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(The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 304.125 707.25456 Tm
( )Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( )Tj
-19.60834 -1.45 Td
( )Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 628.53038 Tm
( Preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( What is a \223quotation\224? It is a saying or piece of writing tha\
t strikes people as so true or )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(memorable that they quote it \(or allude to it\) in speech or writing. O\
ften they will quote it )Tj
T*
(directly, introducing it with a phrase like \223As\227\227says\224 but e\
qually often they will assume that )Tj
T*
(the reader or listener already knows the quotation, and they will simply\
allude to it without )Tj
T*
(mentioning its source \(as in the headline \223A ros\350 is a ros\350 is\
a ros\350,\224 referring obliquely to a line )Tj
T*
(by Gertrude Stein\).)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( This dictionary has been compiled from extensive evidence of the quo\
tations that are actually )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(used in this way. The dictionary includes the commonest quotations which\
were found in a )Tj
T*
(collection of more than 200,000 citations assembled by combing books, ma\
gazines, and )Tj
T*
(newspapers. For example, our collections contained more than thirty exam\
ples each for Edward )Tj
T*
(Heath\222s \223unacceptable face of capitalism\224 and Marshal McLuhan\222\
s \223The medium is the )Tj
T*
(message,\224 so both these quotations had to be included.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( As a result, this book is not\227like many quotations dictionaries\227\
a subjective anthology of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(editor\222s favourite quotations, but an objective selection of the quot\
ations which are most widely )Tj
T*
(known and used. Popularity and familiarity are the main criteria for inc\
lusion, although no reader )Tj
T*
(is likely to be familiar with all the quotations in this dictionary.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The book can be used for reference or for browsing: to trace the sou\
rce of a particular )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(quotation or to find an appropriate saying for a special need.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The quotations are drawn from novels, plays, poems, essays, speeches\
, films radio and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(television broadcasts, songs, advertisements, and even book titles. It i\
s difficult to draw the line )Tj
T*
(between quotations and similar sayings like proverbs, catch-phrases, and\
idioms. For example, )Tj
T*
(some quotations \(like \223The opera ain\222t over till the fat lady sin\
gs\224\) become proverbial. These are )Tj
T*
(usually included if they can be traced to a particular originator. Howev\
er, we have generally )Tj
T*
(omitted phrases like \223agonizing reappraisal\224 which are covered ade\
quately in the Oxford English )Tj
T*
(Dictionary. Catch-phrases are included if there is evidence that they ar\
e widely remembered or )Tj
T*
(used.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( We have taken care to verify all the quotations in original or autho\
ritative sources\227something )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which few other quotations dictionaries have tried to do. We have correc\
ted many errors found in )Tj
T*
(other dictionaries, and we have traced the true origins of such phrases \
as \223There ain\222t no such )Tj
T*
(thing as a free lunch\224 and \223Shaken and not stirred.\224)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The quotations are arranged in alphabetical order of authors, with a\
nonymous quotations in the )Tj
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(middle of \223A.\224 Under each author, the quotations are arranged in a\
lphabetical order of their first )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(words. Foreign quotations are, wherever possible, given in the original \
language as well as in )Tj
T*
(translation. Authors are cited under the names by which they are best kn\
own: for example, )Tj
T*
(Graham Greene \(not Henry Graham Greene\); F. Scott Fitzgerald \(not Fra\
ncis Scott Key )Tj
T*
(Fitzgerald\); George Orwell \(not Eric Blair\); W. C. Fields \(not Willi\
am Claude Dukenfield\). )Tj
T*
(Authors\222 dates of birth and death are given when ascertainable. The a\
ctual writers of the words )Tj
T*
(are credited for quotations from songs, film-scripts, etc.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The references after each quotation are designed to be as helpful as\
possible, enabling the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reader to trace quotations in their original sources if desired.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The index \(1\) has been carefully prepared\227with ingenious comput\
er assistance\227to help the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reader to trace quotations from their most important keywords. Each refe\
rence includes not only )Tj
T*
(the page and the number of the quotation on the page but also the first \
few letters of the author\222s )Tj
T*
(name. The index includes references to book-titles which have become wel\
l known as quotations )Tj
T*
(in their own right.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( This dictionary could not have been compiled without the work of man\
y people, most notably )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Paula Clifford, Angela Partington, Fiona Mullan, Penelope Newsome, Julia\
Cresswell, Michael )Tj
T*
(McKinley, Charles McCreery, Heidi Abbey, Jean Harder, Elizabeth Knowles,\
George )Tj
T*
(Chowdharay-Best, Tracey Ward, and Ernest Trehern. I am also very gratefu\
l to the OUP )Tj
T*
(Dictionary Department\222s team of checkers, who verified the quotations\
at libraries in Oxford, )Tj
T*
(London, Washington, New York, and elsewhere. James Howes deserves credit\
for his work in )Tj
T*
(computerizing the index.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The Editor is responsible for any errors, which he will be grateful \
to have drawn to his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attention. As the quotation from Simeon Strunsky reminds us, \223Famous \
remarks are very seldom )Tj
T*
(quoted correctly,\224 but we have endeavoured to make this book more acc\
urate, authoritative, and )Tj
T*
(helpful than any other dictionary of modern quotations.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( TONY A\
UGARDE)Tj
T*
( \(1\) Discussions of the index features in this preface and in the \
\223How to Use this Dictionary\224 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(section of this book refer to the hard-copy edition. No index has been i\
ncluded in this soft-copy )Tj
T*
(edition. See \223Notices\224 in topic NOTICES for additional information\
about this soft-copy edition.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 191.28038 Tm
( How to Use this Dictionary)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.4624 Tm
( HOW TO.1 General Principles)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The arrangement is alphabetical by the names of authors: usually th\
e names by which each )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(person is best known. So look under Maya Angelou, not Maya Johnson; Prin\
cess Anne, not HRH )Tj
T*
(The Princess Royal; Lord Beaverbrook, not William Maxwell Aitken; Irving\
Berlin, not Israel )Tj
T*
(Balin; Greta Garbo, not Greta Lovisa Gustafsson,)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Anonymous quotations are all together, starting in \223Anonymous\224\
in topic 1.68 They are )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(arranged in alphabetical order of their first significant word.)Tj
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( Under each author, quotations are arranged by the alphabetical order\
of the titles of the works )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(from which they come, even if those works were not written by the person\
who is being quoted. )Tj
T*
(Poems are usually cited from the first book in which they appeared.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Quotations by foreign authors are, where possible, given in the orig\
inal language and also in an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(English translation.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( A reference is given after each quotation to its original source or \
to an authoritative record of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(its use. The reference usually consists of either \(a\) a book-title wit\
h its date of publication and a )Tj
T*
(reference to where the quotation occurs in the book; or \(b\) the title \
of a newspaper or magazine )Tj
T*
(with its date of publication. The reference is preceded by \223In\224 if\
the quotation comes from a )Tj
T*
(secondary source: for example if a writer is quoted by another author in\
a newspaper article, or if )Tj
T*
(a book refers to a saying but does not indicate where or when it was mad\
e.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( HOW TO.2 Examples)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Here are some typical entries, with notes to clarify the meaning of \
each part.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.4528 TD
( Charlie Chaplin \(Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin\) 1889-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All I need to make a comedy is a park, a policeman and a p\
retty girl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.67047 Tm
( \221My Autobiography\222 \(1964\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.75456 Tm
( Charlie Chaplin is the name by which this person is best known but S\
ir Charles Spencer )Tj
0 -1.2028 TD
(Chaplin is the name which would appear in reference books such as )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
(Who\222s Who)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
(. Charlie Chaplin )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(was born in 1889 and died in 1977. The quotation comes from the tenth ch\
apter of Chaplin\222s )Tj
T*
(autobiography, which was published in 1964.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.4528 TD
( Martin Luther King 1929-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.37831 Tm
( Letter from Birmingham Jail, Alabama, 16 Apr. 1963, in \221Atlantic Mo\
nthly\222 Aug. 1963, p. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.4624 Tm
( Martin Luther King wrote these words in a letter that he sent from B\
irmingham Jail on 16 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(April 1963. The letter was published later that year on page 78 of the A\
ugust issue of the Atlanta )Tj
T*
(Monthly.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.4528 TD
( Dorothy Parker 1893-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One more drink and I\222d have been under the host.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.12831 Tm
( In Howard Teichmann \221George S. Kaufman\222 \(1972\) p. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.2124 Tm
( Dorothy Parker must have said this before she died in 1967 but the e\
arliest reliable source we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(can find is a 1972 book by Howard Teichmann. \223In\224 signals the fact\
that the quotation is cited )Tj
T*
(from a secondary source.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( HOW TO.3 Index)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you remember part of a quotation and want to know the rest of it,\
or who said it, you can )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(trace it by means of the index \(1\). The index lists the most significa\
nt words from each quotation. )Tj
T*
(These keywords are listed alphabetically in the index, each with a secti\
on of the text to show the )Tj
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(context of every keyword. These sections are listed in strict alphabetic\
al order under each )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(keyword. Foreign keywords are included in their alphabetical place. The \
references show the first )Tj
T*
(few letters of the author\222s name, followed by the page and item numbe\
rs \(e.g. 163:15 refers to the )Tj
T*
(fifteenth quotation on page 163\).)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( As an example, suppose that you want to verify a quotation which you\
remember contains the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(line \223to purify the dialect of the tribe.\224 If you decide that tri\
be is a significant word and refer to it )Tj
T*
(in the index, you will find this entry:)Tj
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( tribe: To purify the dialect of the t. ELIOT 74:19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 600.75456 Tm
( This will lead you to the poem by T. S. Eliot which is the nineteent\
h quotation on page 74.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 565.53038 Tm
(Table of Contents)Tj
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(Preface)Tj
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(How to Use this Dictionary)Tj
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(HOW TO.1 General Principles)Tj
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(HOW TO.2 Examples)Tj
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(HOW TO.3 Index)Tj
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(M. Neale, 1854\))Tj
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( 1.2 Dannie Abse 1923\227)Tj
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( I know the colour rose, and it is lovely,)Tj
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( But not when it ripens in a tumour;)Tj
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( And healing greens, leaves and grass, so springlike,)Tj
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( In limbs that fester are not springlike.)Tj
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(\221Pathology of Colours\222 \(1968\))Tj
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( So in the simple blessing of a rainbow,)Tj
T*
( In the bevelled edge of a sunlit mirror,)Tj
T*
( I have seen visible, Death\222s artifact)Tj
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( Like a soldier\222s ribbon on a tunic tacked.)Tj
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(\221Pathology of Colours\222 \(1968\))Tj
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( 1.3 Accius 170-c.86 B.C.)Tj
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( Oderint, dum metuant.)Tj
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(From \221Atreus\222, in Seneca \221Dialogues\222 bks. 3-5 \221De Ira\222\
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( 1.4 Goodman Ace 1899-1982)Tj
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( TV\227a clever contraction derived from the words Terrible Vaudevill\
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(because nothing\222s well done.)Tj
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(Letter to Groucho Marx, in \221The Groucho Letters\222 \(1967\) p. 114)Tj
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( 1.5 Dean Acheson 1893-1971)Tj
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( Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role.)Tj
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(Speech at the Military Academy, West Point, 5 December 1962, in \221Vita\
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( The first requirement of a statesman is that he be dull.)Tj
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(In \221Observer\222 21 June 1970)Tj
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( I will undoubtedly have to seek what is happily known as gainful emp\
loyment, which I am )Tj
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(glad to say does not describe holding public office.)Tj
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(In \221Time\222 22 December 1952)Tj
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( A memorandum is written not to inform the reader but to protect the \
writer.)Tj
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(In \221Wall Street Journal\222 8 September 1977)Tj
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( Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.)Tj
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(Creighton\222 \(1904\) vol. 1, ch. 13.)Tj
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( 1.7 Abigail Adams 1744-1818)Tj
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( In the new code of laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you\
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(Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. Remember\
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(tyrants if they could.)Tj
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(Letter to John Adams, 31 March 1776)Tj
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( It is really mortifying, sir, when a woman possessed of a common sha\
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T*
(considers the difference of education between the male and female sex, e\
ven in those families )Tj
T*
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T*
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if I cannot help )Tj
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ngenerous jealousy of )Tj
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(rivals near the throne.)Tj
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(Letter to John Thaxter, 15 February 1778)Tj
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( These are times in which a genius would wish to live. It is not in t\
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(repose of a pacific station, that great challenges are formed....Great n\
ecessities call out great )Tj
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(virtues.)Tj
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(Letter to John Quincy Adams, 19 January 1780)Tj
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( 1.8 Charles Francis Adams 1807-86)Tj
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( It would be superfluous in me to point out to your lordship that thi\
s is war.)Tj
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(Dispatch to Earl Russell, 5 September 1863, in C. F. Adams \221Charles F\
rancis Adams\222 \(1900\))Tj
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( 1.9 Douglas Adams 1952\227)Tj
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( The Answer to the Great Question Of...Life, the Universe and)Tj
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( Everything...[is] Forty-two.)Tj
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(\221The Hitch Hiker\222s Guide to the Galaxy\222 \(1979\) ch. 27)Tj
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( I wonder who\222s kissing her now.)Tj
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(Title of song \(1909\))Tj
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( When the political columnists say \221Every thinking man\222 they me\
an themselves, and when )Tj
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(candidates appeal to \221Every intelligent voter\222 they mean everybody\
who is going to vote for them.)Tj
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(\221Nods and Becks\222 \(1944\) p. 3)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Accident counts for much in companionship as in marriage.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 4.)Tj
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( Women have, commonly, a very positive moral sense; that which they w\
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 6)Tj
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( All experience is an arch to build upon.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 6)Tj
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( A friend in power is a friend lost.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 7)Tj
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( The effect of power and publicity on all men is the aggravation of s\
elf, a sort of tumour that )Tj
T*
(ends by killing the victim\222s sympathies.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 10)Tj
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( These questions of taste, of feeling, of inheritance, need no settle\
ment.)Tj
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( Everyone carries his own inch-rule of taste, and amuses himself by a\
pplying it, triumphantly, )Tj
T*
(wherever he travels.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 12)Tj
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( [Charles] Sumner\222s mind had reached the calm of water which recei\
ves and reflects images )Tj
T*
(without absorbing them; it contained nothing but itself.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 13)Tj
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( Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 16)Tj
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( A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence st\
ops.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 20)Tj
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( One friend in a lifetime is much; two are many; three are hardly pos\
sible. Friendship needs a )Tj
T*
(certain parallelism of life, a community of thought, a rivalry of aim.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 20)Tj
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( What one knows is, in youth, of little moment; they know enough who \
know how to learn.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 21)Tj
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( Morality is a private and costly luxury.)Tj
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( Practical politics consists in ignoring facts.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 22)Tj
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( Nothing in education is so astonishing as the amount of ignorance it\
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(inert facts.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 25)Tj
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( Symbol or energy, the Virgin had acted as the greatest force the Wes\
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(supernatural had ever done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 25)Tj
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( Modern politics is, at bottom, a struggle not of men but of forces.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 28)Tj
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( We combat obstacles in order to get repose, and, when got, the repos\
e is insupportable.)Tj
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(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 29)Tj
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( No one means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for wo\
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(thought is viscous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221The Education of Henry Adams\222 \(1907\) ch. 31)Tj
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( 1.13 John Adams 1735-1826)Tj
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( Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the pe\
ople, who have a right...)Tj
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(and a desire to know; but besides this, they have a right, an indisputab\
le, unalienable, )Tj
T*
(indefeasible, divine right to that most dreaded and envied kind of knowl\
edge, I mean of the )Tj
T*
(characters and conduct of their rulers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221A Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law\222 \(1765\))Tj
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( There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ou\
ght to be to trust no )Tj
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(man living with power to endanger the public liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Notes for an Oration at Braintree\222 \(Spring 1772\))Tj
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( A government of laws, and not of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Boston Gazette\222 \(1774\) no. 7, \221Novanglus\222 papers; later i\
ncorporated in the Massachusetts Constitution )Tj
T*
(\(1780\) Article 30 of the Declaration of Rights)Tj
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( I agree with you that in politics the middle way is none at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Letter to Horatio Gates, 23 March 1776)Tj
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( The happiness of society is the end of government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Government\222 \(1776\))Tj
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( Fear is the foundation of most governments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Government\222 \(1776\))Tj
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( You and I ought not to die)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( before we have explained ourselves to each other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Jefferson, 15 July 1813)Tj
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( The fundamental article of my political creed is that despotism, or \
unlimited sovereignty, or )Tj
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(absolute power, is the same in a majority of a popular assembly, an aris\
tocratic council, an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(oligarchical junto, and a single emperor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Jefferson, 13 November 1815)Tj
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( 1.14 John Quincy Adams 1767-1848)Tj
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( Think of your forefathers! Think of your posterity!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Oration at Plymouth\222 22 December 1802, p. 6)Tj
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( Fiat justitia, pereat coelum [Let justice be done though heaven fall\
]. My toast would be, may )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(our country be always successful, but whether successful or otherwise, a\
lways right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Adams, 1 August 1816)Tj
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( 1.15 Samuel Adams 1722-1803)Tj
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( What a glorious morning for America.)Tj
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(On hearing gunfire at Lexington, 19 April 1775)Tj
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( We cannot make events. Our business is wisely to improve them....Man\
kind are governed more )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(by their feelings than by reason. Events which excite those feelings wil\
l produce wonderful )Tj
T*
(effects.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(In J. N. Rakove \221The Beginnings of National Politics\222 \(1979\) p. \
92)Tj
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( A nation of shop-keepers are very seldom so disinterested.)Tj
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(\221Oration in Philadelphia\222 1 August 1776 \(the authenticity of this\
publication is doubtful\).)Tj
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( 1.16 Sarah Flower Adams 1805-48)Tj
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( Nearer, my God, to thee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nearer to thee!)Tj
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(\221Nearer My God to Thee\222 in W. G. Fox \221Hymns and Anthems\222 \(1\
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( Comin\222 in on a wing and a pray\222r.)Tj
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(Title of song \(1943\))Tj
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( 1.18 Joseph Addison 1672-1719)Tj
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( He more had pleased us, had he pleased us less.)Tj
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(\221An Account of the Greatest English Poets\222 \(referring to Cowley\)\
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( \222Twas then great Marlbro\222s mighty soul was proved.)Tj
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(\221The Campaign\222 \(1705\) l. 279)Tj
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( And, pleased th\222 Almighty\222s orders to perform,)Tj
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( Rides in the whirl-wind, and directs the storm.)Tj
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(\221The Campaign\222 \(1705\) l. 291)Tj
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( And those who paint \222em truest praise \222em most.)Tj
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(\221The Campaign\222 \(1705\) l. 476)Tj
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( \222Tis not in mortals to command success,)Tj
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( But we\222ll do more, Sempronius; we\222ll deserve it.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 43)Tj
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( \222Tis pride, rank pride, and haughtiness of soul;)Tj
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( I think the Romans call it stoicism.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 82)Tj
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( Were you with these, my prince, you\222d soon forget)Tj
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( The pale, unripened beauties of the north.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 134)Tj
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( The woman that deliberates is lost.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 31)Tj
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( Curse on his virtues! they\222ve undone his country.)Tj
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( Such popular humanity is treason.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 205)Tj
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( What pity is it)Tj
T*
( That we can die but once to serve our country!)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 258)Tj
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( Content thyself to be obscurely good.)Tj
T*
( When vice prevails, and impious men bear sway,)Tj
T*
( The post of honour is a private station.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 319)Tj
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( It must be so\227Plato, thou reason\222st well!\227)Tj
T*
( Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire,)Tj
T*
( This longing after immortality?)Tj
T*
( Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror,)Tj
T*
( Of falling into naught? Why shrinks the soul)Tj
T*
( Back on herself, and startles at destruction?)Tj
T*
( \222Tis the divinity that stirs within us;)Tj
T*
( \222Tis heaven itself, that points out an hereafter,)Tj
T*
( And intimates eternity to man.)Tj
T*
( Eternity! thou pleasing, dreadful thought!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.92047 Tm
(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( From hence, let fierce contending nations know)Tj
T*
( What dire effects from civil discord flow.)Tj
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(\221Cato\222 \(1713\) act 5, sc. 1, closing lines)Tj
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( I should think my self a very bad woman, if I had done what I do, fo\
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(\221The Drummer\222 \(1716\) act 1)Tj
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( There is nothing more requisite in business than dispatch.)Tj
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(\221The Drummer\222 \(1716\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
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( For wheresoe\222er I turn my ravished eyes,)Tj
T*
( Gay gilded scenes and shining prospects rise,)Tj
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( Poetic fields encompass me around,)Tj
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( And still I seem to tread on classic ground.)Tj
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(\221Letter from Italy\222 \(1704\))Tj
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( A painted meadow, or a purling stream.)Tj
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(\221Letter from Italy\222 \(1704\))Tj
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( And all of heaven we have below.)Tj
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(\221A Song for St Cecilia\222s Day\222)Tj
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( Should the whole frame of nature round him break,)Tj
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( In ruin and confusion hurled,)Tj
T*
( He, unconcerned, would hear the mighty crack,)Tj
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( And stand secure amidst a falling world.)Tj
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(Translation of Horace Odes bk. 3, ode 3.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.92047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 1, 1 March 1711)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.00456 Tm
( In all thy humours, whether grave or mellow,)Tj
T*
( Thou\222rt such a touchy, testy, pleasant fellow;)Tj
T*
( Hast so much wit, and mirth, and spleen about thee,)Tj
T*
( There is no living with thee, nor without thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 68, 18 May 1711.)Tj
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( As Sir Roger is landlord to the whole congregation, he keeps them in\
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T*
(suffer nobody to sleep in it [the church] besides himself; for if by cha\
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T*
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T*
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 112, 9 July 1711)Tj
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( Sir Roger told them, with the air of a man who would not give his ju\
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T*
(might be said on both sides.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.67047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 122, 20 July 1711)Tj
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( It was a saying of an ancient philosopher, which I find some of our \
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T*
(Queen Elizabeth, who perhaps might have taken occasion to repeat it, tha\
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T*
(of recommendation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.92047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 221, 13 November 1711.)Tj
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( I have often thought, says Sir Roger, it happens very well that Chri\
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T*
(Middle of Winter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 269, 8 January 1712)Tj
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( A true critic ought to dwell rather upon excellencies than imperfect\
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(concealed beauties of a writer, and communicate to the world such things\
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T*
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 291, 2 February 1712.)Tj
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( These widows, Sir, are the most perverse creatures in the world.)Tj
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 335, 25 March 1712)Tj
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( Mirth is short and transient, cheerfulness fixed and permanent....Mi\
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 381, 17 May 1712)Tj
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( The Knight in the triumph of his heart made several reflections on t\
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(Nation; as, that one Englishman could beat three Frenchmen; that we coul\
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T*
(Popery so long as we took care of our fleet; that the Thames was the nob\
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T*
(London Bridge was a greater piece of work than any of the Seven Wonders \
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T*
(many other honest prejudices which naturally cleave to the heart of a tr\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 383, 20 May 1712)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Wide and undetermined prospects are as pleasing to the fancy, as the\
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T*
(infinitude are to the understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 412, 23 June 1712)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Through all Eternity to Thee)Tj
T*
( A joyful Song I\222ll raise,)Tj
T*
( For oh! Eternity\222s too short)Tj
T*
( To utter all thy Praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 453, 9 August 1712)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( We have in England a particular bashfulness in every thing that rega\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 458, 15 August 1712)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( The spacious firmament on high,)Tj
T*
( With all the blue ethereal sky,)Tj
T*
( And spangled heavens, a shining frame,)Tj
T*
( Their great Original proclaim.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 465, 23 August 1712, \221Ode\222)Tj
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( In Reason\222s ear they all rejoice,)Tj
T*
( And utter forth a glorious voice,)Tj
T*
( For ever singing, as they shine:)Tj
T*
( \221The hand that made us is divine.\222)Tj
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 465, 23 August 1712, \221Ode\222)Tj
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( A woman seldom asks advice before she has bought her wedding clothes\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 475, 4 September 1712)Tj
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( Our disputants put me in mind of the skuttle fish, that when he is u\
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T*
(blackens all the water about him, till he becomes invisible.)Tj
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 476, 5 September 1712)Tj
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( If we may believe our logicians, man is distinguished from all other\
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T*
(laughter.)Tj
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(\221The Spectator\222 no. 494, 26 September 1712)Tj
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( \221We are always doing\222, says he, \221something for Posterity, b\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 583, 20 August 1714)Tj
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( There is sometimes a greater judgement shewn in deviating from the r\
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T*
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T*
(the rules of art, than in the works of a little genius, who not only kno\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 592, 10 September 1714.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( I remember when our whole island was shaken with an earthquake some \
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T*
(an impudent mountebank who sold pills which \(as he told the country peo\
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T*
(against an earthquake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Tatler\222 no. 240, 21 October 1710)Tj
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( See in what peace a Christian can die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(Dying words to his stepson Lord Warwick, in Edward Young \221Conjectures\
on Original Composition\222 \(1759\))Tj
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( 1.19 George Ade 1866-1944)Tj
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( After being Turned Down by numerous Publishers, he had decided to wr\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Fables in Slang\222 \(1900\) p. 158)Tj
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( r-e-m-o-r-s-e!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Those dry Martinis did the work for me;)Tj
T*
( Last night at twelve I felt immense,)Tj
T*
( Today I feel like thirty cents.)Tj
T*
( My eyes are bleared, my coppers hot,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll try to eat, but I cannot.)Tj
T*
( It is no time for mirth and laughter,)Tj
T*
( The cold, gray dawn of the morning after.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221The Sultan of Sulu\222 \(1903\) act 2, p. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( \221Whom are you?\222 he asked, for he had attended business college\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221The Steel Box\222 in \221Chicago Record\222 16 March 1898)Tj
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( 1.20 Alfred Adler 1870-1937)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The truth is often a terrible weapon of aggression. It is possible t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221The Problems of Neurosis\222 \(1929\) ch. 2)Tj
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( 1.21 Polly Adler 1900-62)Tj
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( A house is not a home.)Tj
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(Title of book \(1954\))Tj
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( In ancient shadows and twilights)Tj
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( Where childhood had strayed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The world\222s great sorrows were born)Tj
T*
( And its heroes were made.)Tj
T*
( In the lost boyhood of Judas)Tj
T*
( Christ was betrayed.)Tj
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(\221Germinal\222 \(1931\))Tj
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( 1.23 Aeschylus c.525-456 B.C.)Tj
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( Hell to ships, hell to men, hell to cities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.67047 Tm
(Referring to Helen \(literally \221Ship-destroyer, man-destroyer, city-d\
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( Innumerable twinkling of the waves of the sea.)Tj
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(\221Prometheus Bound\222 l. 89)Tj
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( 1.24 Herbert Agar 1897-1980)Tj
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T*
( The truth which makes men free is for the most part the truth which \
men prefer not to hear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.17047 Tm
(\221A Time for Greatness\222 \(1942\) ch. 7)Tj
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( 1.25 James Agate 1877-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( My mind is not a bed to be made and re-made.)Tj
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(\221Ego 6\222 \(1944\) 9 June 1943)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.26 Agathon b. c.445 B.C.)Tj
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T*
( Even God cannot change the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.67047 Tm
(In Aristotle \221Nicomachaean Ethics\222 bk. 6, sect. 2, 1139b)Tj
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( 1.27 Spiro T. Agnew 1918\227)Tj
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( A spirit of national masochism prevails, encouraged by an effete cor\
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0 -1.2 TD
(characterize themselves as intellectuals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.92047 Tm
(Speech in New Orleans, 19 October 1969, in \221Frankly Speaking\222 \(19\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 226.7124 Tm
( 1.28 Maria, Marchioness of Ailesbury d. 1902)Tj
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( My dear, my dear, you never know when any beautiful young lady may n\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Duchess!)Tj
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(In Duke of Portland \221Men, Women, and Things\222 \(1937\) ch. 3)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 138.9624 Tm
( 1.29 Canon Alfred Ainger 1837-1904)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( No flowers, by request.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.42047 Tm
(Speech, 8 July 1897 \(summary of principle of conciseness for contributo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Biography\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.30 Max Aitken)Tj
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( Mind, mind alone, bear witness, earth and heaven!)Tj
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( The living fountains in itself contains)Tj
T*
( Of beauteous and sublime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Pleasures of Imagination\222 \(1744\) bk. 1, l. 481)Tj
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( Nor ever yet)Tj
T*
( The melting rainbow\222s vernal-tinctured hues)Tj
T*
( To me have shone so pleasing, as when first)Tj
T*
( The hand of science pointed out the path)Tj
T*
( In which the sun-beams gleaming from the west)Tj
T*
( Fall on the wat\222ry cloud.)Tj
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(\221The Pleasures of Imagination\222 \(1744\) bk. 2, l. 103)Tj
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( 1.32 Zo\353 Akins 1886-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Greeks had a word for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(Title of play \(1930\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 417.7124 Tm
( 1.33 Alain \(\310mile-Auguste Chartier\) 1868-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Rien n\222est plus dangereux qu\222une id\350e, quand on n\222a qu\222\
une id\350e.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nothing is more dangerous than an idea, when you have only one idea.\
)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221Propos sur la religion\222 \(Remarks on Religion, 1938\) no. 74)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.2124 Tm
( 1.34 Edward Albee 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who\222s afraid of Virginia Woolf?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 288.67047 Tm
(Title of play \(1962\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.75456 Tm
( I have a fine sense of the ridiculous, but no sense of humour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.92047 Tm
(\221Who\222s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?\222 \(1962\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 219.7124 Tm
( 1.35 Prince Albert 1819-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The works of art, by being publicly exhibited and offered for sale, \
are becoming articles of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(trade, following as such the unreasoning laws of markets and fashion; an\
d public and even private )Tj
T*
(patronage is swayed by their tyrannical influence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.17047 Tm
(Speech at the Royal Academy Dinner, 3 May 1851, in \221Addresses\222 \(1\
857\) p. 101)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 113.9624 Tm
( 1.36 Scipione Alberti)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I pensieri stretti ed il viso sciolto.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( [Secret thoughts and open countenance] will go safely over the whole\
world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.67047 Tm
(On being asked how to behave in Rome, in letter from Sir Henry Wotton to\
John Milton, 13 April 1638, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(prefixed to \221Comus\222 in Milton \221Poems\222 \(1645 ed.\))Tj
ET
EMC
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0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 737.4624 Tm
( 1.37 Mary Alcock c.1742-98)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A masquerade, a murdered peer,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His throat just cut from ear to ear\227)Tj
T*
( A rake turned hermit\227a fond maid)Tj
T*
( Run mad, by some false loon betrayed\227)Tj
T*
( These stores supply the female pen,)Tj
T*
( Which writes them o\222er and o\222er again,)Tj
T*
( And readers likewise may be found)Tj
T*
( To circulate them round and round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.92047 Tm
(\221A Receipt for Writing a Novel\222 l. 65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.7124 Tm
( 1.38 Alcuin c.735-804)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, Vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuosi\
tas vulgi semper )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(insaniae proxima sit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And those people should not be listened to who keep saying the voice\
of the people is the voice )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of God, since the riotousness of the crowd is always very close to madne\
ss.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.42047 Tm
(Letter 164 in \221Works\222 \(1863\) vol. 1, p. 438)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 414.2124 Tm
( 1.39 Richard Aldington 1892-1962)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Patriotism is a lively sense of collective responsibility. Nationali\
sm is a silly cock crowing on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(its own dunghill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.67047 Tm
(\221The Colonel\222s Daughter\222 \(1931\) pt. 1, ch. 6)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.4624 Tm
( 1.40 Brian Aldiss 1925\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Keep violence in the mind)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where it belongs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.92047 Tm
(\221Barefoot in the Head\222 \(1969\)\222Charteris\222 ad fin.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 238.7124 Tm
( 1.41 Henry Aldrich 1647-1710)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If all be true that I do think,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There are five reasons we should drink;)Tj
T*
( Good wine\227a friend\227or being dry\227)Tj
T*
( Or lest we should be by and by\227)Tj
T*
( Or any other reason why.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.17047 Tm
(\221Reasons for Drinking\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 96.9624 Tm
( 1.42 Thomas Bailey Aldrich 1836-1907)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The fair, frail palaces,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The fading alps and archipelagoes,)Tj
T*
( And great cloud-continents of sunset-seas.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.42047 Tm
(\221Miracles\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 721.2124 Tm
( 1.43 Alexander the Great 356-323 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If I were not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.67047 Tm
(In Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 \221Alexander\222 ch. 14, sect. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 651.4624 Tm
( 1.44 Cecil Frances Alexander 1818-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All things bright and beautiful,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All creatures great and small,)Tj
T*
( All things wise and wonderful,)Tj
T*
( The Lord God made them all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.92047 Tm
(\221All Things Bright and Beautiful\222 \(1848\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.00456 Tm
( The rich man in his castle,)Tj
T*
( The poor man at his gate,)Tj
T*
( God made them, high or lowly,)Tj
T*
( And ordered their estate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.17047 Tm
(\221All Things Bright and Beautiful\222 \(1848\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 436.9624 Tm
( 1.45 Sir William Alexander, Earl of Stirling c.1567-1640)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The weaker sex, to piety more prone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.42047 Tm
(\221Doomsday\222 5th Hour)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 367.2124 Tm
( 1.46 Alfonso the Wise 1221-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Had I been present at the Creation, I would have given some useful h\
ints for the better ordering )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the universe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.67047 Tm
(Said after studying the Ptolemaic system \(attributed\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 279.4624 Tm
( 1.47 King Alfred the Great 849-99)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Then began I...to turn into English the book that is named in Latin \
Pastoralis...one-while word )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for word, another-while meaning for meaning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.92047 Tm
(Preface to the Anglo-Saxon version of Gregory\222s \221Pastoral Care\222\
in \221Whole Works\222 \(Jubilee Edition, 1852\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 3, p. 64)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 176.7124 Tm
( 1.48 Nelson Algren 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A walk on the wild side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1956\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.25456 Tm
( Never play cards with a man called Doc. Never eat at a place called \
Mom\222s. Never sleep with a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(woman whose troubles are worse than your own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.42047 Tm
(In \221Newsweek\222 2 July 1956)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 52.2124 Tm
( 1.49 Muhammad Ali \(Cassius Clay\) 1942\227)Tj
ET
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Summary of his boxing strategy, in G. Sullivan \221Cassius Clay Story\222\
\(1964\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I\222m the greatest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Catch-phrase from early 1960s, in \221Louisville Times\222 16 November 1\
962)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 1.50 Abb\350 d\222Allainval 1700-53)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222embarras des richesses.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The embarrassment of riches.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Title of comedy \(1726\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 1.51 Fred Allen \(John Florence Sullivan\) 1894-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Committee\227a group of men who individually can do nothing but as a\
group decide that )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(nothing can be done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(In Laurence J. Peter \221Quotations for our Time\222 \(1978\) p. 120)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 488.9624 Tm
( 1.52 Woody Allen \(Allen Stewart Konigsberg\) 1935\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Is sex dirty? Only if it\222s done right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Sex\222 \(1972 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.50456 Tm
( If it turns out that there is a God, I don\222t think that he\222s e\
vil. But the worst that you can say )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(about him is that basically he\222s an underachiever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221Love and Death\222 \(1975 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( A fast word about oral contraception. I asked a girl to go to bed wi\
th me and she said \221no\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Woody Allen Volume Two\222 \(Colpix CP 488\) side 4, b and 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( It\222s not that I\222m afraid to die. I just don\222t want to be th\
ere when it happens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221Death\222 \(1975\) p. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( On the plus side, death is one of the few things that can be done as\
easily lying down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221Early Essays\222 in \221Without Feathers\222 \(1976\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221Early Essays\222 in \221Without Feathers\222 \(1976\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.75456 Tm
( The lion and the calf shall lie down together but the calf won\222t \
get much sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221The Scrolls\222 in \221New Republic\222 31 August 1974)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( Not only is there no God, but try getting a plumber on weekends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221My Philosophy\222 in \221New Yorker\222 27 December 1969)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large depos\
it in my name at a )Tj
T*
(Swiss bank.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Selections from the Allen Notebooks\222 in \221New Yorker\222 5 Nove\
mber 1973)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( On bisexuality: It immediately doubles your chances for a date on Sa\
turday night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 1 December 1975, p. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( My parents finally realize that I\222m kidnapped and they snap into \
action immediately: They )Tj
T*
(rent out my room.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(In Eric Lax \221Woody Allen and his Comedy\222 \(1975\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I don\222t want to achieve immortality through my work....I want to \
achieve it through not dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(In Eric Lax \221Woody Allen and his Comedy\222 \(1975\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.2124 Tm
( 1.53 Woody Allen \(Allen Stewart Konigsberg\) 1935\227and Marshall Bric\
kman 1941\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That [sex] was the most fun I ever had without laughing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(\221Annie Hall\222 \(1977 film\) though probably of earlier origin)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.75456 Tm
( Don\222t knock masturbation. It\222s sex with someone I love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(\221Annie Hall\222 \(1977 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.00456 Tm
( My brain? It\222s my second favourite organ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(\221Sleeper\222 \(1973 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 542.9624 Tm
( 1.54 Margery Allingham 1904-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Once sex rears its ugly \222ead it\222s time to steer clear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(\221Flowers for the Judge\222 \(1936\) ch. 4.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.2124 Tm
( 1.55 William Allingham 1828-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Up the airy mountain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Down the rushy glen,)Tj
T*
( We daren\222t go a-hunting,)Tj
T*
( For fear of little men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(\221The Fairies\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.75456 Tm
( Four ducks on a pond,)Tj
T*
( A grass-bank beyond,)Tj
T*
( A blue sky of spring,)Tj
T*
( White clouds on the wing:)Tj
T*
( What a little thing)Tj
T*
( To remember for years\227)Tj
T*
( To remember with tears!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221A Memory\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 204.7124 Tm
( 1.56 Joseph Alsop b.1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gratitude, like love, is never a dependable international emotion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 30 November 1952)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 134.9624 Tm
( 1.57 Robert Altman 1922\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What\222s a cult? It just means not enough people to make a minority\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(In \221Guardian\222 11 April 1981)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 65.2124 Tm
( 1.58 St Ambrose c.339-397)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ubi Petrus, ibi ergo ecclesia.)Tj
ET
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 751.86667 Tm
( Where Peter is, there must be the Church.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Explanatio psalmi 40\222 in \221Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum L\
atinorum\222 \(1919\) vol. 64, p. 250)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( When I go to Rome, I fast on Saturday, but here [Milan] I do not. Do\
you also follow the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(custom of whatever church you attend, if you do not want to give or rece\
ive scandal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(In St Augustine \221Letter 54 to Januarius\222 \(c.400 A.D.\) in \221St \
Augustine. Letters\222 vol. 1 \(translated by Sister W. )Tj
T*
(Parsons, 1951\) p. 253.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 633.9624 Tm
( 1.59 Leo Amery 1873-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For twenty years he has held a season-ticket on the line of least re\
sistance and has gone )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wherever the train of events has carried him, lucidly justifying his pos\
ition at whatever point he )Tj
T*
(has happened to find himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.42047 Tm
(Referring to Herbert Asquith \(q.v.\) in \221Quarterly Review\222 July 1\
914, p. 276)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.50456 Tm
( Speak for England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.67047 Tm
(Said to Arthur Greenwood in House of Commons, 2 September 1939, in \221M\
y Political Life\222 \(1955\) vol. 3, p. )Tj
T*
(324)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 476.4624 Tm
( 1.60 Fisher Ames 1758-1808)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A monarchy is a merchantman which sails well, but will sometimes str\
ike on a rock, and go to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the bottom; whilst a republic is a raft which would never sink, but then\
your feet are always in the )Tj
T*
(water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 402.92047 Tm
(Attributed to Ames, speaking in the House of Representatives, 1795; quot\
ed by R. W. Emerson in )Tj
T*
(\221Essays\222 \(2nd series, 1844\) no. 7, but not traced in Ames\222s s\
peeches)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 355.7124 Tm
( 1.61 Sir Kingsley Amis 1922\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The delusion that there are thousands of young people about who are \
capable of benefiting )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(from university training, but have somehow failed to find their way ther\
e, is...a necessary )Tj
T*
(component of the expansionist case....More will mean worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.17047 Tm
(\221Encounter\222 July 1960)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.25456 Tm
( Dixon...tried to flail his features into some sort of response to hu\
mour. Mentally, however, he )Tj
T*
(was making a different face and promising himself he\222d make it actual\
ly when next alone. He\222d )Tj
T*
(draw his lower lip in under his top teeth and by degrees retract his chi\
n as far as possible, all this )Tj
T*
(while dilating his eyes and nostrils. By these means he would, he was co\
nfident, cause a deep )Tj
T*
(dangerous flush to suffuse his face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.42047 Tm
(\221Lucky Jim\222 \(1953\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.50456 Tm
( Alun\222s life was coming to consist more and more exclusively of be\
ing told at dictation speed )Tj
T*
(what he knew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Devils\222 \(1986\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.75456 Tm
( Outside every fat man there was an even fatter man trying to close i\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.92047 Tm
(\221One Fat Englishman\222 \(1963\) ch. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.00456 Tm
( He was of the faith chiefly in the sense that the church he currentl\
y did not attend was Catholic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.17047 Tm
(\221One Fat Englishman\222 \(1963\) ch. 8)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Women are really much nicer than men:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No wonder we like them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Something Nasty in the Bookshop\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Should poets bicycle-pump the human heart)Tj
T*
( Or squash it flat?)Tj
T*
( Man\222s love is of man\222s love apart;)Tj
T*
( Girls aren\222t like that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Something Nasty in the Bookshop\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.2124 Tm
( 1.62 Hans Christian Andersen 1805-75)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221But the Emperor has nothing on at all!\222 cried a little child.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221The Emperor\222s New Clothes\222 in \221Danish Fairy Legends and Tal\
es\222 \(1846\); first Danish collection \221Eventyr, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fortalte for b\355rn\222 \(1835\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 511.4624 Tm
( 1.63 Maxwell Anderson 1888-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But it\222s a long, long while)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From May to December;)Tj
T*
( And the days grow short)Tj
T*
( When you reach September.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.92047 Tm
(\221September Song\222 \(1938 song; music by Kurt Weill\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 387.7124 Tm
( 1.64 Maxwell Anderson 1888-1959 and Lawrence Stallings 1894-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What price glory?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.17047 Tm
(Title of play \(1924\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 317.9624 Tm
( 1.65 Robert Anderson 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All you\222re supposed to do is every once in a while give the boys \
a little tea and sympathy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Tea and Sympathy\222 \(1957\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 248.2124 Tm
( 1.66 Bishop Lancelot Andrewes 1555-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What shall become of me \(said Righteousness\)? What use of Justice,\
if God will do no justice, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(if he spare sinners? And what use of me \(saith Mercy\), if he spare the\
m not? Hard hold there was, )Tj
T*
(inasmuch as, Perii, nisi homo moriatur \(said Righteousness\) I die, if \
he die not: And Perii, nisi )Tj
T*
(Misericordiam consequature \(said Mercy\) if he die, I die too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Of the Nativity\222 \(1616\) Sermon 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Verbum infans, the Word without a word, not able to speak a word...H\
e, that \(as in the 38. of )Tj
T*
(Job he saith\) taketh the vast body of the main Sea, turns it to and fro\
, as a little child, and rolls it )Tj
T*
(about with the swaddling bands of darkness; He, to come thus into clouts\
, himself!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Of the Nativity\222 \(1618\) Sermon 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( It was no summer progress. A cold coming they had of it, at this tim\
e of the year; just, the )Tj
T*
(worst time of the year, to take a journey, and specially a long journey,\
in. The ways deep, the )Tj
ET
EMC
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
(weather sharp, the days short, the sun farthest off in solstitio brumali\
, the very dead of Winter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Of the Nativity\222 \(1622\) Sermon 15.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The nearer the Church the further from God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Of the Nativity\222 \(1622\) Sermon 15)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 1.67 Sir Norman Angell 1872-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The great illusion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(Title of book \(1910\), first published as \221Europe\222s optical illus\
ion\222 \(1909\), on the futility of war)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 598.4624 Tm
( 1.68 Anonymous)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 566.54173 Tm
(1.68.1 English)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 545.25456 Tm
( An abomination unto the Lord, but a very present help in time of tro\
uble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 529.42047 Tm
(Definition of a lie, an amalgamation of Proverbs 12.22 and Psalms 46.1, \
often attributed to Adlai Stevenson. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Bill Adler \221The Stevenson Wit\222 \(1966\) p. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.50456 Tm
( Absence makes the heart grow fonder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.67047 Tm
(Davison \221Poetical Rhapsody\222 1602)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 456.75456 Tm
( Adam)Tj
T*
( Had \222em.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.92047 Tm
(On the antiquity of Microbes \(claimed to be the shortest poem\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.00456 Tm
( All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.17047 Tm
(\221Universal Declaration of Human Rights\222 \(1948\) article 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 365.25456 Tm
( All present and correct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(\221King\222s Regulations \(Army\)\222. Report of the Orderly Sergeant t\
o the Officer of the Day)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 328.50456 Tm
( All this buttoning and unbuttoning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(18th century suicide note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.75456 Tm
( The almighty dollar is the only object of worship.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(\221Philadelphia Public Ledger\222 2 December 1836)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.00456 Tm
( Along the electric wire the message came:)Tj
T*
( He is not better\227he is much the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(Said to be from a poem on the illness of the Prince of Wales, later King\
Edward VII, and often attributed to )Tj
T*
(Alfred Austin \(1835-1913\), Poet Laureate. Gribble \221Romance of the C\
ambridge Colleges\222 \(1913\) p. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( The children of Lord Lytton organized a charade. The scene displayed\
a Crusader knight )Tj
T*
(returning from the wars. At his gate he was welcomed by his wife to whom\
he recounted his )Tj
T*
(triumphs and the number of heathen he had slain. His wife, pointing to a\
row of dolls of various )Tj
T*
(sizes, replied with pride, \221And I too, my lord, have not been idle\222\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 3\
1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Any officer who shall behave in a scandalous manner, unbecoming the \
character of an officer )Tj
T*
(and a gentleman shall...be CASHIERED.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221Articles of War\222 \(1872\) \221Disgraceful Conduct\222 article 79 \
\(the Naval Discipline Act, 10 August 1860 Article )Tj
T*
(24, uses the words \221conduct unbecoming the character of an Officer\222\
\))Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Appeal from Philip drunk to Philip sober.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Valerius Maximus \221Facta ac Dicta Memorabilia\222 \(c. A.D. 32\) 6, 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Are we downhearted? No!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Expression much used by British soldiers in World War I, probably echoin\
g Joseph Chamberlain.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( A was an apple-pie;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( B bit it;)Tj
T*
( C cut it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(John Eachard \221Some Observations\222 \(1671\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( A bayonet is a weapon with a worker at each end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(British pacifist slogan \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( A beast, but a just beast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Describing Dr Temple, Headmaster of Rugby School, 1857-69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Be happy while y\222er leevin,)Tj
T*
( For y\222er a lang time deid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(Scottish motto for a house. \221Notes & Queries\222 7 December 1901, 469\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The best defence against the atom bomb is not to be there when it go\
es off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(Contributor to \221British Army Journal\222, in \221Observer\222 20 Febr\
uary 1949)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Better red than dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(Slogan of nuclear disarmament campaigners, late 1950s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Bigamy is having one husband too many. Monogamy is the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(In Erica Jong \221Fear of Flying\222 \(1973\) ch. 1 \(epigraph\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( A bigger bang for a buck.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(Description of Charles E. Wilson\222s defence policy, in \221Newsweek\222\
22 March 1954)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Black is beautiful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(Slogan of American civil rights campaigners in the mid-1960s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( Burn, baby, burn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(Black extremist slogan used in Los Angeles riots, August 1965)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( But at the coming of the King of Heaven)Tj
T*
( All\222s set at six and seven:)Tj
T*
( We wallow in our sin.)Tj
T*
( Christ cannot find a chamber in the inn.)Tj
T*
( We entertain Him always like a stranger,)Tj
T*
( And as at first still lodge Him in the manger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(From Christ Church MS)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( A camel is a horse designed by a committee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(In \221Financial Times\222 31 January 1976, though probably of earlier o\
rigin)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Can\222t act. Slightly bald. Also dances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(Studio official\222s comment on Fred Astaire, in Bob Thomas \221Astaire\222\
\(1985\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( Careless talk costs lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(World War II security slogan \(popularly invented in the form \221carele\
ss lives cost talk\222\))Tj
ET
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( The children in Holland take pleasure in making)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What the children in England take pleasure in breaking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(Nursery Rhyme)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( Collapse of Stout Party.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(Summary of the standard d\350nouement in Victorian humour, as exemplifie\
d by Punch, in R. Pearsall \221Collapse )Tj
T*
(of Stout Party\222 \(1975\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.50456 Tm
( A Company for carrying on an undertaking of Great Advantage, but no \
one to know what it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.67047 Tm
(The South Sea Company Prospectus \(1711\), in Cowles \221The Great Swind\
le\222 \(1963\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.75456 Tm
( Conduct...to the prejudice of good order and military discipline.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.92047 Tm
(Army Act, 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.00456 Tm
( Coughs and sneezes spread diseases. Trap the germs in your handkerch\
ief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.17047 Tm
(World War II health slogan \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.25456 Tm
( [Death is] nature\222s way of telling you to slow down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.42047 Tm
(\221Newsweek\222 25 April 1960 p. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.50456 Tm
( Defence, not defiance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(Motto of the Volunteers Movement, 1859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.75456 Tm
( Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(Instruction on punched cards, found in this form in the 1950s and in dif\
fering forms from the 1930s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Don\222t die of ignorance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(Slogan used in the British health awareness campaign against AIDS, 1987)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( Early one morning, just as the sun was rising,)Tj
T*
( I heard a maid sing in the valley below:)Tj
T*
( \221Oh, don\222t deceive me; Oh, never leave me!)Tj
T*
( How could you use a poor maiden so?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221Early One Morning\222 \(traditional song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.50456 Tm
( Earned a precarious living by taking in one another\222s washing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.67047 Tm
(Attributed to Mark Twain by William Morris, in \221The Commonweal\222 6 \
August 1887)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.75456 Tm
( The eternal triangle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.92047 Tm
(Book review title in \221Daily Chronicle\222 5 December 1907)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.00456 Tm
( Even your closest friends won\222t tell you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.17047 Tm
(US advertisement for Listerine mouthwash, 1920s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.25456 Tm
( Every country has its own constitution; ours is absolutism moderated\
by assassination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.42047 Tm
(Georg Herbert, Count M\374nster, quoting \221an intelligent Russian\222,\
in \221Political Sketches of the State of Europe, )Tj
T*
(1814-1867\222 \(1868\) 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.50456 Tm
( Everyman, I will go with thee, and be thy guide.)Tj
T*
( In thy most need to go by thy side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.67047 Tm
(\221Everyman\222 \(c.1509-19\) l. 522 \(lines spoken by Knowledge\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.75456 Tm
( Every picture tells a story.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(Advertisement for Doan\222s Backache Kidney Pills, early 1900s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.00456 Tm
( Expletive deleted.)Tj
ET
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(\221Submission of Recorded Presidential Conversations to the Committee o\
n the Judiciary of the House of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Representatives by President Richard M. Nixon\222 30 April 1974, appendi\
x 1, p. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Faster than a speeding bullet! More powerful than a locomotive! Able\
to leap tall buildings at a )Tj
T*
(single bound! Look! Up in the sky! It\222s a bird! It\222s a plane! It\222\
s Superman! Yes, it\222s Superman! )Tj
T*
(Strange visitor from another planet, who came to earth with powers and a\
bilities far beyond those )Tj
T*
(of mortal men. Superman! Who can change the course of mighty rivers, ben\
d steel with his bare )Tj
T*
(hands, and who\227disguised as Clark Kent, mild-mannered reporter for a \
great metropolitan )Tj
T*
(newspaper\227fights a never ending battle for truth, justice and the Ame\
rican way!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Preamble to \221Superman\222, US radio show, 1940 onwards)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( Father of his Country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Description of George Washington, in Francis Bailey \221Nordamericanisch\
e Kalender\222 \(1779\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Frankie and Albert were lovers, O Lordy, how they could love.)Tj
T*
( Swore to be true to each other, true as the stars above;)Tj
T*
( He was her man, but he done her wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Frankie and Albert\222 in John Huston \221Frankie and Johnny\222 \(1\
930\) p. 95 \(St Louis ballad later better known as )Tj
T*
(\221Frankie and Johnny\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.00456 Tm
( The fault is great in man or woman)Tj
T*
( Who steals a goose from off a common;)Tj
T*
( But what can plead that man\222s excuse)Tj
T*
( Who steals a common from a goose?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(In \221The Tickler Magazine\222 1 February 1821)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.25456 Tm
( The following is a copy of Orders issued by the German Emperor on Au\
gust 19th: \221It is my )Tj
T*
(Royal and Imperial command that you concentrate your energies for the im\
mediate present upon )Tj
T*
(one single purpose, and that is that you address all your skill and all \
the valour of my soldiers to )Tj
T*
(exterminate first, the treacherous English, walk over General French\222\
s contemptible little army....\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(Annexe to B.E.F. [British Expeditionary Force] Routine Orders of 24 Sept\
ember 1914, in Arthur Ponsonby )Tj
T*
(\221Falsehood in Wartime\222 \(1928\) ch. 10 \(although often attributed\
to Kaiser Wilhelm II, this was most probably )Tj
T*
(fabricated by the British\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.50456 Tm
( From ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggety beasties)Tj
T*
( And things that go bump in the night,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(Cornish prayer)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( Full of Eastern promise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(Advertising slogan for Fry\222s Turkish Delight, 1950s onwards)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( A gentleman haranguing on the perfection of our law, and that it was\
equally open to the poor )Tj
T*
(and the rich, was answered by another, \221So is the London Tavern\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Paine\222s Jests...\222 \(1794\) no. 23; also attributed to John\
Horne Tooke \(1736-1812\) in W. Hazlitt \221The )Tj
T*
(Spirit of the Age\222 \(1825\) \221Mr Horne Tooke\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( God be in my head,)Tj
T*
( And in my understanding;)Tj
ET
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( God be in my eyes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And in my looking;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( God be in my mouth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And in my speaking;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( God be in my heart,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And in my thinking;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( God be at my end,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And at my departing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 599.92047 Tm
(\221Sarum Missal\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 579.00456 Tm
( God gave Noah the rainbow sign,)Tj
T*
( No more water, the fire next time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.17047 Tm
(\221Home in that Rock\222 \(Negro spiritual\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 524.25456 Tm
( God is not dead but alive and working on a much less ambitious proje\
ct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.42047 Tm
(Graffito quoted in \221Guardian\222 26 November 1975)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.50456 Tm
( Gotcha!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(Headline on the sinking of the General Belgrano, in \221Sun\222 4 May 19\
82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.75456 Tm
( Great Chatham with his sabre drawn)Tj
T*
( Stood waiting for Sir Richard Strachan;)Tj
T*
( Sir Richard, longing to be at \222em,)Tj
T*
( Stood waiting for the Earl of Chatham.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(\221At Walcheren, 1809\222; attributed to Joseph Jekyll \(1753-1837\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( Greensleeves was all my joy,)Tj
T*
( Greensleeves was my delight,)Tj
T*
( Greensleeves was my heart of gold,)Tj
T*
( And who but Lady Greensleeves?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(\221A new Courtly Sonnet of the Lady Greensleeves, to the new tune of \223\
Greensleeves\222\221, from \221A Handful of )Tj
T*
(Pleasant Delites\222 \(1584\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 254.25456 Tm
( Happy is that city which in time of peace thinks of war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.42047 Tm
(Inscription found in the armoury of Venice, in Robert Burton \221The Ana\
tomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, )Tj
T*
(sect. 3, member 6.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.50456 Tm
( Hark the herald angels sing)Tj
T*
( Mrs Simpson\222s pinched our king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(1936 children\222s rhyme quoted in letter from Clement Attlee, 26 Decemb\
er 1938, in Kenneth Harris )Tj
T*
(\221Attlee\222 \(1982\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Have you heard? The Prime Minister has resigned and Northcliffe has \
sent for the King.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(Joke circulating in 1919, on Lord Northcliffe succeeding Lloyd George as\
Prime Minister, in Hamilton Fyfe )Tj
T*
(\221Northcliffe, an Intimate Biography\222 \(1930\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( Here lies a poor woman who always was tired,)Tj
T*
( For she lived in a place where help wasn\222t hired.)Tj
T*
( Her last words on earth were, Dear friends I am going)Tj
ET
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( Where washing ain\222t done nor sweeping nor sewing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And everything there is exact to my wishes,)Tj
T*
( For there they don\222t eat and there\222s no washing of dishes...)Tj
T*
( Don\222t mourn for me now, don\222t mourn for me never,)Tj
T*
( For I\222m going to do nothing for ever and ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(Epitaph in Bushey churchyard, before 1860, destroyed by 1916, \221Specta\
tor\222 2 September 1922, \221Letters to the )Tj
T*
(Editor\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 629.25456 Tm
( Here lies a valiant warrior)Tj
T*
( Who never drew a sword;)Tj
T*
( Here lies a noble courtier)Tj
T*
( Who never kept his word;)Tj
T*
( Here lies the Earl of Leicester)Tj
T*
( Who governed the estates)Tj
T*
( Whom the earth could never living love,)Tj
T*
( And the just heaven now hates.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(Attributed to Ben Jonson in Tissington \221Collection of Epitaphs\222 \(\
1857\) p.377)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( Here lies Fred,)Tj
T*
( Who was alive and is dead:)Tj
T*
( Had it been his father,)Tj
T*
( I had much rather;)Tj
T*
( Had it been his brother,)Tj
T*
( Still better than another;)Tj
T*
( Had it been his sister,)Tj
T*
( No one would have missed her;)Tj
T*
( Had it been the whole generation,)Tj
T*
( Still better for the nation:)Tj
T*
( But since \222tis only Fred,)Tj
T*
( Who was alive and is dead,\227)Tj
T*
( There\222s no more to be said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.67047 Tm
(In Horace Walpole \221Memoirs of George II\222 \(1847\) vol. 1, p. 436)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.75456 Tm
( Here\222s tae us; wha\222s like us?)Tj
T*
( Gey few, and they\222re a\222 deid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.92047 Tm
(Scottish Toast, probably of nineteenth-century origin. The first line ap\
pears in Crosland \221The Unspeakable )Tj
T*
(Scot\222 \(1902\) p. 24n; various versions of the second line are curren\
t.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.00456 Tm
( He talked shop like a tenth muse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(Referring to Gladstone\222s Budget speeches, in G. W. E. Russell \221Col\
lections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 107.25456 Tm
( He tickles this age that can)Tj
T*
( Call Tullia\222s ape a marmasyte)Tj
T*
( And Leda\222s goose a swan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.42047 Tm
(\221Fara diddle dyno\222 from Thomas Weelkes \221Airs or Fantastic Spiri\
ts\222 \(1608\). N. Ault \221Elizabethan Lyrics\222)Tj
ET
EMC
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Hierusalem, my happy home)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When shall I come to thee?)Tj
T*
( When shall my sorrows have an end,)Tj
T*
( Thy joys when shall I see?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Hierusalem\222. \221Songs of Praise Discussed\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( His foe was folly and his weapon wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Inscription on the memorial to W. S. Gilbert, Victoria Embankment, Londo\
n, 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( \221How different, how very different from the home life of our own \
dear Queen!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Comment from a middle-aged British matron at a performance of Cleopatra \
by Sarah Bernhardt, in Irvin S. )Tj
T*
(Cobb \221A Laugh a Day\222 \(the story probably apocryphal\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( I can not eat but little meat,)Tj
T*
( My stomach is not good:)Tj
T*
( But sure I think, that I can drink)Tj
T*
( With him that wears a hood.)Tj
T*
( Though I go bare, take ye no care,)Tj
T*
( I am nothing acold:)Tj
T*
( I stuff my skin, so full within,)Tj
T*
( Of jolly good ale and old,)Tj
T*
( Back and side go bare, go bare,)Tj
T*
( Both foot and hand go cold:)Tj
T*
( But belly God send thee good ale enough,)Tj
T*
( Whether it be new or old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Gammer Gurton\222s Needle\222 \(performed 1566, printed 1575\) act 2\
, song; the play attributed to William )Tj
T*
(Stevenson \(c.1530-75\) and also to John Still \(1543-1608\), the song b\
eing possibly of earlier origin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 324.00456 Tm
( I don\222t like the family Stein!)Tj
T*
( There is Gert, there is Ep, there is Ein.)Tj
T*
( Gert\222s writings are punk,)Tj
T*
( Ep\222s statues are junk,)Tj
T*
( Nor can anyone understand Ein.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(Rhyme current in the USA in the 1920s, in R. Graves and A. Hodge \221The\
Long Weekend\222 \(1940\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.25456 Tm
( I feel no pain dear mother now)Tj
T*
( But oh, I am so dry!)Tj
T*
( O take me to a brewery)Tj
T*
( And leave me there to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(Parody of \221The Collier\222s Dying Child\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( If God were to take one or other of us, I should go and live in Pari\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(In Samuel Butler \221Notebooks\222 \(ed. G. Keynes and B. Hill, 1951\) p\
. 193)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.75456 Tm
( If he only knew a little of law, he would know a little of everythin\
g.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.92047 Tm
(Said of Lord Brougham, in Ralph Waldo Emerson \221Quotation and Original\
ity\222 \(1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 51.00456 Tm
( If it moves, salute it; if it doesn\222t move, pick it up; and if yo\
u can\222t pick it up, paint it.)Tj
ET
EMC
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(1940s saying, in Paul Dickson \221The Official Rules\222 \(1978\) p. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I\222ll sing you twelve O.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Green grow the rushes O.)Tj
T*
( What is your twelve O?)Tj
T*
( Twelve for the twelve apostles,)Tj
T*
( Eleven for the eleven who went to heaven,)Tj
T*
( Ten for the ten commandments,)Tj
T*
( Nine for the nine bright shiners,)Tj
T*
( Eight for the eight bold rangers,)Tj
T*
( Seven for the seven stars in the sky,)Tj
T*
( Six for the six proud walkers,)Tj
T*
( Five for the symbol at your door,)Tj
T*
( Four for the Gospel makers,)Tj
T*
( Three for the rivals,)Tj
T*
( Two, two, the lily-white boys,)Tj
T*
( Clothed all in green O,)Tj
T*
( One is one and all alone)Tj
T*
( And ever more shall be so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221The Dilly Song\222, in G. Grigson \221The Faber Book of Popular Vers\
e\222. Revd S. Baring-Gould and Revd H. )Tj
T*
(Fleetwood Sheppard \221Songs and Ballads of the West\222 \(1891\) no. 78\
for a variant version)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.50456 Tm
( I\222m armed with more than complete steel\227The justice of my quar\
rel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(\221Lust\222s Dominion\222 \(1657\) act 4, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( I met wid Napper Tandy, and he took me by the hand,)Tj
T*
( And he said, \221How\222s poor ould Ireland, and how does she stand?\
\222)Tj
T*
( She\222s the most disthressful country that iver yet was seen,)Tj
T*
( For they\222re hangin\222 men an\222 women there for the wearin\222 \
o\222 the Green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221The Wearin\222 o\222 the Green\222 \(famous street ballad, later add\
ed to by Boucicault\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( I saw my lady weep,)Tj
T*
( And Sorrow proud to be exalted so)Tj
T*
( In those fair eyes where all perfections keep.)Tj
T*
( Her face was full of woe;)Tj
T*
( But such a woe, believe me, as wins more hearts,)Tj
T*
( Than Mirth can do with her enticing parts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(Lute song set by John Dowland, in \221Oxford Book of 16th Century Verse\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.25456 Tm
( It became necessary to destroy the town to save it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.42047 Tm
(Statement by unidentified US Army Major, referring to Ben Tre in Vietnam\
, in Associated Press Report, )Tj
T*
(\221New York Times\222 8 February 1968)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.50456 Tm
( It is positively dangerous to sit to Sargent. It\222s taking your fa\
ce in your hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 72.67047 Tm
(Referring to the painter, John Singer Sargent, in W. Graham Robertson \221\
Time Was\222 \(1931\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 51.75456 Tm
( It\222s finger lickin\222 good.)Tj
ET
EMC
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W* n
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221American Restaurant Magazine\222 June 1958, referring to Kentucky Fr\
ied Chicken)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( It\222s that man again...! At the head of a cavalcade of seven black\
motor cars Hitler swept out of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(his Berlin Chancellery last night on a mystery journey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Headline in \221Daily Express\222 2 May 1939 \(the acronym ITMA became t\
he title of a BBC radio show, from )Tj
T*
(September 1939\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( It will play in Peoria.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 9 June 1973 \(catch-phrase of the Nixon admini\
stration\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.75456 Tm
( Jaques Brel is alive and well and living in Paris.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(Title of musical entertainment \(1968-72\), which spawned numerous imita\
tions of the phrase \221alive and well )Tj
T*
(and living in...\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.00456 Tm
( Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.17047 Tm
(Advertising copy for \221Jaws 2\222 \(1978 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.25456 Tm
( The King over the Water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.42047 Tm
(Jacobite toast \(18th century\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 502.50456 Tm
( King\222s Moll Reno\222d in Wolsey\222s Home Town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(American newspaper headline referring to Wallis Simpson\222s divorce pro\
ceedings in Ipswich, in Frances )Tj
T*
(Donaldson \221Edward VIII\222 \(1974\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.75456 Tm
( LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.92047 Tm
(Anti-Vietnam marching slogan, in Jacquin Sanders \221The Draft and the V\
ietnam War\222 \(1966\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.00456 Tm
( Let\222s get out of these wet clothes and into a dry Martini.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(Line coined in 1920s by press agent for Robert Benchley \(and often attr\
ibuted to Benchley\), in Howard )Tj
T*
(Teichmann \221Smart Alec\222 \(1976\) ch. 9; subsequently adopted in a s\
imilar form, by Mae West in Every Day\222s a )Tj
T*
(Holiday \(1937 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( Liberty is always unfinished business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.42047 Tm
(Title of 36th Annual Report of the American Civil Liberties Union, 1 Jul\
y 1955-30 June 1956)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.50456 Tm
( Life is a sexually transmitted disease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.67047 Tm
(Graffiti found on the London Underground, in D. J. Enright \(ed.\) \221\
Faber Book of Fevers and Frets\222 \(1989\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 273.75456 Tm
( Like a fine old English gentleman,)Tj
T*
( All of the olden time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.92047 Tm
(\221The Fine Old English Gentleman\222 \(traditional song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.00456 Tm
( Like Caesar\222s wife, all things to all men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.17047 Tm
(Impartiality, as described by a newly-elected mayor, in G. W. E. Russell\
\221Collections and )Tj
T*
(Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( Lizzie Borden took an axe)Tj
T*
( And gave her mother forty whacks;)Tj
T*
( When she saw what she had done)Tj
T*
( She gave her father forty-one!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(Popular rhyme in circulation after the acquittal of Lizzie Borden from t\
he charge of murdering her father and )Tj
T*
(stepmother on 4 August 1892 in Fall River, Massachusetts)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Lloyd George knows my father,)Tj
T*
( My father knows Lloyd George.)Tj
ET
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W* n
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Comic song consisting of these two lines sung to the tune of Onward, Chr\
istian Soldiers, possibly by Tommy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Rhys Roberts \(1910-75\); sometimes with \221knew\222 substituted for \221\
knows\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Lousy but loyal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 703.42047 Tm
(London East End slogan at George V\222s Jubilee \(1935\), in Nigel Rees \
\221Slogans\222 \(1982\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 682.50456 Tm
( Love me little, love me long,)Tj
T*
( Is the burden of my song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(\221Love me little, love me long\222 \(1569-70\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.75456 Tm
( Mademoiselle from Armenteers,)Tj
T*
( Hasn\222t been kissed for forty years,)Tj
T*
( Hinky, dinky, parley-voo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(Song of World War I, variously attributed to Edward Rowland and to Harry\
Carlton)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( Child: Mamma, are Tories born wicked, or do they grow wicked afterw\
ards? )Tj
T*
( Mother: They are born wicked, and grow worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 1\
0)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( The man you love to hate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(Billing for Erich von Stroheim in the film \221The Heart of Humanity\222\
\(1918\), in Peter Noble \221Hollywood )Tj
T*
(Scapegoat\222 \(1950\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.50456 Tm
( Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,)Tj
T*
( The bed be blest that I lie on.)Tj
T*
( Four angels to my bed,)Tj
T*
( Four angels round my head,)Tj
T*
( One to watch, and one to pray,)Tj
T*
( And two to bear my soul away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(Thomas Ady \221A Candle in the Dark\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( The ministry of all the talents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(A name given ironically to Grenville\222s coalition of 1806, and also ap\
plied to later coalitions, in G. W. Cooke )Tj
T*
(\221History of Party\222 \(1837\) vol. 3, p. 460)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.00456 Tm
( Miss Buss and Miss Beale)Tj
T*
( Cupid\222s darts do not feel.)Tj
T*
( How different from us,)Tj
T*
( Miss Beale and Miss Buss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(Of the Headmistress of the North London Collegiate School and the Princi\
pal of the Ladies\222 College, )Tj
T*
(Cheltenham, c.1884)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.25456 Tm
( Mother may I go and bathe?)Tj
T*
( Yes, my darling daughter.)Tj
T*
( Hang your clothes on yonder tree,)Tj
T*
( But don\222t go near the water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(In Iona and Peter Opie \221Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes\222 \(195\
1\) p. 314.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.50456 Tm
( Most Gracious Queen, we thee implore)Tj
T*
( To go away and sin no more,)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( But if that effort be too great,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To go away at any rate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Epigram on Queen Caroline,in Lord Colchester\222s Diary, 15 November 182\
0)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Multiplication is vexation,)Tj
T*
( Division is as bad;)Tj
T*
( The Rule of three doth puzzle me,)Tj
T*
( And Practice drives me mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Elizabethan MS. dated 1570)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( My Love in her attire doth show her wit,)Tj
T*
( It doth so well become her:)Tj
T*
( For every season she hath dressings fit,)Tj
T*
( For winter, spring, and summer.)Tj
T*
( No beauty she doth miss,)Tj
T*
( When all her robes are on;)Tj
T*
( But beauty\222s self she is,)Tj
T*
( When all her robes are gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(Madrigal)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( My name is George Nathaniel Curzon,)Tj
T*
( I am a most superior person.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Masque of Balliol\222 composed by and current among members of B\
alliol College in the late 1870\222s, in W. )Tj
T*
(G. Hiscock \221The Balliol Rhymes\222 \(1939\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( My face is pink, my hair is sleek,)Tj
T*
( I dine at Blenheim once a week.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(A later addition to \221The Masque of Balliol\222 in W. G. Hiscock \221T\
he Balliol Rhymes\222 \(1939\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( My sledge and anvil lie declined)Tj
T*
( My bellows too have lost their wind)Tj
T*
( My fire\222s extinct, my forge decayed,)Tj
T*
( And in the dust my vice is laid)Tj
T*
( My coals are spent, my iron\222s gone)Tj
T*
( My nails are drove, my work is done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(Epitaph in Nettlebed churchyard on William Strange, d. 6 June 1746, and \
elsewhere to commemorate other )Tj
T*
(blacksmiths)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( The nature of God is a circle of which the centre is everywhere and \
the circumference is )Tj
T*
(nowhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.67047 Tm
(Said to have been traced to a lost treatise of Empedocles; quoted in the\
\221Roman de la Rose\222, and by S. )Tj
T*
(Bonaventura in \221Itinerarius Mentis in Deum\222 ch. 5 ad fin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( The nearest thing to death in life)Tj
T*
( Is David Patrick Maxwell Fyfe,)Tj
T*
( Though underneath that gloomy shell)Tj
T*
( He does himself extremely well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.92047 Tm
(Rhyme about Sir David Maxwell Fyfe, said to have been current on the Nor\
thern circuit in the late 1930s, in )Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.92047 Tm
(E. Grierson \221Confessions of a Country Magistrate\222 \(1972\) p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( Nil carborundum illegitimi.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(Cod Latin for \221Don\222t let the bastards grind you down\222, in use d\
uring World War II, though possibly of earlier )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(origin; often occuring as nil carborundum or illegitimi non carborundum)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 681.25456 Tm
( The noise, my dear! And the people!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.42047 Tm
(Of the retreat from Dunkirk. Rhodes \221Sword of Bone\222 \(1942\) closi\
ng words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.50456 Tm
( No more Latin, no more French,)Tj
T*
( No more sitting on a hard board bench.)Tj
T*
( No more beetles in my tea)Tj
T*
( Making googly eyes at me;)Tj
T*
( No more spiders in my bath)Tj
T*
( Trying hard to make me laugh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.67047 Tm
(Children\222s rhyme for the end of school term, in Iona and Peter Opie \221\
The Lore and Language of )Tj
T*
(Schoolchildren\222 \(1959\) ch. 13; variants include \221No more Latin, \
no more Greek, No more cares to make me )Tj
T*
(squeak\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.75456 Tm
( Nostalgia isn\222t what it used to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.92047 Tm
(Graffito)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 451.00456 Tm
( Not so much a programme, more a way of life!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.17047 Tm
(Title of BBC television series, 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.25456 Tm
( Now I lay me down to sleep;)Tj
T*
( I pray the Lord my soul to keep.)Tj
T*
( If I should die before I wake,)Tj
T*
( I pray the Lord my soul to take.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.42047 Tm
(First printed in a late edition of the \221New England Primer\222 \(1781\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.50456 Tm
( O Death, where is thy sting-a-ling-a-ling,)Tj
T*
( O grave, thy victory?)Tj
T*
( The bells of Hell go ting-a-ling-a-ling)Tj
T*
( For you but not for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.67047 Tm
(\221For You But Not For Me\222 \(song from World War I\) in S. Louis Gui\
raud \(ed.\) \221Songs That Won the )Tj
T*
(War\222 \(1930\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.75456 Tm
( O God, if there be a God, save my soul, if I have a soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.92047 Tm
(Prayer of a common soldier before the battle of Blenheim, in \221Notes &\
Queries\222 vol. 173, p. 264; quoted in )Tj
T*
(John Henry Newman \221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.00456 Tm
( An old song made by an aged old pate,)Tj
T*
( Of an old worshipful gentleman who had a great estate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Courtier\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.25456 Tm
( Once again we stop the mighty roar of London\222s traffic and from t\
he great crowds we bring )Tj
T*
(you some of the interesting people who have come by land, sea and air to\
be in town tonight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.42047 Tm
(\221In Town Tonight\222 \(BBC radio series, 1933-60\) introductory words\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.50456 Tm
( One Cartwright brought a Slave from Russia, and would scourge him, f\
or which he was )Tj
T*
(questioned: and it was resolved, That England was too pure an Air for Sl\
aves to breathe in.)Tj
ET
EMC
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 752.67047 Tm
(\221In the 11th of Elizabeth\222 \(17 November 1568-16 November 1569\), \
in Rushworth \221Historical )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Collections\222 \(1680-1722\) vol. 2, p. 468.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.75456 Tm
( On Waterloo\222s ensanguined plain)Tj
T*
( Full many a gallant man was slain,)Tj
T*
( But none, by sabre or by shot,)Tj
T*
( Fell half so flat as Walter Scott.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.92047 Tm
(On Scott\222s \221Field of Waterloo\222 \(1815\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.00456 Tm
( A place within the meaning of the Act.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.17047 Tm
(\221Betting Act\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.25456 Tm
( Please do not shoot the pianist. He is doing his best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.42047 Tm
(Printed notice, in Oscar Wilde \221Impressions of America\222 \221Leadvi\
lle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.50456 Tm
( Please to remember the Fifth of November,)Tj
T*
( Gunpowder Treason and Plot.)Tj
T*
( We know no reason why gunpowder treason)Tj
T*
( Should ever be forgot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.67047 Tm
(Traditional rhyme from the 17th century, about the Gunpowder Plot \(1605\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.75456 Tm
( Power to the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.92047 Tm
(Slogan of the Black Panther movement, c. 1968 onwards, in \221Black Pant\
her\222 14 September 1968)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.00456 Tm
( Puella Rigensis ridebat)Tj
T*
( Quam tigris in tergo vehebat;)Tj
T*
( Externa profecta,)Tj
T*
( Interna revecta,)Tj
T*
( Risusque cum tigre manebat.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There was a young lady of Riga)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who went for a ride on a tiger;)Tj
T*
( They returned from the ride)Tj
T*
( With the lady inside,)Tj
T*
( And a smile on the face of the tiger.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.42047 Tm
(In R. L. Green \(ed.\) \221A Century of Humorous Verse\222 \(1959\) p. \
285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.50456 Tm
( The [or A] quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.67047 Tm
(Used by keyboarders to ensure that all letters of the alphabet are funct\
ioning: see R. Hunter Middleton\222s )Tj
T*
(introduction to \221The Quick Brown Fox\222 \(1945\) by Richard H. Templ\
eton Jr.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.75456 Tm
( The rabbit has a charming face:)Tj
T*
( Its private life is a disgrace.)Tj
T*
( I really dare not name to you)Tj
T*
( The awful things that rabbits do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.92047 Tm
(\221The Rabbit\222 in \221The Week-End Book\222 \(1925\) p. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.00456 Tm
( Raise the stone, and there thou shalt find me, cleave the wood and t\
here am I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.17047 Tm
(Oxyrhynchus Papyri, in B. P. Grenfell and A. S. Hunt \(eds.\) \221Sayin\
gs of Our Lord\222 \(1897\) Logion 5, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.25456 Tm
( Says Tweed to Till\227)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( \221What gars ye rin sae still?\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Says Till to Tweed\227)Tj
T*
( \221Though ye rin with speed)Tj
T*
( And I rin slaw,)Tj
T*
( For ae man that ye droon)Tj
T*
( I droon twa\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Two Rivers\222 in \221Oxford Book of English Verse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( See the happy moron,)Tj
T*
( He doesn\222t give a damn,)Tj
T*
( I wish I were a moron,)Tj
T*
( My God! perhaps I am!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Eugenics Review\222 July 1929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Seven wealthy towns contend for HOMER dead)Tj
T*
( Through which the living HOMER begged his bread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(Epilogue to \221Aesop at Tunbridge; or, a Few Selected Fables in Verse\222\
By No Person of Quality \(1698\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( She was poor but she was honest)Tj
T*
( Victim of a rich man\222s game.)Tj
T*
( First he loved her, than he left her,)Tj
T*
( And she lost her maiden name.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( See her on the bridge at midnight,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Saying \221Farewell, blighted love.\222)Tj
T*
( Then a scream, a splash and goodness,)Tj
T*
( What is she a-doin\222 of?)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( It\222s the same the whole world over,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It\222s the poor wot gets the blame,)Tj
T*
( It\222s the rich wot gets the gravy.)Tj
T*
( Ain\222t it all a bleedin shame?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(\221She was Poor but she was Honest\222 \(sung by British soldiers in Wo\
rld War I\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.50456 Tm
( Shome mishtake, shurely?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(Editorial catch-phrase in \221Private Eye\222, 1980s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.75456 Tm
( Since first I saw your face, I resolved to honour and renown ye;)Tj
T*
( If now I be disdained, I wish my heart had never known ye.)Tj
T*
( What? I that loved and you that liked, shall we begin to wrangle?)Tj
T*
( No, no, no, my heart is fast, and cannot disentangle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(In \221Music of Sundry Kinds\222 \(1607\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of men that\
the defences of peace must )Tj
T*
(be constructed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221Constitution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultu\
ral Organisation\222 \(1945\), in \221UK )Tj
T*
(Parliamentary Papers 1945-6\222 vol. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( The singer not the song.)Tj
ET
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(From a West Indian calypso and adopted as the title of a novel \(1959\) \
by Audrey Erskine Lindop)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Spheres of influence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Sir Edward Hertslet \221Map of Africa by Treaty\222 3rd ed., 868.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Snap! Crackle! Pop!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(Slogan for Kellogg\222s Rice Krispies, from c. 1928)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( So farewell then....)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(Standard opening for obituary poems by \221E. J. Thribb\222 in \221Priva\
te Eye\222 from 1970s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( So much chewing gum for the eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(Small boy\222s definition of certain television programmes, 1955, in Jam\
es Beasley Simpson \221Best Quotes of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\22150, \22155, \22156\222 \(1957\) p. 233)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( Sticks nix hick pix.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(Frontpage headline on lack of interest in farm dramas among rural popula\
tions, in \221Variety\222 17 July 1935)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Sumer is icumen in,)Tj
T*
( Lhude sing cuccu!)Tj
T*
( Groweth sed, and bloweth med,)Tj
T*
( And springth the wude nu.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Cuckoo Song\222 c.1250, sung annually at Reading Abbey gateway and f\
irst recorded by John Fornset, a monk )Tj
T*
(of Reading Abbey)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( The Sun himself cannot forget)Tj
T*
( His fellow traveller.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(\221Wit\222s Recreations\222 \(1640\) epigrams no. 146 \(on Sir Francis \
Drake\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( That\222ll do nicely, sir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(Advertisement for American Express credit card, 1970s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Therefore let us sing and dance a galliard,)Tj
T*
( To the remembrance of the mallard:)Tj
T*
( And as the mallard dives in pool,)Tj
T*
( Let us dabble, dive, and duck in Bowl.)Tj
T*
( Oh! by the blood of King Edward,)Tj
T*
( Oh! by the blood of King Edward,)Tj
T*
( It was a swapping, swapping mallard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(All Souls College, Oxford, song \(perhaps of Tudor date\) in \221The Oxf\
ord Sausage\222 \(1764\) p. 83. Manuscript )Tj
T*
(sources suggest the song was first printed in 1752; Hearne\222s Diaries \
vol. 17, p. 46, May 1708 \(see Collections, )Tj
T*
(ed. C. E. Doble, ii, O.H.S. vii, 1886, p. 111\) give the form \221duck a\
nd dive\222 in the fourth line)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( There is a lady sweet and kind,)Tj
T*
( Was never face so pleased my mind;)Tj
T*
( I did but see her passing by,)Tj
T*
( And yet I love her till I die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.67047 Tm
(Found on the reverse of leaf 53 of \221Popish Kingdome or reigne of Anti\
christ\222, in Latin verse by Thomas )Tj
T*
(Naogeorgus, and Englished by Barnabe Googel; printed in 1570. \221Notes \
& Queries\222 9th series, vol. 10, p. 427)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world; and th\
at is an idea whose time has )Tj
T*
(come.)Tj
ET
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(\221Nation\222 15 April 1943.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( There is so much good in the worst of us,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And so much bad in the best of us,)Tj
T*
( That it hardly becomes any of us)Tj
T*
( To talk about the rest of us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(Attributed, among others, to Edward Wallis Hoch \(1849-1945\) on the gro\
unds of it having appeared in his )Tj
T*
(Kansas publication, the Marion Record, though in fact disclaimed by him;\
\221behooves\222 sometimes substituted )Tj
T*
(for \221becomes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 612.25456 Tm
( There\222s nae luck about the house,)Tj
T*
( There\222s nae luck at a\222,)Tj
T*
( There\222s nae luck about the house)Tj
T*
( When our gudeman\222s awa\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.42047 Tm
(\221The Mariner\222s Wife\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.50456 Tm
( There was a faith-healer of Deal)Tj
T*
( Who said, \221Although pain isn\222t real,)Tj
T*
( If I sit on a pin)Tj
T*
( And it punctures my skin,)Tj
T*
( I dislike what I fancy I feel.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.67047 Tm
(\221The Week-End Book\222 \(1925\) p. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.75456 Tm
( They are a form of statuary which no careful father would wish his d\
aughter, or no discerning )Tj
T*
(young man his fianc\350e, to see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.92047 Tm
(\221Evening Standard\222 19 June 1908, commenting on Jacob Epstein\222s \
sculptures for the former BMA building in )Tj
T*
(the Strand, London)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.00456 Tm
( They come as a boon and a blessing to men,)Tj
T*
( The Pickwick, the Owl, and the Waverley pen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.17047 Tm
(Advertisement by MacNiven and H. Cameron Ltd., c. 1920; almost cetainly \
inspired by J. C. Prince \221The Pen )Tj
T*
(and the Press\222 in E. W. Cole \(ed.\) \221The Thousand Best Poems in \
the World\222 \(1891\): It came as a boon and a )Tj
T*
(blessing to men, The peaceful, the pure, the victorious Pen!)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.25456 Tm
( Thirty days hath September,)Tj
T*
( April, June, and November;)Tj
T*
( All the rest have thirty-one,)Tj
T*
( Excepting February alone,)Tj
T*
( And that has twenty-eight days clear)Tj
T*
( And twenty-nine in each leap year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.42047 Tm
(Stevins MS. \(c.1555\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.50456 Tm
( [This film] is so cryptic as to be almost meaningless. If there is a\
meaning, it is doubtless )Tj
T*
(objectionable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.67047 Tm
(The British Board of Film Censors, banning Jean Cocteau\222s film \221Th\
e Seashell and the Clergyman\222 \(1929\), in )Tj
T*
(J. C. Robertson \221Hidden Cinema\222 \(1989\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.75456 Tm
( This is a rotten argument, but it should be good enough for their lo\
rdships on a hot summer )Tj
T*
(afternoon.)Tj
ET
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(Annotation to a ministerial brief, said to have been read inadvertently \
in the House of Lords, in Lord Home )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221The Way the Wind Blows\222 \(1976\) p. 204)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Though I yield to no one in my admiration for Mr Coolidge, I do wish\
he did not look as if he )Tj
T*
(had been weaned on a pickle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Anonymous remark, in Alice Roosevelt Longworth \221Crowded Hours\222 \(1\
933\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Thought shall be the harder, heart the keener, courage the greater, \
as our might lessens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(\221The Battle of Maldon\222 \(translated from Anglo-Saxon by R. K. Gord\
on, 1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.75456 Tm
( To err is human but to really foul things up requires a computer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(\221Farmers\222 Almanac for 1978\222 \(1977\) \221Capsules of Wisdom\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.00456 Tm
( Too small to live in and too large to hang on a watch-chain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(Attributed to a guest, describing Chiswick House, in Cecil Roberts \221A\
nd so to Bath\222 \(1940\) ch. 4 \221By Way of )Tj
T*
(Chiswick\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.25456 Tm
( Two men wrote a lexicon, Liddell and Scott;)Tj
T*
( Some parts were clever, but some parts were not.)Tj
T*
( Hear, all ye learned, and read me this riddle,)Tj
T*
( How the wrong part wrote Scott, and the right part wrote Liddell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(On Henry Liddell \(1811-98\) and Robert Scott \(1811-87\), co-authors of\
the Greek Lexicon \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.50456 Tm
( Wall St. lays an egg.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.67047 Tm
(Crash headline, \221Variety\222 30 October 1929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.75456 Tm
( War will cease when men refuse to fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(Pacifist slogan, from c. 1936 \(often quoted \221Wars will cease...\222\)\
\221Birmingham Gazette\222 21 November 1936, p. )Tj
T*
(3, and \221Peace News \221 15 October 1938, p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( We are the Ovaltineys,)Tj
T*
( Little girls and boys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.17047 Tm
(\221We are the Ovaltineys\222 promotional song for Ovaltine, from c.1935\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.25456 Tm
( The weekend starts here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(Catch-phrase from \221Ready, Steady, Go,\222 British television series, \
c. 1963)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( Weep you no more, sad fountains;)Tj
T*
( What need you flow so fast?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.67047 Tm
(Lute song \(1603\) set by John Dowland, in \221Oxford Book of 16th Centu\
ry Verse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.75456 Tm
( We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created eq\
ual, that they are endowed )Tj
T*
(by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are l\
ife, liberty and the pursuit )Tj
T*
(of happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(The American Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.00456 Tm
( We\222re here)Tj
T*
( Because)Tj
T*
( We\222re here)Tj
T*
( Because)Tj
T*
( We\222re here)Tj
T*
( Because we\222re here.)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(World War I song, to the tune of \221Auld Lang Syne\222, in John Brophy \
and Eric Partridge \221Songs and Slang of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the British Soldier 1914-18\222 \(1930\) p. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( We\222re number two. We try harder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 703.42047 Tm
(Advertising slogan for Avis car rentals)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 682.50456 Tm
( We shall not be moved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 666.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 645.75456 Tm
( We shall not pretend that there is nothing in his long career which \
those who respect and )Tj
T*
(admire him would wish otherwise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(On Edward VII\222s accession to the throne, in \221The Times\222 23 Janu\
ary 1901, leading article)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.00456 Tm
( We shall overcome,)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(Title of song, originating from before the American Civil War, adapted a\
s a Baptist hymn \(\221I\222ll Overcome )Tj
T*
(Some Day\222, 1901\) by C. Albert Tindley; revived in 1946 as a protest \
song by black tobacco workers and in )Tj
T*
(1963 during the black Civil Rights Campaign)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 524.25456 Tm
( Western wind, when will thou blow,)Tj
T*
( The small rain down can rain?)Tj
T*
( Christ, if my love were in my arms)Tj
T*
( And I in my bed again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 454.42047 Tm
(\221Western Wind\222 \(published 1790\) in \221Oxford Book of 16th Centu\
ry Verse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.50456 Tm
( What wee gave, wee have;)Tj
T*
( What wee spent, wee had;)Tj
T*
( What wee kept, wee lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(Epitaph on Edward Courtenay, Earl of Devonshire \(d. 1419\), and his wif\
e, at Tiverton, in Westcote \221A View )Tj
T*
(of Devonshire in 1630\222; variants appear in Risdon \221Survey of the C\
ounty of Devon\222, and Edmund Spenser )Tj
T*
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \(1579\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( When Israel was in Egypt land,)Tj
T*
( Let my people go,)Tj
T*
( Oppressed so hard they could not stand,)Tj
T*
( Let my people go.)Tj
T*
( Go down, Moses,)Tj
T*
( Way-down in Egypt land,)Tj
T*
( Tell old Pharaoh)Tj
T*
( To let my people go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Go Down, Moses\222 \(Negro spiritual\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( When I was a little boy, I had but a little wit,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis a long time ago, and I have no more yet;)Tj
T*
( Nor ever ever shall, until that I die,)Tj
T*
( For the longer I live the more fool am I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Wit and Mirth, an Antidote against Melancholy\222 \(1684\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Where is the man who has the power and skill)Tj
T*
( To stem the torrent of a woman\222s will?)Tj
T*
( For if she will, she will, you may depend on\222t;)Tj
ET
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( And if she won\222t, she won\222t; so there\222s an end on\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(From the Pillar Erected on the Mount in the Dane John Field, Canterbury,\
\221Examiner\222 31 May 1829)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Whilst Adam slept, Eve from his side arose:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Strange his first sleep should be his last repose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Consequence\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Who dares wins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Motto on badge of British Special Air Service regiment, from 1942. J. L.\
Collins \221Elite Forces: the )Tj
T*
(SAS\222 \(1986\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( Whose finger do you want on the trigger?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.92047 Tm
(Headline in \221Daily Mirror\222 21 September 1951)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.00456 Tm
( A willing foe and sea room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(Naval toast in the time of Nelson, in Beckett \221A Few Naval Customs, E\
xpressions, Traditions, and )Tj
T*
(Superstitions\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( Would you like to sin)Tj
T*
( With Elinor Glyn)Tj
T*
( On a tigerskin?)Tj
T*
( Or would you prefer)Tj
T*
( To err)Tj
T*
( With her)Tj
T*
( On some other fur?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(In A. Glyn \221Elinor Glyn\222 \(1955\) bk. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 376.50456 Tm
( Yet, if his majesty our sovereign lord)Tj
T*
( Should of his own accord)Tj
T*
( Friendly himself invite,)Tj
T*
( And say \221I\222ll be your guest tomorrow night\222,)Tj
T*
( How should we stir ourselves, call and command)Tj
T*
( All hands to work!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(From Christ Church MS)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.75456 Tm
( The young Sahib shot divinely, but God was very merciful to the bird\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.00456 Tm
( You pays your money and you takes your choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(From a peepshow rhyme, in V. S. Lean \221Collectanea\222 \(1902-4\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( You should make a point of trying every experience once, excepting i\
ncest and folk-dancing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(Sir Arnold Bax \(1883-1953\), quoting \221a sympathetic Scot\222, in \221\
Farewell My Youth\222 \(1943\) p. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 129.29173 Tm
( 1.68.2 French)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 108.00456 Tm
( \307a ira.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(Refrain of \221Carillon national\222, popular song of the French Revolut\
ion, c.July 1790, translated as \221Things will )Tj
T*
(work out\222 by William Doyle in his \221Oxford History of the French Re\
volution\222 \(1989\) p. 129; the phrase is )Tj
T*
(believed to originate with Benjamin Franklin, who may have used it in 17\
76 when asked for news of the )Tj
T*
(American Revolution)Tj
ET
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( Cet animal est tr\351s m\350chant,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quand on l\222attaque il se d\350fend.)Tj
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( This animal is very bad; when attacked it defends itself.)Tj
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(\221La M\350nagerie\222 by Th\350odore P. K. \(1828\))Tj
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( Chevalier sans peur et sans reproche.)Tj
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T*
( Knight without fear and without blemish.)Tj
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(Description in contemporary chronicles of Pierre Bayard \(1476-1524\))Tj
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( Honi soit qui mal y pense.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( Evil be to him who evil thinks [of it].)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 580.42047 Tm
(Motto of the Order of the Garter, originated by Edward III probably on 2\
3 April of 1348 or 1349)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 559.50456 Tm
( Je suis Marxiste\227tendance Groucho.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( I am a Marxist\227of the Groucho tendency.)Tj
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(Slogan found at Nanterre in Paris, 1968)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Ils ne passeront pas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( They shall not pass.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(Slogan used by the French army at the defence of Verdun in 1916; various\
ly attributed to Marshal P\350tain and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to General Robert Nivelle, and taken up by the Republicans in the Spanis\
h Civil War in the form No pasaran!)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Il y avait un jeune homme de Dijon,)Tj
T*
( Qui n\222avait que peu de religion.)Tj
T*
( Il dit: \221Quant \341 moi,)Tj
T*
( Je d\350teste tous les trois,)Tj
T*
( Le P\351re, et le Fils, et le Pigeon.\222)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There was a young man of Dijon,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who had only a little religion,)Tj
T*
( he said: \221As for me,)Tj
T*
( I detest all the three,)Tj
T*
( The Father, the son, and the pigeon.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Norman Douglas Limerick Book\222 \(1969, first privately printed\
in 1928 as \221Some Limericks\222\) )Tj
T*
(introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( [Riddle:] Je suis le capitaine de vingt-quatre soldats, et sans moi \
Paris serait pris?)Tj
T*
( [Answer:] A.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( [Riddle:] [Literally] I am the captain of twenty-four soldiers, and \
without me Paris would be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(taken?)Tj
T*
( [Answer:] A [i.e. the letter \221A\222])Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(In Hugh Rowley \221Puniana: or thoughts wise and otherwise a new collect\
ion of the best\222 \(1867\) p. 42. The )Tj
T*
(saying \221With twenty-six lead soldiers [the characters of the alphabet\
set up for printing] I can conquer the )Tj
T*
(world\222 may derive from this riddle, but probably arose independently.\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.50456 Tm
( La grande phrase re\347ue, c\222est qu\222il ne faut pas \352tre plu\
s royaliste que le roi. Cette phrase n\222est )Tj
T*
(pas du moment; elle fut invent\350e sous Louis XVI: elle encha\356na les\
mains des fid\351les, pour ne )Tj
ET
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(laisser libre que le bras du bourreau.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The big catch-phrase is that you mustn\222t be more of a royalist th\
an His Royal Highness. This )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(expression is not new; it was coined under the reign of Louis XVI: it ch\
ained up the hands of the )Tj
T*
(loyal, leaving free only the arm of the hangman.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(Chateaubriand \221De La Monarchie selon la Charte\222 vol. 2, ch. 41)Tj
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( Laisser-nous-faire.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( M. Colbert assembla plusieurs Deput\350s de commerce chez lui pour l\
eur demander ce qu\222il )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pourroit faire pour le commerce; le plus raisonnable et le moins flatteu\
r d\222entre eux, lui dit ce seul )Tj
T*
(mot: \221Laissez-nous-faire.\222)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Monsieur Colbert assembled several deputies of commerce at his house\
to ask what could be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(done for commerce; the most rational and the least flattering among them\
answered him in one )Tj
T*
(word: \221Laissez-nous-faire\222 [literally \221Allow us to do [it]\222\
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(In \221Journal Oeconomique\222 Paris, April 1751.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 506.25456 Tm
( L\222amour est aveugle; l\222amiti\350 ferme les yeux.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Love is blind; friendship closes its eyes.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.67047 Tm
(Proverbial saying)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.75456 Tm
( Le monde est plein de fous, et qui n\222en veut pas voir)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Doit se tenir tout seul, et casser son miroir.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The world is full of fools, and he who would not see it should live \
alone and smash his mirror.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(Adaptation from an original form attributed to Claude Le Petit \(1640-65\
\) in \221Discours satiriques\222 \(1686\))Tj
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( Libert\350! \310galit\350! Fraternit\350!)Tj
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T*
( Freedom! Equality! Brotherhood!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(Motto of the French Revolution, but of earlier origin. The Club des Cord\
eliers passed a motion, 30 June 1793, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221que les propri\350taires seront invit\350s,...de faire peindre sur l\
a fa\347ade de leurs maisons, en gros caract\351res, ces )Tj
T*
(mots: Unit\350, indivisibilit\350 de la R\350publique, Libert\350, \310\
galit\350, Fraternit\350 ou la mort that owners should be )Tj
T*
(urged to paint on the front of their houses, in large letters, the words\
: Unity, indivisibility of the Republic, )Tj
T*
(Liberty, Equality, Fraternity or death\222. In \221Journal de Paris\222 \
no. 182 \(from 1795 the words \221ou la mort\222 were )Tj
T*
(dropped from this prescription\).)Tj
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( L\222ordre r\351gne \341 Varsovie.)Tj
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( Order reigns in Warsaw.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(After the brutal suppression of an uprising, the newspaper \221Moniteur\222\
reported \(16 September 1831\) \221L\222ordre )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(et la tranquillit\350 sont enti\351rement r\350tablis dans la capitale. \
Order and calm are completely restored in the )Tj
T*
(capital\222; on the same day Count Sebastiani, minister of foreign affai\
rs said \221La tranquillit\350 r\351gne \341 Varsovie. )Tj
T*
(Peace reigns in Warsaw\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Nous n\222irons plus aux bois, les lauriers sont coup\350s.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We\222ll to the woods no more,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The laurels all are cut.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(Old nursery rhyme quoted by Banville in \221Les Cariatides, les stalacti\
tes\222 \(translation by A. E. Housman in )Tj
T*
(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) introductory\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Revenons \341 ces moutons.)Tj
ET
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Let us return to our sheep.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221Maistre Pierre Pathelin\222 l. 1191 \(meaning \221Let us get back to\
the subject\222\); often quoted as \221Retournons \341 nos )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(moutons\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 699.25456 Tm
( Si le Roi m\222avait donn\350,)Tj
T*
( Paris, sa grand\222ville,)Tj
T*
( Et qu\222il me fall\373t quitter)Tj
T*
( L\222amour de ma mie,)Tj
T*
( Je dirais au roi Henri:)Tj
T*
( \221Reprenez votre Paris:)Tj
T*
( J\222aime mieux ma mie, au gu\350,)Tj
T*
( J\222aime mieux ma mie.\222)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If the king had given me Paris, his great city, and if I were requir\
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0 -1.2 TD
(love, I would say to King Henry: \221Take your Paris back; I prefer my d\
arling, by the ford, I prefer )Tj
T*
(my darling.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.67047 Tm
(Popular song, attributed to Antoine de Bourbon \(1518-62\), father of He\
nri IV. Amp\351re \221Instructions relatives )Tj
T*
(aux po\350sies populaires de la France\222, and quoted in this form by M\
oli\351re in \221Le Misanthrope\222 act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.75456 Tm
( Taisez-vous! M\350fiez-vous! Les oreilles ennemies vous \350coutent.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Keep your mouth shut! Be on your guard! Enemy ears are listening to \
you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(Official Notice in France, 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( Toujours perdrix!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Always partridge!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.67047 Tm
(Said to originate in a story of Henri IV having ordered that nothing but\
partridge be served to his confessor, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(who had rebuked the king for his sexual liasons.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.75456 Tm
( Tout passe, tout casse, tout lasse.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything passes, everything perishes, everything palls.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.17047 Tm
(Cahier \221Quelques six mille proverbes\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 263.04173 Tm
( 1.68.3 German)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 241.75456 Tm
( Arbeit macht frei.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( Work liberates.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.17047 Tm
(Words inscribed on the gates of Dachau concentration camp, 1933)Tj
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( Ein Reich, ein Volk, ein F\374hrer.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( One realm, one people, one leader.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.67047 Tm
(Nazi Party slogan, early 1930s)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.75456 Tm
( Vorsprung durch Technik.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Progress through technology.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.17047 Tm
(Advertising slogan for Audi cars, from 1986)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 56.04173 Tm
( 1.68.4 Greek)Tj
ET
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( Know thyself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Inscribed on the temple of Apollo at Delphi \(Plato \221Protagoras\222 3\
43 b, ascribes the saying to the Seven Wise )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Men\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( Nothing in excess.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(xxx)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Whenever God prepares evil for a man, He first damages his mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Scholiastic annotation to Sophocles \221Antigone\222 622 ff. See R. C. J\
ebb\222s ed. \(1906\), Appendix, p. 255 for the )Tj
T*
(Latin translation in which it is perhaps best known.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 612.75456 Tm
( Let no one enter who does not know geometry [mathematics].)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 596.92047 Tm
(Inscription on Plato\222s door, probably at the Academy at Athens. Elias\
Philosophus \221In Aristotelis Categorias )Tj
T*
(Commentaria\222, 118.18 \(A. Busse ed., Comm. in Arist. Graeca, Berlin, \
1900, XVIII, i.\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 550.79173 Tm
( 1.68.5 Italian)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.50456 Tm
( Se non \351 vero, \351 molto ben trovato.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If it is not true, it is a happy invention.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.92047 Tm
(Apparently a common saying in the sixteenth century. Found in Giordano B\
runo \(1585\) in the above form, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and in Antonio Doni \(1552\) as \221Se non \351 vero, egli \351 stato un\
bel trovato\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 445.79173 Tm
( 1.68.6 Latin)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Adeste, fideles,)Tj
T*
( laeti triumphantes;)Tj
T*
( venite, venite in Bethlehem;)Tj
T*
( natum videte regem angelorum)Tj
T*
( venite, adoremus Dominum)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O come, all ye faithful,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Joyful and triumphant,)Tj
T*
( O come ye, O come ye to Bethlehem;)Tj
T*
( Come and behold him,)Tj
T*
( Born the King of angels:)Tj
T*
( O come, let us adore him,)Tj
T*
( O come, let us adore him,)Tj
T*
( O come, let us adore him, Christ the Lord!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(French or German hymn \(c.1743\) in \221Murray\222s Hymnal\222 \(1852\) \
\(translation based on that of F. Oakeley, )Tj
T*
(1841\). \221Songs of Praise Discussed\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Ad majorem Dei gloriam.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To the greater glory of God.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(Motto of the Society of Jesus)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Ave Caesar, morituri te salutant.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Hail Caesar, those who are about to die salute you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(Gladiators saluting the Roman Emperor. Suetonius \221Claudius\222 21)Tj
ET
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
0 0 0 rg
0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum: Benedicta tu in mulieribus, \
et benedictus fructus )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ventris tui, Jesus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee: Blessed art thou am\
ong women, and blessed is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Ave Maria\222, also known as \221The Angelic Salutation\222, dating \
from the 11th century)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.50456 Tm
( Ave verum corpus,)Tj
T*
( Natum Ex Maria Virgine.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hail the true body, born of the Virgin Mary.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.92047 Tm
(Eucharistic hymn, dating probably from the 14th century)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 582.00456 Tm
( Caveant consules ne quid res publica detrimenti caperet.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Let the consuls see to it that no harm come to the state.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 544.42047 Tm
(Senatorial \221ultimate decree\222 in the Roman Republic. for example Ci\
cero \221Pro Milone\222 26, 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 523.50456 Tm
( Cras amet qui nunquam amavit, quique amavit cras amet!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Let those love now, who never loved before: Let those who always lov\
ed, now love the more.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221Pervigilium Veneris\222 1 \(translated by Parnell\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( Et in Arcadia ego.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( And I too in Arcadia.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(Tomb inscription, of uncertain meaning, often depicted in classical pain\
tings. E. Panofsky \221Philosophy and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(History: Essays Presented to E. Cassirer\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( Gaudeamus igitur,)Tj
T*
( Juvenes dum sumus)Tj
T*
( Post jucundam juventutem,)Tj
T*
( Post molestam senectutem,)Tj
T*
( Nos habebit humus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let us then rejoice,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( While we are young.)Tj
T*
( After the pleasures of youth)Tj
T*
( And the tiresomeness of old age)Tj
T*
( Earth will hold us.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(Medieval students\222 song, traced to 1267, but revised in the 18th cent\
ury)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Meum est propositum)Tj
T*
( In taberna mori,)Tj
T*
( Ut sint vina proxima)Tj
T*
( Morientis ori.)Tj
T*
( Tunc cantabunt laetius)Tj
T*
( Angelorum chori:)Tj
T*
( \221Sit Deus propitius)Tj
T*
( Huic potatori!\222)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I desire to end my days in a tavern drinking,)Tj
ET
EMC
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
0 i
BT
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.11667 Tm
( May some Christian hold for me the glass when I am shrinking;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That the Cherubim may cry, when they see me sinking,)Tj
T*
( \221God be merciful to a soul of this gentleman\222s way of thinking\
.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(The Arch-poet \(fl. 1159-67\) \221Estuans intrinsecus ira vehementi\222 \
\(translated by Leigh Hunt\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Nemo me impune lacessit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( No one provokes me with impunity.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(Motto of the Crown of Scotland and of all Scottish regiments)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.75456 Tm
( Per ardua ad astra.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Through struggle to the stars.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(Motto of the Mulvany family, quoted and translated by Rider Haggard \221\
The People of the Mist\222 \(1894\) ch. 1; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(still in use as motto of the R. A. F., having been proposed by J. S. Yul\
e in 1912 and approved by King George )Tj
T*
(V in 1913.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Post coitum omne animal triste.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( After coition every animal is sad.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(Post-classical saying)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.75456 Tm
( Quidquid agas, prudenter agas, et respice finem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Whatever you do, do cautiously, and look to the end.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.17047 Tm
(\221Gesta Romanorum\222 no. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 416.25456 Tm
( Salve, regina, mater misericordiae,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Vita, dulcedo et spes nostra, salve!)Tj
T*
( Ad te clamamus exsules filii Evae,)Tj
T*
( Ad te suspiramus gementes et flentes)Tj
T*
( In hac lacrimarum valle.)Tj
T*
( Eia ergo, advocata nostra,)Tj
T*
( Illos tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte.)Tj
T*
( Et Iesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui,)Tj
T*
( Nobis post hoc exsilium ostende,)Tj
T*
( O clemens, o pia,)Tj
T*
( O dulcis virgo Maria.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hail holy queen, mother of mercy, hail our life, our sweetness, and \
our hope! To thee do we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(cry, poor banished children of Eve; to thee do we send up our sighs, mou\
rning and weeping in )Tj
T*
(this vale of tears. Turn then, most gracious advocate, thine eyes of mer\
cy towards us; and after )Tj
T*
(this our exile show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus, O clem\
ent, O loving, O sweet )Tj
T*
(virgin Mary.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(Attributed to various 11th century authors, in \221Analecta Hymnica\222 \
vol. 50 \(1907\) p. 318)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( Sic transit gloria mundi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Thus passes the glory of the world.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(Spoken during the coronation of a new Pope, while flax is burned to repr\
esent the transitoriness of earthly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(glory; used at the coronation of Alexander V, Pisa, 7 July 1409, but ear\
lier in origin.)Tj
ET
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q
0 0 612 792 re
W* n
0 0 0 rg
0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If you seek for a monument, gaze around.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Inscription in St Paul\222s Cathedral, London, attributed to the son of \
the architect, Sir Christopher Wren)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.50456 Tm
( Te Deum laudamus: Te Dominum confitemur.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( We praise thee, God: we own thee Lord.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 656.92047 Tm
(\221Te Deum\222, hymn traditionally ascribed to St Ambrose and St August\
ine in A.D. 387, though attributed by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(some modern scholars to St Niceta \(d. c.414\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.00456 Tm
( In te Domine, speravi: non confundar in aeternum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Lord, I have set my hopes in thee, I shall not be destroyed for ever\
.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 583.42047 Tm
(\221Te Deum\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 562.50456 Tm
( Tempora mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Times change, and we change with them.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(In William Harrison \221Description of Britain\222 \(1577\) vol. 3, ch. \
3, p. 99 \(attributed to the Emperor Lothar I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\(795-855\) in the form Omnia mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis All thin\
gs change, and we change with them\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 489.00456 Tm
( Vox et praeterea nihil.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A voice and nothing more.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(Describing a nightingale. Plutarch \221Moralia\222 \221Sayings of Sparta\
ns\222 no. 233a)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.2124 Tm
( 1.69 Jean Anouilh 1910-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dieu est avec tout le monde....Et, en fin de compte, il est toujours\
avec ceux qui ont beaucoup )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(d\222argent et de grosses arm\350es.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God is on everyone\222s side....And, in the last analysis, he is on \
the side with plenty of money )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and large armies.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Alouette\222 \(The Lark, 1953\) p. 120.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.00456 Tm
( Tragedy is clean, it is restful, it is flawless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Antigone\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( The spring is wound up tight. It will uncoil of itself. That is what\
is so convenient in tragedy. )Tj
T*
(The least little turn of the wrist will do the job. Anything will set it\
going.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221Antigone\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.50456 Tm
( Il y a l\222amour bien s\373r. Et puis il y a la vie, son ennemie.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There is love of course. And then there\222s life, its enemy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Ard\351le\222 \(1949\) p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Vous savez bien que l\222amour, c\222est avant tout le don de soi!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( You know very well that love is, above all, the gift of oneself!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Ard\351le\222 \(1949\) p. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( C\222est tr\351s jolie la vie, mais cela n\222a pas de forme. L\222a\
rt a pour objet de lui en donner une )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pr\350cis\350ment et de faire par tous les artifices possibles\227plus v\
rai que le vrai.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Life is very nice, but it has no shape. The object of art is actuall\
y to give it some and to do it by )Tj
ET
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
0 i
BT
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.11667 Tm
(every artifice possible\227truer than the truth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221La R\350p\350tition\222 \(The Rehearsal, 1950\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 1.70 Christopher Anstey 1724-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If ever I ate a good supper at night,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I dreamed of the devil, and waked in a fright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221The New Bath Guide\222 \(1766\) Letter 4 \221A Consultation of the P\
hysicians\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( You may go to Carlisle\222s, and to Almack\222s too;)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll give you my head if you find such a host,)Tj
T*
( For coffee, tea, chocolate, butter, and toast:)Tj
T*
( How he welcomes at once all the world and his wife,)Tj
T*
( And how civil to folk he ne\222er saw in his life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221The New Bath Guide\222 \(1766\) Letter 13 \221A Public Breakfast\222\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 508.4624 Tm
( 1.71 F. Anstey \(Thomas Anstey Guthrie\) 1856-1934)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Drastic measures is Latin for a whopping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.92047 Tm
(\221Vice Versa\222 \(1882\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 438.7124 Tm
( 1.72 Guillaume Apollinaire 1880-1918)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Les souvenirs sont cors de chasse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dont meurt le bruit parmi le vent.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Memories are hunting horns)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whose sound dies on the wind.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221Cors de Chasse\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( Sous le pont Mirabeau coule la Seine.)Tj
T*
( Et nos amours, faut-il qu\222il m\222en souvienne?)Tj
T*
( La joie venait toujours apr\351s la peine.)Tj
T*
( Vienne la nuit, sonne l\222heure,)Tj
T*
( Les jours s\222en vont, je demeure.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Under Mirabeau Bridge flows the Seine.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And our loves, must I remember them?)Tj
T*
( Joy always comes after pain.)Tj
T*
( Let night come, ring out the hour,)Tj
T*
( The days go by, I remain.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221Le Pont Mirabeau\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( On ne peut pas porter partout le cadavre de son p\351re.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One can\222t carry one\222s father\222s corpse about everywhere.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Antitradition futuriste\222 \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.2124 Tm
( 1.73 Sir Edward Appleton 1892-1965)Tj
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
0 0 0 rg
0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( I do not mind what language an opera is sung in so long as it is a l\
anguage I don\222t understand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 28 August 1955)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 1.74 Thomas Gold Appleton 1812-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A Boston man is the east wind made flesh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( Good Americans, when they die, go to Paris.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(In Oliver Wendell Holmes \221The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table\222 \(1\
858\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 598.4624 Tm
( 1.75 The Arabian Nights Entertainments, or the Thousand and one Nights)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Who will change old lamps for new ones?...new lamps for old ones?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221The History of Aladdin\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( Open Sesame!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(\221The History of Ali Baba\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 491.9624 Tm
( 1.76 William Arabin 1773-1841)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( If ever there was a case of clearer evidence than this of persons ac\
ting in concert together, this )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(case is that case.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.42047 Tm
(In Sir R. Megarry \221Arabinesque at Law\222 \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 415.50456 Tm
( They will steal the very teeth out of your mouth as you walk through\
the streets. I know it from )Tj
T*
(experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(Referring to the citizens of Uxbridge, in Sir R. Megarry \221Arabinesque\
at Law\222 \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.75456 Tm
( Prisoner, God has given you good abilities, instead of which you go \
about the country stealing )Tj
T*
(ducks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(\221Notes and Queries\222 vol. 170, p. 310)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.7124 Tm
( 1.77 Louis Aragon 1897-1982)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O mois des floraisons mois des m\350tamorphoses )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mai qui fut sans nuage et Juin poignard\350 m\350tamorphoses )Tj
T*
( Je n\222oublierai jamais les lilas ni les roses m\350tamorphoses )Tj
T*
( Ni ceux que le printemps dans ses plis a gard\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O month of flowerings, month of metamorphoses, m\350tamorphoses )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( May without cloud and June that was stabbed, m\350tamorphoses )Tj
T*
( I shall never forget the lilac and the roses m\350tamorphoses )Tj
T*
( Nor those whom spring has kept in its folds.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221Les lilas et les roses\222 \(1940\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 95.2124 Tm
( 1.78 John Arbuthnot 1667-1735)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He warns the heads of parties against believing their own lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.67047 Tm
(\221The Art of Political Lying\222 \(1712\) p. 19)Tj
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( Law is a bottomless pit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The History of John Bull\222 \(1712\) ch. 24)Tj
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( Hame\222s hame, be it never so hamely.)Tj
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(\221Law is a Bottomless Pit\222 \(1712\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.79 Archilochus)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The fox knows many things\227the hedgehog one big one.)Tj
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(E. Diehl \(ed.\) \221Anthologia Lyrica Graeca\222 \(3rd ed., 1949-52\) \
vol. 1, p. 241, no. 103.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.80 Archimedes 287-212 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Eureka! [I\222ve got it!])Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(In Vitruvius Pollio \221De Architectura\222 bk. 9, preface, sect. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( Give me but one firm spot on which to stand, and I will move the ear\
th.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(With reference to a lever, in Pappus \221Synagoge\222 bk. 8, sect. 19, p\
roposition 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 491.9624 Tm
( 1.81 Hannah Arendt 1906-75)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( It was as though in those last minutes he [Eichmann] was summing up \
the lessons that this )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(long course in human wickedness had taught us\227the lesson of the fears\
ome, word-and-thought-)Tj
T*
(defying banality of evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(\221Eichmann in Jerusalem: a Report on the Banality of Evil\222 \(1963\)\
ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.50456 Tm
( Only crime and the criminal, it is true, confront us with the perple\
xity of radical evil; but only )Tj
T*
(the hypocrite is really rotten to the core.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221On Revolution\222 \(1963\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.75456 Tm
( Under conditions of tyranny it is far easier to act than to think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(In W. H. Auden \221A Certain World\222 \(1970\) p. 369)Tj
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( The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative on the day\
after the revolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(In \221New Yorker\222 12 September 1970, p. 88)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.82 Marquis d\222Argenson \(Ren\350 Louis de Voyer d\222Argenson\) 169\
4-1757)Tj
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( Laisser-faire.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( No interference.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.67047 Tm
(\221M\350moires\222 \(1736\) vol. 5, p. 364.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.83 Comte d\222Argenson \(Marc Pierre de Voyed d\222Argenson\) 1696-17\
64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Abb\350 Guyot Desfontaines: Il faut que je vive.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( D\222Argenson: Je n\222en vois pas la n\350cessit\350.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Desfontaines: I must live.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( d\222Argenson: I do not see the necessity.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.17047 Tm
(In Voltaire \221Alzire\222 \(1736\) \221Discours Pr\350liminaire\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 38.9624 Tm
( 1.84 Ludovico Ariosto 1474-1533)Tj
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( Natura il fece, e poi roppe la stampa.)Tj
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( Nature made him, and then broke the mould.)Tj
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(\221Orlando Furioso\222 \(1532\) canto 10, st. 84)Tj
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( 1.85 Aristophanes c.444-c.380 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How about \221Cloudcuckooland\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 639.92047 Tm
(Naming the capital city of the Birds in \221The Birds\222 \(414 B.C.\) l\
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15 0 0 15 10 619.00456 Tm
( To make the worse appear the better reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 603.17047 Tm
(\221The Clouds\222 \(423 B.C.\) l. 114 and elsewhere)Tj
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( But he was contented there, is contented here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 566.42047 Tm
(Referring to Sophocles in \221The Frogs\222 \(405 B.C.\) l. 82 \(there o\
n earth; here in Hades\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 545.50456 Tm
( Brekekekex koax koax.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 529.67047 Tm
(Cry of the Frogs in \221The Frogs\222 \(405 B.C.\) l. 209 and elsewhere)Tj
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( 1.86 Aristotle 384-322 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( So the good has been well explained as that at which all things aim.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.92047 Tm
(\221Nicomachean Ethics\222 bk. 1, opening sentence)Tj
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( We make war that we may live in peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.17047 Tm
(\221Nicomachean Ethics\222 bk. 10, ch. 7.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.25456 Tm
( Man is by nature a political animal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.42047 Tm
(\221Politics\222 bk. 1, sect. 2, 1253a)Tj
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( Nature does nothing uselessly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.67047 Tm
(\221Politics\222 bk. 1, sect. 2)Tj
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( He who is unable to live in society, or who has no need because he i\
s sufficient for himself, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.92047 Tm
(\221Politics\222 bk. 1, sect. 2)Tj
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( Where some people are very wealthy and others have nothing, the resu\
lt will be either extreme )Tj
T*
(democracy or absolute oligarchy, or despotism will come from either of t\
hose excesses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(\221Politics\222 bk. 1, sect. 4, 1296a)Tj
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( Tragedy is thus a representation of an action that is worth serious \
attention, complete in itself )Tj
T*
(and of some amplitude...by means of pity and fear bringing about the pur\
gation of such emotions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.42047 Tm
(\221Poetics\222 ch. 6, 1449b)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.50456 Tm
( For this reason poetry is something more philosophical and more wort\
hy of serious attention )Tj
T*
(than history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.67047 Tm
(\221Poetics\222 ch. 9, 1451b)Tj
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( Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibili\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.92047 Tm
(\221Poetics\222 ch. 24, 1460a)Tj
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( Plato is dear to me, but dearer still is truth.)Tj
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(Greek original ascribed to Aristotle)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( What is a friend? A single soul dwelling in two bodies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(In Diogenes Laertius \221Lives of Eminent Philosophers\222 bk. 5, sect. \
20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.87 Lewis Addison Armistead 1817-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Give them the cold steel, boys!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Attributed during the American Civil War, 1863)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.4624 Tm
( 1.88 Harry Armstrong 1879-1951)Tj
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T*
( There\222s an old mill by the stream, Nellie Dean,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where we used to sit and dream, Nellie Dean.)Tj
T*
( And the waters as they flow)Tj
T*
( Seem to murmur sweet and low,)Tj
T*
( \221You\222re my heart\222s desire; I love you, Nellie Dean.\222)Tj
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(\221Nellie Dean\222 \(1905 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 1.89 Dr John Armstrong 1709-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Much had he read,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Much more had seen; he studied from the life,)Tj
T*
( And in th\222 original perused mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.17047 Tm
(\221The Art of Preserving Health\222 \(1744\) bk. 4, l. 231)Tj
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( \222Tis not for mortals always to be blest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221The Art of Preserving Health\222 \(1744\) bk. 4, l. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( Of right and wrong he taught)Tj
T*
( Truths as refined as ever Athens heard;)Tj
T*
( And \(strange to tell!\) he practised what he preached.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.67047 Tm
(\221The Art of Preserving Health\222 \(1744\) bk. 4, l. 303)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.75456 Tm
( \222Tis not too late to-morrow to be brave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(\221The Art of Preserving Health\222 \(1744\) bk. 4, l. 460)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 222.7124 Tm
( 1.90 Louis Satchmo Armstrong 1901-71)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All music is folk music, I ain\222t never heard no horse sing a song\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 7 July 1971, p. 41)Tj
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( If you still have to ask...shame on you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.42047 Tm
(When asked what jazz is, in Max Jones et al. \221Salute to Satchmo\222 \(\
1970\) p. 25 \(sometimes quoted as \221Man, if )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you gotta ask you\222ll never know\222\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 101.2124 Tm
( 1.91 Neil Armstrong 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Houston, Tranquillity Base here. The Eagle has landed. That\222s one\
small step for a man, one )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(giant leap for mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 31 July 1969, p. 20)Tj
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( 1.92 Lord Armstrong 1927\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( It contains a misleading impression, not a lie. It was being economi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 705.92047 Tm
(Referring to a letter during the \221Spycatcher\222 trial, Supreme Court\
, New South Wales, 18 November 1986, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(137, \221Falsehood and delusion are allowed in no case whatsoever: But, \
as in the exercise of all the virtues, )Tj
T*
(there is an economy of truth.\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 1.93 Sir Edwin Arnold 1832-1904)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nor ever once ashamed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So we be named)Tj
T*
( Press-men; Slaves of the Lamp; Servants of Light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.17047 Tm
(\221The Tenth Muse\222 \(1895\) st. 18)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 522.9624 Tm
( 1.94 George Arnold 1834-65)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The living need charity more than the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.42047 Tm
(\221The Jolly Old Pedagogue\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 453.2124 Tm
( 1.95 Matthew Arnold 1822-88)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( And we forget because we must)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And not because we will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.67047 Tm
(\221Absence\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 376.75456 Tm
( Only\227but this is rare\227)Tj
T*
( When a belov\350d hand is laid in ours,)Tj
T*
( When, jaded with the rush and glare)Tj
T*
( Of the interminable hours,)Tj
T*
( Our eyes can in another\222s eyes read clear,)Tj
T*
( When our world-deafened ear)Tj
T*
( Is by the tones of a loved voice caressed\227)Tj
T*
( A bolt is shot back somewhere in our breast,)Tj
T*
( And a lost pulse of feeling stirs again.)Tj
T*
( The eye sinks inward, and the heart lies plain,)Tj
T*
( And what we mean, we say, and what we would, we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.92047 Tm
(\221The Buried Life\222 \(1852\) l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.00456 Tm
( The Sea of Faith)Tj
T*
( Was once, too, at the full, and round earth\222s shore)Tj
T*
( Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled.)Tj
T*
( But now I only hear)Tj
T*
( Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,)Tj
T*
( Retreating, to the breath)Tj
T*
( Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear)Tj
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( Ah, love, let us be true)Tj
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T*
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T*
( So various, so beautiful, so new,)Tj
T*
( Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,)Tj
T*
( Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221Dover Beach\222 \(1867\) l. 21)Tj
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( Be neither saint nor sophist-led, but be a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221Empedocles on Etna\222 \(1852\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 136)Tj
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( Is it so small a thing)Tj
T*
( To have enjoyed the sun,)Tj
T*
( To have lived light in the spring,)Tj
T*
( To have loved, to have thought, to have done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Empedocles on Etna\222 \(1852\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 397)Tj
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( Because thou must not dream, thou needst not then despair!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Empedocles on Etna\222 \(1852\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 426)Tj
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( Come to me in my dreams, and then)Tj
T*
( By day I shall be well again!)Tj
T*
( For then the night will more than pay)Tj
T*
( The hopeless longing of the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Faded Leaves\222 \(1855\) no. 5 \(first published, 1852, as \221Long\
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( Come, dear children, let us away;)Tj
T*
( Down and away below!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221The Forsaken Merman\222 \(1849\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Now the great winds shorewards blow;)Tj
T*
( Now the salt tides seawards flow;)Tj
T*
( Now the wild white horses play,)Tj
T*
( Champ and chafe and toss in the spray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221The Forsaken Merman\222 \(1849\) l. 4)Tj
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( Sand-strewn caverns, cool and deep,)Tj
T*
( Where the winds are all asleep;)Tj
T*
( Where the spent lights quiver and gleam;)Tj
T*
( Where the salt weed sways in the stream;)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221The Forsaken Merman\222 \(1849\) l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( Where great whales come sailing by,)Tj
T*
( Sail and sail, with unshut eye,)Tj
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( Round the world for ever and aye.)Tj
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(\221The Forsaken Merman\222 \(1849\) l. 43)Tj
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( This truth\227to prove, and make thine own: \221Thou hast been, shal\
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(\221Isolation. To Marguerite\222 \(1857\) l. 29)Tj
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( Creep into thy narrow bed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
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( Let the long contention cease!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
( Thou art tired; best be still.)Tj
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(\221The Last Word\222 \(1867\))Tj
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( Calm soul of all things! make it mine)Tj
T*
( To feel, amid the city\222s jar,)Tj
T*
( That there abides a peace of thine,)Tj
T*
( Man did not make, and cannot mar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221Lines written in Kensington Gardens\222 \(1852\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( He spoke, and loosed our heart in tears.)Tj
T*
( He laid us as we lay at birth)Tj
T*
( On the cool flowery lap of earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(Lines on Wordsworth in \221Memorial Verses, April 1850\222 l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Ere the parting hour go by,)Tj
T*
( Quick, thy tablets, Memory!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221A Memory Picture\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( With aching hands and bleeding feet)Tj
T*
( We dig and heap, lay stone on stone;)Tj
T*
( We bear the burden and the heat)Tj
T*
( Of the long day, and wish \222twere done.)Tj
T*
( Not till the hours of light return,)Tj
T*
( All we have built do we discern.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Morality\222 \(1852\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Say, has some wet bird-haunted English lawn)Tj
T*
( Lent it the music of its trees at dawn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Parting\222 \(1852\) l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Hark! ah, the Nightingale!)Tj
T*
( The tawny-throated!)Tj
T*
( Hark! from that moonlit cedar what a burst!)Tj
T*
( What triumph! hark\227what pain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221Philomela\222 \(1853\) l. 1)Tj
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( Eternal Passion!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Eternal Pain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Philomela\222 l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( Cruel, but composed and bland,)Tj
T*
( Dumb, inscrutable and grand,)Tj
T*
( So Tiberius might have sat,)Tj
T*
( Had Tiberius been a cat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.92047 Tm
(\221Poor Matthias\222 \(1885\) l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.00456 Tm
( Her cabined ample Spirit,)Tj
T*
( It fluttered and failed for breath.)Tj
T*
( To-night it doth inherit)Tj
T*
( The vasty hall of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.17047 Tm
(\221Requiescat\222 \(1853\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.25456 Tm
( Not deep the Poet sees, but wide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221Resignation\222 \(1849\) l. 214)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( Yet they, believe me, who await)Tj
T*
( No gifts from chance, have conquered fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(\221Resignation\222 \(1849\) l. 247)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( Not milder is the general lot)Tj
T*
( Because our spirits have forgot,)Tj
T*
( In action\222s dizzying eddy whirled,)Tj
T*
( The something that infects the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.92047 Tm
(\221Resignation\222 \(1849\) l. 247)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.00456 Tm
( Coldly, sadly descends)Tj
T*
( The autumn evening. The Field)Tj
T*
( Strewn with its dank yellow drifts)Tj
T*
( Of withered leaves, and the elms,)Tj
T*
( Fade into dimness apace,)Tj
T*
( Silent;\227hardly a shout)Tj
T*
( From a few boys late at their play!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.17047 Tm
(\221Rugby Chapel, November 1857\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.25456 Tm
( Go, for they call you, Shepherd, from the hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.42047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.50456 Tm
( All the live murmur of a summer\222s day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.67047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.75456 Tm
( Tired of knocking at Preferment\222s door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.00456 Tm
( Crossing the stripling Thames at Bab-lock-hithe,)Tj
T*
( Trailing in the cool stream thy fingers wet,)Tj
T*
( As the slow punt swings round.)Tj
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(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Rapt, twirling in thy hand a withered spray,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And waiting for the spark from heaven to fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The line of festal light in Christ-Church hall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Thou waitest for the spark from heaven! and we,)Tj
T*
( Light half-believers in our casual creeds...)Tj
T*
( Who hesitate and falter life away,)Tj
T*
( And lose to-morrow the ground won to-day\227)Tj
T*
( Ah, do not we, Wanderer, await it too?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( O born in days when wits were fresh and clear,)Tj
T*
( And life ran gaily as the sparkling Thames;)Tj
T*
( Before this strange disease of modern life,)Tj
T*
( With its sick hurry, its divided aims,)Tj
T*
( Its heads o\222ertaked, its palsied hearts, was rife\227)Tj
T*
( Fly hence, our contact fear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Still nursing the unconquerable hope,)Tj
T*
( Still clutching the inviolable shade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Scholar-Gipsy\222 \(1853\) l. 211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Resolve to be thyself: and know, that he)Tj
T*
( Who finds himself, loses his misery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Self-Dependence\222 \(1852\) l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Others abide our question. Thou art free.)Tj
T*
( We ask and ask: Thou smilest and art still,)Tj
T*
( Out-topping knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Shakespeare\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( And thou, who didst the stars and sunbeams know,)Tj
T*
( Self-schooled, self-scanned, self-honoured, self-secure,)Tj
T*
( Didst tread on Earth unguessed at.\227Better so!)Tj
T*
( All pains the immortal spirit must endure,)Tj
T*
( All weakness which impairs, all griefs which bow,)Tj
T*
( Find their sole speech in that victorious brow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Shakespeare\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Curled minion, dancer, coiner of sweet words!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Sohrab and Rustum\222 \(1853\) l. 458)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( No horse\222s cry was that, most like the roar)Tj
T*
( Of some pained desert lion, who all day)Tj
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( Hath trailed the hunter\222s javelin in his side,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And comes at night to die upon the sand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Sohrab and Rustum\222 \(1853\) l. 501)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Truth sits upon the lips of dying men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Sohrab and Rustum\222 \(1853\) l. 656)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( But the majestic River floated on,)Tj
T*
( Out of the mist and hum of that low land,)Tj
T*
( Into the frosty starlight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Sohrab and Rustum\222 \(1853\) l. 875)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Oxus, forgetting the bright speed he had)Tj
T*
( In his high mountain cradle in Pamere,)Tj
T*
( A foiled circuitous wanderer\227till at last)Tj
T*
( The longed-for dash of waves is heard, and wide)Tj
T*
( His luminous home of waters opens, bright)Tj
T*
( And tranquil, from whose floor the new-bathed stars)Tj
T*
( Emerge, and shine upon the Aral Sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Sohrab and Rustum\222 \(1853\) l. 886)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( For rigorous teachers seized my youth,)Tj
T*
( And purged its faith, and trimmed its fire,)Tj
T*
( Showed me the high, white star of Truth,)Tj
T*
( There bade me gaze, and there aspire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse\222 \(1855\) l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Wandering between two worlds, one dead,)Tj
T*
( The other powerless to be born,)Tj
T*
( With nowhere yet to rest my head,)Tj
T*
( Like these, on earth I wait forlorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse\222 \(1855\) l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( What helps it now, that Byron bore,)Tj
T*
( With haughty scorn which mocked the smart,)Tj
T*
( Through Europe to the Aetolian shore)Tj
T*
( The pageant of his bleeding heart?)Tj
T*
( That thousands counted every groan,)Tj
T*
( And Europe made his woe her own?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse\222 \(1855\) l. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Ah! two desires toss about)Tj
T*
( The poet\222s feverish blood.)Tj
T*
( One drives him to the world without,)Tj
T*
( And one to solitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Stanzas in Memory of the Author of \223Obermann\224, November 1849\222\
l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Still bent to make some port he knows not where,)Tj
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( Still standing for some false impossible shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Summer Night\222 l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The signal-elm, that looks on Ilsley downs,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Vale, the three lone weirs, the youthful Thames.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( And that sweet City with her dreaming spires,)Tj
T*
( She needs not June for beauty\222s heightening.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( So have I heard the cuckoo\222s parting cry,)Tj
T*
( From the wet field, through the vext garden-trees,)Tj
T*
( Come with the volleying rain and tossing breeze:)Tj
T*
( \221The bloom is gone, and with the bloom go I.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Too quick despairer, wherefore wilt thou go?)Tj
T*
( Soon will the high Midsummer pomps come on,)Tj
T*
( Soon will the musk carnations break and swell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( For Time, not Corydon, hath conquered thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( The foot less prompt to meet the morning dew,)Tj
T*
( The heart less bounding at emotion new,)Tj
T*
( And hope, once crushed, less quick to spring again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Thyrsis\222 \(1866\) l. 138)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Who saw life steadily, and saw it whole:)Tj
T*
( The mellow glory of the Attic stage;)Tj
T*
( Singer of sweet Colonus, and its child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(Lines on Sophocles in \221To a Friend\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( France, famed in all great arts, in none supreme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221To a Republican Friend, 1848. Continued\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Yes! in the sea of life enisled,)Tj
T*
( With echoing straits between us thrown,)Tj
T*
( Dotting the shoreless watery wild,)Tj
T*
( We mortal millions live alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221To Marguerite\227Continued\222 \(1852\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( A God, a God their severance ruled!)Tj
T*
( And bade betwixt their shores to be)Tj
T*
( The unplumbed, salt, estranging sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221To Marguerite\227Continued\222 \(1852\) l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Nor bring, to see me cease to live,)Tj
T*
( Some doctor full of phrase and fame,)Tj
ET
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( To shake his sapient head and give)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The ill he cannot cure a name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Wish\222 \(1867\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( And sigh that one thing only has been lent)Tj
T*
( To youth and age in common\227discontent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Youth\222s Agitations\222 \(1852\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Our society distributes itself into Barbarians, Philistines, and Pop\
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T*
(ourselves, with the Barbarians quite left out, and the Populace nearly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The pursuit of perfection, then, is the pursuit of sweetness and lig\
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T*
(sweetness and light united, works to make reason and the will of God pre\
vail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The men of culture are the true apostles of equality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( When I want to distinguish clearly the aristocratic class from the P\
hilistines proper, or middle )Tj
T*
(class, [I] name the former, in my own mind the Barbarians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( That vast portion...of the working-class which, raw and half-develop\
ed, has long lain half-)Tj
T*
(hidden amidst its poverty and squalor, and is now issuing from its hidin\
g-place to assert an )Tj
T*
(Englishman\222s heaven-born privilege of doing as he likes, and is begin\
ning to perplex us by )Tj
T*
(marching where it likes, meeting where it likes, bawling what it likes, \
breaking what it likes\227to )Tj
T*
(this vast residuum we may with great propriety give the name of Populace\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Hebraism and Hellenism\227between these two points of influence move\
s our)Tj
T*
( World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( \221He knows\222 says Hebraism, \221his Bible!\222\227whenever we he\
ar this said, we may, without any )Tj
T*
(elaborate defence of culture, content ourselves with answering simply: \221\
No man, who knows )Tj
T*
(nothing else, knows even his Bible.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Culture and Anarchy\222 \(1869\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Nothing could moderate, in the bosom of the great English middle cla\
ss, their passionate, )Tj
T*
(absorbing, almost blood-thirsty clinging to life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Beautiful city! so venerable, so lovely, so unravaged by the fierce \
intellectual life of our )Tj
T*
(century, so serene!...whispering from her towers the last enchantments o\
f the Middle Age....)Tj
T*
(Home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names, and impo\
ssible loyalties!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(On Oxford in \221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( \221Our unrivalled happiness\222;\227what an element of grimness, ba\
reness, and hideousness mixes )Tj
T*
(with it and blurs it; the workhouse, the dismal Mapperly Hills,\227how d\
ismal those who have seen )Tj
T*
(them will remember;\227the gloom, the smoke, the cold, the strangled ill\
egitimate child!...And the )Tj
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(final touch,\227short, bleak and inhuman: Wragg is in custody. The sex \
lost in the confusion of our )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unrivalled happiness; or \(shall I say?\) the superfluous Christian name\
lopped off by the )Tj
T*
(straightforward vigour of our old Anglo-Saxon breed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Prompted by a newspaper report of the murder of her illegitimate child b\
y a girl named Wragg; \221Essays in )Tj
T*
(Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) \221The Function of Criticism at the\
Present Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 665.25456 Tm
( I am bound by my own definition of criticism: a disinterested endeav\
our to learn and propagate )Tj
T*
(the best that is known and thought in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) \221The Function of Cr\
iticism at the Present Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( Philistinism!\227We have not the expression in English. Perhaps we h\
ave not the word because )Tj
T*
(we have so much of the thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) \221Heinrich Heine\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( The great apostle of the Philistines, Lord Macaulay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) \221Joubert\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( The absence, in this country, of any force of educated literary and \
scientific opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 First Series \(1865\) \221The Literary Influ\
ence of Academies\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( In poetry, no less than in life, he is \221a beautiful and ineffectu\
al angel, beating in the void his )Tj
T*
(luminous wings in vain\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 Second Series \(1888\) \221Shelley\222; Arno\
ld is quoting from his own essay on Byron in the )Tj
T*
(same work.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( More and more mankind will discover that we have to turn to poetry t\
o interpret life for us, to )Tj
T*
(console us, to sustain us. Without poetry our science will appear incomp\
lete; and most of what )Tj
T*
(now passes for religion and philosophy will be replaced by poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 Second Series \(1888\) \221The Study of Poet\
ry\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.75456 Tm
( The difference between genuine poetry and the poetry of Dryden, Pope\
, and all their school, is )Tj
T*
(briefly this: their poetry is conceived and composed in their wits, genu\
ine poetry is conceived and )Tj
T*
(composed in the soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 Second Series \(1888\) \221Thomas Gray\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( Poetry is at bottom a criticism of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221Essays in Criticism\222 Second Series \(1888\) \221Wordsworth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( His expression may often be called bald...but it is bald as the bare\
mountain tops are bald, with )Tj
T*
(a baldness full of grandeur.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221Wordsworth\222 in \221Essays in Criticism\222 Second Series \(1888\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( I am past thirty, and three parts iced over.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(Howard Foster Lowry \(ed.\) \221The Letters of Matthew Arnold to Arthur\
Hugh Clough\222 \(1932\) 12 February )Tj
T*
(1853)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.75456 Tm
( Culture, the acquainting ourselves with the best that has been known\
and said in the world, and )Tj
T*
(thus with the history of the human spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Literature and Dogma\222 \(1873\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Terms like grace, new birth, justification...terms, in short, which \
with)Tj
T*
( St Paul are literary terms, theologians have employed as if they wer\
e scientific terms.)Tj
ET
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(\221Literature and Dogma\222 \(1873\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The true meaning of religion is thus not simply morality, but morali\
ty touched by emotion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Literature and Dogma\222 \(1873\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Conduct is three-fourths of our life and its largest concern.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Literature and Dogma\222 \(1873\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( But there remains the question: what righteousness really is. The me\
thod and secret and sweet )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reasonableness of Jesus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Literature and Dogma\222 \(1873\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( So we have the Philistine of genius in religion\227Luther; the Phili\
stine of genius in politics\227)Tj
T*
(Cromwell; the Philistine of genius in)Tj
T*
( literature\227Bunyan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Mixed Essays\222 \(1879\) \221Lord Falkland\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Wordsworth says somewhere that wherever Virgil seems to have compose\
d)Tj
T*
( \221with his eye on the object\222, Dryden fails to render him. Home\
r invariably composes \221with his )Tj
T*
(eye on the object\222, whether the object be a moral or a material one: \
Pope composes with his eye )Tj
T*
(on his style, into which he translates his object, whatever it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221On Translating Homer\222 \(1861\) Lecture 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Of these two literatures [French and German], as of the intellect of\
)Tj
T*
( Europe in general, the main effort, for now many years, has been a c\
ritical effort; the )Tj
T*
(endeavours, in all branches of knowledge\227theology, philosophy, histor\
y, art, science\227to see the )Tj
T*
(object as in itself it really is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221On Translating Homer\222 \(1861\) Lecture 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( He [the translator] will find one English book and one only, where, \
as in the Iliad itself, perfect )Tj
T*
(plainness of speech is allied with perfect nobleness; and that book is t\
he Bible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221On Translating Homer\222 \(1861\) Lecture 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Nothing has raised more questioning among my critics than these word\
s\227noble, the grand )Tj
T*
(style....I think it will be found that the grand style arises in poetry,\
when a noble nature, poetically )Tj
T*
(gifted, treats with simplicity or with severity a serious subject.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221On Translating Homer\222 \221Last Words\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( People think that I can teach them style. What stuff it all is! Hav\
e something to say, and say it )Tj
T*
(as clearly as you can. That is the only secret of style.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 1\
3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.2124 Tm
( 1.96 S. J. Arnold)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( England, home and beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221The Death of Nelson\222 \(1811 song\) from \221The Americans. A Comi\
c Opera\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 88.4624 Tm
( 1.97 Dr Thomas Arnold 1795-1842)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( My object will be, if possible, to form Christian men, for Christian\
boys)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I can scarcely hope to make.)Tj
ET
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(Letter to Revd John Tucker, 2 March 1828, on appointment to the Headmast\
ership of Rugby School, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Arthur Penrhyn Stanley \221The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold\222\
\(1844\) vol. 1, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( What we must look for here is, 1st, religious and moral principles: \
2ndly, gentlemanly conduct: )Tj
T*
( 3rdly, intellectual ability.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Address to the Praeposters of Rugby School, in Arthur Penrhyn Stanley \221\
The Life and Correspondence of )Tj
T*
(Thomas Arnold\222 \(1844\) vol. 1, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 649.50456 Tm
( As for rioting, the old Roman way of dealing with that is always the\
right one; flog the rank )Tj
T*
(and file, and fling the ringleaders from the Tarpeian rock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(From an unpublished letter written before 1828, quoted by Matthew Arnold\
in \221Cornhill Magazine\222 August )Tj
T*
(1868 \221Anarchy and Authority\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 568.4624 Tm
( 1.98 Raymond Aron 1905\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La pens\350e politique, en France, est r\350trospective ou utopique.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Political thought, in France, is retrospective or utopian.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.17047 Tm
(\221L\222opium des intellectuels\222 \(1955\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 476.9624 Tm
( 1.99 Antonin Artaud 1896-1948)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il faut nous laver de la litt\351rature. Nous voulons \352tre hommes\
avant tout,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \352tre humains.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We must wash literature off ourselves. We want to be men first of al\
l; to be human.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(\221Les Oeuvres et les Hommes\222 unpublished MS, 17 May 1922)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 367.4624 Tm
( 1.100 George Asaf 1880-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What\222s the use of worrying?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It never was worth while,)Tj
T*
( So, pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,)Tj
T*
( And smile, smile, smile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(\221Pack up your Troubles\222 \(1915 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 243.7124 Tm
( 1.101 Roger Ascham 1515-68)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I said...how, and why, young children, were sooner allured by love, \
than driven by beating, to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attain good learning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221The Schoolmaster\222 \(1570\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( There is no such whetstone, to sharpen a good wit and encourage a wi\
ll to learning, as is praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(\221The Schoolmaster\222 \(1570\) bk. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( Inglese Italianato, \351 un diavolo incarnato, that is to say, you r\
emain men in shape and fashion, )Tj
T*
(but become devils in life and condition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221The Schoolmaster\222 \(1570\) bk. 1 \(referring to Englishmen travel\
ling in Italy\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( He that will write well in any tongue, must follow this counsel of A\
ristotle, to speak as the )Tj
T*
(common people do, to think as wise men do; and so should every man under\
stand him, and the )Tj
T*
(judgment of wise men allow him.)Tj
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(\221To all gentlemen and yeomen of England\222 in \221Toxophilus\222 \(1\
545\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 721.7124 Tm
( 1.102 John Dunning, Baron Ashburton 1731-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The power of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and ought to be\
diminished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 684.17047 Tm
(House of Commons, 1780)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 651.9624 Tm
( 1.103 Daisy Ashford 1881-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Mr Salteena was an elderly man of 42.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 614.42047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 593.50456 Tm
( I am not quite a gentleman but you would hardly notice it but can\222\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.67047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 556.75456 Tm
( You look rather rash my dear your colors dont quite match your face.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.92047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.00456 Tm
( Bernard always had a few prayers in the hall and some whiskey afterw\
ards as he was rarther )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pious but Mr Salteena was not very addicted to prayers so he marched up \
to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.17047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.25456 Tm
( Oh this is must kind said Mr Salteena. Minnit closed his eyes with a\
tired smile. Not kind sir he )Tj
T*
(muttered quite usual.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.42047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.50456 Tm
( It was a sumpshous spot all done up in gold with plenty of looking g\
lasses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.67047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.75456 Tm
( Oh I see said the Earl but my own idear is that these things are as \
piffle before the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.92047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.00456 Tm
( The bearer of this letter is an old friend of mine not quite the rig\
ht side of the blanket as they )Tj
T*
(say in fact he is the son of a first rate butcher but his mother was a d\
ecent family called Hyssopps )Tj
T*
(of the Glen so you see he is not so bad and is desireus of being the cor\
rect article.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.17047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.25456 Tm
( My life will be sour grapes and ashes without you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.42047 Tm
(\221The Young Visiters\222 \(1919\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 216.2124 Tm
( 1.104 Isaac Asimov 1920\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The three fundamental Rules of Robotics....One, a robot may not inju\
re a human being, or, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm....Two...a robot m\
ust obey the orders )Tj
T*
(given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with th\
e First Law...Three, a )Tj
T*
(robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not\
conflict with the First or )Tj
T*
(Second Laws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.67047 Tm
(\221I, Robot\222 \(1950\) in \221Runaround\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 74.4624 Tm
( 1.105 Herbert Asquith \(first Earl of Oxford and Asquith\) 1852-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We had better wait and see.)Tj
ET
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(Phrased used repeatedly in speeches in 1910, referring to the rumour tha\
t the House of Lords was to be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(flooded with new Liberal peers to ensure the passage of the Finance Bill\
. Roy Jenkins \221Asquith\222 \(1964\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( We shall never sheath the sword which we have not lightly drawn unti\
l Belgium recovers in )Tj
T*
(full measure all and more than all that she has sacrificed, until France\
is adequately secured )Tj
T*
(against the menace of aggression, until the rights of the smaller nation\
alities of Europe are placed )Tj
T*
(upon an unassailable foundation, and until the military domination of Pr\
ussia is wholly and )Tj
T*
(finally destroyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(Speech at the Guildhall, London, 9 November 1914, in \221The Times\222 1\
0 November 1914)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( It is fitting that we should have buried the Unknown Prime Minister \
by the side of the )Tj
T*
(Unknown Soldier.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Referring to Bonar Law, in Robert Blake \221The Unknown Prime Minister\222\
\(1955\) p. 531)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( [The War Office kept three sets of figures:] one to mislead the publ\
ic, another to mislead the )Tj
T*
(Cabinet, and the third to mislead itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(In Alistair Horne \221Price of Glory\222 \(1962\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 1.106 Margot Asquith \(Countess of Oxford and Asquith\) 1864-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The t is silent, as in Harlow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(To Jean Harlow, who had been calling her Margot \(as in argot\), in T. S\
. Matthews \221Great Tom\222 \(1973\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( Lord Birkenhead is very clever but sometimes his brains go to his he\
ad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(In \221Listener\222 11 June 1953 \221Margot Oxford\222 by Lady Violet Bo\
nham Carter)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.50456 Tm
( She tells enough white lies to ice a wedding cake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
( Referring to Lady Desborough, in \221Listener\222 11 June 1953 \221M\
argot Oxford\222 by Lady Violet Bonham Carter)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( He can\222t see a belt without hitting below it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
( Referring to Lloyd George, in \221Listener\222 11 June 1953 \221Marg\
ot Oxford\222 by)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lady Violet Bonham Carter)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.7124 Tm
( 1.107 Mary Astell 1668-1731)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Their sophistry I can control)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who falsely say that women have no soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.17047 Tm
(\221Ambition\222 l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 218.25456 Tm
( Happy am I who out of danger sit,)Tj
T*
( Can see and pity them who wade thro it;)Tj
T*
( Need take no thought my treasure to dispose,)Tj
T*
( What I ne\222re had I cannot fear to lose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.42047 Tm
(\221Awake my Lute\222 l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 127.50456 Tm
( Our opposers usually miscall our quickness of thought, fancy and fla\
sh, and christen their own )Tj
T*
(heaviness by the specious names of judgement and solidity; but it is eas\
y to retort upon them the )Tj
T*
(reproachful ones of dullness and stupidity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay in Defence of the Female Sex\222 \(1696\) p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.75456 Tm
( Fetters of gold are still fetters, and the softest lining can never \
make them so easy as liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay in Defence of the Female Sex\222 \(1696\) p. 25)Tj
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( If all men are born free, how is it that all women are born slaves?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 732.17047 Tm
(\221Some Reflections upon Marriage\222 \(1706 ed.\) preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 699.9624 Tm
( 1.108 Sir Jacob Astley 1579-1652)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O Lord! thou knowest how busy I must be this day: if I forget thee, \
do not thou forget me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(Prayer before the Battle of Edgehill, in Sir Philip Warwick \221Memoires\
\222 \(1701\) p. 229)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 630.2124 Tm
( 1.109 Nancy Astor \(Viscountess Astor\) 1879-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I married beneath me, all women do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.67047 Tm
(In \221Dictionary of National Biography 1961-1970\222 \(1981\) p. 43)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 560.4624 Tm
( 1.110 Brooks Atkinson 1894-1984)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( After each war there is a little less democracy to save.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.92047 Tm
(\221Once Around the Sun\222 \(1951\) 7 January)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 490.7124 Tm
( 1.111 E. L. Atkinson 1882-1929 and Apsley Cherry-Garrard 1882-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Hereabouts died a very gallant gentleman, Captain L. E. G. Oates of \
the Inniskilling Dragoons. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(In March 1912, returning from the Pole, he walked willingly to his death\
in a blizzard to try and )Tj
T*
(save his comrades, beset by hardships.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.17047 Tm
(Epitaph on cairn erected in the Antarctic, 15 November 1912, in Apsley C\
herry-Garrard \221The Worst Journey )Tj
T*
(in the World\222 \(1922\) p. 487)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.9624 Tm
( 1.112 Clement Attlee \(first Earl Attlee\) 1883-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The voice we heard was that of Mr Churchill but the mind was that of\
Lord)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beaverbrook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.42047 Tm
(Speech on radio, 5 June 1945, in Francis Williams \221A Prime Minister R\
emembers\222 \(1961\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.50456 Tm
( I think the British have the distinction above all other nations of \
being able to put new wine )Tj
T*
(into old bottles without bursting them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 24 October 1950, col. 2705)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( Few thought he was even a starter)Tj
T*
( There were many who thought themselves smarter)Tj
T*
( But he ended PM)Tj
T*
( CH and OM)Tj
T*
( An earl and a knight of the garter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.92047 Tm
(Describing himself in a letter to Tom Attlee, 8 April 1956; in Kenneth H\
arris \221Attlee\222 \(1982\) p. 545)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.00456 Tm
( [Russian Communism is] the illegitimate child of Karl Marx and Cathe\
rine the Great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.17047 Tm
(Speech at Aarhus University, 11 April 1956, in \221The Times\222 12 Apri\
l 1956)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.25456 Tm
( Democracy means government by discussion, but it is only effective i\
f you can stop people )Tj
T*
(talking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.42047 Tm
(Speech at Oxford, 14 June 1957, in \221The Times\222 15 June 1957)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.50456 Tm
( A monologue is not a decision.)Tj
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(To Winston Churchill, who had complained that a matter had been brought \
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(Francis Williams \221A Prime Minister Remembers\222 \(1961\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( The Bishop sometimes would take the key of the wine-cellar, and he a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(and lock themselves in and be merry. Then first he lays down his episcop\
al hat\227There lies the )Tj
T*
(Doctor. Then he puts off his gown\227There lies the Bishop. Then \222twa\
s, Here\222s to thee, Corbet, )Tj
T*
(and Here\222s to thee, Lushington.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.92047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Richard Corbet\222)Tj
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( How these curiosities would be quite forgot, did not such idle fello\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.17047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Venetia Digby\222)Tj
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( Extreme pleasant in his conversation, and at dinner, supper, etc; bu\
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T*
(the letter R \(littera canina\) very hard\227a certain sign of a satiric\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.42047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221John Dryden\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.50456 Tm
( He had read much, if one considers his long life; but his contemplat\
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T*
(his reading. He was wont to say that if he had read as much as other men\
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T*
(no more than other men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.67047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Thomas Hobbes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.75456 Tm
( As they were reading of inscribing and circumscribing figures, said \
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T*
(inscribe a triangle in a quadrangle. Bring a pig into the quadrangle and\
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T*
(at him, & he will take the pig by the ear, then I come & take the dog by\
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T*
(tail, and so there you have a triangle in a quadrangle; quod erat facien\
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(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Ralph Kettel\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.00456 Tm
( He was so fair that they called him the lady of Christ\222s College.\
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(\221Brief Lives\222 \221John Milton\222)Tj
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T*
(was a spare man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.42047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221John Milton\222)Tj
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( Sciatica: he cured it, by boiling his buttock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.67047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Sir Jonas Moore\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.75456 Tm
( She was when a child much against the Bishops, and prayed to God to \
take them to him, but )Tj
T*
(afterwards was reconciled to them. Prayed aloud, as the hypocritical fas\
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T*
(overheard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.92047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Katherine Philips\222)Tj
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( Sir Walter, being strangely surprised and put out of his countenance\
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T*
(his son a damned blow over the face. His son, as rude as he was, would n\
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T*
(strikes over the face the gentleman that sat next to him a nd said \221B\
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T*
(father anon\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.17047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221Sir Walter Raleigh\222)Tj
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( When he killed a calf he would do it in a high style, and make a spe\
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(\221Brief Lives\222 \221William Shakespeare\222)Tj
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( He was a handsome, well-shaped man: very good company, and of a very\
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0 -1.2 TD
(smooth wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Brief Lives\222 \221William Shakespeare\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Anno 1670, not far from Cirencester, was an apparition; being demand\
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T*
(or a bad? returned no answer, but disappeared with a curious perfume and\
most melodious twang. )Tj
T*
(Mr W. Lilly believes it was a fairy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1696\) \221Apparitions\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 1.114 W. H. Auden \(Wystan Hugh Auden\) 1907-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some thirty inches from my nose)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The frontier of my Person goes,)Tj
T*
( And all the untilled air between)Tj
T*
( Is private pagus or demesne.)Tj
T*
( Stranger, unless with bedroom eyes)Tj
T*
( I beckon you to fraternize,)Tj
T*
( Beware of rudely crossing it:)Tj
T*
( I have no gun, but I can spit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221About the House\222 \(1966\) \221Prologue: the Birth of Architecture\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.00456 Tm
( Sob, heavy world,)Tj
T*
( Sob as you spin)Tj
T*
( Mantled in mist, remote from the happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221The Age of Anxiety\222 \(1947\) p. 104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Lay your sleeping head, my love,)Tj
T*
( Human on my faithless arm;)Tj
T*
( Time and fevers burn away)Tj
T*
( Individual beauty from)Tj
T*
( Thoughtful children, and the grave)Tj
T*
( Proves the child ephemeral:)Tj
T*
( But in my arms till break of day)Tj
T*
( Let the living creature lie,)Tj
T*
( Mortal, guilty, but to me)Tj
T*
( The entirely beautiful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221Another Time\222 \(1940\) no. 18, p. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( I\222ll love you, dear, I\222ll love you)Tj
T*
( Till China and Africa meet)Tj
T*
( And the river jumps over the mountain)Tj
T*
( And the salmon sing in the street.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I\222ll love you till the ocean)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is folded and hung up to dry)Tj
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( And the seven stars go squawking)Tj
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( Like geese about the sky.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221As I Walked Out One Evening\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( O plunge your hands in water,)Tj
T*
( Plunge them in up to the wrist;)Tj
T*
( Stare, stare in the basin)Tj
T*
( And wonder what you\222ve missed.)Tj
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( The glacier knocks in the cupboard,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The desert sighs in the bed,)Tj
T*
( And the crack in the tea-cup opens)Tj
T*
( A lane to the land of the dead.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221As I Walked Out One Evening\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( A poet\222s hope: to be,)Tj
T*
( like some valley cheese,)Tj
T*
( local, but prized elsewhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Collected Poems\222 \(1976\) p. 639)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( To save your world you asked this man to die:)Tj
T*
( Would this man, could he see you now, ask why?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Epitaph for the Unknown Soldier\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( Perfection, of a kind, was what he was after,)Tj
T*
( And the poetry he invented was easy to understand;)Tj
T*
( He knew human folly like the back of his hand,)Tj
T*
( And was greatly interested in armies and fleets;)Tj
T*
( When he laughed, respectable senators burst with laughter,)Tj
T*
( And when he cried the little children died in the streets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on a Tyrant\222 \(1940\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Altogether elsewhere, vast)Tj
T*
( Herds of reindeer move across)Tj
T*
( Miles and miles of golden moss,)Tj
T*
( Silently and very fast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221The Fall of Rome\222 \(1951\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( To us he is no more a person)Tj
T*
( Now but a whole climate of opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221In Memory of Sigmund Freud\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( He disappeared in the dead of winter:)Tj
T*
( The brooks were frozen, the airports almost deserted,)Tj
T*
( And snow disfigured the public statues;)Tj
T*
( The mercury sank in the mouth of the dying day.)Tj
T*
( What instruments we have agree)Tj
T*
( The day of his death was a dark cold day.)Tj
ET
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(\221In Memory of W. B. Yeats\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( You were silly like us: your gift survived it all;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The parish of rich women, physical decay,)Tj
T*
( Yourself; mad Ireland hurt you into poetry.)Tj
T*
( Now Ireland has her madness and her weather still,)Tj
T*
( For poetry makes nothing happen: it survives)Tj
T*
( In the valley of its saying where executives)Tj
T*
( Would never want to tamper; it flows south)Tj
T*
( From ranches of isolation and the busy griefs,)Tj
T*
( Raw towns that we believe and die in; it survives,)Tj
T*
( A way of happening, a mouth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221In Memory of W. B. Yeats\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Earth, receive an honoured guest;)Tj
T*
( William Yeats is laid to rest:)Tj
T*
( Let the Irish vessel lie)Tj
T*
( Emptied of its poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221In Memory of W. B. Yeats\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( In the nightmare of the dark)Tj
T*
( All the dogs of Europe bark,)Tj
T*
( And the living nations wait,)Tj
T*
( Each sequestered in its hate;)Tj
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( Intellectual disgrace)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And the seas of pity lie)Tj
T*
( Locked and frozen in each eye.)Tj
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(\221In Memory of W. B. Yeats\222 \(1940\))Tj
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( In the deserts of the heart)Tj
T*
( Let the healing fountain start,)Tj
T*
( In the prison of his days)Tj
T*
( Teach the free man how to praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221In Memory of W. B. Yeats\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( There is no love;)Tj
T*
( There are only the various envies, all of them sad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221In Praise of Limestone\222 \(1951\) l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( This land is not the sweet home that it looks,)Tj
T*
( Nor its peace the historical calm of a site)Tj
T*
( Where something was settled once and for all: A backward)Tj
T*
( And dilapidated province, connected)Tj
T*
( To the big busy world by a tunnel, with a certain)Tj
T*
( Seedy appeal.)Tj
ET
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(\221In Praise of Limestone\222 \(1951\) l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The desires of the heart are as crooked as corkscrews)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not to be born is the best for man)Tj
T*
( The second best is a formal order)Tj
T*
( The dance\222s pattern, dance while you can.)Tj
T*
( Dance, dance, for the figure is easy)Tj
T*
( The tune is catching and will not stop)Tj
T*
( Dance till the stars come down with the rafters)Tj
T*
( Dance, dance, dance till you drop.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Letter to William Coldstream, Esq.\222 \(1937\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( And make us as Newton was, who in his garden watching)Tj
T*
( The apple falling towards England, became aware)Tj
T*
( Between himself and her of an eternal tie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Out on the lawn I lie in bed,)Tj
T*
( Vega conspicuous overhead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Let the florid music praise,)Tj
T*
( The flute and the trumpet,)Tj
T*
( Beauty\222s conquest of your face:)Tj
T*
( In that land of flesh and bone,)Tj
T*
( Where from citadels on high)Tj
T*
( Her imperial standards fly,)Tj
T*
( Let the hot sun)Tj
T*
( Shine on, shine on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Look, stranger, at this island now)Tj
T*
( The leaping light for your delight discovers,)Tj
T*
( Stand stable here)Tj
T*
( And silent be,)Tj
T*
( That through the channels of the ear)Tj
T*
( May wander like a river)Tj
T*
( The swaying sound of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( O what is that sound which so thrills the ear)Tj
T*
( Down in the valley drumming, drumming?)Tj
T*
( Only the scarlet soldiers, dear,)Tj
T*
( The soldiers coming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( O it\222s broken the lock and splintered the door,)Tj
ET
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( O it\222s the gate where they\222re turning, turning;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their boots are heavy on the floor)Tj
T*
( And their eyes are burning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( A shilling life will give you all the facts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( August for the people and their favourite islands.)Tj
T*
( Daily the steamers sidle up to meet)Tj
T*
( The effusive welcome of the pier.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Look, Stranger!\222 \(1936\) no. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( About suffering they were never wrong,)Tj
T*
( The Old Masters: how well they understood)Tj
T*
( Its human position; how it takes place)Tj
T*
( While someone else is eating or opening a window or just walking dul\
ly along.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Mus\350e des Beaux Arts\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( They never forgot)Tj
T*
( That even the dreadful martyrdom must run its course)Tj
T*
( Anyhow in a corner, some untidy spot)Tj
T*
( Where the dogs go on with their doggy life and the torturer\222s hor\
se)Tj
T*
( Scratches its innocent behind on a tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Mus\350e des Beaux Arts\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I see it often since you\222ve been away:)Tj
T*
( The island, the veranda, and the fruit;)Tj
T*
( The tiny steamer breaking from the bay;)Tj
T*
( The literary mornings with its hoot;)Tj
T*
( Our ugly comic servant; and then you,)Tj
T*
( Lovely and willing every afternoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221New Verse\222 October 1933, p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( At the far end of the enormous room)Tj
T*
( An orchestra is playing to the rich.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221New Verse\222 October 1933, p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( To the man-in-the-street, who, I\222m sorry to say,)Tj
T*
( Is a keen observer of life,)Tj
T*
( The word \221Intellectual\222 suggests straight away)Tj
T*
( A man who\222s untrue to his wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221New Year Letter\222 \(1941\) note to l. 1277)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( This is the Night Mail crossing the Border,)Tj
T*
( Bringing the cheque and the postal order,)Tj
T*
( Letters for the rich, letters for the poor,)Tj
T*
( The shop at the corner, the girl next door.)Tj
ET
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( Pulling up Beattock, a steady climb:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The gradient\222s against her, but she\222s on time.)Tj
T*
( Past cotton-grass and moorland border,)Tj
T*
( Shovelling white steam over her shoulder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Night Mail\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Letters of thanks, letters from banks,)Tj
T*
( Letters of joy from girl and boy,)Tj
T*
( Receipted bills and invitations)Tj
T*
( To inspect new stock or to visit relations,)Tj
T*
( And applications for situations,)Tj
T*
( And timid lovers\222 declarations,)Tj
T*
( And gossip, gossip from all the nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Night Mail\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Private faces in public places)Tj
T*
( Are wiser and nicer)Tj
T*
( Than public faces in private places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Orators\222 \(1932\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( To ask the hard question is simple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Poems\222 \(1933\) no. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( At Dirty Dick\222s and Sloppy Joe\222s)Tj
T*
( We drank our liquor straight,)Tj
T*
( Some went upstairs with Margery,)Tj
T*
( And some, alas, with Kate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Sea and the Mirror\227Master and Boatswain\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( My Dear One is mine as mirrors are lonely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Sea and the Mirror\227Miranda\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( I and the public know)Tj
T*
( What all schoolchildren learn,)Tj
T*
( Those to whom evil is done)Tj
T*
( Do evil in return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221September 1, 1939\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( All I have is a voice)Tj
T*
( To undo the folded lie,)Tj
T*
( The romantic lie in the brain)Tj
T*
( Of the sensual man-in-the-street)Tj
T*
( And the lie of Authority)Tj
T*
( Whose buildings grope the sky:)Tj
T*
( There is no such thing as the State)Tj
T*
( And no one exists alone;)Tj
T*
( Hunger allows no choice)Tj
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( To the citizen or the police;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We must love one another or die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221September 1, 1939\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Out of the air a voice without a face)Tj
T*
( Proved by statistics that some cause was just)Tj
T*
( In tones as dry and level as the place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Shield of Achilles\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Sir, no man\222s enemy, forgiving all)Tj
T*
( But will his negative inversion, be prodigal:)Tj
T*
( Send to us power and light, a sovereign touch)Tj
T*
( Curing the intolerable neutral itch,)Tj
T*
( The exhaustion of weaning, the liar\222s quinsy,)Tj
T*
( And the distortions of ingrown virginity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Sir, No Man\222s Enemy\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Harrow the house of the dead; look shining at)Tj
T*
( New styles of architecture, a change of heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Sir, No Man\222s Enemy\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Tomorrow for the young the poets exploding like bombs,)Tj
T*
( The walks by the lake, the weeks of perfect communion;)Tj
T*
( Tomorrow the bicycle races)Tj
T*
( Through the suburbs on summer evenings. But today the struggle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Spain\222 \(1937\) p. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( The stars are dead. The animals will not look:)Tj
T*
( We are left alone with our day, and the time is short, and)Tj
T*
( History to the defeated)Tj
T*
( May say Alas but cannot help nor pardon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Spain\222 \(1937\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( In a garden shady this holy lady)Tj
T*
( With reverent cadence and subtle psalm,)Tj
T*
( Like a black swan as death came on)Tj
T*
( Poured forth her song in perfect calm:)Tj
T*
( And by ocean\222s margin this innocent virgin)Tj
T*
( Constructed an organ to enlarge her prayer,)Tj
T*
( And notes tremendous from her great engine)Tj
T*
( Thundered out on the Roman air.)Tj
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( Blonde Aphrodite rose up excited,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Moved to delight by the melody,)Tj
T*
( White as an orchid she rode quite naked)Tj
T*
( In an oyster shell on top of the sea.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Three Songs for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1941\); set to music by Be\
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(\221Hymn to St Cecilia\222 op. 27 \(1942\))Tj
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( Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions)Tj
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( To all musicians, appear and inspire:)Tj
T*
( Translated Daughter, come down and startle)Tj
T*
( Composing mortals with immortal fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Three Songs for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1941\))Tj
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( Let us honour if we can)Tj
T*
( The vertical man)Tj
T*
( Though we value none)Tj
T*
( But the horizontal one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221To Christopher Isherwood\222 \(1930\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Our researchers into Public Opinion are content)Tj
T*
( That he held the proper opinions for the time of year;)Tj
T*
( When there was peace, he was for peace; when there was war, he went.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Unknown Citizen\222 \(1940\))Tj
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( Was he free? Was he happy? The question is absurd:)Tj
T*
( Had anything been wrong, we should certainly have heard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221The Unknown Citizen\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( The sky is darkening like a stain;)Tj
T*
( Something is going to fall like rain,)Tj
T*
( And it won\222t be flowers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Witnesses\222 \(1935\) l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( All sin tends to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction i\
s what is called damnation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221A Certain World\222 \(1970\) \221Hell\222)Tj
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( Man is a history-making creature who can neither repeat his past nor\
leave it behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Dyer\222s Hand\222 \(1963\) \221D. H. Lawrence\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( The true men of action in our time, those who transform the world, a\
re not the politicians and )Tj
T*
(statesmen, but the scientists. Unfortunately poetry cannot celebrate the\
m, because their deeds are )Tj
T*
(concerned with things, not persons, and are, therefore, speechless. When\
I find myself in the )Tj
T*
(company of scientists, I feel like a shabby curate who has strayed by mi\
stake into a drawing room )Tj
T*
(full of dukes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Dyer\222s Hand\222 \(1963\) \221The Poet and the City\222)Tj
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( Some books are undeservedly forgotten; none are undeservedly remembe\
red.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Dyer\222s Hand\222 \(1963\) \221Reading\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( My face looks like a wedding-cake left out in the rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(In Humphrey Carpenter \221W. H. Auden\222 \(1981\) pt. 2, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Art is born of humiliation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(In Stephen Spender \221World Within World\222 \(1951\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 48.7124 Tm
( 1.115 W. H. Auden 1907-73 and Christopher Isherwood 1904-86)Tj
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( Happy the hare at morning, for she cannot read)Tj
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( The Hunter\222s waking thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Dog beneath the Skin\222 \(1935\) chorus following act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( 1.116 \310mile Augier 1820-89)Tj
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( Montrichard: La nostalgie de la boue!)Tj
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( Marquis: Put a duck on a lake in the midst of some swans, and you\222\
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( Montrichard: Longing to be back in the mud!)Tj
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(\221Le Mariage d\222Olympe\222 \(1855\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( 1.117 St Augustine of Hippo A.D. 354-430)Tj
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( Nondum amabam, et amare amabam...quaerebam quid amarem, amans amare.\
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(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 3, ch. 1)Tj
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( Et illa erant fercula, in quibus mihi esurienti te inferebatur sol e\
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( And these were the dishes wherein to me, hunger-starven for thee, th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(moon.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.67047 Tm
(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 3, ch.6)Tj
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( Da mihi castitatem et continentiam, sed noli modo.)Tj
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(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 8, ch. 7)Tj
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( Tolle lege, tolle lege.)Tj
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T*
( Take up and read, take up and read.)Tj
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(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 8, ch.12)Tj
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( Sero te amavi, pulchritudo tam antiqua et tam nova, sero te amavi! e\
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(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 10, ch. 27)Tj
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( Continentiam iubes; da quod iubes et iube quod vis.)Tj
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(\221Confessions\222 \(397-8\) bk. 10, ch. 29)Tj
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( Securus iudicat orbis terrarum.)Tj
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(\221Contra Epistolam Parmeniani\222 \(400\) bk. 3, sect. 24)Tj
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( Salus extra ecclesiam non est.)Tj
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(\221De Baptismo contra Donatistas\222 bk. 4, 100, 17, 24.)Tj
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( Audi partem alteram.)Tj
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( Hear the other side.)Tj
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(\221De Duabus Animabus contra Manicheos\222 ch. 14)Tj
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( Dilige et quod vis fac.)Tj
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( Love and do what you will.)Tj
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(\221In Epistolam Joannis ad Parthos\222 \(413\) tractatus 7, sect. 8 \(o\
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( Multi quidem facilius se abstinent ut non utantur, quam temperent ut\
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( To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation.)Tj
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(\221On the Good of Marriage\222 \(401\) ch. 21)Tj
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( Cum dilectione hominum et odio vitiorum.)Tj
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T*
( With love for mankind and hatred of sins.)Tj
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(\221Opera Omnia\222 vol. 2, col. 962, letter 211 in J.-P. Migne \(ed.\) \
\221Patrologiae Latinae\222 \(1845\) vol. 33 \(often )Tj
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(quoted in the form: \221Love the sinner but hate the sin\222\))Tj
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( Roma locuta est; causa finita est.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Rome has spoken; the case is concluded.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.17047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 bk. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.25456 Tm
( We make ourselves a ladder out of our vices if we trample the vices \
themselves underfoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.42047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 bk. 3 \221De Ascensione\222)Tj
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( 1.118 Emperor Augustus 63 B.C.-A.D. 14)Tj
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( Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(In Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Divus Augustus\222 sect. 2\
3)Tj
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( I inherited it brick and left it marble.)Tj
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(In Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Divus Augustus\222 sect. 2\
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( It will be paid at the Greek Kalends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(In Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Divus Augustus\222 sect. 8\
7 \(meaning never\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 210.9624 Tm
( 1.119 Jane Austen 1775-1817)Tj
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T*
( Miss Bates stood in the very worst predicament in the world for havi\
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(favour; and she had no intellectual superiority to make atonement for he\
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T*
(who might hate her, into outward respect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.42047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 3)Tj
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( An egg boiled very soft is not unwholesome.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.67047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 3 \(Mr Woodhouse\))Tj
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( One half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 9 \(Emma\))Tj
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( It did not often happen...but it was too often for Emma\222s charity\
, especially as there was all the )Tj
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(pain of apprehension to be frequently endured, though the offence came n\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( With men he can be rational and unaffected, but when he has ladies t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(works.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 13 \(Mr John Knightley, of Mr Elton\))Tj
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( The folly of allowing people to be comfortable at home\227and the fo\
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T*
(comfortable at home when they can!...five dull hours in another man\222s\
house, with nothing to say )Tj
T*
(or to hear that was not said and heard yesterday, and may not be said an\
d heard again tomorrow....)Tj
T*
(four horses and four servants taken out for nothing but to convey five i\
dle, shivering creatures )Tj
T*
(into colder rooms and worse company than they might have had at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 13 \(Mr John Knightley\))Tj
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( My mother\222s deafness is very trifling, you see, just nothing at a\
ll. By only raising my voice, )Tj
T*
(and saying anything two or three times over, she is sure to hear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 19 \(Miss Bates\))Tj
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( The sooner every party breaks up the better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 25 \(Mr Woodhouse\))Tj
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( Surprises are foolish things. The pleasure is not enhanced, and the \
inconvenience is often )Tj
T*
(considerable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 26 \(Mr John Knightley\))Tj
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( That young man is not quite the thing. He has been opening the doors\
very often this evening )Tj
T*
(and keeping them open very inconsiderately. He does not think of the dra\
ught. I do not mean to )Tj
T*
(set you against him, but indeed he is not quite the thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 29 \(Mr Woodhouse\))Tj
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( One has no great hopes from Birmingham. I always say there is someth\
ing direful in the sound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Emma\222 \(1816\) ch. 36 \(Mrs Elton\))Tj
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(Henry the 4th ascended the throne of England much to his own satisfactio\
n in the year 1399.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221The History of England\222 \(written 1791\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( One of Edward\222s Mistresses was Jane Shore, who has had a play wri\
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T*
(tragedy and therefore not worth reading.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The History of England\222 \(written 1791\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Nothing can be said in his vindication, but that his abolishing Reli\
gious Houses and leaving )Tj
T*
(them to the ruinous depredations of time has been of infinite use to the\
landscape of England in )Tj
T*
(general.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The History of England\222 \(written 1791\))Tj
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( Lady Jane Grey, who has been already mentioned as reading Greek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221The History of England\222 \(written 1791\))Tj
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( It was too pathetic for the feelings of Sophia and myself\227we fain\
ted Alternately on a Sofa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Love and Freindship\222 \(written 1790\) \221Letter the 8th\222)Tj
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( She was nothing more than a mere good-tempered, civil and obliging y\
oung woman; as such )Tj
T*
(we could scarcely dislike her\227she was only an Object of Contempt.)Tj
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(\221Love and Freindship\222 \(written 1790\) \221Letter the 13th\222)Tj
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( The true London maxim, that everything is to be got with money.)Tj
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(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 6 \(Mary Crawford\))Tj
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( We do not look in great cities for our best morality.)Tj
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(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 9 \(Edmund Bertram\))Tj
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( A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of. It \
certainly may secure all the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(myrtle and turkey part of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 22)Tj
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( Shakespeare one gets acquainted with without knowing how. It is part\
of an Englishman\222s )Tj
T*
(constitution. His thoughts and beauties are so spread abroad that one to\
uches them everywhere, )Tj
T*
(one is intimate with him by instinct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 34 \(Henry Crawford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery. I quit such odious subject\
s as soon as I can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( He feared that principle, active principle, had been wanting, that t\
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T*
(taught to govern their inclinations and tempers, by that sense of duty w\
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T*
(They had been instructed theoretically in their religion, but never requ\
ired to bring it into daily )Tj
T*
(practice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Mansfield Park\222 \(1814\) ch. 48 \(of Sir Thomas Bertram\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( \221Oh! it is only a novel!...only Cecilia, or Camilla, or Belinda:\222\
or, in short, only some work in )Tj
T*
(which the most thorough knowledge of human nature, the happiest delineat\
ion of its varieties, the )Tj
T*
(liveliest effusions of wit and humour are conveyed to the world in the b\
est chosen language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Oh! who can ever be tired of Bath?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 10 \(Catherine Morland\))Tj
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( Real solemn history, I cannot be interested in....The quarrels of po\
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T*
(pestilences, in every page; the men all so good for nothing, and hardly \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 14 \(Catherine Morland\))Tj
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( Where people wish to attach, they should always be ignorant. To come\
with a well-informed )Tj
T*
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T*
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isfortune of knowing )Tj
T*
(any thing, should conceal it as well as she can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( From politics, it was an easy step to silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( Remember the country and the age we live in. Remember that we are En\
glish, that we are )Tj
T*
(Christians....Does our education prepare us for such atrocities? Do our \
laws connive at them? )Tj
T*
(Could they be perpetrated without being known, in a country like this, w\
here social and literary )Tj
T*
(intercourse is on such a footing; where every man is surrounded by a nei\
ghbourhood of voluntary )Tj
T*
(spies, and where roads and newspapers lay every thing open?)Tj
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(\221Northanger Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 34 \(Henry Tilney\))Tj
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( Sir Walter Elliot, of Kellynch-hall, in Somersetshire, was a man who\
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T*
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(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 1)Tj
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( She had been forced into prudence in her youth, she learned romance \
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T*
(natural sequel of an unnatural beginning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( She ventured to hope he did not always read only poetry; and to say,\
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T*
(misfortune of poetry, to be seldom safely enjoyed by those who enjoyed i\
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T*
(the strong feelings while alone could estimate it truly, were the very f\
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T*
(it but sparingly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( \221My idea of good company, Mr Elliot, is the company of clever, we\
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T*
(have a great deal of conversation; that is what I call good company.\222\
)Tj
T*
( \221You are mistaken,\222 said he gently, \221that is not good compa\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 16 \(Anne Elliot and William Elliot\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Educa\
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T*
(much higher a degree; the pen has been in their hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 23 \(Anne Eliot\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( All the privilege I claim for my own sex...is that of loving longest\
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T*
(hope is gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 23 \(Anne Eliot\))Tj
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( It was, perhaps, one of those cases in which advice is good or bad o\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Persuasion\222 \(1818\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possess\
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T*
(be in want of a wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 1.)Tj
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( May I ask whether these pleasing attentions proceed from the impulse\
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T*
(the result of previous study?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 14 \(Mr Bennet\))Tj
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( Mr Collins had only to change from Jane to Elizabeth\227and it was s\
oon done\227done while Mrs )Tj
T*
(Bennet was stirring the fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( From this day you must be a stranger to one of your parents.\227Your\
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T*
(again if you do not marry Mr Collins, and I will never see you again if \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 20 \(Mr Bennet\))Tj
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( Are the shades of Pemberley to be thus polluted?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 56 \(Lady Catherine de Burgh\))Tj
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( You ought certainly to forgive them as a christian, but never to adm\
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(allow their names to be mentioned in your hearing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 57 \(Mr Collins\))Tj
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( For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbours, and laugh\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 57 \(Mr Bennet\))Tj
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( I have been a selfish being all my life, in practice, though not in \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Pride and Prejudice\222 \(1813\) ch. 58 \(Mr Darcy\))Tj
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( An annuity is a very serious business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Sense and Sensibility\222 \(1811\) ch. 2 \(Mrs Dashwood\))Tj
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(\221I am afraid,\222 replied Elinor, \221that the pleasantness of an emp\
loyment does not always evince its )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Sense and Sensibility\222 \(1811\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( A person and face, of strong, natural, sterling insignificance, thou\
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T*
(of fashion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Sense and Sensibility\222 \(1811\) ch. 33)Tj
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( We met...Dr Hall in such very deep mourning that either his mother, \
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(Letter to Cassandra Austen, 17 May 1799, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221J\
ane Austen\222s Letters\222 \(1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( How horrible it is to have so many people killed!\227And what a bles\
sing that one cares for none )Tj
T*
(of them!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(Letter to Cassandra Austen, 31 May 1811, after the battle of Albuera, 16\
May 1811, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) )Tj
T*
( \221Jane Austen\222s Letters\222 \(1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( 3 or 4 families in a country village is the very thing to work on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(Letter to Anna Austen, 9 September 1814, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221J\
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15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( What should I do with your strong, manly, spirited sketches, full of\
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T*
(could I possibly join them on to the little bit \(two inches wide\) of i\
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T*
(fine a brush, as produces little effect after much labour?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(Letter to J. Edward Austen, 16 December 1816, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221\
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( He and I should not in the least agree of course, in our ideas of no\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Knight, 23 March 1817, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221Jan\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.120 Earl of Avon)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Sir Anthony Eden \(5.2\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 1.121 Alan Ayckbourn 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My mother used to say, Delia, if S-E-X ever rears its ugly head, clo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the rest of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(\221Bedroom Farce\222 \(1978\) act 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( This place, you tell them you\222re interested in the arts, you get \
messages of sympathy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(\221Chorus of Disapproval\222 \(1986\) act 2)Tj
ET
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( Do you realize, Mrs Foster, the hours I\222ve put into that woman? W\
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0 -1.2 TD
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Encouraging her to join )Tj
T*
(the public library and make use of her non-fiction tickets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221How the Other Half Loves\222 \(1972\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( If you gave Ruth a rose, she\222d peel all the petals off to make su\
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T*
(And when she\222d done that, she\222d turn round and say, do you call th\
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T*
(bits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Table Manners\222 \(1975\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( I always feel with Norman that I have him on loan from somewhere. Li\
ke one of his library )Tj
T*
(books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Table Manners\222 \(1975\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.4624 Tm
( 1.122 A. J. Ayer \(Sir Alfred Jules Ayer\) 1910-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The criterion which we use to test the genuineness of apparent state\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(and only if, he knows how to verify the proposition which it purports to\
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T*
(knows what observations would lead him, under certain conditions, to acc\
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T*
(being true, or reject it as being false.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221Language, Truth, and Logic\222 \(2nd ed., 1946\) p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.00456 Tm
( If I...say \221Stealing money is wrong,\222 I produce a sentence whi\
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T*
(is, expresses no proposition which can be either true or false. It is as\
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T*
(money!!\222\227where the shape and thickness of the exclamation marks sh\
ow, by a suitable )Tj
T*
(convention, that a special sort of moral disapproval is the feeling whic\
h is being expressed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221Language, Truth, and Logic\222 \(2nd ed., 1946\) p. 107)Tj
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( [We] offer the theist the same comfort as we gave to the moralist. H\
is assertions cannot )Tj
T*
(possibly be valid, but they cannot be invalid either. As he says nothing\
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T*
(cannot justly be accused of saying anything false, or anything for which\
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T*
(grounds. It is only when the theist claims that in asserting the existen\
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T*
(is expressing a genuine proposition that we are entitled to disagree wit\
h him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221Language, Truth, and Logic\222 \(2nd ed., 1946\) p. 116)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 200.2124 Tm
( 1.123 Pam Ayres 1947\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Medicinal discovery,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It moves in mighty leaps,)Tj
T*
( It leapt straight past the common cold)Tj
T*
( And gave it us for keeps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(\221Oh no, I got a cold\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 76.4624 Tm
( 1.124 Sir Robert Aytoun 1570-1638)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I loved thee once. I\222ll love no more,)Tj
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( Thine be the grief, as is the blame;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou art not what thou wast before,)Tj
T*
( What reason I should be the same?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221To an Inconstant Mistress\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.125 W. E. Aytoun 1813-65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221He is coming! he is coming!\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like a bridegroom from his room,)Tj
T*
( Came the hero from his prison)Tj
T*
( To the scaffold and the doom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.42047 Tm
(\221The Execution of Montrose\222 st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 556.50456 Tm
( The grim Geneva ministers)Tj
T*
( With anxious scowl drew near,)Tj
T*
( As you have seen the ravens flock)Tj
T*
( Around the dying deer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(\221The Execution of Montrose\222 st. 17)Tj
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( They bore within their breasts the grief)Tj
T*
( That fame can never heal\227)Tj
T*
( The deep, unutterable woe)Tj
T*
( Which none save exiles feel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(\221The Island of the Scots\222 st. 12)Tj
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( The earth is all the home I have,)Tj
T*
( The heavens my wide roof-tree.)Tj
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(\221The Wandering Jew\222 l. 49)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
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( 2.0 B)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( )Tj
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0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.1 Charles Babbage 1792-1871)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every moment dies a man,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Every moment 1-1/16 is born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Parody of Tennyson\222s \221Vision of Sin\222 in an unpublished letter t\
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T*
(p. 1428.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 148.4624 Tm
( 2.2 Francis Bacon \(Baron Verulam and Viscount St Albans\) 1561-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For all knowledge and wonder \(which is the seed of knowledge\) is a\
n impression of pleasure in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 1, ch. 1, sect. 3)Tj
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( So let great authors have their due, as time, which is the author of\
authors, be not deprived of )Tj
T*
(his due, which is further and further to discover truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.17047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 1, ch. 4, sect. 12)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 713.42047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 1, ch. 5, sect. 8)Tj
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( [Knowledge is] a rich storehouse for the glory of the Creator and th\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 676.67047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 1, ch. 5, sect. 11)Tj
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( Antiquities are history defaced, or some remnants of history which h\
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T*
(shipwreck of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 621.92047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 2, sect. 1)Tj
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( Poesy was ever thought to have some participation of divineness, bec\
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T*
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T*
(buckle and bow the mind unto the nature of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 549.17047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 4, sect. 2)Tj
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( The knowledge of man is as the waters, some descending from above, a\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.42047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 5, sect. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 473.50456 Tm
( They are ill discoverers that think there is no land, when they can \
see nothing but sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.67047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 7, sect. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 436.75456 Tm
( Words are the tokens current and accepted for conceits, as moneys ar\
e for values.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.92047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 16, sect. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.00456 Tm
( A dance is a measured pace, as a verse is a measured speech.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.17047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 16, sect. 5)Tj
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( But men must know, that in this theatre of man\222s life it is reser\
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T*
(be lookers on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.42047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 20, sect. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 308.50456 Tm
( Did not one of the fathers in great indignation call poesy vinum dae\
monum?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.67047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 22, sect. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.75456 Tm
( All good moral philosophy is but an handmaid to religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.92047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 22, sect. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.00456 Tm
( It is in life as it is in ways, the shortest way is commonly the fou\
lest, and surely the fairer way )Tj
T*
(is not much about.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.17047 Tm
(\221The Advancement of Learning\222 \(1605\) bk. 2, ch. 23, sect. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.25456 Tm
( That all things are changed, and that nothing really perishes, and t\
hat the sum of matter )Tj
T*
(remains exactly the same, is sufficiently certain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.42047 Tm
(\221Cogitationes de Natura Rerum\222 Cogitatio 5 in J. Spedding \(ed.\) \
\221The Works of Francis Bacon\222 vol. 3 \(1857\) )Tj
T*
(p. 22 \(Latin\) and vol. 5 \(1858\) p. 426 \(English translation\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.50456 Tm
( Riches are a good handmaid, but the worst mistress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.67047 Tm
(\221De Dignitate et Augmentis Scientiarum\222 \(1640 ed., translated by \
Gilbert Watts\) I, vi, 3. Antitheta, 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.75456 Tm
( Antiquitas saeculi juventus mundi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ancient times were the youth of the world.)Tj
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(\221De Dignitate et Augmentis Scientiarum\222 \(1640 ed., translated by \
Gilbert Watts\) I, vii, 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( No terms of moderation takes place with the vulgar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221De Dignitate et Augmentis Scientiarum\222 \(1640 ed., translated by \
Gilbert Watts\) I, vii, 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Silence is the virtue of fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221De Dignitate et Augmentis Scientiarum\222 \(1640 ed., translated by \
Gilbert Watts\) I, vii, 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( I hold every man a debtor to his profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221The Elements of the Common Law\222 \(1596\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( Why should a man be in love with his fetters, though of gold?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221Essay of Death\222 in The Remaines of...Lord Verulam \(1648\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( He is the fountain of honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay of a King\222 \(1642\); attribution doubtful)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( Prosperity is the blessing of the Old Testament, adversity is the bl\
essing of the New.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Adversity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( The pencil of the Holy Ghost hath laboured more in describing the af\
flictions of Job than the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(felicities of Solomon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Adversity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( Prosperity is not without many fears and distastes; and adversity is\
not without comforts and )Tj
T*
(hopes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Adversity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( Prosperity doth best discover vice, but adversity doth best discover\
virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Adversity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( I had rather believe all the fables in the legend, and the Talmud, a\
nd the)Tj
T*
( Alcoran, than that this universal frame is without a mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Atheism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( A little philosophy inclineth man\222s mind to atheism, but depth in\
philosophy bringeth men\222s )Tj
T*
(minds about to religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Atheism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( They that deny a God destroy man\222s nobility; for certainly man is\
of kin to the beasts by his )Tj
T*
(body; and, if he be not of kin to God by his spirit, he is a base and ig\
noble creature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Atheism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 203.25456 Tm
( Virtue is like a rich stone, best plain set.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Beauty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.50456 Tm
( That is the best part of beauty, which a picture cannot express.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Beauty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.75456 Tm
( There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the p\
roportion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Beauty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( He said it that knew it best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Boldness\222 \(referring to Demosthenes\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( In civil business; what first? boldness; what second and third? bold\
ness: and yet boldness is a )Tj
T*
(child of ignorance and baseness.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 752.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Boldness\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 731.50456 Tm
( Boldness is an ill keeper of promise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Boldness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.75456 Tm
( Houses are built to live in and not to look on; therefore let use be\
preferred before uniformity, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(except where both may be had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Building\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.00456 Tm
( Light gains make heavy purses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Ceremonies and Respects\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.25456 Tm
( He that is too much in anything, so that he giveth another occasion \
of satiety, maketh himself )Tj
T*
(cheap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Ceremonies and Respects\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 548.50456 Tm
( Books will speak plain when counsellors blanch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Counsel\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 511.75456 Tm
( There be that can pack the cards and yet cannot play well; so there \
are some that are good in )Tj
T*
(canvasses and factions, that are otherwise weak men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Cunning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.00456 Tm
( In things that are tender and unpleasing, it is good to break the ic\
e by some whose words are of )Tj
T*
(less weight, and to reserve the more weighty voice to come in as by chan\
ce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Cunning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.25456 Tm
( I knew one that when he wrote a letter he would put that which was m\
ost material in the )Tj
T*
(postscript, as if it had been a bymatter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Cunning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.50456 Tm
( Nothing doth more hurt in a state than that cunning men pass for wis\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Cunning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.75456 Tm
( Men fear death as children fear to go in the dark; and as that natur\
al fear in children is )Tj
T*
(increased with tales, so is the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.00456 Tm
( There is no passion in the mind of man so weak, but it mates and mas\
ters the fear of death. )Tj
T*
(And therefore death is no such terrible enemy, when a man hath so many a\
ttendants about him )Tj
T*
(that can win the combat of him. Revenge triumphs over death; love slight\
s it; honour aspireth to )Tj
T*
(it; grief flieth to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( It is as natural to die as to be born; and to a little infant, perha\
ps, the one is as painful as the )Tj
T*
(other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.50456 Tm
( Above all, believe it, the sweetest canticle is Nunc dimittis, when \
a man hath obtained worthy )Tj
T*
(ends and expectations. Death hath this also, that it openeth the gate to\
good fame, and )Tj
T*
(extinguisheth envy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Death\222)Tj
ET
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q
0 0 612 792 re
W* n
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( If you dissemble sometimes your knowledge of that you are thought to\
know, you shall be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(thought, another time, to know that you know not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Discourse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I knew a wise man that had it for a by-word, when he saw men hasten \
to a conclusion. \221Stay a )Tj
T*
(little, that we may make an end the sooner.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Dispatch\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( To choose time is to save time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Dispatch\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Riches are for spending.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Expense\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( A man ought warily to begin charges which once begun will continue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Expense\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( There is little friendship in the world, and least of all between eq\
uals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Followers and Friends\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Chiefly the mould of a man\222s fortune is in his own hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Fortune\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( If a man look sharply, and attentively, he shall see Fortune: for th\
ough she be blind, yet she is )Tj
T*
(not invisible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Fortune\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( It had been hard for him that spake it to have put more truth and un\
truth together, in a few )Tj
T*
(words, than in that speech: \221Whosoever is delighted in solitude is ei\
ther a wild beast, or a god.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Friendship\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( A crowd is not company, and faces are but a gallery of pictures, and\
talk but a tinkling cymbal, )Tj
T*
(where there is no love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( It redoubleth joys, and cutteth griefs in halves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( As if you would call a physician, that is thought good for the cure \
of the disease you complain )Tj
T*
(of but is unacquainted with your body, and therefore may put you in the \
way for a present cure )Tj
T*
(but overthroweth your health in some other kind; and so cure the disease\
and kill the patient.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( God Almighty first planted a garden; and, indeed, it is the purest o\
f human pleasures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Gardens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( The inclination to goodness is imprinted deeply in the nature of man\
: insomuch, that if it issue )Tj
T*
(not towards men, it will take unto other living creatures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Goodness, and Goodness of Nature\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( If a man be gracious and courteous to strangers, it shows he is a ci\
tizen of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Goodness, and Goodness of Nature\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or\
state, servants of fame, and )Tj
T*
(servants of business.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Great Place\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( It is a strange desire to seek power and to lose liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Great Place\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( The rising unto place is laborious, and by pains men come to greater\
pains; and it is sometimes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(base, and by indignities men come to dignities. The standing is slippery\
, and the regress is either )Tj
T*
(a downfall, or at least an eclipse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Great Place\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.50456 Tm
( Severity breedeth fear, but roughness breedeth hate. Even reproofs f\
rom authority ought to be )Tj
T*
(grave, and not taunting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Great Place\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.75456 Tm
( All rising to great place is by a winding stair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Great Place\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( As the births of living creatures at first are ill-shapen, so are al\
l innovations, which are the )Tj
T*
(births of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Innovations\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( He that will not apply new remedies must expect new evils; for time \
is the greatest innovator.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Innovations\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( The speaking in a perpetual hyperbole is comely in nothing but in lo\
ve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( It has been well said that \221the arch-flatterer with whom all the \
petty flatterers have intelligence )Tj
T*
(is a man\222s self.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.00456 Tm
( He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for t\
hey are impediments to )Tj
T*
(great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Marriage and the Single Life\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.25456 Tm
( A single life doth well with churchmen, for charity will hardly wate\
r the ground where it must )Tj
T*
(first fill a pool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Marriage and the Single Life\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.50456 Tm
( Wives are young men\222s mistresses, companions for middle age, and \
old men\222s nurses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Marriage and the Single Life\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.75456 Tm
( He was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question \
when a man should )Tj
T*
(marry? \221A young man not yet, an elder man not at all.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Marriage and the Single Life\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.00456 Tm
( Nature is often hidden, sometimes overcome, seldom extinguished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Nature in Men\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.25456 Tm
( It is generally better to deal by speech than by letter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Negotiating\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 74.50456 Tm
( New nobility is but the act of power, but ancient nobility is the ac\
t of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Nobility\222)Tj
ET
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Nobility of birth commonly abateth industry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Nobility\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The joys of parents are secret, and so are their griefs and fears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Parents and Children\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Children sweeten labours, but they make misfortunes more bitter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Parents and Children\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Fame is like a river, that beareth up things light and swollen, and \
drowns things weighty and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(solid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Praise\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Age will not be defied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Regimen of Health\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Revenge is a kind of wild justice, which the more man\222s nature ru\
ns to, the more ought law to )Tj
T*
(weed it out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Revenge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( A man that studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Revenge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( Defer not charities till death; for certainly, if a man weigh it rig\
htly, he that doth so is rather )Tj
T*
(liberal of another man\222s than of his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Riches\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( The four pillars of government...\(which are religion, justice, coun\
sel, and treasure\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Seditions and Troubles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( The surest way to prevent seditions \(if the times do bear it\) is t\
o take away the matter of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Seditions and Troubles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Money is like muck, not good except it be spread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Seditions and Troubles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( The remedy is worse than the disease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Seditions and Troubles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( The French are wiser than they seem, and the Spaniards seem wiser th\
an they are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Seeming Wise\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.25456 Tm
( Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability.)Tj
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(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
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( To spend too much time in studies is sloth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( They perfect nature and are perfected by experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( Read not to contradict and confute, nor to believe and take for gran\
ted, nor to find talk and )Tj
T*
(discourse, but to weigh and consider.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
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( Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to\
be chewed and digested; )Tj
T*
(that is, some books are to be read only in parts; others to be read but \
not curiously; and some few )Tj
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(to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention. Some books also may\
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(extracts made of them by others.)Tj
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(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
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( Reading maketh a full man; conference a ready man; and writing an ex\
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(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
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( Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; nat\
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T*
(moral, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Studies\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.00456 Tm
( There is a superstition in avoiding superstition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Superstition\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.25456 Tm
( Suspicions amongst thoughts are like bats amongst birds, they ever f\
ly by twilight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Suspicion\222)Tj
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( There is nothing makes a man suspect much, more than to know little.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Suspicion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.75456 Tm
( Neither is money the sinews of war \(as it is trivially said\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of the True Greatness of Kingdoms\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.00456 Tm
( Neither will it be, that a people overlaid with taxes should ever be\
come valiant and martial.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of the True Greatness of Kingdoms\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 420.25456 Tm
( Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of education; in the elder, a\
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T*
(travelleth into a country before he hath some entrance into the language\
, goeth to school, and not )Tj
T*
(to travel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Travel\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.50456 Tm
( What is truth? said jesting Pilate; and would not stay for an answer\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Truth\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.75456 Tm
( A mixture of a lie doth ever add pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Truth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 274.00456 Tm
( It is not the lie that passeth through the mind, but the lie that si\
nketh in, and settleth in it, that )Tj
T*
(doth the hurt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Truth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.25456 Tm
( The inquiry of truth, which is the love-making, or wooing of it, the\
knowledge of truth, which )Tj
T*
(is the presence of it, and the belief of truth, which is the enjoying of\
it, is the sovereign good of )Tj
T*
(human nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Truth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 146.50456 Tm
( All colours will agree in the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Unity in Religion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.75456 Tm
( It was prettily devised of Aesop, \221The fly sat upon the axletree \
of the chariot-wheel and said, )Tj
T*
(what a dust do I raise.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Vain-Glory\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.00456 Tm
( In the youth of a state arms do flourish; in the middle age of a sta\
te, learning; and then both of )Tj
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(them together for a time; in the declining age of a state, mechanical ar\
ts and merchandise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Vicissitude of Things\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Be so true to thyself as thou be not false to others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Wisdom for a Man\222s Self\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( It is the nature of extreme self-lovers, as they will set a house on\
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(their eggs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Wisdom for a Man\222s Self\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( It is the wisdom of the crocodiles, that shed tears when they would \
devour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Wisdom for a Man\222s Self\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Young men are fitter to invent than to judge, fitter for execution t\
han for counsel, and fitter for )Tj
T*
(new projects than for settled business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1625\) \221Of Youth and Age\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( For they thought generally that he was a Prince as ordained, and sen\
t down from heaven to )Tj
T*
(unite and put to an end the long dissensions of the two houses; which al\
though they had had, in )Tj
T*
(the times of Henry the Fourth, Henry the Fifth, and a part of Henry the \
Sixth on the one side, and )Tj
T*
(the times of Edward the Fourth on the other, lucid intervals and happy p\
auses; yet they did ever )Tj
T*
(hang over the kingdom, ready to break forth into new perturbations and c\
alamities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221History of King Henry VII\222 \(1622\) para. 3 in J. Spedding \(ed.\)\
\221The Works of Francis Bacon\222 vol. 6 \(1858\) )Tj
T*
(p. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( I have rather studied books than men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221A Letter of Advice...to the Duke of Buckingham, When he became Favou\
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15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( I have taken all knowledge to be my province.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221To My Lord Treasurer Burghley\222 \(1592\) in J. Spedding \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters and Life of Francis Bacon\222 vol. 1 )Tj
T*
(\(1861\) p. 109)Tj
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( Opportunity makes a thief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.17047 Tm
(\221A Letter of Advice to the Earl of Essex...\222 \(1598\) in J. Speddi\
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T*
(Bacon\222 vol. 2 \(1862\) p. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 269.25456 Tm
( Universities incline wits to sophistry and affectation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Valerius Terminus of the Interpretation of Nature\222 ch. 26 in \221\
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T*
(Bacon\222 \(collected by Robert Stephens, 1734\) p. 450)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.50456 Tm
( Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est.)Tj
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( Knowledge itself is power.)Tj
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(\221Meditationes Sacrae\222 \(1597\) \221Of Heresies\222)Tj
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( I would live to study, and not study to live.)Tj
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(\221Memorial of Access\222)Tj
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( God\222s first Creature, which was Light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(\221New Atlantis\222 \(1627\))Tj
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( The end of our foundation is the knowledge of causes, and secret mot\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221New Atlantis\222 \(1627\))Tj
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( For what a man would like to be true, that he more readily believes.\
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(\221Novum Organum\222 \(1620\) bk. 1, Aphorism 49 \(translated by J. Spe\
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( Magna ista scientiarum mater.)Tj
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( That great mother of sciences.)Tj
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(\221Novum Organum\222 \(1620\) bk. 1, Aphorism 80 \(translated by J. Spe\
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( Vim et virtutem et consequentias rerum inventarum notare juvat; quae\
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T*
(obscura et ingloria sunt: Artis nimirum Imprimendi, Pulveris Tormentarii\
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T*
(Haec enim tria rerum faciem et statum in orbe terrarum mutaverunt.)Tj
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( It is well to observe the force and virtue and consequence of discov\
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T*
(of which the origin, though recent, is obscure and inglorious; namely, p\
rinting, gunpowder and )Tj
T*
(the magnet [Mariner\222s Needle]. For these three have changed the whole\
face and state of things )Tj
T*
(throughout the world.)Tj
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(\221Novum Organum\222 \(1620\) bk. 1, Aphorism 129 \(translated by J. Sp\
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( Naturae enim non imperatur, nisi parendo.)Tj
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( Nature cannot be ordered about, except by obeying her.)Tj
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(\221Novum Organum\222 \(1620\) bk. 1, Aphorism 129 \(translated by J. Sp\
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( Books must follow sciences, and not sciences books.)Tj
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(\221Resuscitatio\222 \(1657\) \221Proposition touching Amendment of Laws\
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( Wise nature did never put her precious jewels into a garret four sto\
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0 -1.2 TD
(exceeding tall men had ever very empty heads.)Tj
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(J. Spedding \(ed.\) \221The Works of Francis Bacon\222 vol. 7 \(1859\) \
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( Hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper.)Tj
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(J. Spedding \(ed.\) \221The Works of Francis Bacon\222 vol. 7 \(1859\) \
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T*
(36)Tj
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( The world\222s a bubble; and the life of man)Tj
T*
( Less than a span.)Tj
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(\221The World\222 \(1629\))Tj
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( Who then to frail mortality shall trust,)Tj
T*
( But limns the water, or but writes in dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(\221The World\222 \(1629\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.25456 Tm
( What is it then to have or have no wife,)Tj
T*
( But single thraldom, or a double strife?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(\221The World\222 \(1629\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.50456 Tm
( What then remains, but that we still should cry,)Tj
T*
( Not to be born, or being born, to die?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221The World\222 \(1629\))Tj
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( The scouts\222 motto is founded on my initials, it is: be prepared, \
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Scouting for Boys\222 \(1908\) pt. 1)Tj
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( 2.4 Karl Baedeker 1801-59)Tj
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( Oxford is on the whole more attractive than Cambridge to the ordinar\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Great Britain\222 \(1887\) Route 30 \221From London to Oxford\222)Tj
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( The traveller need have no scruple in limiting his donations to the \
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T*
(liberality frequently becomes a source of annoyance and embarrassment.)Tj
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(\221Northern Italy\222 \(1895\) \221Gratuities\222)Tj
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( Passports. On arrival at a Syrian port the traveller\222s passport i\
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T*
(ordinary visiting-card will answer the purpose equally well.)Tj
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(\221Palestine and Syria\222 \(1876\) \221Passports and Custom House\222)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 464.4624 Tm
( 2.5 Joan Baez 1941\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The only thing that\222s been a worse flop than the organization of \
non-violence has been the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.92047 Tm
(\221Daybreak\222 \(1970\) \221What Would You Do If?\222.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 376.7124 Tm
( 2.6 Walter Bagehot 1826-77)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A constitutional statesman is in general a man of common opinion and\
uncommon abilities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.17047 Tm
(\221Biographical Studies\222 \(1881\) \221The Character of Sir Robert Pe\
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15 0 0 15 10 318.25456 Tm
( He believes, with all his heart and soul and strength, that there is\
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(the soul of a martyr with the intellect of an advocate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.42047 Tm
(\221Biographical Studies\222 \(1881\) \221Mr Gladstone\222)Tj
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( The mystic reverence, the religious allegiance, which are essential \
to a true monarchy, are )Tj
T*
(imaginative sentiments that no legislature can manufacture in any people\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( In such constitutions [as England\222s] there are two parts...first,\
those which excite and preserve )Tj
T*
(the reverence of the population\227the dignified parts...and next, the e\
fficient parts\227those by )Tj
T*
(which it, in fact, works and rules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.92047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( No orator ever made an impression by appealing to men as to their pl\
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T*
(except when he could allege that those wants were caused by some one\222\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.17047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( The Crown is according to the saying, the \221fountain of honour\222\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.42047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222.)Tj
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( A cabinet is a combining committee\227a hyphen which joins, a buckle\
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(legislative part of the state to the executive part of the state.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( It has been said that England invented the phrase, \221Her Majesty\222\
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T*
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of the polity as )Tj
T*
(administration itself. This critical opposition is the consequence of ca\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( The Times has made many ministries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( The great qualities, the imperious will, the rapid energy, the eager\
nature fit for a great crisis )Tj
T*
(are not required\227are impediments\227in common times. A Lord Liverpool\
is better in everyday )Tj
T*
(politics than a Chatham\227a Louis Philippe far better than a Napoleon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Cabinet\222)Tj
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( The soldier\227that is, the great soldier\227of to-day is not a roma\
ntic animal, dashing at forlorn )Tj
T*
(hopes, animated by frantic sentiment, full of fancies as to a love-lady \
or a sovereign; but a quiet, )Tj
T*
(grave man, busied in charts, exact in sums, master of the art of tactics\
, occupied in trivial detail; )Tj
T*
(thinking, as the Duke of Wellington was said to do, most of the shoes of\
his soldiers; despising )Tj
T*
(all manner of \350clat and eloquence; perhaps, like Count Moltke, \221si\
lent in seven languages\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221Checks and Balances\222)Tj
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( The order of nobility is of great use, too, not only in what it crea\
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T*
(prevents the rule of wealth\227the religion of gold. This is the obvious\
and natural idol of the )Tj
T*
(Anglo-Saxon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The House of Lords\222)Tj
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( A severe though not unfriendly critic of our institutions said that \
\221the cure for admiring the )Tj
T*
(House of Lords was to go and look at it.\222)Tj
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(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The House of Lords\222)Tj
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( Nations touch at their summits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The House of Lords\222)Tj
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( The best reason why Monarchy is a strong government is, that it is a\
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T*
(The mass of mankind understand it, and they hardly anywhere in the world\
understand any other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy\222)Tj
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( The characteristic of the English Monarchy is that it retains the fe\
elings by which the heroic )Tj
T*
(kings governed their rude age, and has added the feelings by which the c\
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T*
(Greece ruled in more refined ages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Women\227one half the human race at least\227care fifty times more f\
or a marriage than a )Tj
T*
(ministry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Royalty is a government in which the attention of the nation is conc\
entrated on one person )Tj
T*
(doing interesting actions. A Republic is a government in which that atte\
ntion is divided between )Tj
ET
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(many, who are all doing uninteresting actions. Accordingly, so long as t\
he human heart is strong )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and the human reason weak, Royalty will be strong because it appeals to \
diffused feeling, and )Tj
T*
(Republics weak because they appeal to the understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
(Throughout the greater part of his life George III was a kind of \221con\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy\222)Tj
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( The Sovereign has, under a constitutional monarchy such as ours, thr\
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T*
(consulted, the right to encourage, the right to warn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The Monarchy \(continued\)\
\222)Tj
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( No real English gentleman, in his secret soul, was ever sorry for th\
e death of a political )Tj
T*
(economist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Estimates of some Englishmen and Scotchmen\222 \(1858\) \221The Firs\
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15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Writers, like teeth, are divided into incisors and grinders.)Tj
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(\221Estimates of some Englishmen and Scotchmen\222 \(1858\) \221The Firs\
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( To a great experience one thing is essential, an experiencing nature\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Estimates of some Englishmen and Scotchmen\222 \(1858\) \221Shakespe\
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15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( One of the greatest pains to human nature is the pain of a new idea.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Physics and Politics\222 \(1872\) \221The Age of Discussion\222)Tj
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( The most melancholy of human reflections, perhaps, is that, on the w\
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T*
(whether the benevolence of mankind does most good or harm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Physics and Politics\222 \(1872\) \221The Age of Discussion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( He describes London like a special correspondent for posterity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221National Review\222 7 October 1858 \221Charles Dickens\222)Tj
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( Wordsworth, Tennyson and Browning; or, pure, ornate, and grotesque a\
rt in English poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221The National Review\222 November 1864: essay title)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.2124 Tm
( 2.7 Philip James Bailey 1816-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We should count time by heart-throbs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Festus\222 \(1839\) sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( America, thou half-brother of the world;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With something good and bad of every land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Festus\222 \(1839\) sc. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.7124 Tm
( 2.8 Bruce Bairnsfather 1888-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Well, if you knows of a better \222ole, go to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Fragments from France\222 \(1915\) p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.9 Hylda Baker 1908-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( She knows, you know!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(Catch-phrase for her friend Cynthia; later used as title of her BBC radi\
o comedy series, from 10 July 1956)Tj
ET
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(Elysard\222\))Tj
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( We wish, in a word, equality\227equality in fact as corollary, or ra\
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T*
(of liberty. From each according to his faculties, to each according to h\
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T*
(wish sincerely and energetically.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 603.17047 Tm
(Declaration signed by forty-seven anarchists on trial after the failure \
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T*
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/TT1 1 Tf
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they have never failed to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(imitate them. They must, they have no other models.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221Nobody Knows My Name\222 \(1961\) \221Fifth Avenue, Uptown: a letter\
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( Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knows how extremely expen\
sive it is to be poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.67047 Tm
(\221Nobody Knows My Name\222 \(1961\) \221Fifth Avenue, Uptown: a letter\
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15 0 0 15 10 442.75456 Tm
( Freedom is not something that anybody can be given; freedom is somet\
hing people take and )Tj
T*
(people are as free as they want to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.92047 Tm
(\221Nobody Knows My Name\222 \(1961\) \221Notes for a Hypothetical Novel\
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15 0 0 15 10 388.00456 Tm
( If the concept of God has any validity or any use, it can only be to\
make us larger, freer, and )Tj
T*
(more loving. If God cannot do this, then it is time we got rid of Him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(\221New Yorker\222 17 November 1962 \221Down at the Cross\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.25456 Tm
( If they take you in the morning, they will be coming for us that nig\
ht.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221New York Review of Books\222 7 January 1971 \221Open Letter to my Si\
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15 0 0 15 10 296.50456 Tm
( It comes as a great shock around the age of 5, 6 or 7 to discover th\
at the flag to which you have )Tj
T*
(pledged allegiance, along with everybody else, has not pledged allegianc\
e to you. It comes as a )Tj
T*
(great shock to see Gary Cooper killing off the Indians and, although you\
are rooting for Gary )Tj
T*
(Cooper, that the Indians are you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.67047 Tm
(Speech at Cambridge University, 17 February 1965, in \221New York Times \
Magazine\222 7 March 1965, p. 32)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 194.4624 Tm
( 2.12 Stanley Baldwin \(Earl Baldwin of Bewdley\) 1867-1947)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A platitude is simply a truth repeated until people get tired of hea\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 29 May 1924, col. 727)Tj
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( I think it is well also for the man in the street to realize that th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(protect him from being bombed. Whatever people may tell him, the bomber \
will always get )Tj
T*
(through. The only defence is in offence, which means that you have to ki\
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T*
(children more quickly than the enemy if you want to save yourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 10 November 1932, col. 632)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.25456 Tm
( Since the day of the air, the old frontiers are gone. When you think\
of the defence of England )Tj
ET
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 30 July 1934, col. 2339)Tj
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( I shall be but a short time tonight. I have seldom spoken with great\
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T*
(yet unsealed. Were these troubles over I would make a case, and I guaran\
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T*
(go into the lobby against us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 10 December 1935, col. 856, on the Abyssinian crisis \(u\
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15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Do not run up your nose dead against the Pope or the NUM!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(In Lord Butler \221The Art of Memory\222 \(1982\) \221Iain Macleod\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( They [parliament] are a lot of hard-faced men who look as if they ha\
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T*
(war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(In J. M. Keynes \221Economic Consequences of the Peace\222 \(1919\) ch. \
5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( There are three classes which need sanctuary more than others\227bir\
ds, wild flowers, and Prime )Tj
T*
(Ministers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 24 May 1925)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( The intelligent are to the intelligentsia what a gentleman is to a g\
ent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(In G. M. Young \221Stanley Baldwin\222 \(1952\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.2124 Tm
( 2.13 Arthur James Balfour \(First Earl of Balfour\) 1848-1930)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Christianity, of course...but why journalism?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(Replying to Frank Harris, who had claimed that \221all the faults of the\
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0 -1.2 TD
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( [Our] whole political machinery pre-supposes a people so fundamental\
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T*
(safely afford to bicker.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(In Walter Bagehot \221The English Constitution\222 \(World Classics ed.,\
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( I thought he was a young man of promise, but it appears he is a youn\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(Describing Churchill, in Winston Churchill \221My Early Life\222 \(1930\)\
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( It is unfortunate, considering that enthusiasm moves the world, that\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
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T*
(Letters\222 \(1917\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.14 Ballads)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
( That lived in Islington.)Tj
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(\221The Bailiff\222s Daughter of Islington\222)Tj
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( All in the merry month of May,)Tj
T*
( When green buds they were swellin\222,)Tj
ET
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( For love of Barbara Allen.)Tj
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(\221Barbara Allen\222s Cruelty\222)Tj
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( O make it saft and narrow:)Tj
T*
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T*
( I\222ll die for him to-morrow.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
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( It fell about the Lammastide,)Tj
T*
( When the muir-men win their hay,)Tj
T*
( The doughty Douglas bound him to ride)Tj
T*
( Into England, to drive a prey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Battle of Otterburn\222 \(win harvest\))Tj
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( Ye Highlands and ye Lawlands,)Tj
T*
( O where hae ye been?)Tj
T*
( They hae slain the Earl of Murray,)Tj
T*
( And hae laid him on the green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Bonny Earl of Murray\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( He was a braw gallant,)Tj
T*
( And he play\222d at the gluve;)Tj
T*
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( Come sounding through the town!)Tj
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(\221The Bonny Earl of Murray\222)Tj
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( Is there any room at your head, Sanders?)Tj
T*
( Is there any room at your feet?)Tj
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T*
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(\221Clerk Sanders\222)Tj
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( She hadna sail\222d a league, a league,)Tj
T*
( A league but barely three,)Tj
T*
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T*
( And gurly grew the sea.)Tj
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( \221What hills are yon, yon pleasant hills,)Tj
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T*
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(\221The Death of Robin Hood\222)Tj
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T*
( On the dowie dens o\222 Yarrow;)Tj
T*
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T*
( They would go fight tomorrow.)Tj
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(\221Dowie Dens of Yarrow\222 \(dowie melancholy; den river valley\))Tj
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( O well\222s me o\222 my gay goss-hawk,)Tj
T*
( That he can speak and flee!)Tj
T*
( He\222ll carry a letter to my love,)Tj
T*
( Bring another back to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.17047 Tm
(\221The Gay Goss Hawk\222)Tj
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( I am a man upon the land,)Tj
T*
( I am a selkie in the sea;)Tj
T*
( When I am far and far from land,)Tj
T*
( My home it is the Sule Skerry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.42047 Tm
(\221The Great Selkie of Sule Skerry\222 \(selkie seal\))Tj
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T*
( And she goes by the name of the Golden Vanity,)Tj
T*
( O I fear she will be taken by a Spanish Ga-la-lee,)Tj
T*
( As she sails by the Low-lands low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.67047 Tm
(\221The Golden Vanity\222)Tj
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( He bored with his augur, he bored once and twice,)Tj
T*
( And some were playing cards, and some were playing dice,)Tj
T*
( When the water flowed in it dazzled their eyes,)Tj
T*
( And she sank by the Low-lands low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.92047 Tm
(\221The Golden Vanity\222)Tj
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( I wish I were where Helen lies,)Tj
T*
( Night and day on me she cries;)Tj
T*
( O that I were where Helen lies,)Tj
T*
( On fair Kirkconnell lea!)Tj
ET
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T*
( St Johnston\222s bower, and Huntingtower,)Tj
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(\221Huntingtower\222 \(St Johnston Perth\))Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221Johnny, I hardly knew Ye\222)Tj
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T*
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T*
( And my sister Masery she\222s made)Tj
T*
( The machrel of the sea.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( An\222 evry Saturday at noon)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The machrel comes to me)Tj
T*
( An\222 she takes my laily head)Tj
T*
( An\222 lays it on her knee;)Tj
T*
( An\222 she kaims it wi\222 a siller kaim)Tj
T*
( An\222 washes \222t in the sea.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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(\221The Laily Worm and the Machrel\222 \(laily worm loathsome serpent\))Tj
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( \221What gat ye to your dinner, Lord Randal, my Son?)Tj
T*
( What gat ye to your dinner, my handsome young man?\222)Tj
T*
( \221I gat eels boil\222d in broo\222; mother, make my bed soon,)Tj
T*
( For I\222m weary wi\222 hunting, and fain wald lie down.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.92047 Tm
(\221Lord Randal\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.00456 Tm
( This ae nighte, this ae nighte,)Tj
T*
( \227Every nighte and alle,)Tj
T*
( Fire and fleet and candle-lighte,)Tj
T*
( And Christe receive thy saule.)Tj
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(\221Lyke-Wake Dirge\222 \(fleet floor; other readings of fleet are sleet\
and salt\))Tj
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( From Brig o\222 Dread when thou may\222st pass,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \227Every nighte and alle,)Tj
T*
( To Purgatory fire thou com\222st at last;)Tj
T*
( And Christe receive thy saule.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( If ever thou gavest meat or drink,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \227Every nighte and alle,)Tj
T*
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T*
( And Christe receive thy saule.)Tj
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(\221Lyke-Wake Dirge\222)Tj
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( When captains courageous whom death could not daunt,)Tj
T*
( Did march to the siege of the city of Gaunt,)Tj
T*
( They mustered their soldiers by two and by three,)Tj
T*
( And the foremost in battle was Mary Ambree.)Tj
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(\221Mary Ambree\222)Tj
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( For in my mind, of all mankind)Tj
T*
( I love but you alone.)Tj
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(\221The Nut Brown Maid\222)Tj
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T*
( Alone, a banished man.)Tj
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(\221The Nut Brown Maid\222)Tj
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T*
( Wi\222 ribbons on her breast;)Tj
T*
( The King thought mair o\222 Marie Hamilton)Tj
T*
( Than he listen\222d to the priest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221The Queen\222s Maries\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.75456 Tm
( Yestreen the Queen had four Maries,)Tj
T*
( The night she\222ll hae but three;)Tj
T*
( There was Marie Seaton, and Marie Beaton,)Tj
T*
( And Marie Carmichael, and me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.92047 Tm
(\221The Queen\222s Maries\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.00456 Tm
( \221O what is longer than the wave?)Tj
T*
( And what is deeper than the sea?)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What is greener than the grass?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And what is more wicked than a woman once was?...\222)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \221Love is longer than the wave,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hell is deeper than the sea.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Envy\222s greener than the grass,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the de\222il more wicked than a woman e\222er was.\222)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( As soon as she the fiend did name,)Tj
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(\221Riddles Wisely Expounded\222)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( As I hear many men say,)Tj
T*
( But the merriest month in all the year)Tj
T*
( Is the merry month of May.)Tj
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(\221Robin Hood and the Widow\222s Three Sons\222)Tj
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( Fight on, my men, sayes Sir Andrew Bartton,)Tj
T*
( I am hurt but I am not slain;)Tj
T*
( Ile lay mee downe and bleed a while)Tj
T*
( And then Ile rise and fight againe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Sir Andrew Bartton\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The king sits in Dunfermline town)Tj
T*
( Drinking the blude-red wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Sir Patrick Spens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( \221To Noroway, to Noroway,)Tj
T*
( To Noroway o\222er the faem;)Tj
T*
( The king\222s daughter o\222 Noroway,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis thou must bring her hame.\222)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( The first word that Sir Patrick read)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So loud, loud laughed he;)Tj
T*
( The neist word that Sir Patrick read)Tj
T*
( The tear blinded his e\222e.)Tj
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(\221Sir Patrick Spens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( \221I saw the new moon late yestreen)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 the auld moon in her arm;)Tj
T*
( And if we gang to sea master,)Tj
T*
( I fear we\222ll come to harm.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Sir Patrick Spens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Go fetch a web o\222 the silken claith,)Tj
T*
( Another o\222 the twine,)Tj
T*
( And wap them into our ship\222s side,)Tj
T*
( And let nae the sea come in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221Sir Patrick Spens\222 \(wap wrap\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( O laith, laith were our gude Scots lords)Tj
T*
( To wat their cork-heel\222d shoon;)Tj
T*
( But lang or a\222 the play was play\222d)Tj
T*
( They wat their hats aboon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
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( O lang, lang may the ladies sit,)Tj
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( Wi\222 their fans into their hand,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Before they see Sir Patrick Spens)Tj
T*
( Come sailing to the strand!)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And lang, lang may the maidens sit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wi\222 their gowd kames in their hair,)Tj
T*
( A-waiting for their ain dear loves!)Tj
T*
( For them they\222ll see nae mair.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Half-owre, half-owre to Aberdour,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \222Tis fifty fathoms deep;)Tj
T*
( And there lies good Sir Patrick Spens,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 the Scots lords at his feet!)Tj
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( And she has kilted her green kirtle)Tj
T*
( A little abune her knee;)Tj
T*
( And she has braided her yellow hair)Tj
T*
( A little abune her bree.)Tj
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(\221Tam Lin\222 st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.00456 Tm
( \221But what I ken this night, Tam Lin,)Tj
T*
( Gin I had kent yestreen,)Tj
T*
( I wad ta\222en out thy heart o\222 flesh,)Tj
T*
( And put in a heart o\222 stane.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(\221Tam Lin\222 st. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( She\222s mounted on her milk-white steed,)Tj
T*
( She\222s ta\222en true Thomas up behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.42047 Tm
(\221Thomas the Rhymer\222 st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.50456 Tm
( \221And see ye not yon braid, braid road,)Tj
T*
( That lies across the lily leven?)Tj
T*
( That is the Path of Wickedness,)Tj
T*
( Though some call it the Road to Heaven.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(\221Thomas the Rhymer\222 st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.75456 Tm
( It was mirk, mirk night, there was nae starlight,)Tj
T*
( They waded thro\222 red blude to the knee;)Tj
T*
( For a\222 the blude that\222s shed on the earth)Tj
T*
( Rins through the springs o\222 that countrie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Thomas the Rhymer\222 st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( There were three ravens sat on a tree,)Tj
T*
( They were as black as they might be.)Tj
T*
( The one of them said to his make,)Tj
T*
( \221Where shall we our breakfast take?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.17047 Tm
(\221The Three Ravens\222)Tj
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( God send every gentleman)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Such hounds, such hawks, and such leman.)Tj
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(\221The Three Ravens\222)Tj
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( As I was walking all alane,)Tj
T*
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T*
( The tane unto the tither did say,)Tj
T*
( \221Where sall we gang and dine the day?\222)Tj
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( \221\227In behint yon auld fail dyke)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And naebody kens that he lies there)Tj
T*
( But his hawk, his hound, and his lady fair.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \221His hound is to the hunting gane,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His hawk to fetch the wild-fowl hame,)Tj
T*
( His lady\222s ta\222en anither mate,)Tj
T*
( So we may make our dinner sweet.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \221Ye\222ll sit on his white hause-bane,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And I\222ll pike out his bonny blue e\222en:)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 ae lock o\222 his gowden hair)Tj
T*
( We\222ll theek our nest when it grows bare.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.42047 Tm
(\221The Twa Corbies\222 \(corbies ravens, fail turf, hause neck, theek t\
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( \221The wind doth blow to-day, my love,)Tj
T*
( And a few small drops of rain;)Tj
T*
( I never had but one true love;)Tj
T*
( In cold grave she was lain.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( \221I\222ll do as much for my true-love)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As any young man may;)Tj
T*
( I\222ll sit and mourn all at her grave)Tj
T*
( For a twelvemonth and a day.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.92047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.00456 Tm
( O waly, waly, up the bank,)Tj
T*
( And waly, waly, doun the brae,)Tj
T*
( And waly, waly, yon burn-side,)Tj
T*
( Where I and my Love wont to gae!)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I lean\222d my back unto an aik,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I thocht it was a trustie tree;)Tj
T*
( But first it bow\222d and syne it brake\227)Tj
T*
( Sae my true love did lichtlie me.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( O waly, waly, gin love be bonnie)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A little time while it is new!)Tj
ET
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( But when \222tis auld it waxeth cauld,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And fades awa\222 like morning dew.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Waly, Waly\222)Tj
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T*
( That love had been sae ill to win,)Tj
T*
( I had lock\222d my heart in a case o\222 gowd,)Tj
T*
( And pinn\222d it wi\222 a siller pin.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And O! if my young babe were born,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And set upon the nurse\222s knee;)Tj
T*
( And I mysel\222 were dead and gane,)Tj
T*
( And the green grass growing over me!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221Waly, Waly\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( \221Tom Pearse, Tom Pearse, lend me your grey mare,)Tj
T*
( All along, down along, out along, lee.)Tj
T*
( For I want for to go to Widdicombe Fair,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer, Peter Gurney, Peter Davey, Dan\222l \
Whiddon,)Tj
T*
( Harry Hawk,)Tj
T*
( Old Uncle Tom Cobbleigh and all.)Tj
T*
( Old Uncle Tom Cobbleigh and all.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Widdicombe Fair\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 375.7124 Tm
( 2.15 Whitney Balliett 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A critic is a bundle of biases held loosely together by a sense of t\
aste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Dinosaurs in the Morning\222 \(1962\) introductory note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( The sound of surprise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(Title of book on jazz \(1959\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.2124 Tm
( 2.16 Pierre Balmain 1914-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The trick of wearing mink is to look as though you were wearing a cl\
oth coat. The trick of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wearing a cloth coat is to look as though you are wearing mink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 25 December 1955)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 181.4624 Tm
( 2.17 George Bancroft 1800-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Calvinism [in Switzerland]...established a religion without a prelat\
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0 -1.2 TD
(king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221History of the United States\222 \(1855 ed.\) vol. 3, ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 93.7124 Tm
( 2.18 Richard Bancroft 1544-1610)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where Christ erecteth his Church, the devil in the same churchyard w\
ill have his chapel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(Sermon at Paul\222s Cross, 9 February 1588.)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.9624 Tm
( 2.19 Edward Bangs)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Yankee Doodle came to town)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Riding on a pony;)Tj
T*
( Stuck a feather in his cap)Tj
T*
( And called it Macaroni.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Yankee Doodle\222. Nicholas Smith \221Stories of Great National Song\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.2124 Tm
( 2.20 Tallulah Bankhead 1903-68)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m as pure as the driven slush.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(In \221Saturday Evening Post\222 12 April 1947 \(quoted by Maurice Zolot\
ow\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( There is less in this than meets the eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Describing a revival of Maeterlinck\222s play Aglavaine and Selysette, i\
n Alexander Woollcott \221Shouts and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Murmurs\222 \(1922\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 2.21 Nancy Banks-Smith)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you have to keep the lavatory door shut by extending your left le\
g, it\222s modern architecture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(\221Guardian\222 20 February 1979)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 437.9624 Tm
( 2.22 Th\350odore Faullain de Banville 1823-91)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Jeune homme sans m\350lancolie,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Blond comme un soleil d\222Italie,)Tj
T*
( Garde bien ta belle folie.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Young man untroubled by melancholy, fair as an Italian sun, take goo\
d care of your fine )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(carelessness.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221A Adolphe Gaiffe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( Licences po\350tiques. Il n\222y en a pas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Poetic licence. There\222s no such thing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Petit trait\350 de po\350sie fran\347aise\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.9624 Tm
( 2.23 Imamu Amiri Baraka \(Everett LeRoi Jones\) 1934\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man is either free or he is not. There cannot be any apprenticeshi\
p for freedom.)Tj
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(\221Kulchur\222 Spring 1962 \221Tokenism\222)Tj
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( God has been replaced, as he has all over the West, with respectabil\
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(\221Midstream\222 \(1963\) p. 39)Tj
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( 2.24 Anna Laetitia Barbauld 1743-1825)Tj
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T*
( If e\222er thy breast with freedom glowed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And spurned a tyrant\222s chain,)Tj
T*
( Let not thy strong oppressive force)Tj
T*
( A free-born mouse detain.)Tj
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( Beware, lest in the worm you crush)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A brother\222s soul you find.)Tj
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(\221The Mouse\222s Petition\222 l. 33)Tj
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( Yes, injured Woman! rise, assert thy right!)Tj
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(\221The Rights of Woman\222 l. 1)Tj
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T*
(Jefferies to Swedenborg and Oscar Wilde to Thomas \341 Kempis.)Tj
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(\221Enjoying Life and Other Literary Remains\222 \(1919\) \221Crying for\
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( Am writing an essay on the life-history of insects and have abandone\
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T*
(\221How Cats Spend their Time\222.)Tj
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(\221Journal of a Disappointed Man\222 \(1919\) 3 Jan. 1903)Tj
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( I can remember wondering as a child if I were a young Macaulay or Ru\
skin and secretly )Tj
T*
(deciding that I was. My infant mind even was bitter with those who insis\
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T*
(normal child and not as a prodigy.)Tj
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(\221Journal of a Disappointed Man\222 \(1919\) 23 Oct. 1910)Tj
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( 2.26 Mary Barber c.1690-1757)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What is it our mammas bewitches)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To plague us little boys with breeches?)Tj
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(\221Written for My Son, and Spoken by Him at His First Putting on Breech\
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( A husband\222s first praise is a Friend and Protector;)Tj
T*
( Then change not these titles for Tyrant and Hector.)Tj
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(\221Conclusion of a Letter to the Revd Mr C\227\222 l. 67)Tj
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( 2.27 John Barbour c.1320-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Storys to rede ar delitabill,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Suppos that thai be nocht bot fabill.)Tj
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(\221The Bruce\222 \(1375\) bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( A! fredome is a noble thing!)Tj
T*
( Fredome mayse man to haiff liking.)Tj
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(\221The Bruce\222 \(1375\) bk. 1, l. 225)Tj
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( 2.28 Revd R. H. Barham \(Richard Harris Barham\) 1788-1845)Tj
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( Though I\222ve always considered Sir Christopher Wren,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And, talking of Epitaphs,\227much I admire his,)Tj
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( \221Circumspice, si Monumentum requiris\222;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which an erudite Verger translated to me,)Tj
T*
( \221If you ask for his Monument, Sir\227come\227spy\227see!\222)Tj
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(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Cynotaph\222\
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( What was to be done?\227\222twas perfectly plain)Tj
T*
( That they could not well hang the man over again;)Tj
T*
( What was to be done?\227The man was dead!)Tj
T*
( Nought could be done\227nought could be said;)Tj
T*
( So\227my Lord Tomnoddy went home to bed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221Hon. Mr Sucklet\
humbkin\222s Story\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( The Jackdaw sat on the Cardinal\222s chair!)Tj
T*
( Bishop, and abbot, and prior were there;)Tj
T*
( Many a monk, and many a friar,)Tj
T*
( Many a knight, and many a squire,)Tj
T*
( With a great many more of lesser degree,\227)Tj
T*
( In sooth a goodly company;)Tj
T*
( And they served the Lord Primate on bended knee.)Tj
T*
( Never, I ween,)Tj
T*
( Was a prouder seen,)Tj
T*
( Read of in books, or dreamt of in dreams,)Tj
T*
( Than the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Rheims!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Jackdaw of \
Rheims\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( And six little Singing-boys,\227dear little souls!)Tj
T*
( In nice clean faces, and nice white stoles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Jackdaw of \
Rheims\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( He cursed him in sleeping, that every night)Tj
T*
( He should dream of the devil, and wake in a fright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Jackdaw of \
Rheims\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Never was heard such a terrible curse!)Tj
T*
( But what gave rise)Tj
T*
( To no little surprise,)Tj
T*
( Nobody seemed one penny the worse!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Jackdaw of \
Rheims\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Heedless of grammar, they all cried, \221That\222s him!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221The Jackdaw of \
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15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Here\222s a corpse in the case with a sad swelled face,)Tj
T*
( And a \221Crowner\222s Quest\222 is a queer sort of thing!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(First Series, 1840\) \221A Lay of St Gen\
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T*
(Crowner\222s a queer sort of thing!\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.00456 Tm
( So put that in your pipe, my Lord Otto, and smoke it!)Tj
ET
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( A servant\222s too often a negligent elf;)Tj
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( \227If it\222s business of consequence, do it yourself!)Tj
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(\221The Ingoldsby Legends\222 \(Second Series, 1842\) \221The Ingoldsby \
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( 2.29 Maurice Baring 1874-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( In Mozart and Salieri we see the contrast between the genius which d\
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0 -1.2 TD
(talent which does what it can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Outline of Russian Literature\222 \(1914\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.30 Ronnie Barker 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The marvellous thing about a joke with a double meaning is that it c\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(\221Sauce\222 \(1977\) \221Daddie\222s Sauce\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.31 Frederick R. Barnard)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( One picture is worth ten thousand words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.17047 Tm
(\221Printers\222 Ink\222 10 March 1927)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 440.9624 Tm
( 2.32 Barnabe Barnes c.1569-1609)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ah, sweet Content! where doth thy harbour hold?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.42047 Tm
(\221Parthenophil and Parthenophe\222 \(1593\) sonnet 66)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 371.2124 Tm
( 2.33 Julian Barnes 1946\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What does this journey seem like to those who aren\222t British\227a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(embarrassment and breakfast?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Flaubert\222s Parrot\222 \(1984\) ch. 7)Tj
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( The writer must be universal in sympathy and an outcast by nature: o\
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T*
(clearly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(\221Flaubert\222s Parrot\222 \(1984\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( Do not imagine that Art is something which is designed to give gentl\
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T*
(confidence. Art is not a brassi\351re. At least, not in the English sens\
e. But do not forget that )Tj
T*
(brassi\351re is the French for life-jacket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Flaubert\222s Parrot\222 \(1984\) ch. 10)Tj
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( Books say: she did this because. Life says: she did this. Books are \
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T*
(to you; life is where things aren\222t. I\222m not surprised some people\
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T*
(of life. The only problem is that the lives they make sense of are other\
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T*
(own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Flaubert\222s Parrot\222 \(1984\) ch. 13)Tj
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( Love is just a system for getting someone to call you Darling after \
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(\221Talking It Over\222 \(1991\) ch. 16)Tj
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( Claire: How do you know you\222re...God?)Tj
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(\221The Ruling Class\222 \(1969\) act 1, sc. 4)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Do le\344n down low in Linden Lea.)Tj
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(\221Hwomely Rhymes\222 \(1859\) \221My Orcha\222d in Linden Lea\222)Tj
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( But still the ne\344me do bide the se\344me\227)Tj
T*
( \222Tis Pentridge\227Pentridge by the river.)Tj
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(\221Hwomely Rhymes\222 \(1859\) \221Pentridge by the River\222)Tj
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( My love is the ma\357d ov all ma\357dens,)Tj
T*
( Though all mid be comely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect\222 \(1862\) \221In the Sp\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 2.36 Richard Barnfield 1574-1627)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The waters were his winding sheet, the sea was made his tomb;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yet for his fame the ocean sea, was not sufficient room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221The Encomion of Lady Pecunia\222 \(1598\) \221To the Gentlemen Reade\
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15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( My flocks feed not, my ewes breed not,)Tj
T*
( My rams speed not, all is amiss:)Tj
T*
( Love in dying, Faith is defying,)Tj
T*
( Heart\222s renying, Causer of this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221England\222s Helicon\222 \(1600\) \221The Unknown Shepherd\222s Comp\
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15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( As it fell upon a day)Tj
T*
( In the merry month of May,)Tj
T*
( Sitting in a pleasant shade,)Tj
T*
( Which a grove of myrtles made.)Tj
T*
( Beasts did leap and birds did sing,)Tj
T*
( Trees did grow and plants did spring,)Tj
T*
( Everything did banish moan,)Tj
T*
( Save the nightingale alone.)Tj
T*
( She, poor bird, as all forlorn,)Tj
T*
( Leaned her breast up-till a thorn,)Tj
T*
( And there sung the dolefull\222st ditty)Tj
T*
( That to hear it was great pity.)Tj
T*
( Fie, fie, fie, now would she cry;)Tj
T*
( Tereu, Tereu, by and by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221Poems: In Divers Humours\222 \(1598\) \221An Ode\222)Tj
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( If Music and sweet Poetry agree,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Then must the love be great, \222twixt thee and me,)Tj
T*
( Because thou lov\222st the one, and I the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Poems: in Divers Humours\222 \(1598\) \221To his friend Mister R. L.\
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( 2.37 Phineas T. Barnum 1810-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s a sucker born every minute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.38 Sir J. M. Barrie 1860-1937)Tj
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T*
( His lordship may compel us to be equal upstairs, but there will neve\
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0 -1.2 TD
(servants\222 hall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221The Admirable Crichton\222 \(performed 1902, published 1914\) act 1)Tj
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( It\222s my deserts; I\222m a second eleven sort of chap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221The Admirable Crichton\222 \(performed 1902, published 1914\) act 3)Tj
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( The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one stor\
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T*
(his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he v\
owed to make it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221The Little Minister\222 \(1891\) vol. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( It\222s grand, and you canna expect to be baith grand and comfortabl\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(\221The Little Minister\222 \(1891\) vol. 1, ch. 10)Tj
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( Facts were never pleasing to him. He acquired them with reluctance a\
nd got rid of them with )Tj
T*
(relief. He was never on terms with them until he had stood them on their\
heads.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(\221Love Me Never or For Ever\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( When the first baby laughed for the first time, the laugh broke into\
a thousand pieces and they )Tj
T*
(all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of fairies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Peter Pan\222 \(1928\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( Every time a child says \221I don\222t believe in fairies\222 there \
is a little fairy somewhere that falls )Tj
T*
(down dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Pan\222 \(1928\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( To die will be an awfully big adventure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221Peter Pan\222 \(1928\) act 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( Do you believe in fairies? Say quick that you believe! If you believ\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Peter Pan\222 \(1928\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( That is ever the way. \222Tis all jealousy to the bride and good wis\
hes to the corpse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Quality Street\222 \(performed 1901, published 1913\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( One\222s religion is whatever he is most interested in, and yours is\
Success.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(\221The Twelve-Pound Look\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( Charm...it\222s a sort of bloom on a woman. If you have it, you don\222\
t need to have anything else; )Tj
T*
(and if you don\222t have it, it doesn\222t much matter what else you hav\
e. Some women, the few, have )Tj
ET
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(charm for all; and most have charm for one. But some have charm for none\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221What Every Woman Knows\222 \(performed 1908, published 1918\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( There are few more impressive sights in the world than a Scotsman on\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221What Every Woman Knows\222 \(performed 1908, published 1918\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The tragedy of a man who has found himself out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221What Every Woman Knows\222 \(performed 1908, published 1918\) act 4)Tj
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( Every man who is high up loves to think that he has done it all hims\
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0 -1.2 TD
(and lets it go at that. It\222s our only joke. Every woman knows that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221What Every Woman Knows\222 \(performed 1908, published 1918\) act 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 2.39 Ethel Barrymore 1879-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For an actress to be a success, she must have the face of a Venus, t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(grace of Terpsichore, the memory of a Macaulay, the figure of Juno, and \
the hide of a rhinoceros.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(In George Jean Nathan \221The Theatre in the Fifties\222 \(1953\) p. 30)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 488.9624 Tm
( 2.40 Lionel Bart 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Frank Norman \(2.33\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.41 Roland Barthes 1915-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ce que le public r\350clame, c\222est l\222image de la passion, non \
la passion elle-m\352me.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What the public wants is the image of passion, not passion itself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Mythologies\222 \(1957\) \221Le monde o\227l\222on catche\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Je crois que l\222automobile est aujourd\222hui l\222\350quivalent a\
ssez exact des grandes cath\350drales )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gothiques: je veux dire une grande cr\350ation d\222\350poque, con\347ue\
passionn\350ment par des artistes )Tj
T*
(inconnus, consomm\350e dans son image, si non dans son usage, par un peu\
ple entier qui )Tj
T*
(s\222approprie en elle un objet parfaitement magique.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I think that cars today are almost the exact equivalent of the great\
Gothic cathedrals: I mean )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the supreme creation of an era, conceived with passion by unknown artist\
s, and consumed in )Tj
T*
(image if not in usage by a whole population which appropriates them as a\
purely magical object.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Mythologies\222 \(1957\) \221La nouvelle Citro\353n\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 194.2124 Tm
( 2.42 Bernard Baruch 1870-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let us not be deceived\227we are today in the midst of a cold war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(Speech to South Carolina Legislature 16 April 1947, in \221New York Time\
s\222 17 April 1947, p. 21 \(the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(expression \221cold war\222 was suggested to him by H. B. Swope, former \
editor of the New York \221World\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( To me old age is always fifteen years older than I am.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(In \221Newsweek\222 29 August 1955)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Vote for the man who promises least; he\222ll be the least disappoin\
ting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(In Meyer Berger \221New York\222 \(1960\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( A political leader must keep looking over his shoulder all the time \
to see if the boys are still )Tj
ET
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(there. If they aren\222t still there, he\222s no longer a political lead\
er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 21 June 1965, p. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 2.43 Jacques Barzun 1907\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If it were possible to talk to the unborn, one could never explain t\
o them how it feels to be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(alive, for life is washed in the speechless real.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221The House of Intellect\222 \(1959\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 2.44 William Basse d. c.1653)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The first men that our Saviour dear)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Did choose to wait upon him here,)Tj
T*
( Blest fishers were; and fish the last)Tj
T*
( Food was, that he on earth did taste:)Tj
T*
( I therefore strive to follow those)Tj
T*
( Whom he to follow him hath chose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221The Angler\222s Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.75456 Tm
( Renown\351d Spenser, lie a thought more nigh)Tj
T*
( To learn\351d Chaucer, and rare Beaumont lie)Tj
T*
( A little nearer Spenser, to make more room)Tj
T*
( For Shakespeare, in your threefold, fourfold tomb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(\221On Mr Wm. Shakespeare\222 \(1633\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 366.7124 Tm
( 2.45 Thomas Bastard 1566-1618)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Age is deformed, youth unkind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We scorn their bodies, they our mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.17047 Tm
(\221Chrestoleros\222 \(1598\) bk. 7, epigram 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.9624 Tm
( 2.46 Edgar Bateman and George Le Brunn)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Wiv a ladder and some glasses,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You could see to \222Ackney Marshes,)Tj
T*
( If it wasn\222t for the \222ouses in between.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(\221If it wasn\222t for the \221Ouses in between\222 \(1894 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.2124 Tm
( 2.47 Katherine Lee Bates 1859-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( America! America!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( God shed His grace on thee)Tj
T*
( And crown thy good with brotherhood)Tj
T*
( From sea to shining sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221America the Beautiful\222 \(1893\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 49.4624 Tm
( 2.48 Charles Baudelaire 1821-67)Tj
ET
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( Hypocrite lecteur,\227mon semblable,\227mon fr\351re.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hypocrite reader\227my likeness\227my brother.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(\221Les Fleurs du Mal\222 \(1857\) \221Au Lecteur\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.50456 Tm
( Le po\351te est semblable au prince des nu\350es)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Qui hante la temp\352te et se rit de l\222archer;)Tj
T*
( Exil\350 sur le sol, au milieu des hu\350es,)Tj
T*
( Ses ailes de g\350ant l\222emp\352chent de marcher.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The poet is like the prince of the clouds, who rides out the tempest\
and laughs at the archer. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(But when he is exiled on the ground, amidst the clamour, his giant\222s \
wings prevent him from )Tj
T*
(walking.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 566.92047 Tm
(\221Les fleurs du mal\222 \(1857\) \221L\222Albatross\222-\222Spleen et \
id\350al\222 no. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 546.00456 Tm
( L\341, tout n\222est qu\222ordre et beaut\350,)Tj
T*
( Luxe, calme et volupt\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything there is simply order and beauty, luxury, peace and sensu\
al indulgence.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.42047 Tm
(\221Les fleurs du mal\222 \(1857\) \221L\222Invitation au voyage\222-\222\
Spleen et id\350al\222 no. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 469.50456 Tm
( Quelle est cette \356le triste et noire? C\222est Cyth\351re,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nous dit-on, un pays fameux dans les chansons,)Tj
T*
( Eldorado banal de tous les vieux gar\347ons.)Tj
T*
( Regardez, apr\351s tout, c\222est un pauvre terre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What sad, black isle is that? It\222s Cythera, so they say, a land c\
elebrated in song, the banal )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Eldorado of all the old fools. Look, after all, it\222s a land of povert\
y.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Les fleurs du mal\222 \(1857\) \221Un voyage \341 Cyth\351re\222-\222\
Les fleurs du mal\222 no. 121)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 327.7124 Tm
( 2.49 L. Frank Baum 1856-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The road to the City of Emeralds is paved with yellow brick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(\221The Wonderful Wizard of Oz\222 \(1900\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 257.9624 Tm
( 2.50 Vicki Baum 1888-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Verheiratet sein verlangt immer und \374berall die feinsten Kunst de\
r Unaufrichtigkeit zwischen )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Mensch und Mensch.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Marriage always demands the finest arts of insincerity possible betw\
een two human beings.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221Zwischenfall in Lohwinckel\222 \(1930\) p. 140 \(translated by Marga\
ret Goldsmith as \221Results of an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Accident\222 \(1931\) p. 140\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 133.4624 Tm
( 2.51 Thomas Haynes Bayly 1797-1839)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh! no! we never mention her,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her name is never heard;)Tj
T*
( My lips are now forbid to speak)Tj
T*
( That once familiar word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(\221Songs, Ballads, and other Poems\222 \(1844\) \221Oh! No! We Never Me\
ntion Her\222)Tj
ET
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( 2.52 Beachcomber)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See J. B. Morton \(1.182\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.53 James Beattie 1735-1803)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some deemed him wondrous wise, and some believed him mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.42047 Tm
(\221The Minstrel\222 bk. 1 \(1771\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.50456 Tm
( Fancy a thousand wondrous forms descries)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( More wildly great than ever pencil drew,)Tj
T*
( Rocks, torrents, gulfs, and shapes of giant size,)Tj
T*
( And glittering cliffs on cliffs, and fiery ramparts rise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.67047 Tm
(\221The Minstrel\222 bk. 1 \(1771\) st. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.75456 Tm
( In the deep windings of the grove, no more)Tj
T*
( The hag obscene, and grisly phantom dwell;)Tj
T*
( Nor in the fall of mountain-stream, or roar)Tj
T*
( Of winds, is heard the angry spirit\222s yell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.92047 Tm
(\221The Minstrel\222 bk. 2 \(1774\) st. 48)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 433.7124 Tm
( 2.54 David Beatty \(First Earl Beatty\) 1871-1936)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s something wrong with our bloody ships today, Chatfield.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.17047 Tm
(At the Battle of Jutland, 1916, in Winston Churchill \221The World Crisi\
s\222 \(1927\) vol. 1, p. 129. The additional )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(words, \221Steer two points nearer the enemy\222, though attributed to B\
eatty, are denied by Lord Chatfield, the )Tj
T*
(only person to have heard the remark)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 333.9624 Tm
( 2.55 Topham Beauclerk 1739-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( [On Boswell saying that a certain person was \221a man of good princ\
iples\222])Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Then he does not wear them out in practice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) vol. 3,\
p. 281 \(14 April 1778\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 246.2124 Tm
( 2.56 Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais 1732-99)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Aujourd\222hui ce qui ne vaut pas la peine d\222\352tre dit, on le c\
hante.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Today if something is not worth saying, people sing it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.92047 Tm
(\221Le Barbier de Seville\222 \(1775\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.00456 Tm
( Je me presse de rire de tout, de peur d\222\352tre oblig\350 d\222en\
pleurer.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( I make myself laugh at everything, for fear of having to weep.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.42047 Tm
(\221Le Barbier de Seville\222 \(1775\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 107.50456 Tm
( Boire sans soif et faire l\222amour en tout temps, madame, il n\222y\
a que \347a qui nous distingue des )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(autres b\352tes.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Drinking when we are not thirsty and making love all year round, mad\
am; that is all there is to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(distinguish us from other animals.)Tj
ET
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(\221Le Mariage de Figaro\222 \(1785\) act 2, sc. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Parce que vous \352tes un grand seigneur, vous vous croyez un grand \
g\350nie!...Vous vous \352tes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(donn\350 la peine de na\356tre, et rien de plus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Because you are a great lord, you believe yourself to be a great gen\
ius!...You took the trouble )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to be born, but no more.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Le Mariage de Figaro\222 \(1785\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.4624 Tm
( 2.57 Francis Beaumont 1584-1616)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nose, nose, jolly red nose,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who gave thee this jolly red nose?...)Tj
T*
( Nutmegs and ginger, cinnamon and cloves,)Tj
T*
( And they gave me this jolly red nose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Knight of the Burning Pestle\222 act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( What things have we seen,)Tj
T*
( Done at the Mermaid! heard words that have been)Tj
T*
( So nimble, and so full of subtil flame,)Tj
T*
( As if that every one from whence they came,)Tj
T*
( Had meant to put his whole wit in a jest,)Tj
T*
( And had resolved to live a fool, the rest)Tj
T*
( Of his dull life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Letter to Ben Jonson\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Here are sands, ignoble things,)Tj
T*
( Dropt from the ruined sides of kings;)Tj
T*
( Here\222s a world of pomp and state,)Tj
T*
( Buried in dust, once dead by fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.2124 Tm
( 2.58 Francis Beaumont 1584-1616 and John Fletcher 1579-1625)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Those have most power to hurt us that we love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(\221The Maid\222s Tragedy\222 \(written 1610-11\) act 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( Philaster: Oh, but thou dost not know)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What \222tis to die.)Tj
T*
( Bellario: Yes, I do know, my Lord:)Tj
T*
( \222Tis less than to be born; a lasting sleep;)Tj
T*
( A quiet resting from all jealousy,)Tj
T*
( A thing we all pursue; I know besides,)Tj
T*
( It is but giving over of a game,)Tj
T*
( That must be lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(\221Philaster\222 \(written 1609\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.00456 Tm
( There is no other purgatory but a woman.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Scornful Lady\222 \(1616\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( It would talk: Lord how it talk\222t!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Scornful Lady\222 \(1616\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( See also John Fletcher \(6.45\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.59 Lord Beaverbrook \(William Maxwell Aitken, first Baron Beaverbrook\
\) 1879-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Flying Scotsman is no less splendid a sight when it travels nort\
h to Edinburgh than when it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(travels south to London. Mr Baldwin denouncing sanctions was as dignifie\
d as Mr Baldwin )Tj
T*
(imposing them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Daily Express\222 29 May 1937)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( [Lloyd George] did not seem to care which way he travelled providing\
he was in the driver\222s )Tj
T*
(seat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George\222 \(1963\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( With the publication of his Private Papers in 1952, he committed sui\
cide 25 years after his )Tj
T*
(death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Men and Power\222 \(1956\) p. xviii \(of Earl Haig\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Our cock won\222t fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(Said to Winston Churchill, of Edward VIII, during the abdication crisis \
of 1936, in Frances Donaldson )Tj
T*
(\221Edward VIII\222 \(1974\) ch. 22)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.4624 Tm
( 2.60 Carl Becker 1873-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The significance of man is that he is that part of the universe that\
asks the question, What is the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(significance of Man? He alone can stand apart imaginatively and, regardi\
ng himself and the )Tj
T*
(universe in their eternal aspects, pronounce a judgment: The significanc\
e of man is that he is )Tj
T*
(insignificant and is aware of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Progress and Power\222 \(1936\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 273.7124 Tm
( 2.61 Samuel Beckett 1906-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is suicide to be abroad. But what is it to be at home, Mr Tyler, \
what is it to be at home? A )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lingering dissolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221All That Fall\222 \(1957\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.25456 Tm
( We could have saved sixpence. We have saved fivepence. \(Pause\) But\
at what cost?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221All That Fall\222 \(1957\) p. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.50456 Tm
( Clov: Do you believe in the life to come?)Tj
T*
( Hamm: Mine was always that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Endgame\222 \(1958\) p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( Let us pray to God...the bastard! He doesn\222t exist!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Endgame\222 \(1958\) p. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Personally I have no bone to pick with graveyards, I take the air th\
ere willingly, perhaps more )Tj
T*
(willingly than elsewhere, when take the air I must.)Tj
ET
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(\221First Love\222 \(1973\) p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( If I had the use of my body I would throw it out of the window.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Malone Dies\222 \(1958\) p. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( There is no use indicting words, they are no shoddier than what they\
peddle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Malone Dies\222 \(1958\) p.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Where I am, I don\222t know, I\222ll never know, in the silence you \
don\222t know, you must go on, I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(can\222t go on, I\222ll go on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Unnamable\222 \(1959\) p. 418)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Nothing to be done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( One of the thieves was saved. \(Pause\) It\222s a reasonable percent\
age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( Estragon: Charming spot. Inspiring prospects. Let\222s go. )Tj
T*
( Vladimir: We can\222t.)Tj
T*
( Estragon: Why not?)Tj
T*
( Vladimir: We\222re waiting for Godot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it\222s awful!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( He can\222t think without his hat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( Vladimir: That passed the time.)Tj
T*
( Estragon: It would have passed in any case.)Tj
T*
( Vladimir: Yes, but not so rapidly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( We always find something, eh, Didi, to give us the impression that w\
e exist?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( We are not saints, but we have kept our appointment. How many people\
can boast as much?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( We all are born mad. Some remain so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( They give birth astride of a grave, the light gleams an instant, the\
n it\222s night once more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( The air is full of our cries. \(He listens\) But habit is a great de\
adener.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(\221Waiting for Godot\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 100.4624 Tm
( 2.62 William Beckford 1759-1844)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When he was angry, one of his eyes became so terrible, that no perso\
n could bear to behold it; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and the wretch upon whom it was fixed, instantly fell backward, and some\
times expired. For fear, )Tj
T*
(however, of depopulating his dominions and making his palace desolate, h\
e but rarely gave way )Tj
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(to his anger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Vathek\222 \(1782, 3rd ed., 1816\) opening para.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He did not think, with the Caliph Omar Ben Adalaziz, that it was nec\
essary to make a hell of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(this world to enjoy Paradise in the next.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Vathek\222 \(3rd ed., 1816\) para. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Your presence I condescend to accept; but beg you will let me be qui\
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T*
(of resisting temptation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Vathek\222 \(3rd ed., 1816\) para. 215)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 2.63 Thomas Becon 1512-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When the wine is in, the wit is out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222 \(ed. J. Ayre, 1844\) p. 375)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.7124 Tm
( 2.64 Thomas Lovell Beddoes 1803-49)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( If thou wilt ease thine heart)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of love and all its smart,)Tj
T*
( Then sleep, dear, sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Jest Book 1825-8\222 \(1850\) act. 2, sc. 2 \221Dirge\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( But wilt thou cure thine heart)Tj
T*
( Of love and all its smart,)Tj
T*
( Then die, dear, die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Jest Book 1825-8\222 \(1850\) act. 2, sc. 2 \221Dirge\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( I have a bit of fiat in my soul,)Tj
T*
( And can myself create my little world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Jest Book 1825-8\222 \(1850\) act. 5, sc. 1, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( King Death hath asses\222 ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Jest Book 1825-8\222 \(1850\) act. 5, sc. 4, l. 245)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( If there were dreams to sell,)Tj
T*
( What would you buy?)Tj
T*
( Some cost a passing bell;)Tj
T*
( Some a light sigh,)Tj
T*
( That shakes from Life\222s fresh crown)Tj
T*
( Only a rose-leaf down.)Tj
T*
( If there were dreams to sell,)Tj
T*
( Merry and sad to tell,)Tj
T*
( And the crier rung the bell,)Tj
T*
( What would you buy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Dream-Pedlary\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 56.9624 Tm
( 2.65 The Venerable Bede 673-735)Tj
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( Talis, inquiens, mihi videtur, rex, vita hominum praesens in terris,\
ad conparationem eius, quod )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(nobis incertum est, temporis, quale cum te residente ad caenam cum ducib\
us ac ministris tuis )Tj
T*
(tempore brumali,...adveniens unus passerum domum ci tissime, pervolaveri\
t; qui cum per unum )Tj
T*
(ostium ingrediens, mox per aliud exierit. Ipso quidem tempore, quo intus\
est, hiemis tempestate )Tj
T*
(non tangitur, sed tamen parvissimo spatio serenitatis ad momentum excurs\
o, mox de hieme in )Tj
T*
(hiemem regrediens, tuis ocul is elabitur. Ita haec vita hominum ad modic\
um apparet; quid autem )Tj
T*
(sequatur, quidve praecesserit, prorsus ignoramus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( \221Such,\222 he said, \221O King, seems to me the present life of m\
en on earth, in comparison with the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(time which to us is uncertain, as if when on a winter\222s night you sit\
feasting with your ealdormen )Tj
T*
(and thegns,\227a single sparrow should fly swiftly into the hall, and co\
ming in at one door, )Tj
T*
(instantly fly out through another. In that time in which it is indoors i\
t is indeed not touched by the )Tj
T*
(fury of the winter, but yet, this smallest space of calmness being passe\
d almost in a flash, from )Tj
T*
(winter going into winter again, it is lost to your eyes. Somewhat like t\
his appears the life of man; )Tj
T*
(but of what follows or what went before, we are utterly ignorant.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Ecclesiastical History of the English People\222 bk. 2, ch. 13)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.2124 Tm
( 2.66 Harry Bedford and Terry Sullivan)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m a bit of a ruin that Cromwell knocked about a bit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221It\222s a Bit of a Ruin that Cromwell Knocked about a Bit\222 \(1920\
song; written for Marie Lloyd\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.4624 Tm
( 2.67 Barnard Elliott Bee 1823-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( There is Jackson with his Virginians, standing like a stone wall. Le\
t us determine to die here, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and we will conquer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(Referring to General T. J. \(\221Stonewall\222\) Jackson at the battle o\
f Bull Run, 21 July, 1861 \(in which Bee himself )Tj
T*
(was killed\), in B. Perley Poore \221Perley\222s Reminiscences\222 \(188\
6\) vol. 2, ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.7124 Tm
( 2.68 Sir Thomas Beecham 1879-1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and fini\
sh together. The public )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(doesn\222t give a damn what goes on in between.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.17047 Tm
(In Harold Atkins and Archie Newman \221Beecham Stories\222 \(1978\) p. 2\
7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 218.25456 Tm
( Like two skeletons copulating on a corrugated tin roof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.42047 Tm
(Describing the harpsichord, in Harold Atkins and Archie Newman \221Beech\
am Stories\222 \(1978\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.50456 Tm
( A kind of musical Malcolm Sargent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(Describing Herbert von Karajan, in Harold Atkins and Archie Newman \221B\
eecham Stories\222 \(1978\) p. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.75456 Tm
( Why do we have to have all these third-rate foreign conductors aroun\
d\227when we have so )Tj
T*
(many second-rate ones of our own?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.92047 Tm
(In L. Ayre \221Wit of Music\222 \(1966\) p. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.00456 Tm
( Hark! the herald angels sing!)Tj
T*
( Beecham\222s Pills are just the thing,)Tj
T*
( Two for a woman, one for a child...)Tj
ET
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( Peace on earth and mercy mild!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In Neville Cardus \221Sir Thomas Beecham\222 \(1961\) p. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A very long work, the musical equivalent of the Towers of St Pancras\
Station\227neo-Gothic, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Describing Elgar\222s 1st Symphony, in Neville Cardus \221Sir Thomas Bee\
cham\222 \(1961\) p. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Please do try to keep in touch with us from time to time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(To an orchestral musician at rehearsal, in Neville Cardus \221Sir Thomas\
Beecham\222 \(1961\) p. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( I am not the greatest conductor in this country. On the other hand I\
\222m better than any damned )Tj
T*
(foreigner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(In \221Daily Express\222 9 March 1961)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Too much counterpoint; what is worse, Protestant counterpoint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Describing Bach, in \221Guardian\222 8 March 1971)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( All the arts in America are a gigantic racket run by unscrupulous me\
n for unhealthy women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 5 May 1946)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Madam, you have between your legs an instrument capable of giving pl\
easure to thousands\227)Tj
T*
(and all you can do is scratch it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(To a cellist; attributed, no source found)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 430.4624 Tm
( 2.69 Revd H. C. Beeching 1859-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Not when the sense is dim,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But now from the heart of joy,)Tj
T*
( I would remember Him:)Tj
T*
( Take the thanks of a boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221In a Garden and Other Poems\222 \(1895\) \221Prayers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( First come I; my name is Jowett.)Tj
T*
( There\222s no knowledge but I know it.)Tj
T*
( I am Master of this college:)Tj
T*
( What I don\222t know isn\222t knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Masque of Balliol\222, composed by and current among members of \
Balliol College in the late 1870s, in W. )Tj
T*
(G. Hiscock \(ed.\) \221The Balliol Rhymes\222 \(1939\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 200.9624 Tm
( 2.70 Sir Max Beerbohm 1872-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mankind is divisible into two great classes: hosts and guests.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(\221And Even Now\222 \(1920\) \221Hosts and Guests\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.50456 Tm
( I maintain that though you would often in the fifteenth century have\
heard the snobbish Roman )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(say, in a would-be off-hand tone, \221I am dining with the Borgias tonig\
ht,\222 no Roman ever was able )Tj
T*
(to say, \221I dined last night with the Borgias.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221And Even Now\222 \(1920\) \221Hosts and Guests\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.75456 Tm
( They so very indubitably are, you know!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(\221Christmas Garland\222 \(1912\) \221Mote in the Middle Distance\222)Tj
ET
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( A swear-word in a rustic slum)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A simple swear-word is to some,)Tj
T*
( To Masefield something more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Fifty Caricatures\222 \(1912\) no. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I was not unpopular [at school]...It is Oxford that has made me insu\
fferable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221More\222 \(1899\) \221Going Back to School\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Undergraduates owe their happiness chiefly to the consciousness that\
they are no longer at )Tj
T*
(school. The nonsense which was knocked out of them at school is all put \
gently back at Oxford or )Tj
T*
(Cambridge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221More\222 \(1899\) \221Going Back to School\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Enter Michael Angelo. Andrea del Sarto appears for a moment at a win\
dow. Pippa passes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Seven Men\222 \(1919\) \221\223Savonarola\224 Brown\222 act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The fading signals and grey eternal walls of that antique station, w\
hich, familiar to them and )Tj
T*
(insignificant, does yet whisper to the tourist the last enchantments of \
the Middle Age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( The dullard\222s envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the sus\
picion that they will come to )Tj
T*
(a bad end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Women who love the same man have a kind of bitter freemasonry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Deeply regret inform your grace last night two black owls came and p\
erched on battlements )Tj
T*
(remained there through night hooting at dawn flew away none knows whithe\
r awaiting )Tj
T*
(instructions Jellings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Prepare vault for funeral Monday Dorset.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( The Socratic manner is not a game at which two can play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Zuleika Dobson\222 \(1911\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Most women are not so young as they are painted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221The Yellow Book\222 \(1894\) vol. 1, p. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Fate wrote her a most tremendous tragedy, and she played it in tight\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Yellow Book\222 \(1894\) vol. 3, p. 260 \(of Queen Caroline of B\
runswick\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 156.7124 Tm
( 2.71 Ethel Lynn Beers 1827-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All quiet along the Potomac to-night,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No sound save the rush of the river,)Tj
T*
( While soft falls the dew on the face of the dead\227)Tj
T*
( The picket\222s off duty forever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Picket Guard\222 \(1861\) st. 6.)Tj
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( 2.72 Ludwig van Beethoven 1770-1827)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Muss es sein? Es muss sein.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Must it be? It must be.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 693.67047 Tm
(String Quartet in F Major, Opus 135, epigraph)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 661.4624 Tm
( 2.73 Brendan Behan 1923-64)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He was born an Englishman and remained one for years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.92047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.00456 Tm
( Pat: He was an Anglo-Irishman.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Meg: In the blessed name of God what\222s that?)Tj
T*
( Pat: A Protestant with a horse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.17047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 530.25456 Tm
( Meanwhile I\222ll sing that famous old song, \221The Hound that Caug\
ht the Pubic Hare\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.42047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.50456 Tm
( When I came back to Dublin, I was courtmartialled in my absence and \
sentenced to death in )Tj
T*
(my absence, so I said they could shoot me in my absence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.67047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.75456 Tm
( I am a sociable worker. Have you your testament?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.92047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.00456 Tm
( Go on, abuse me\227your own husband that took you off the streets on\
a Sunday morning, when )Tj
T*
(there wasn\222t a pub open in the city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( We\222re here because we\222re queer)Tj
T*
( Because we\222re queer because we\222re here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.42047 Tm
(\221Hostage\222 \(1958\) act 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.50456 Tm
( There\222s no such thing as bad publicity except your own obituary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.67047 Tm
(In Dominic Behan \221My Brother Brendan\222 \(1965\) p. 158)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 244.4624 Tm
( 2.74 Aphra Behn n\350e Johnson)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, what a dear ravishing thing is the beginning of an Amour!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221The Emperor of the Moon\222 \(1687\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( Love ceases to be a pleasure, when it ceases to be a secret.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221The Lover\222s Watch\222 \(1686\) \221Four o\222 Clock. General Conv\
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15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( Since man with that inconstancy was born,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To love the absent, and the present scorn,)Tj
T*
( Why do we deck, why do we dress)Tj
T*
( For such a short-lived happiness?)Tj
T*
( Why do we put attraction on,)Tj
T*
( Since either way \222tis we must be undone?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidus\222 \(1688\) \221To Alexis, in Answer to his Poem against Fr\
uition\222)Tj
ET
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( I owe a duty, where I cannot love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221The Moor\222s Revenge\222 act 3, sc. 3)Tj
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( Be just, my lovely swain, and do not take)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
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( Let us then love upon the honest square,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Since interest neither have designed.)Tj
T*
( For the sly gamester, who ne\222er plays me fair,)Tj
T*
( Must trick for trick expect to find.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(\221Poems upon Several Occasions\222 \(1684\) \221To Lysander, on some V\
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T*
(than \222twas worth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.25456 Tm
( A brave world, Sir, full of religion, knavery, and change: we shall \
shortly see better days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.42047 Tm
(\221The Roundheads\222 act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.50456 Tm
( Variety is the soul of pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(\221The Rover\222 pt. 2 \(1681\) act 1)Tj
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( Come away; poverty\222s catching.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(\221The Rover\222 pt. 2 \(1681\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Money speaks sense in a language all nations understand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221The Rover\222 pt. 2 \(1681\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( Do you not daily see fine clothes, rich furniture, jewels and plate \
are more inviting than beauty )Tj
T*
(unadorned?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221The Rover\222 pt. 2 \(1681\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( The soft, unhappy sex.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(\221The Wandering Beauty\222 \(1698\) para. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.4624 Tm
( 2.75 John Hay Beith)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Ian Hay \(8.55\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.76 Clive Bell 1881-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Art and Religion are, then, two roads by which men escape from circu\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Between aesthetic and religious rapture there is a family alliance. Art \
and Religion are means to )Tj
T*
(similar states of mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.17047 Tm
(\221Art\222 \(1914\) pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.25456 Tm
( I will try to account for the degree of my aesthetic emotion. That, \
I conceive, is the function of )Tj
T*
(the critic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.42047 Tm
(\221Art\222 \(1914\) pt. 3 ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.50456 Tm
( Only reason can convince us of those three fundamental truths withou\
t a recogniton of which )Tj
T*
(there can be no effective liberty: that what we believe is not necessari\
ly true; that what we like is )Tj
T*
(not necessarily good; and that all questions are open.)Tj
ET
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(\221Civilization\222 \(1928\) ch. 5)Tj
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( 2.77 Hilaire Belloc 1870-1953)Tj
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( When people call this beast to mind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They marvel more and more)Tj
T*
( At such a little tail behind,)Tj
T*
( So large a trunk before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221A Bad Child\222s Book of Beasts\222 \(1896\) \221The Elephant\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( I shoot the Hippopotamus)Tj
T*
( With bullets made of platinum,)Tj
T*
( Because if I use leaden ones)Tj
T*
( His hide is sure to flatten \222em.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221A Bad Child\222s Book of Beasts\222 \(1896\) \221The Hippopotamus\222\
.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( The Tiger, on the other hand, is kittenish and mild,)Tj
T*
( He makes a pretty play fellow for any little child;)Tj
T*
( And mothers of large families \(who claim to common sense\))Tj
T*
( Will find a Tiger well repay the trouble and expense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(\221A Bad Child\222s Book of Beasts\222 \(1896\) \221The Tiger\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( Believing Truth is staring at the sun)Tj
T*
( Which but destroys the power that could perceive.)Tj
T*
( So naught of our poor selves can be at one)Tj
T*
( With burning Truth, nor utterly believe)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221Believing Truth is staring at the sun\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Physicians of the Utmost Fame)Tj
T*
( Were called at once; but when they came)Tj
T*
( They answered, as they took their Fees,)Tj
T*
( \221There is no Cure for this Disease.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.42047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Henry King\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 247.50456 Tm
( And always keep a-hold of Nurse)Tj
T*
( For fear of finding something worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Jim\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.75456 Tm
( In my opinion, Butlers ought)Tj
T*
( To know their place, and not to play)Tj
T*
( The Old Retainer night and day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Lord Lundy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( Sir! you have disappointed us!)Tj
T*
( We had intended you to be)Tj
T*
( The next Prime Minister but three:)Tj
T*
( The stocks were sold; the Press was squared;)Tj
T*
( The Middle Class was quite prepared.)Tj
ET
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( But as it is!...My language fails!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Go out and govern New South Wales!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Lord Lundy\222)Tj
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( A Trick that everyone abhors)Tj
T*
( In Little Girls is slamming Doors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Rebecca\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( She was not really bad at heart,)Tj
T*
( But only rather rude and wild:)Tj
T*
( She was an aggravating child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Cautionary Tales\222 \(1907\) \221Rebecca\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Of Courtesy, it is much less)Tj
T*
( Than Courage of Heart or Holiness,)Tj
T*
( Yet in my Walks it seems to me)Tj
T*
( That the Grace of God is in Courtesy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Courtesy\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( John Henderson, an unbeliever,)Tj
T*
( Had lately lost his Joie de Vivre)Tj
T*
( From reading far too many books...)Tj
T*
( Moral: The moral is \(it is indeed!\))Tj
T*
( You mustn\222t monkey with the Creed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Ladies and Gentlemen\222 \(1932\) \221The Example\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I said to Heart, \221How goes it ?\222 Heart replied:)Tj
T*
( \221Right as a Ribstone Pippin!\222 But it lied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The False Heart\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( I\222m tired of Love: I\222m still more tired of Rhyme.)Tj
T*
( But Money gives me pleasure all the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Fatigued\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Strong brother in God and last companion, Wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Heroic Poem upon Wine\222 \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Remote and ineffectual Don)Tj
T*
( That dared attack my Chesterton.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Lines to a Don\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Dons admirable! Dons of Might!)Tj
T*
( Uprising on my inward sight)Tj
T*
( Compact of ancient tales, and port)Tj
T*
( And sleep\227and learning of a sort.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Lines to a Don\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Whatever happens we have got)Tj
T*
( The Maxim Gun, and they have not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Modern Traveller\222 \(1898\) pt. 6)Tj
ET
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( The Llama is a woolly sort of fleecy hairy goat,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With an indolent expression and an undulating throat)Tj
T*
( Like an unsuccessful literary man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221More Beasts for Worse Children\222 \(1897\) \221The Llama\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The Microbe is so very small)Tj
T*
( You cannot make him out at all.)Tj
T*
( But many sanguine people hope)Tj
T*
( To see him through a microscope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221More Beasts for Worse Children\222 \(1897\)\222The Microbe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Lord Finchley tried to mend the Electric Light)Tj
T*
( Himself. It struck him dead: And serve him right!)Tj
T*
( It is the business of the wealthy man)Tj
T*
( To give employment to the artisan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221More Peers\222 \(1911\) \221Lord Finchley\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Like many of the Upper Class)Tj
T*
( He liked the Sound of Broken Glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221New Cautionary Tales\222 \(1930\) \221About John\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( And even now, at twenty-five,)Tj
T*
( He has to work to keep alive!)Tj
T*
( Yes! All day long from 10 till 4!)Tj
T*
( For half the year or even more;)Tj
T*
( With but an hour or two to spend)Tj
T*
( At luncheon with a city friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221New Cautionary Tales\222 \(1930\) \221Peter Goole\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( A smell of burning fills the startled Air\227)Tj
T*
( The Electrician is no longer there!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Newdigate Poem\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( The accursed power which stands on Privilege)Tj
T*
( \(And goes with Women, and Champagne, and Bridge\))Tj
T*
( Broke\227and Democracy resumed her reign:)Tj
T*
( \(Which goes with Bridge, and Women and Champagne\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221On a Great Election\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( I am a sundial, and I make a botch)Tj
T*
( Of what is done much better by a watch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221On a Sundial\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( When I am dead, I hope it may be said:)Tj
T*
( \221His sins were scarlet, but his books were read.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221On His Books\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Pale Ebenezer thought it wrong to fight,)Tj
T*
( But Roaring Bill \(who killed him\) thought it right.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Pacifist\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( When I am living in the Midlands)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That are sodden and unkind...)Tj
T*
( And the great hills of the South Country)Tj
T*
( Come back into my mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The South Country\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Do you remember an Inn, Miranda?)Tj
T*
( Do you remember an Inn?)Tj
T*
( And the tedding and the spreading)Tj
T*
( Of the straw for a bedding,)Tj
T*
( And the fleas that tease in the High Pyrenees)Tj
T*
( And the wine that tasted of the tar?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Tarantella\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Balliol made me, Balliol fed me,)Tj
T*
( Whatever I had she gave me again:)Tj
T*
( And the best of Balliol loved and led me.)Tj
T*
( God be with you, Balliol men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221To the Balliol Men Still in Africa\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( From quiet homes and first beginning,)Tj
T*
( Out to the undiscovered ends,)Tj
T*
( There\222s nothing worth the wear of winning,)Tj
T*
( But laughter and the love of friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Verses\222 \(1910\) \221Dedicatory Ode\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Is there no Latin word for Tea? Upon my soul, if I had known that I \
would have let the vulgar )Tj
T*
(stuff alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221On Nothing\222 \(1908\) \221On Tea\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Gentlemen, I am a Catholic...If you reject me on account of my relig\
ion, I shall thank God that )Tj
T*
(He has spared me the indignity of being your representative.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(Speech to voters of South Salford, 1906, in R. Speaight \221Life of Hila\
ire Belloc\222 \(1957\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 214.4624 Tm
( 2.78 Saul Bellow 1915\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If I am out of my mind, it\222s all right with me, thought Moses Her\
zog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221Herzog\222 \(1961\) opening sentence)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( A novel is balanced between a few true impressions and the multitude\
of false ones that make )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(up most of what we call life. It tells us that for every human being the\
re is a diversity of )Tj
T*
(existences, that the single existence is itself an illusion in part...it\
promises us meaning, harmony, )Tj
T*
(and even justice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(Speech on receiving the Nobel Prize, 1976)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( Art has something to do with the achievement of stillness in the mid\
st of chaos. A stillness )Tj
T*
(which characterizes prayer, too, and the eye of the storm...an arrest of\
attention in the midst of )Tj
ET
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(distraction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In George Plimpton \221Writers at Work\222 \(1967\) 3rd series, p. 190)Tj
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( 2.79 Pierre-Laurent Buirette du Belloy 1725-75)Tj
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( Plus je vis d\222\350trangers, plus j\222aimai ma patrie.)Tj
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( The more foreigners I saw, the more I loved my homeland.)Tj
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(\221Le Si\351ge de Calais\222 \(1765\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 613.4624 Tm
( 2.80 Robert Benchley 1889-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My only solution for the problem of habitual accidents...is to stay \
in bed all day. Even then, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(there is always the chance that you will fall out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221Safety Second\222 in \221Chips off the old Benchley\222 \(1949\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( In America there are two classes of travel\227first class, and with \
children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Pluck and Luck\222 \(1925\) p. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( Daddy sat up very late working on a case of Scotch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Pluck and Luck\222 \(1925\) p. 198)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( It took me fifteen years to discover that I had no talent for writin\
g, but I couldn\222t give it up )Tj
T*
(because by that time I was too famous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(In Nathaniel Benchley \221Robert Benchley\222 \(1955\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( \221Streets flooded. Please advise.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(Telegraph message on arriving in Venice, in R. E. Drennan \(ed.\) \221W\
its End\222 \(1973\) \221Robert Benchley\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 360.7124 Tm
( 2.81 Julien Benda 1867-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La trahison des clercs.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The treachery of the intellectuals.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1927\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.2124 Tm
( 2.82 Stephen Vincent Ben\350t 1898-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have fallen in love with American names,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The sharp, gaunt names that never get fat,)Tj
T*
( The snakeskin-titles of mining-claims,)Tj
T*
( The plumed war-bonnet of Medicine Hat,)Tj
T*
( Tucson and Deadwood and Lost Mule Flat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221American Names\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( I shall not rest quiet in Montparnasse.)Tj
T*
( I shall not lie easy at Winchelsea.)Tj
T*
( You may bury my body in Sussex grass,)Tj
T*
( You may bury my tongue at Champm\350dy.)Tj
T*
( I shall not be there, I shall rise and pass.)Tj
T*
( Bury my heart at Wounded Knee.)Tj
ET
EMC
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(\221American Names\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( We thought we were done with these things but we were wrong.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We thought, because we had power, we had wisdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Litany for Dictatorships\222 \(1935\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 2.83 William Rose Ben\350t 1886-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Blake saw a treefull of angels at Peckham Rye,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And his hands could lay hold on the tiger\222s terrible heart.)Tj
T*
( Blake knew how deep is Hell, and Heaven how high,)Tj
T*
( And could build the universe from one tiny part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Mad Blake\222 \(1918\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 2.84 Tony Benn \(Anthony Neil Wedgewood Benn, Viscount Stansgate-title \
renounced 1963\) 1925)Tj
T*
(\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In developing our industrial strategy for the period ahead, we have \
the benefit of much )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(experience. Almost everything has been tried at least once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 13 March 1974, col. 197)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.00456 Tm
( It is arguable that what has really happened has amounted to such a \
breakdown in the social )Tj
T*
(contract, upon which parliamentary democracy by universal suffrage was b\
ased, that that contract )Tj
T*
(now needs to be re-negotiated on a basis that shares power much more wid\
ely, before it can win )Tj
T*
(general assent again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221The New Politics\222 \(1970\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( It is as wholly wrong to blame Marx for what was done in his name, a\
s it is to blame Jesus for )Tj
T*
(what was done in his.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(In Alan Freeman \221The Benn Heresy\222 \(1982\) \221Interview with Tony\
Benn\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 293.2124 Tm
( 2.85 George Bennard 1873-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I will cling to the old rugged cross,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And exchange it some day for a crown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Rugged Cross\222 \(1913 hymn\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 205.4624 Tm
( 2.86 Alan Bennett 1934\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have never understood this liking for war. It panders to instincts\
already catered for within the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(scope of any respectable domestic establishment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
(\221Forty Years On\222 \(1969\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.00456 Tm
( We started off trying to set up a small anarchist community, but peo\
ple wouldn\222t obey the rules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(\221Getting On\222 \(1972\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.25456 Tm
( We were put to Dickens as children but it never quite took. That unr\
emitting humanity soon )Tj
T*
(had me cheesed off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Country\222 \(1978\) act 2)Tj
ET
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( Life, you know, is rather like opening a tin of sardines. We are all\
of us looking for the key. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(And, I wonder, how many of you here tonight have wasted years of your li\
ves looking behind the )Tj
T*
(kitchen dressers of this life for that key. I know I have. Others think \
they\222ve found the key, don\222t )Tj
T*
(they? They roll back the lid of the sardine tin of life, they reveal the\
sardines, the riches of life, )Tj
T*
(therein, and they get them out, they enjoy them. But, you know, there\222\
s always a little bit in the )Tj
T*
(corner you can\222t get out. I wonder\227I wonder, is there a little bit\
in the corner of your life? I )Tj
T*
(know there is in mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Take a Pew\222 \(1961\), in Roger Wilmut \221Complete Beyond the Fri\
nge\222 \(1987\) p. 104)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.9624 Tm
( 2.87 Arnold Bennett \(Enoch Arnold Bennett\) 1867-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( His opinion of himself, having once risen, remained at \221set fair\222\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.42047 Tm
(\221The Card\222 \(1911\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 538.50456 Tm
( \221What\222s he done? Has he ever done a day\222s work in his life?\
What great cause is he identified )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(with?\222 \221He\222s identified...with the great cause of cheering us a\
ll up.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.67047 Tm
(\221The Card\222 \(1911\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.75456 Tm
( Englishmen act better than Frenchmen, and Frenchwomen better than En\
glishwomen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221Cupid and Commonsense\222 \(1909\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.00456 Tm
( \221With people like you, love only means one thing.\222 \221No,\222\
he replied. \221It means twenty things, )Tj
T*
(but it doesn\222t mean nineteen.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 \(1932\) 20 November 1904)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( Pessimism, when you get used to it, is just as agreeable as optimism\
. Indeed, I think it must be )Tj
T*
(more agreeable, must have a more real savour, than optimism\227from the \
way in which pessimists )Tj
T*
(abandon themselves to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221Things that have Interested Me\222 \(1921\) \221Slump in Pessimism\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( The price of justice is eternal publicity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221Things that have Interested Me\222 \(2nd series, 1923\) \221Secret T\
rials\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( A cause may be inconvenient, but it\222s magnificent. It\222s like c\
hampagne or high heels, and one )Tj
T*
(must be prepared to suffer for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221The Title\222 \(1918\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Being a husband is a whole-time job. That is why so many husbands fa\
il. They cannot give )Tj
T*
(their entire attention to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Title\222 \(1918\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Literature\222s always a good card to play for Honours. It makes peo\
ple think that Cabinet )Tj
T*
(ministers are educated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221The Title\222 \(1918\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( All the time my father was dying, I was at the bedside making copiou\
s notes. You can\222t just )Tj
T*
(slap those things down. You have to take trouble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Praising his own handling of the death of Darius Clayhanger in an overhe\
ard conversation with Hugh )Tj
T*
(Walpole, in P. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton \221Bring on the Girls\222 \(\
1954\) ch. 15)Tj
ET
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( 2.88 Ada Benson and Fred Fisher 1875-1942)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Your feet\222s too big,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Don\222t want you \222cause your feet\222s too big,)Tj
T*
( Mad at you \222cause your feet\222s too big,)Tj
T*
( Hates you \222cause your feet\222s too big.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Your Feet\222s Too Big\222 \(1936 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.2124 Tm
( 2.89 A. C. Benson 1862-1925)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How shall we extol thee who are born of thee?)Tj
T*
( Wider still and wider shall thy bounds be set;)Tj
T*
( God who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Land of Hope and Glory\222 written to be sung as the Finale of Elgar\
\222s Coronation Ode \(1902\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 505.4624 Tm
( 2.90 Stella Benson 1892-1933)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Call no man foe, but never love a stranger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221This is the End\222 \(1917\) p. 63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 435.7124 Tm
( 2.91 Jeremy Bentham 1748-1832)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Right...is the child of law: from real laws come real rights; but fr\
om imaginary laws, from laws )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of nature, fancied and invented by poets, rhetoricians, and dealers in m\
oral and intellectual )Tj
T*
(poisons, come imaginary rights, a bastard brood of monsters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(\221Anarchical Fallacies\222 in J. Bowring \(ed.\) \221Works\222 vol. 2\
, p. 501)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.25456 Tm
( Natural rights is simple nonsense: natural and imprescriptible right\
s, rhetorical nonsense\227)Tj
T*
(nonsense upon stilts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(\221Anarchical Fallacies\222 in J. Bowring \(ed.\) \221Works\222 vol. 2\
, p. 523)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.50456 Tm
( The greatest happiness of the greatest number is the foundation of m\
orals and legislation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221The Commonplace Book\222 in J. Bowring \(ed.\) \221Works\222 vol. 1\
0 \(1843\) p. 142, in which Bentham claims to )Tj
T*
(have acquired the \221sacred truth\222 either from Joseph Priestley \(17\
33-1804\) or Cesare Beccaria \(1738-94\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.75456 Tm
( The Fool had stuck himself up one day, with great gravity, in the Ki\
ng\222s throne; with a stick, )Tj
T*
(by way of a sceptre, in one hand, and a ball in the other: being asked w\
hat he was doing? he )Tj
T*
(answered \221reigning\222. Much of the same sort of reign, I take it wou\
ld be that of our Author\222s )Tj
T*
([Blackstone\222s] Democracy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.92047 Tm
(\221A Fragment on Government\222 \(1776\) ch. 2, para. 34, footnote \(e\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.00456 Tm
( All punishment is mischief: all punishment in itself is evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(\221Principles of Morals and Legislation\222 \(1789\) ch. 13, para. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 107.25456 Tm
( Prose is when all the lines except the last go on to the end. Poetry\
is when some of them fall )Tj
T*
(short of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(In M. St. J. Packe \221The Life of John Stuart Mill\222 \(1954\) bk. 1, \
ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 52.50456 Tm
( He rather hated the ruling few than loved the suffering many.)Tj
ET
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(Referring to James Mill, in H. N. Pym \(ed.\) \221Memories of Old Frien\
ds, being Extracts from the Journals and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Letters of Caroline Fox\222 \(1882\) p. 113 7 August 1840)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 2.92 Edmund Clerihew Bentley 1875-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When their lordships asked Bacon)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How many bribes he had taken)Tj
T*
( He had at least the grace)Tj
T*
( To get very red in the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 616.42047 Tm
(\221Baseless Biography\222 \(1939\) \221Bacon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 595.50456 Tm
( The Art of Biography)Tj
T*
( Is different from Geography.)Tj
T*
( Geography is about Maps,)Tj
T*
( But Biography is about Chaps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.75456 Tm
( Chapman & Hall)Tj
T*
( Swore not at all.)Tj
T*
( Mr Chapman\222s yea was yea,)Tj
T*
( And Mr Hall\222s nay was nay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.92047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221Chapman & Hall\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.00456 Tm
( What I like about Clive)Tj
T*
( Is that he is no longer alive.)Tj
T*
( There is a great deal to be said)Tj
T*
( For being dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221Clive\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( Sir Humphrey Davy)Tj
T*
( Abominated gravy.)Tj
T*
( He lived in the odium)Tj
T*
( Of having discovered Sodium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221Sir Humphrey Davy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.50456 Tm
( It looked bad when the Duke of Fife)Tj
T*
( Left off using a knife;)Tj
T*
( But people began to talk)Tj
T*
( When he left off using a fork.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221The Duke of Fife\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.75456 Tm
( Edward the Confessor)Tj
T*
( Slept under the dresser.)Tj
T*
( When that began to pall,)Tj
T*
( He slept in the hall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.92047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221Edward the Confessor\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 51.00456 Tm
( John Stuart Mill,)Tj
ET
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( By a mighty effort of will,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Overcame his natural bonhomie)Tj
T*
( And wrote \221Principles of Political Economy\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221John Stuart Mill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Sir Christopher Wren)Tj
T*
( Said, \221I am going to dine with some men.)Tj
T*
( If anybody calls)Tj
T*
( Say I am designing St Paul\222s.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Biography for Beginners\222 \(1905\) \221Sir Christopher Wren\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( George the Third)Tj
T*
( Ought never to have occurred.)Tj
T*
( One can only wonder)Tj
T*
( At so grotesque a blunder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221More Biography\222 \(1929\) \221George the Third\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 487.4624 Tm
( 2.93 Eric Bentley 1916\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ours is the age of substitutes: instead of language, we have jargon;\
instead of principles, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(slogans; and, instead of genuine ideas, Bright Ideas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221New Republic\222 29 December 1952)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 2.94 Richard Bentley 1662-1742)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It would be port if it could.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(His judgement on claret, in R. C. Jebb \221Bentley\222 \(1902\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.25456 Tm
( It is a pretty poem, Mr Pope, but you must not call it Homer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(When pressed by Pope to comment on \221My Homer\222 [ie. his translation\
], in John Hawkins \(ed.\) \221The Works of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Samuel Johnson\222 \(1787\) vol. 4 \221The Life of Pope\222 p. 126, foot\
note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( I hold it as certain, that no man was ever written out of reputation\
but by himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.67047 Tm
(In William Warburton \(ed.\) \221The Works of Alexander Pope\222 \(1751\
\) vol. 4, p. 159, footnote)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 241.4624 Tm
( 2.95 Pierre-Jean de B\350ranger 1780-1857)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il \350tait un roi d\222Yvetot)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Peu connu dans l\222histoire.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There was a king of Yvetot)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Little known to history.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.17047 Tm
(\221Le Roi d\222Yvetot\222 \(written 1813\) in \221Chansons de De B\350r\
anger\222 \(1832\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.25456 Tm
( Nos amis, les ennemis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Our friends, the enemy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Opinion de ces demoiselles\222 \(written 1815\) in \221Chansons\
de De B\350ranger\222 \(1832\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 55.4624 Tm
( 2.96 Nikolai Berdyaev 1874-1948)Tj
ET
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( All history is myth.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.97 Lord Charles Beresford 1846-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Very sorry can\222t come. Lie follows by post.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Telegraphed message to the Prince of Wales, on being summoned to dine at\
the eleventh hour; Ralph Nevill )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(claims Beresford as the originator of this much imitated witticism in \221\
The World of Fashion 1837-)Tj
T*
(1922\222 \(1923\) ch. 5.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 620.2124 Tm
( 2.98 Henri Bergson 1859-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The present contains nothing more than the past, and what is found i\
n the effect was already in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Evolution cr\350atrice\222 \(1907\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 543.75456 Tm
( L\222\350lan vital.)Tj
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( The vital spirit.)Tj
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(\221L\222Evolution cr\350atrice\222 \(1907\) ch. 2)Tj
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( 2.99 George Berkeley 1685-1753)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( They are neither finite quantities, or quantities infinitely small, \
nor yet nothing. May we not )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(call them the ghosts of departed quantities?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(\221The Analyst\222 \(1734\) sect. 35 \(on Newton\222s infinitesimals\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.50456 Tm
( [Tar Water] is of a nature so mild and benign and proportioned to th\
e human constitution, as to )Tj
T*
(warm without heating, to cheer but not inebriate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221Siris\222 \(1744\) para. 217.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.75456 Tm
( Truth is the cry of all, but the game of the few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(\221Siris\222 \(1744\) para. 368)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.00456 Tm
( The same principles which at first lead to scepticism, pursued to a \
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T*
(to common sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(\221Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous\222 \(1734\) Dialogue 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.25456 Tm
( We have first raised a dust and then complain we cannot see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(\221A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge\222 \(1710\)\
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15 0 0 15 10 214.50456 Tm
( All the choir of heaven and furniture of earth\227in a word, all tho\
se bodies which compose the )Tj
T*
(mighty frame of the world\227have not any subsistence without a mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge\222 \(1710\)\
pt. 1, sect. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( Westward the course of empire takes its way;)Tj
T*
( The first four acts already past,)Tj
T*
( A fifth shall close the drama with the day:)Tj
T*
( Time\222s noblest offspring is the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221On the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in America\222 \(1752\)\
st. 6. John Quincy Adams \221Oration at )Tj
T*
(Plymouth\222 \(1802\) \221westward the star of empire takes its way\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 42.7124 Tm
( 2.100 Irving Berlin \(Israel Baline\) 1888-1989)Tj
ET
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( Come on and hear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come on and hear,)Tj
T*
( Alexander\222s ragtime band,)Tj
T*
( Come on and hear,)Tj
T*
( Come on and hear,)Tj
T*
( It\222s the best band in the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Ragtime Band\222 \(1911 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Anything you can do, I can do better,)Tj
T*
( I can do anything better than you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221Anything You Can Do\222 \(1946 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( God bless America,)Tj
T*
( Land that I love,)Tj
T*
( Stand beside her and guide her)Tj
T*
( Thru the night with a light from above.)Tj
T*
( From the mountains to the prairies,)Tj
T*
( To the oceans white with foam,)Tj
T*
( God bless America,)Tj
T*
( My home sweet home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.67047 Tm
(\221God Bless America\222 \(1939 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.75456 Tm
( A pretty girl is like a melody)Tj
T*
( That haunts you night and day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.92047 Tm
(\221A Pretty Girl is like a Melody\222 \(1919 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.00456 Tm
( The song is ended \(but the melody lingers on\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.25456 Tm
( There\222s no business like show business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.50456 Tm
( I\222m dreaming of a white Christmas,)Tj
T*
( Just like the ones I used to know,)Tj
T*
( Where the tree-tops glisten)Tj
T*
( And children listen)Tj
T*
( To hear sleigh bells in the snow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.67047 Tm
(\221White Christmas\222 \(1942 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.4624 Tm
( 2.101 Sir Isaiah Berlin 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Injustice, poverty, slavery, ignorance\227these may be cured by refo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(do not live only by fighting evils. They live by positive goals, individ\
ual and collective, a vast )Tj
T*
(variety of them, seldom predictable, at times incompatible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.92047 Tm
(\221Four Essays on Liberty\222 \(1969\) \221Political Ideas in the Twent\
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15 0 0 15 10 64.00456 Tm
( There exists a great chasm between those, on one side, who relate ev\
erything to a single central )Tj
T*
(vision...and, on the other side, those who pursue many ends, often unrel\
ated and even )Tj
ET
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(contradictory...The first kind of intellectual and artistic personality \
belongs to the hedgehogs, the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(second to the foxes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Hedgehog and the Fox\222 \(1953\) ch. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Rousseau was the first militant lowbrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Observer\222 9 November 1952)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Liberty is liberty, not equality or fairness or justice or human hap\
piness or a quiet conscience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Two Concepts of Liberty\222 \(1958\) p. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 613.4624 Tm
( 2.102 Georges Bernanos 1888-1948)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Le d\350sir de la pri\351re est d\350j\341 une pri\351re.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The wish for prayer is a prayer in itself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Journal d\222un cur\350 de campagne\222 \(Diary of a Country Priest,\
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( L\222enfer, madame, c\222est de ne plus aimer.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Hell, madam, is to love no more.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(\221Journal d\222un cur\350 de campagne\222 \(Diary of a Country Priest,\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 463.4624 Tm
( 2.103 St Bernard 1090-1153)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Liberavi animam meam.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I have freed my soul.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.17047 Tm
(\221Epistles\222 no. 371)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 371.9624 Tm
( 2.104 Bernard of Chartres d. c.1130)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Bernard of Chartres used to say that we are like dwarfs on the shoul\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
(size.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(In John of Salisbury \221The Metalogicon\222 \(1159\) bk. 3, ch. 4, quot\
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T*
(Giants\222 \(1965\) ch. 9.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.2124 Tm
( 2.105 Eric Berne 1910-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Games people play: the psychology of human relationships.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Title of book \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( Human life [as]...mainly a process of filling in time until the arri\
val of death, or Santa Claus, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(with very little choice, if any, of what kind of business one is going t\
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T*
(wait, is a commonplace but not the final answer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Games People Play\222 \(1964\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 90.7124 Tm
( 2.106 Lord Berners \(George Hugh Tyrwhitt-Wilson, fourteenth Baron Bern\
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Always backing into the limelight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(Of T. E. Lawrence \(oral tradition\))Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( All the President\222s men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 713.42047 Tm
(Title of book on the Watergate scandal \(1974\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 681.2124 Tm
( 2.108 Chuck Berry \(Charles Edward Berry\) 1926\227or 1931\227)Tj
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T*
( Roll over, Beethoven, and tell Tchaikovsky the news.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(\221Roll Over, Beethoven\222 \(1956 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 611.4624 Tm
( 2.109 John Berryman 1914-1972)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( We must travel in the direction of our fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.92047 Tm
(\221Poems\222 \(1942\) \221A Point of Age\222)Tj
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( Life, friends, is boring. We must not say so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.17047 Tm
(\22177 Dream Songs\222 \(1964\) no. 14)Tj
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( And moreover my mother taught me as a boy)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(repeatingly\) \221Ever to confess you\222re bored)Tj
T*
( means you have no Inner Resources.\222 I conclude now I have no)Tj
T*
( inner resources, because I am heavy bored.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.42047 Tm
(\22177 Dream Songs\222 \(1964\) no. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.50456 Tm
( I seldom go to films. They are too exciting,)Tj
T*
( said the Honourable Possum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\22177 Dream Songs\222 \(1964\) no. 53)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 359.4624 Tm
( 2.110 Charles Best)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Look how the pale Queen of the silent night)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Doth cause the Ocean to attend upon her,)Tj
T*
( And he, as long as she is in his sight,)Tj
T*
( With his full tide is ready her to honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.92047 Tm
(\221Of the Moon\222 \(1602\) in N. Ault \(ed.\) \221Elizabethan Lyrics \
from the Original Texts\222 \(1925\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 235.7124 Tm
( 2.111 Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg 1856-1921)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Just for a word \221neutrality\222\227a word which in wartime has so\
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0 -1.2 TD
(a scrap of paper, Great Britain is going to make war on a kindred nation\
who desires nothing )Tj
T*
(better than to be friends with her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.17047 Tm
(Summary of a report by Sir E. Goschen to Sir Edward Grey in \221British \
Documents on Origins of the War )Tj
T*
(1898-1914\222 \(1926\) vol. 11, p. 351. \221The Diary of Edward Goschen \
1900-1914\222 \(1980\) Appendix B for a )Tj
T*
(discussion of the contentious origins of this statement)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 99.9624 Tm
( 2.112 Sir John Betjeman 1906-84)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He sipped at a weak hock and seltzer)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As he gazed at the London skies)Tj
T*
( Through the Nottingham lace of the curtains)Tj
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T*
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T*
( And was helped to a hansom outside.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.50456 Tm
( And girls in slacks remember Dad,)Tj
T*
( And oafish louts remember Mum,)Tj
T*
( And sleepless children\222s hearts are glad,)Tj
T*
( And Christmas-morning bells say \221Come!\222)Tj
T*
( Even to shining ones who dwell)Tj
T*
( Safe in the Dorchester Hotel.)Tj
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( And is it true? And is it true,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This most tremendous tale of all,)Tj
T*
( Seen in a stained-glass window\222s hue,)Tj
T*
( A Baby in an ox\222s stall?)Tj
T*
( The Maker of the stars and sea)Tj
T*
( Become a Child on earth for me?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.92047 Tm
(\221Christmas\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.00456 Tm
( Oh! Chintzy, Chintzy cheeriness,)Tj
T*
( Half dead and half alive!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(\221Death in Leamington\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( Spirits of well-shot woodcock, partridge, snipe)Tj
T*
( Flutter and bear him up the Norfolk sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.42047 Tm
(\221Death of King George V\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.50456 Tm
( Old men in country houses hear clocks ticking)Tj
T*
( Over thick carpets with a deadened force.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.67047 Tm
(\221Death of King George V\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.75456 Tm
( Old men who never cheated, never doubted,)Tj
T*
( Communicated monthly, sit and stare)Tj
T*
( At the new suburb stretched beyond the run-way)Tj
T*
( Where a young man lands hatless from the air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221Death of King George V\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( Whist upon whist upon whist upon whist drive, in Institute, Legion a\
nd Social Club.)Tj
T*
( Horny hands that hold the aces which this morning held the plough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(\221Dorset\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.25456 Tm
( Oh shall I see the Thames again?)Tj
T*
( The prow-promoted gems again,)Tj
T*
( As beefy ATS)Tj
T*
( Without their hats)Tj
ET
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( Come shooting through the bridge?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And \221cheerioh\222 or \221cheeri-bye\222)Tj
T*
( Across the waste of waters die)Tj
T*
( And low the mists of evening lie)Tj
T*
( And lightly skims the midge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(\221Henley-on-Thames\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( Phone for the fish-knives, Norman)Tj
T*
( As Cook is a little unnerved;)Tj
T*
( You kiddies have crumpled the serviettes)Tj
T*
( And I must have things daintily served.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.67047 Tm
(\221How to get on in Society\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.75456 Tm
( Milk and then just as it comes dear?)Tj
T*
( I\222m afraid the preserve\222s full of stones;)Tj
T*
( Beg pardon, I\222m soiling the doileys)Tj
T*
( With afternoon tea-cakes and scones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(\221How to get on in Society\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.00456 Tm
( In the Garden City Caf\350 with its murals on the wall)Tj
T*
( Before a talk on \221Sex and Civics\222 I meditated on the Fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221Huxley Hall\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( The Church\222s Restoration)Tj
T*
( In eighteen-eighty-three)Tj
T*
( Has left for contemplation)Tj
T*
( Not what there used to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.42047 Tm
(\221Hymn\222 in \221Mount Zion\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.50456 Tm
( Think of what our Nation stands for,)Tj
T*
( Books from Boots\222 and country lanes,)Tj
T*
( Free speech, free passes, class distinction,)Tj
T*
( Democracy and proper drains.)Tj
T*
( Lord, put beneath Thy special care)Tj
T*
( One-eighty-nine Cadogan Square.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.67047 Tm
(\221In Westminster Abbey\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.75456 Tm
( In the licorice fields at Pontefract)Tj
T*
( My love and I did meet)Tj
T*
( And many a burdened licorice bush)Tj
T*
( Was blooming round our feet;)Tj
T*
( Red hair she had and golden skin,)Tj
T*
( Her sulky lips were shaped for sin,)Tj
T*
( Her sturdy legs were flannel-slack\222d,)Tj
T*
( The strongest legs in Pontefract.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.92047 Tm
(\221The Licorice Fields at Pontefract\222 \(1954\))Tj
ET
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( Belbroughton Road is bonny, and pinkly bursts the spray)Tj
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( Of prunus and forsythia across the public way,)Tj
T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.42047 Tm
(\221May-Day Song for North Oxford\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.50456 Tm
( Gaily into Ruislip Gardens)Tj
T*
( Runs the red electric train,)Tj
T*
( With a thousand Ta\222s and Pardon\222s)Tj
T*
( Daintily alights Elaine;)Tj
T*
( Hurries down the concrete station)Tj
T*
( With a frown of concentration,)Tj
T*
( Out into the outskirt\222s edges)Tj
T*
( Where a few surviving hedges)Tj
T*
( Keep alive our lost Elysium\227rural Middlesex again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Middlesex\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Pam, I adore you, Pam, you great big mountainous sports girl,)Tj
T*
( Whizzing them over the net, full of the strength of five:)Tj
T*
( That old Malvernian brother, you zephyr and khaki shorts girl,)Tj
T*
( Although he\222s playing for Woking, can\222t stand up to your wonde\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Pot Pourri from a Surrey Garden\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( The gas was on in the Institute,)Tj
T*
( The flare was up in the gymn,)Tj
T*
( A man was running a mineral line,)Tj
T*
( A lass was singing a hymn,)Tj
T*
( When Captain Webb the Dawley man,)Tj
T*
( Captain Webb from Dawley,)Tj
T*
( Came swimming along in the old canal)Tj
T*
( That carries the bricks to Lewley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Slough!)Tj
T*
( It isn\222t fit for humans now,)Tj
T*
( There isn\222t grass to graze a cow.)Tj
T*
( Swarm over, Death!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Slough\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Miss J. Hunter Dunn, Miss J. Hunter Dunn,)Tj
T*
( Furnish\222d and burnish\222d by Aldershot sun,)Tj
T*
( What strenuous singles we played after tea,)Tj
T*
( We in the tournament\227you against me.)Tj
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( Love-thirty, love-forty, oh! weakness of joy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The speed of a swallow, the grace of a boy,)Tj
T*
( With carefullest carelessness, gaily you won,)Tj
T*
( I am weak from your loveliness, Joan Hunter Dunn.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Miss Joan Hunter Dunn, Miss Joan Hunter Dunn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How mad I am, sad I am, glad that you won.)Tj
T*
( The warm-handled racket is back in its press,)Tj
T*
( But my shock-headed victor, she loves me no less.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.17047 Tm
(\221A Subaltern\222s Love-Song\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.25456 Tm
( By roads \221not adopted\222, by woodlanded ways,)Tj
T*
( She drove to the club in the late summer haze,)Tj
T*
( Into nine-o\222clock Camberley, heavy with bells)Tj
T*
( And mushroomy, pine-woody, evergreen smells.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Miss Joan Hunter Dunn, Miss Joan Hunter Dunn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I can hear from the car-park the dance has begun.)Tj
T*
( Oh! full Surrey twilight! importunate band!)Tj
T*
( Oh! strongly adorable tennis-girl\222s hand!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 439.67047 Tm
(\221Subaltern\222s Love-Song\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 418.75456 Tm
( The dread of beatings! Dread of being late!)Tj
T*
( And, greatest dread of all, the dread of games!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.92047 Tm
(\221Summoned by Bells\222 \(1960\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 364.00456 Tm
( There was sun enough for lazing upon beaches,)Tj
T*
( There was fun enough for far into the night.)Tj
T*
( But I\222m dying now and done for,)Tj
T*
( What on earth was all the fun for?)Tj
T*
( For God\222s sake keep that sunlight out of sight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.17047 Tm
(\221Sun and Fun\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.25456 Tm
( Broad of Church and \221broad of Mind\222,)Tj
T*
( Broad before and broad behind,)Tj
T*
( A keen ecclesiologist,)Tj
T*
( A rather dirty Wykehamist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.42047 Tm
(\221The Wykehamist\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.50456 Tm
( Ghastly good taste, or a depressing story of the rise and fall of En\
glish architecture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.67047 Tm
(Title of book \(1933\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 116.4624 Tm
( 2.113 Aneurin Bevan 1897-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This island is made mainly of coal and surrounded by fish. Only an o\
rganizing genius could )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(produce a shortage of coal and fish at the same time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.92047 Tm
(Speech at Blackpool 24 May 1945, in \221Daily Herald\222 25 May 1945)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.00456 Tm
( No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seductio\
n, can eradicate from my )Tj
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(heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party...So far as I am concerne\
d they are lower than )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vermin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.17047 Tm
(Speech at Manchester, 4 July 1948, in \221The Times\222 5 July 1948)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.25456 Tm
( The language of priorities is the religion of Socialism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.42047 Tm
(Speech at Labour Party Conference in Blackpool, 8 June 1949, in \221Repo\
rt of the 48th Annual )Tj
T*
(Conference\222 \(1949\) p. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 645.50456 Tm
( Why read the crystal when he can read the book?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.67047 Tm
(Referring to Robert Boothby during a debate on the Sterling Exchange Rat\
e, \221Hansard\222 29 September 1949, )Tj
T*
(col. 319)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 593.75456 Tm
( [Winston Churchill] does not talk the language of the 20th century b\
ut that of the 18th. He is )Tj
T*
(still fighting Blenheim all over again. His only answer to a difficult s\
ituation is send a gun-boat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.92047 Tm
(Speech at Labour Party Conference, Scarborough, 2 October 1951, in \221D\
aily Herald\222 3 October 1951)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.00456 Tm
( I am not going to spend any time whatsoever in attacking the Foreign\
Secretary...If we )Tj
T*
(complain about the tune, there is no reason to attack the monkey when th\
e organ grinder is )Tj
T*
(present.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.17047 Tm
(During a debate on the Suez crisis, \221Hansard\222 16 May 1957, col. 68\
0)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.25456 Tm
( If you carry this resolution you will send Britain\222s Foreign Secr\
etary naked into the conference )Tj
T*
(chamber.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.42047 Tm
(Speech at Labour Party Conference in Brighton, 3 October 1957, against a\
motion proposing unilateral )Tj
T*
(nuclear disarmament by the UK, in \221Daily Herald\222 4 October 1957)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.50456 Tm
( Listening to a speech by Chamberlain is like paying a visit to Woolw\
orth\222s: everything in its )Tj
T*
(place and nothing above sixpence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.67047 Tm
(In Michael Foot \221Aneurin Bevan\222 \(1962\) vol. 1, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.75456 Tm
( I know that the right kind of leader for the Labour Party is a desic\
cated calculating machine )Tj
T*
(who must not in any way permit himself to be swayed by indignation. If h\
e sees suffering, )Tj
T*
(privation or injustice he must not allow it to move him, for that would \
be evidence of the lack of )Tj
T*
(proper education or of absence of self-control. He must speak in calm an\
d objective accents and )Tj
T*
(talk about a dying child in the same way as he would about the pieces in\
side an internal )Tj
T*
(combustion engine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.92047 Tm
(In Michael Foot \221Aneurin Bevan\222 \(1973\) vol. 2, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.00456 Tm
( Damn it all, you can\222t have the crown of thorns and the thirty pi\
eces of silver.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.17047 Tm
(In Michael Foot \221Aneurin Bevan\222 \(1973\) vol. 2, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.25456 Tm
( We know what happens to people who stay in the middle of the road. T\
hey get run down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 6 December 1953)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.50456 Tm
( I read the newspapers avidly. It is my one form of continuous fictio\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.67047 Tm
(In \221The Times\222 29 March 1960)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 93.4624 Tm
( 2.114 William Henry Beveridge \(First Baron Beveridge\) 1879-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ignorance is an evil weed, which dictators may cultivate among their\
dupes, but which no )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(democracy can afford among its citizens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 37.92047 Tm
(\221Full Employment in a Free Society\222 \(1944\) pt. 7)Tj
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( The object of government in peace and in war is not the glory of rul\
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0 -1.2 TD
(happiness of the common man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 713.17047 Tm
(\221Social Insurance and Allied Services\222 \(1942\) pt. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 692.25456 Tm
( Want is one only of five giants on the road of reconstruction...the \
others are Disease, )Tj
T*
(Ignorance, Squalor and Idleness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 658.42047 Tm
(\221Social Insurance and Allied Services\222 \(1942\) pt. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 637.50456 Tm
( The state is or can be master of money, but in a free society it is \
master of very little else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 621.67047 Tm
(\221Voluntary Action\222 \(1948\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 589.4624 Tm
( 2.115 Ernest Bevin 1881-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The most conservative man in this world is the British Trade Unionis\
t when you want to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(change him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.92047 Tm
(Speech, 8 September 1927, in \221Report of Proceedings of the Trades Uni\
on Congress\222 \(1927\) p. 298)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.00456 Tm
( I hope you will carry no resolution of an emergency character tellin\
g a man with a conscience )Tj
T*
(like Lansbury what he ought to do...It is placing the Executive in an ab\
solutely wrong position to )Tj
T*
(be taking your conscience round from body to body to be told what you ou\
ght to do with it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.17047 Tm
(\221Labour Party Conference Report\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.25456 Tm
( There never has been a war yet which, if the facts had been put calm\
ly before the ordinary folk, )Tj
T*
(could not have been prevented...The common man, I think, is the great pr\
otection against war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 23 November 1945, col. 786)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( My [foreign] policy is to be able to take a ticket at Victoria Stati\
on and go anywhere I damn )Tj
T*
(well please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(In \221Spectator\222 20 April 1951, p. 514)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( If you open that Pandora\222s Box, you never know what Trojan \222or\
ses will jump out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(On the Council of Europe, in Sir Roderick Barclay \221Ernest Bevin and F\
oreign Office\222 \(1975\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.00456 Tm
( I didn\222t ought never to have done it. It was you, Willie, what pu\
t me up to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(To Lord Strang, after officially recognizing Communist China, in C. Parr\
ott \221Serpent and Nightingale\222 \(1977\) )Tj
T*
(ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 230.9624 Tm
( 2.116 The Bible)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.116.1 Authorized Version)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See also The Book of Common Prayer for the Psalms \(4.93\) in Volume\
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0 -1.45 TD
( Upon the setting of that bright Occidental Star, Queen Elizabeth of \
most happy memory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(The Epistle Dedicatory)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( The appearance of Your Majesty, as of the Sun in his strength.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(The Epistle Dedicatory)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 47.9624 Tm
( 2.116.2 Old Testament)Tj
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( In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(the waters.)Tj
T*
( And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
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( And the evening and the morning were the first day.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 1, v. 5)Tj
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( And God saw that it was good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 1, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 560.50456 Tm
( And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, an\
d the lesser light to rule the )Tj
T*
(night: he made the stars also.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 526.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 1, v. 16)Tj
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( And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and \
let them have dominion )Tj
T*
(over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cat\
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T*
(over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 1, v. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.00456 Tm
( Male and female created he them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 1, v. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.25456 Tm
( Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 1, v. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.50456 Tm
( And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed \
into his nostrils the )Tj
T*
(breath of life; and man became a living soul.)Tj
T*
( And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.75456 Tm
( And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is p\
leasant to the sight, and )Tj
T*
(good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the\
tree of knowledge of good )Tj
T*
(and evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.00456 Tm
( But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not ea\
t of it: for in the day that )Tj
T*
(thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.25456 Tm
( It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help\
meet for him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.50456 Tm
( And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept\
: and he took one of his )Tj
T*
(ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;)Tj
T*
( And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.75456 Tm
( This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be ca\
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( Woman, because she was taken out of Man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 2, v. 23)Tj
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( Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cle\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(Genesis ch. 2, v. 24)Tj
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( Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
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( Ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 3, v. 5)Tj
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( And they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons.)Tj
T*
( And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in th\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 7 \(\221and made themselves breeches\222 in the Geneva\
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T*
(\221Breeches Bible\222 for that reason.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( What is this that thou hast done?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( It shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( In sorrow thou shalt bring forth children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( The mother of all living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 3, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Am I my brother\222s keeper?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 4, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( The voice of thy brother\222s blood crieth unto me from the ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 4, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( My punishment is greater than I can bear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 4, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( And the Lord set a mark upon Cain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 4, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the la\
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T*
( Nod, on the east of Eden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 4, v. 16)Tj
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( And Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 5, v. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine year\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 5, v. 27)Tj
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( And Noah begat Shem, Ham, and Japheth.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 5, v. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, w\
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0 -1.2 TD
(unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same beca\
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T*
(were of old, men of renown.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 6, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( There went in two and two unto Noah into the Ark, the male and the f\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( But the dove found no rest for the sole of her foot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 8, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.00456 Tm
( For the imagination of man\222s heart is evil from his youth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 8, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.25456 Tm
( While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, \
and summer and winter, )Tj
T*
(and day and night shall not cease.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 8, v. 22)Tj
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( At the hand of every man\222s brother will I require the life of man\
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(Genesis ch. 9, v. 5)Tj
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( Whoso sheddeth man\222s blood, by man shall his blood be shed.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 9, v. 6)Tj
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( I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a coven\
ant between me and the )Tj
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(earth. And it shall come to pass, when I bring a cloud over the earth, t\
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(the cloud.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 9, v. 13)Tj
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( Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 10, v. 9)Tj
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( Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between thee and me...for we be\
brethren.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 13, v. 8)Tj
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( An horror of great darkness fell upon him.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 15, v. 12)Tj
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( Thou shalt be buried in a good old age.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 15, v. 15)Tj
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( His [Ishmael\222s] hand will be against every man, and every man\222\
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(Genesis ch. 16, v. 12)Tj
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( Now Abraham and Sarah were old and well stricken in age; and it ceas\
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(the manner of women.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 18, v. 11)Tj
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( Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 18, v. 25)Tj
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( But his wife looked back from behind him, and she became a pillar of\
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(Genesis ch. 19, v. 26)Tj
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( Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 22, v. 2)Tj
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( My son, God will provide himself a lamb.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 22, v. 8)Tj
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( Behold behind him a ram caught in a thicket by his horns.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 22, v. 13)Tj
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( Esau selleth his birthright for a mess of potage.)Tj
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(Heading to ch. 25 in Genevan Bible \(1560\).)Tj
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( Esau was a cunning hunter, a man of the field; and Jacob was a plain\
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(Genesis ch. 25, v. 27)Tj
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( And he sold his birthright unto Jacob.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 25, v. 33)Tj
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( Behold, Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 27, v. 11)Tj
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( The voice is Jacob\222s voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 27, v. 22)Tj
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( Thy brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 27, v. 35)Tj
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( And he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top\
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(and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 28, v. 12)Tj
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( Surely the Lord is in this place; and I knew it not.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 28, v. 16)Tj
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( This is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of hea\
ven.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 28, v. 17)Tj
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( And Jacob served seven years for Rachel; and they seemed unto him bu\
t a few days, for the )Tj
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(love he had to her.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 29, v. 20)Tj
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( The Lord watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from anot\
her.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 31, v. 49)Tj
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( There wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day.)Tj
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( And when he saw that he prevailed not against him, he touched the ho\
llow of his thigh; and the )Tj
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(hollow of Jacob\222s thigh was out of joint, as he wrestled with him.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 32, v. 24)Tj
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( I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 32, v. 26)Tj
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( For I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 32, v. 30)Tj
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( Now Israel loved Joseph more than all his children, because he was t\
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(he made him a coat of many colours.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 37, v. 3)Tj
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( Behold, your sheaves stood round about, and made obeisance to my she\
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(Genesis ch. 37, v. 7)Tj
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( Behold, this dreamer cometh.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 37, v. 19)Tj
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( Some evil beast hath devoured him.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 37, v. 20)Tj
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( And she caught him by his garment, saying, Lie with me; and he left \
his garment in her hand, )Tj
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(and fled.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 39, v. 12)Tj
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( And the lean and the ill favoured kine did eat up the first seven fa\
t kine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 41, v. 20)Tj
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( And the thin ears devoured the seven good ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 41, v. 24)Tj
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( Jacob saw that there was corn in Egypt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 42, v. 1)Tj
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( Ye are spies; to see the nakedness of the land ye are come.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 42, v. 9)Tj
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( My son shall not go down with you; for his brother is dead, and he i\
s left alone: if mischief )Tj
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(befell him by the way in which ye go, then shall ye bring down my gray h\
airs with sorrow to the )Tj
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(grave.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 42, v. 38)Tj
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( Ye shall eat the fat of the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 45, v. 18)Tj
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( See that ye fall not out by the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(Genesis ch. 45, v. 24)Tj
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( Few and evil have the days of the years of my life been.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 47, v. 9)Tj
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( Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel.)Tj
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(Genesis ch. 49, v. 4)Tj
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( 2.116.2.2 Exodus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Now there arose up a new king over Egypt, which knew not Joseph.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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( She took for him an ark of bulrushes, and daubed it with slime.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 2, v. 3)Tj
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( Who made thee a prince and a judge over us?)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( I have been a stranger in a strange land.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 2, v. 22. See Exodus ch. 18, v. 3)Tj
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( Behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 2)Tj
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( Put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou stan\
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 5)Tj
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( And Moses hid his face; for he was afraid to look upon God.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 6)Tj
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( A land flowing with milk and honey.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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( I AM THAT I AM.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 14)Tj
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( The Lord God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, \
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(Exodus ch. 3, v. 15)Tj
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( But I am slow of speech, and of a slow tongue.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 4, v. 10)Tj
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( I know not the Lord, neither will I let Israel go.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
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( And I will harden Pharaoh\222s heart, and multiply my signs and my w\
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(Exodus ch. 7, v. 3)Tj
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( Aaron\222s rod swallowed up their rods.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And he hardened Pharaoh\222s heart, that he hearkened not.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 7, v. 12)Tj
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( Let my people go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 7, v. 16)Tj
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( A boil breaking forth with blains.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 9, v. 10)Tj
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( Stretch out thine hand toward heaven, that there may be darkness ove\
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(darkness which may be felt.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 10, v. 21)Tj
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( Your lamb shall be without blemish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 12, v. 5)Tj
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( And they shall eat the flesh in that night, roast with fire, and unl\
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(herbs they shall eat it.)Tj
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( Eat not of it raw, nor sodden at all with water, but roast with fire\
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(with the purtenance thereof.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 12, v. 8)Tj
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(in haste; it is the Lord\222s passover.)Tj
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( For I will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and will smite\
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(of Egypt, both man and beast.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 12, v. 11)Tj
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( And Pharaoh rose up in the night, he, and all his servants, and all \
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(one dead.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 12, v. 30)Tj
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( And they spoiled the Egyptians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 12, v. 36)Tj
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( And the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of a cloud, to lead\
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(night in a pillar of fire, to give them light.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 13, v. 21)Tj
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( The Lord is a man of war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.67047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 15, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.75456 Tm
( Would to God we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egyp\
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T*
(flesh pots, and when we did eat bread to the full.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 16, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.00456 Tm
( And God spake all these words, saying,)Tj
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( I am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Eg\
ypt, out of the house of )Tj
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(bondage.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt have no other gods before me.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of a\
ny thing that is in heaven )Tj
T*
(above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under th\
e earth:)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the L\
ord thy God am a jealous )Tj
T*
(God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the thi\
rd and fourth generation of )Tj
T*
(them that hate me;)Tj
T*
( And showing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my c\
ommandments.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain; for the Lo\
rd will not hold him )Tj
T*
(guiltless that taketh his name in vain.)Tj
T*
( Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.)Tj
T*
( Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work:)Tj
T*
( But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou s\
halt not do any work, thou, )Tj
T*
(nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor \
thy cattle, nor thy )Tj
T*
(stranger that is within thy gates:)Tj
T*
( For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all tha\
t in them is, and rested the )Tj
T*
(seventh day: wherefore the Lord blest the sabbath day, and hallowed it.)Tj
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( Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the\
land which the Lord thy )Tj
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(God giveth thee.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Thou shalt not commit adultery.)Tj
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( Thou shalt not steal.)Tj
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( Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.)Tj
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( Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour\222s house, thou shalt not covet \
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(Exodus ch. 20, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Life for life,)Tj
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( Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,)Tj
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( Burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 21, v. 23)Tj
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( Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 22, v. 18)Tj
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( Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother\222s milk.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 23, v. 19)Tj
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( And thou shalt put in the breastplate of judgment the Urim and the)Tj
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( Thummin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\(Sacred symbols worn on the breastplate of the high priest\) Exodus ch.\
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( These be thy gods, O Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 32, v. 4)Tj
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( And the people sat down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play.)Tj
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(Exodus ch. 32, v. 6)Tj
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( I will not go up in the midst of thee; for thou art a stiffnecked pe\
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T*
(way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 33, v. 3)Tj
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( There shall no man see me and live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(Exodus ch. 33, v. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.3 Leviticus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( And the swine, though he divide the hoof, and be cloven-footed, yet \
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(is unclean to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(Leviticus ch. 11, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.00456 Tm
( Let him go for a scapegoat into the wilderness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(Leviticus ch. 16, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 137.25456 Tm
( Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(Leviticus ch. 19, v. 18. See St Matthew ch. 19, v. 19)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.4 Numbers)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( The Lord bless thee, and keep thee:)Tj
T*
( The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee:)Tj
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( The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 6, v. 24)Tj
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( These are the names of the men which Moses sent to spy out the land.\
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(Numbers ch. 13, v. 16)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 13, v. 33)Tj
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( And Israel smote him with the edge of the sword, and possessed his l\
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(Numbers ch. 21, v. 24)Tj
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( He whom thou blessest is blessed, and he whom thou cursest is cursed\
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(Numbers ch. 22, v. 6)Tj
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( God is not a man, that he should lie.)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 23, v. 19)Tj
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( What hath God wrought!)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 23, v. 23. Quoted by Samuel Morse in the first electric tele\
graph message, Washington, 24 May )Tj
T*
(1844)Tj
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( I called thee to curse mine enemies, and, behold, thou hast altogeth\
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T*
(times.)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 24, v. 10)Tj
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( Be sure your sin will find you out.)Tj
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(Numbers ch. 32, v. 23)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.5 Deuteronomy)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 4, v. 26)Tj
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( Remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and that the\
Lord thy God brought )Tj
T*
(thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a stretched out arm.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 5, v. 15)Tj
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( Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 6, v. 4)Tj
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( For the Lord thy God is a jealous God.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 6, v. 15.)Tj
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( Man doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth o\
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T*
(Lord doth man live.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 8, v. 3.)Tj
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( If there arise among you a prophet, or a dreamer of dreams...Thou sh\
alt not hearken.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 13, v. 1)Tj
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( If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or thy daughter, \
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(thy friend, which is as thine own soul, entice thee secretly...Thou shal\
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(Deuteronomy ch. 13, v. 6)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 25, v. 4)Tj
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( Cursed be he that removeth his neighbour\222s landmark.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 27, v. 17)Tj
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(it were morning!)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 28, v. 67)Tj
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( The secret things belong unto the Lord our God.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 29, v. 29)Tj
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( I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefor\
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T*
(and thy seed may live.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 30, v. 19)Tj
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( He found him in a desert land, and in the waste howling wilderness; \
he led him about, he )Tj
T*
(instructed him, he kept him as the apple of his eye.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 32, v. 10)Tj
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( For they are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith\
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(Deuteronomy ch. 32, v. 20)Tj
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( I will heap mischiefs upon them; I will spend mine arrows upon them.\
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(Deuteronomy ch. 32, v. 23)Tj
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( The eternal God is thy refuge, and underneath are the everlasting ar\
ms.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 33, v. 27)Tj
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( No man knoweth of his [Moses\222] sepulchre unto this day.)Tj
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(Deuteronomy ch. 34, v. 6)Tj
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( 2.116.2.6 Joshua)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( As I was with Moses, so I will be with thee: I will not fail thee, n\
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(Joshua ch. 1, v. 5)Tj
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( Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dism\
ayed: for the Lord thy God )Tj
T*
(is with thee, whithersoever thou goest.)Tj
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(Joshua ch. 1, v. 9)Tj
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( This line of scarlet thread.)Tj
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(Joshua ch. 2, v. 18)Tj
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( All the Israelites passed over on dry ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(Joshua ch. 3, v. 17)Tj
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( When the people heard the sound of the trumpet, and the people shout\
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T*
(that the wall fell down flat, so that the people went up into the city.)Tj
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(Joshua ch. 6, v. 20)Tj
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( Let them live; but let them be hewers of wood and drawers of water u\
nto all the congregation.)Tj
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(Joshua ch. 9, v. 21)Tj
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( Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon; and thou, Moon, in the valley of)Tj
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(Joshua ch. 10, v. 12)Tj
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( I am going the way of all the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Joshua ch. 23, v. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.7 Judges)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( He delivered them into the hands of spoilers.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( Then Jael Heber\222s wife took a nail of the tent, and took an hamme\
r in her hand, and went softly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unto him, and smote the nail into his temples, and fastened it into the \
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T*
(asleep and weary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.42047 Tm
(Judges ch. 4, v. 21)Tj
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( I arose a mother in Israel.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 5, v. 7)Tj
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( The stars in their courses fought against Sisera.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(Judges ch. 5, v. 20)Tj
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( He asked water, and she gave him milk; she brought forth butter in a\
lordly dish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(Judges ch. 5, v. 25)Tj
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( At her feet he bowed, he fell, he lay down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(Judges ch. 5, v. 27)Tj
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( The mother of Sisera looked out at a window, and cried through the l\
attice, Why is his chariot )Tj
T*
(so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariots?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(Judges ch. 5, v. 28)Tj
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( Have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two?)Tj
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(Judges ch. 5, v. 30)Tj
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( The Lord is with thee, thou mighty man of valour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(Judges ch. 6, v. 12)Tj
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( The Spirit of the Lord came upon Gideon, and he blew a trumpet.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 6, v. 34)Tj
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( The host of Midian was beneath him in the valley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(Judges ch. 7, v. 8)Tj
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( Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage\
of)Tj
T*
( Abi-ezer?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(Judges ch. 8, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Faint, yet pursuing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(Judges ch. 8, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Let fire come out of the bramble and devour the cedars of Lebanon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(Judges ch. 9, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Then said they unto him, Say now Shibboleth: and he said Sibboleth: \
for he could not frame to )Tj
T*
(pronounce it right. Then they took him, and slew him.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 12, v. 6)Tj
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( Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth s\
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(Judges ch. 14, v. 14)Tj
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( If ye had not plowed with my heifer, ye had not found out my riddle.\
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(Judges ch. 14, v. 18)Tj
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( He smote them hip and thigh.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 15, v. 8)Tj
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( With the jawbone of an ass, heaps upon heaps, with the jaw of an ass\
have I slain a thousand )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(Judges ch. 15, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( The Philistines be upon thee, Samson.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 16, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( He wist not that the Lord was departed from him.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 16, v. 20)Tj
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( He did grind in the prison house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(Judges ch. 16, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( The dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he sle\
w in his life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(Judges ch. 16, v. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( In those days there was no king in Israel, but every man did that wh\
ich was right in his own )Tj
T*
(eyes.)Tj
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(Judges ch. 17, v. 6)Tj
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( From Dan even to Beer-sheba.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(Judges ch. 20, v. 1)Tj
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( The people arose as one man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(Judges ch. 20, v. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.8 Ruth)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee\
: for whither thou goest, I )Tj
T*
(will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my pe\
ople, and thy God my )Tj
T*
(God:)Tj
T*
( Where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the Lord d\
o so to me, and more also, if )Tj
T*
(ought but death part thee and me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(Ruth ch. 1, v. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 143.54173 Tm
( 2.116.2.9 1 Samuel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( All the increase of thy house shall die in the flower of their age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 2, v. 33)Tj
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( The Lord called Samuel: and he answered, Here am I.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 3, v. 4)Tj
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( Here am I; for thou calledst me. And he said, I called not; lie down\
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( Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 3, v. 9)Tj
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( The ears of every one that heareth it shall tingle.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 3, v. 11)Tj
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( Quit yourselves like men, and fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 4, v. 9)Tj
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( He fell from off the seat backward by the side of the gate, and his \
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(1 Samuel ch. 4, v. 18)Tj
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( And she named the child I-chabod, saying, The glory is departed from\
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(1 Samuel ch. 4, v. 21)Tj
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( Is Saul also among the prophets?)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 10, v. 11)Tj
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( God save the king.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 10, v. 24)Tj
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( A man after his own heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.17047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 13, v. 14)Tj
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( Come up to us and we will shew you a thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.42047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 14, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.50456 Tm
( I did but taste a little honey with the end of the rod that was in m\
ine hand, and, lo, I must die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.67047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 14, v. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 366.75456 Tm
( To obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of ram\
s.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.92047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 15, v. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.00456 Tm
( Agag came unto him delicately. And Agag said, Surely the bitterness \
of death is past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.17047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 15, v. 32)Tj
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( For the Lord seeth not as man seeth: for man looketh on the outward \
appearance, but the Lord )Tj
T*
(looketh on the heart.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 16, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( Now he was ruddy, and withal of a beautiful countenance, and goodly \
to look to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 16, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( I know thy pride, and the naughtiness of thine heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 17, v. 28)Tj
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( Let no man\222s heart fail because of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 17, v. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.25456 Tm
( Go, and the Lord be with thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(1 Samuel ch. 17, v. 37)Tj
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( And he took his staff in his hand and chose him five smooth stones o\
ut of the brook.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 17, v. 40)Tj
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( Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 17, v. 43)Tj
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( Saul hath slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 18, v. 7)Tj
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( And Saul said, God hath delivered him into mine hand.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 23, v. 7)Tj
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( Behold, I have played the fool, and have erred exceedingly.)Tj
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(1 Samuel ch. 26, v. 21)Tj
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( 2.116.2.10 2 Samuel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( The beauty of Israel is slain upon thy high places: how are the migh\
ty fallen!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tell it not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askelon; lest \
the daughters of the Philistines )Tj
T*
(rejoice, lest the daughters of the uncircumcised triumph.)Tj
T*
( Ye mountains of Gilboa, let there be no dew, neither let there be ra\
in, upon you, nor fields of )Tj
T*
(offerings: for there the shield of the mighty is vilely cast away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 1, v. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.75456 Tm
( Saul and Jonathan were lovely and pleasant in their lives, and in th\
eir death they were not )Tj
T*
(divided: they were swifter than eagles, they were stronger than lions.)Tj
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( Ye daughters of Israel, weep over Saul, who clothed you in scarlet, \
with other delights, who )Tj
T*
(put on ornaments of gold upon your apparel.)Tj
T*
( How are the mighty fallen in the midst of the battle! O Jonathan, th\
ou wast slain in thine high )Tj
T*
(places. I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan: very pleasant has\
t thou been unto me: thy )Tj
T*
(love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women.)Tj
T*
( How are the mighty fallen, and the weapons of war perished!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 1, v. 23)Tj
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( And David danced before the Lord with all his might.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 6, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( Set ye Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and retire ye f\
rom him, that he may be )Tj
T*
(smitten, and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 11, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.50456 Tm
( The poor man had nothing, save one little ewe lamb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 12, v. 3)Tj
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( Thou art the man.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 12, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( While the child was yet alive, I fasted and wept...But now he is dea\
d, wherefore should I fast? )Tj
T*
(can I bring him back again? I shall go to him but he shall not return to\
me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 12, v. 22)Tj
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( For we needs must die, and are as water spilt on the ground, which c\
annot be gathered up )Tj
T*
(again; neither doth God respect any person.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 14, v. 14)Tj
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( Come out, come out, thou bloody man, thou son of Belial.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 16, v. 7)Tj
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( And when Ahithophel saw that his counsel was not followed, he saddle\
d his ass, and arose, and )Tj
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(gat him home to his house, to his city, and put his household in order, \
and hanged himself.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 17, v. 23)Tj
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( And the king was much moved, and went up to the chamber above the ga\
te, and wept: and as )Tj
T*
(he went, thus he said, O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! would G\
od I had died for )Tj
T*
(thee, O Absalom, my son, my son!)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 18, v. 33)Tj
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( By my God have I leaped over a wall.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 22, v. 30)Tj
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( David...the sweet psalmist of Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(2 Samuel ch. 23, v. 1)Tj
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( Went in jeopardy of their lives.)Tj
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(2 Samuel ch. 23, v. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.11 1 Kings)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( And Zadok the priest took an horn of oil out of the tabernacle, and \
anointed Solomon. And )Tj
T*
(they blew the trumpet; and all the people said, God save king Solomon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 1, v. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( Then will I cut off Israel out of the land which I have given them; \
and this house, which I have )Tj
T*
(hallowed for my name, will I cast out of my sight; and Israel shall be a\
proverb and a byword )Tj
T*
(among all people.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 9, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( And when the queen of Sheba had seen all Solomon\222s wisdom...there\
was no more spirit in her.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 10, v. 4)Tj
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( Behold, the half was not told me.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 10, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( Once in three years came the navy of Tharshish, bringing gold, and s\
ilver, ivory, and apes, and )Tj
T*
(peacocks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 10, v. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( But king Solomon loved many strange women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 11, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( My little finger shall be thicker than my father\222s loins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 12, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( My father hath chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you wit\
h scorpions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 12, v. 11)Tj
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( To your tents, O Israel: now see to thine own house, David.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 12, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( He slept with his fathers.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 14, v. 20)Tj
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( He went and dwelt by the brook Cherith, that is before Jordan.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the morning, and bread\
and flesh in the evening; )Tj
T*
(and he drank of the brook.)Tj
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(1 Kings ch. 17, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( An handful of meal in a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 17, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( How long halt ye between two opinions?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 18, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( He is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradven\
ture he sleepeth, and must be )Tj
T*
(awaked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 18, v. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( There is a sound of abundance of rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 18, v. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( There ariseth a little cloud out of the sea, like a man\222s hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 18, v. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( He girded up his loins, and ran before Ahab.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 18, v. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( He himself went a day\222s journey into the wilderness, and came and\
sat down under a juniper )Tj
T*
(tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 19, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( But the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake; \
but the Lord was not in the )Tj
T*
(earthquake:)Tj
T*
( And after the earthquake a fire: but the Lord was not in the fire: a\
nd after the fire a still small )Tj
T*
(voice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 19, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Elijah passed by him, and cast his mantle upon him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 19, v. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself as he that put\
teth it off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 20, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Naboth the Jezreelite had a vineyard, which was in Jezreel, hard by \
the palace of Ahab King of )Tj
T*
(Samaria.)Tj
T*
( And Ahab spake unto Naboth, saying, Give me thy vineyard, that I may\
have it for a garden of )Tj
T*
(herbs, because it is near unto my house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 21, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Hast thou found me, O mine enemy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 21, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( I saw all Israel scattered upon the hills, as sheep that have not a \
shepherd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 22, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( Feed him with bread of affliction and with water of affliction, unti\
l I come in peace.)Tj
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( And Micaiah said, If thou return at all in peace, the Lord hath not \
spoken by me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 22, v. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( And a certain man drew a bow at a venture, and smote the king of Isr\
ael between the joints of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the harness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(1 Kings ch. 22, v. 34)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 650.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.12 2 Kings)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.75456 Tm
( Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.)Tj
T*
( And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my father, the chariot o\
f Israel, and the horsemen )Tj
T*
(thereof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.92047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 2, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 556.00456 Tm
( The spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.17047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 2, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.25456 Tm
( Go up, thou bald head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.42047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 2, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.50456 Tm
( Is it well with the child? And she answered, It is well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.67047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 4, v. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.75456 Tm
( There is death in the pot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.92047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 4, v. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.00456 Tm
( He shall know that there is a prophet in Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.17047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.25456 Tm
( Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the w\
aters of Israel?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.42047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 5, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.50456 Tm
( I bow myself in the house of Rimmon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.67047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 5, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.75456 Tm
( Whence comest thou, Gehazi?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.92047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 5, v. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.00456 Tm
( Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.17047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 8, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.25456 Tm
( Is it peace? And Jehu said, What hast thou to do with peace? turn th\
ee behind me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.50456 Tm
( The driving is like the driving of Jehu, the son of Nimshi; for he d\
riveth furiously.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.67047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.75456 Tm
( She painted her face, and tired her head, and looked out at a window\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.92047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.00456 Tm
( Had Zimri peace, who slew his master?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.17047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.25456 Tm
( Who is on my side? who?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.42047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.50456 Tm
( They found no more of her than the skull, and the feet, and the palm\
s of her hands.)Tj
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(2 Kings ch. 9, v. 35)Tj
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( Thou trustest upon the staff of this bruised reed, even upon Egypt, \
on which if a man lean, it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(will go into his hand, and pierce it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(2 Kings ch. 18, v. 21)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.13 1 Chronicles)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 648.00456 Tm
( For we are strangers before thee, and sojourners, as were all our fa\
thers: our days on the earth )Tj
T*
(are as a shadow, and there is none abiding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 614.17047 Tm
(1 Chronicles ch. 29, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 593.25456 Tm
( He died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.42047 Tm
(1 Chronicles ch. 29, v. 28)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 546.29173 Tm
( 2.116.2.14 Nehemiah)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.00456 Tm
( Every one with one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the ot\
her hand held a weapon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.17047 Tm
(Nehemiah ch. 4, v. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 478.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.15 Esther)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 456.75456 Tm
( And if I perish, I perish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.92047 Tm
(Esther ch. 4, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 420.00456 Tm
( Thus shall it be done to the man whom the king delighteth to honour.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.17047 Tm
(Esther ch. 6, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.25456 Tm
( Behold also, the gallows fifty cubits high.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(Esther ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 336.29173 Tm
( 2.116.2.16 Job)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( The sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Sata\
n came also among them.)Tj
T*
( And the Lord said unto Satan, Whence comest thou? Then Satan answere\
d the Lord, and said, )Tj
T*
(From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 1, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Doth Job fear God for naught?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 1, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of \
the)Tj
T*
( Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 1, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( All that a man hath will he give for his life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 2, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( And he took him a potsherd to scrape himself withal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 2, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Curse God, and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was\
said, There is a man child )Tj
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(conceived.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 3, v. 3)Tj
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( For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should have slept\
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0 -1.2 TD
( With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built desolate places\
for themselves.)Tj
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(Job ch. 3, v. 13)Tj
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( There the wicked cease from troubling, and there the weary be at res\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 3, v. 17)Tj
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( Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and life unto the\
bitter in soul?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 3, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( Then a spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 4, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.75456 Tm
( Shall mortal man be more just than God? shall a man be more pure tha\
n his maker?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 4, v. 17)Tj
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( Man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 5, v. 7)Tj
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( My days are swifter than a weaver\222s shuttle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 7, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( He shall return no more to his house, neither shall his place know h\
im any more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 7, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( Let me alone, that I may take comfort a little,)Tj
T*
( Before I go whence I shall not return, even to the land of darkness \
and the shadow of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 10, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.00456 Tm
( A land...where the light is as darkness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 10, v. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( Canst thou by searching find out God?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 11, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 12, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( With the ancient is wisdom; and in length of days understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 12, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.00456 Tm
( Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him: but I will maintain mine\
own ways before him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 13, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( Man that is born of a woman is of few days, and full of trouble.)Tj
T*
( He cometh forth like a flower, and is cut down: he fleeth also as a \
shadow, and continueth not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 14, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.50456 Tm
( Miserable comforters are ye all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 16, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.75456 Tm
( I also could speak as ye do: if your soul were in my soul\222s stead\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 16, v. 4)Tj
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( I am escaped with the skin of my teeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 19, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Oh that my words were now written! oh that they were printed in a bo\
ok!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 19, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latte\
r day upon the earth:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh sh\
all I see God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 19, v. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Ye should say, Why persecute we him, seeing the root of the matter i\
s found in me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 19, v. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( But where shall wisdom be found? and where is the place of understan\
ding?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 28, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( The price of wisdom is above rubies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 28, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( I was eyes to the blind, and feet was I to the lame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 29, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( For I know that thou wilt bring me to death, and to the house appoin\
ted for all living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 30, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( I am a brother to dragons, and a companion to owls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(Job ch. 30, v.29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( My desire is...that mine adversary had written a book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(Job ch. 31, v. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( Great men are not always wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(Job ch. 32, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( He multiplieth words without knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(Job ch. 35, v. 16)Tj
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( Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?)Tj
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(Job ch. 38, v. 2)Tj
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( Gird up now thy loins like a man.)Tj
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(Job ch. 38, v. 3)Tj
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( Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, i\
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(Job ch. 38, v. 4)Tj
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( When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shoute\
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(Job ch. 38, v. 7)Tj
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( Hath the rain a father? or who hath begotten the drops of dew?)Tj
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(Job ch. 38, v. 28)Tj
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( Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands\
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(Job ch. 38, v. 31)Tj
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( He paweth in the valley, and rejoiceth in his strength: he goeth on \
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(Job ch. 39, v. 21)Tj
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( He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha; and he smelleth the battle afar\
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(captains, and the shouting.)Tj
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(Job ch. 39, v. 24)Tj
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( Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee; he eateth grass as an o\
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(Job ch. 40, v. 15)Tj
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( He is the chief of the ways of God: he that made him can make his sw\
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(Job ch. 40, v. 19)Tj
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( He lieth under the shady trees, in the covert of the reed, and fens.\
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( The shady trees cover him with their shadow; the willows of the broo\
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( Behold, he drinketh up a river, and hasteth not.)Tj
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(Job ch. 40, v. 21)Tj
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( Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook?)Tj
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(Job ch. 41, v. 1)Tj
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( I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear: but now mine eye see\
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(Job ch. 42, v. 5)Tj
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( So the Lord blessed the latter end of Job more than his beginning.)Tj
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(Job ch. 42, v. 12)Tj
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( 2.116.2.17 Proverbs)Tj
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( Surely in vain the net is spread in the sight of any bird.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 1, v. 17)Tj
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( For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 3, v. 12)Tj
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( Length of days is in her right hand; and in her left hand riches and\
honour.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 3, v. 16)Tj
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( Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 3, v. 17)Tj
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( Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all th\
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(Proverbs ch. 4, v. 7)Tj
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( The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and \
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(Proverbs ch. 4, v. 18)Tj
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( For the lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her mouth \
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( But her end is bitter as wormwood, sharp as a twoedged sword.)Tj
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( Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold on hell.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 5, v. 3)Tj
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( Go to the ant thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 6, v. 6)Tj
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( How long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? When wilt thou arise out of th\
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(Proverbs ch. 6, v. 9. See Proverbs ch. 24, v. 33)Tj
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( Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned?)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 6, v. 27)Tj
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( For the goodman is not at home, he is gone a long journey.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 7, v. 18)Tj
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( He goeth after her straightway, as an ox goeth to the slaughter.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 7, v. 22)Tj
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( Wisdom is better than rubies.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 8, v. 11)Tj
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( Wisdom hath builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 9, v. 1)Tj
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( Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 9, v. 17)Tj
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( A wise son maketh a glad father: but a foolish son is the heaviness \
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(Proverbs ch. 10, v. 1)Tj
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( The destruction of the poor is their poverty.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 10, v. 15)Tj
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( He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 11, v. 15)Tj
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( As a jewel of gold in a swine\222s snout, so is a fair woman which i\
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(Proverbs ch. 11, v. 22)Tj
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( A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 12, v. 4)Tj
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( A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast: but the tender merc\
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(Proverbs ch. 12, v. 10)Tj
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( Hope deferred maketh the heart sick: but when the desire cometh, it \
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(Proverbs ch. 13, v. 12)Tj
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( The way of transgressors is hard.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 13, v. 15)Tj
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( The desire accomplished is sweet to the soul.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 13, v. 19)Tj
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( He that spareth his rod hateth his son.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 13, v. 24)Tj
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( Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 14, v. 13)Tj
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( In all labour there is profit.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 14, v. 23)Tj
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( Righteousness exalteth a nation.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 14, v. 34)Tj
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( A soft answer turneth away wrath.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 15, v. 1)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 15, v. 13)Tj
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( A word spoken in due season, how good is it!)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 15, v. 23)Tj
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( Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.\
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(Proverbs ch. 16, v. 18 \(proverbially quoted as \221Pride goes before a \
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( He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty; and he that rule\
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(Proverbs ch. 16, v. 32)Tj
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( He that repeateth a matter separateth very friends.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 17, v. 9)Tj
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( A friend loveth at all times, and a brother is born for adversity.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 17, v. 17)Tj
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( A merry heart doeth good like a medicine.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 17, v. 22)Tj
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( A wounded spirit who can bear?)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 18, v. 14)Tj
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( There is a friend that sticketh closer than a brother.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 18, v. 24)Tj
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( Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 20, v. 1)Tj
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( Every fool will be meddling.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 20, v. 3)Tj
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( Even a child is known by his doings.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 20, v. 11)Tj
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( The hearing ear, and the seeing eye, the Lord hath made even both of\
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(Proverbs ch. 20, v. 12)Tj
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( It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer: but when he is gone his\
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(Proverbs ch. 20, v. 14)Tj
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( It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop, than with a brawl\
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(Proverbs ch. 21, v. 9)Tj
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( A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 22, v. 1)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 22, v. 6)Tj
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( Remove not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 22, v. 28)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 23, v. 31)Tj
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( The heart of kings is unsearchable.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 3)Tj
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( A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 11)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 14)Tj
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( Withdraw thy foot from thy neighbour\222s house; lest he be weary of\
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 17)Tj
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( If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirst\
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( For thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head, and the Lord shall \
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 21)Tj
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( As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country\
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(Proverbs ch. 25, v. 25)Tj
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( Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unt\
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( Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own con\
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(Proverbs ch. 26, v. 4)Tj
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( As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 26, v. 11)Tj
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( Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? There is more hope of a fo\
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(Proverbs ch. 26, v. 12)Tj
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( The slothful man saith, There is a lion in the way: a lion is in the\
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(Proverbs ch. 26, v. 13)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 26, v. 16)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 27, v. 1)Tj
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( Open rebuke is better than secret love.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 27, v. 5)Tj
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( Faithful are the wounds of a friend.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 27, v. 6)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 27, v. 15)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 28, v. 1)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 28, v. 20)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 29, v. 11)Tj
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( Where there is no vision, the people perish.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 29, v. 18)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 30, v. 8)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 30, v. 15)Tj
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( The way of an eagle in the air; the way of a serpent upon a rock; th\
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(of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 30, v. 18)Tj
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( It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is not for kings to drink wine; no\
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( Lest they drink and forget the law, and pervert the judgment of any \
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( Give strong drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto th\
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( Let him drink, and forget his poverty, and remember his misery no mo\
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(Proverbs ch. 31, v. 4)Tj
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( Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 31, v. 10)Tj
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( Her children arise up, and call her blessed.)Tj
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(Proverbs ch. 31, v. 28)Tj
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( 2.116.2.18 Ecclesiastes)Tj
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( Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities; all is v\
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( One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 2)Tj
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( All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 7)Tj
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(filled with hearing.)Tj
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( The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which \
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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( All is vanity and vexation of spirit.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 14)Tj
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( He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 18)Tj
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( Wisdom excelleth folly, as far as light excelleth darkness.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 2, v. 13)Tj
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( One event happeneth to them all.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under \
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( A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time\
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( A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to \
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( A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a \
time to embrace, and a time )Tj
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(to refrain from embracing;)Tj
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( A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cas\
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( A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a tim\
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( A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of pea\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
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( For that which befalleth the sons of men befalleth beasts; even one \
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(above a beast: for all is vanity.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
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( Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead more than the li\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 4, v. 2)Tj
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( A threefold cord is not quickly broken.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 4, v. 12)Tj
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( God is in heaven, and thou upon earth: therefore let thy words be fe\
w.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
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( The sleep of a labouring man is sweet.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 5, v. 12)Tj
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( As the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of a fool\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 6)Tj
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( Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 8)Tj
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( Say not thou, What is the cause that the former days were better tha\
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(enquire wisely concerning this.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 10)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 14)Tj
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( Be not righteous over much.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 16)Tj
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( One man among a thousand have I found; but a woman among all those h\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 28)Tj
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( God hath made man upright; but they have sought out many inventions.\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 7, v. 29)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 8, v. 8)Tj
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( A man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat, and to drink,\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 8, v. 15.)Tj
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( A living dog is better than a dead lion.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 9, v. 4)Tj
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( Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, and drink thy wine with a merry \
heart; for God now )Tj
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(accepteth thy works.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 9, v. 7)Tj
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( Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there i\
s no work, nor device, nor )Tj
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(knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 9, v. 10)Tj
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( The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 9, v. 11)Tj
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( Dead flies cause the ointment of the apothecary to send forth a stin\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 10, v. 1)Tj
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( He that diggeth a pit shall fall into it.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 10, v. 8)Tj
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( Woe to thee, O land, when thy king is a child, and thy princes eat i\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 10, v. 16)Tj
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( Wine maketh merry: but money answereth all things.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 10, v. 19)Tj
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( Cast thy bread upon the waters: for thou shalt find it after many da\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 1)Tj
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( In the place where the tree falleth, there it shall be.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 3)Tj
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( He that observeth the wind shall not sow; and he that regardeth the \
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 4)Tj
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( In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine h\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 6)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 7)Tj
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( Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and let thy heart cheer thee in \
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 11, v. 9)Tj
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( While the sun, or the light, or the moon, or the stars, be not darke\
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(after the rain:)Tj
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( In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble, and the stro\
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(themselves, and the grinders cease because they are few, and those that \
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(be darkened,)Tj
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( And the doors shall be shut in the streets, when the sound of the gr\
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(rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters of musick shall \
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( Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and fears shal\
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(almond tree shall flourish, and the grasshopper shall be a burden, and d\
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(man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go about the streets:)Tj
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( Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be broken, or \
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(fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern.)Tj
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( Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit sh\
all return unto God who gave it.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 12, v. 1)Tj
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( The words of the wise are as goads.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 12, v. 11)Tj
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( Of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness \
of the flesh.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 12, v. 12)Tj
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( Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of m\
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( For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thin\
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(whether it be evil.)Tj
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 12, v. 13)Tj
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( The song of songs, which is Solomon\222s.)Tj
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( Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for thy love is better\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
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( I am black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of\
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(Solomon.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 1, v. 5)Tj
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( O thou fairest among women.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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( A bundle of myrrh is my wellbeloved unto me; he shall lie all night \
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 1, v. 13)Tj
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( I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 1)Tj
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( His banner over me was love.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 4)Tj
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( Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples: for I am sick of love.\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 5)Tj
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( Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away.)Tj
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( For, lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone;)Tj
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( The flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is\
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(turtle is heard in our land.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 10)Tj
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( Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 15)Tj
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( My beloved is mine, and I am his: he feedeth among the lilies.)Tj
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( Until the day break, and the shadows flee away.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 16)Tj
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( By night on my bed I sought him whom my soul loveth.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
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( Behold, thou art fair, my love; behold, thou art fair; thou hast dov\
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(hair is as a flock of goats, that appear from mount Gilead.)Tj
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( Thy teeth are like a flock of sheep that are even shorn, which came \
up from the washing; )Tj
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(whereof every one bear twins, and none is barren among them.)Tj
T*
( Thy lips are like a thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely: thy\
temples are like a piece of a )Tj
T*
(pomegranate within thy locks.)Tj
T*
( Thy neck is like the tower of David builded for an armoury, whereon \
there hang a thousand )Tj
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(bucklers, all shields of mighty men.)Tj
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( Thy two breasts are like two young roes that are twins, which feed a\
mong the lilies.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 4, v. 1)Tj
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( Thou art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 4, v. 7)Tj
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( A garden inclosed is my sister, my spouse; a spring shut up, a fount\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 4, v. 12)Tj
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( Awake, O north wind; and come, thou south; blow upon my garden, that\
the spices thereof )Tj
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(may flow out. Let my beloved come into his garden, and eat his pleasant \
fruits.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 4, v. 16)Tj
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( I sleep, but my heart waketh: it is the voice of my beloved that kno\
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(my sister, my love, my dove, my undefiled.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
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( The watchmen that went about the city found me, they smote me, they \
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( What is thy beloved more than another beloved, O thou fairest among \
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 7)Tj
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( My beloved is white and ruddy, the chiefest among ten thousand.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 10)Tj
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( His hands are as gold rings set with the beryl: his belly is as brig\
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( His legs are as pillars of marble, set upon sockets of fine gold: hi\
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T*
(excellent as the cedars.)Tj
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( His mouth is most sweet: yea, he is altogether lovely. This is my be\
loved, and this is my )Tj
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(friend, O daughters of Jerusalem.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 14)Tj
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( Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clea\
r as the sun, and terrible as )Tj
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(an army with banners?)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 6, v. 10)Tj
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( Return, return, O Shulamite; return, return, that we may look upon t\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 6, v. 13)Tj
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( How beautiful are thy feet with shoes, O prince\222s daughter!)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 7, v. 1)Tj
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( Thy navel is like a round goblet, which wanteth not liquor: thy bell\
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(set about with lilies.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 7, v. 2)Tj
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( Thy neck is as a tower of ivory; thine eyes like the fishpools in He\
shbon, by the gate of Bath-)Tj
T*
(rabbim: thy nose is as the tower of Lebanon which looketh toward Damascu\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 7, v. 4)Tj
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( Like the best wine, for my beloved, that goeth down sweetly, causing\
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T*
(asleep to speak.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
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( Set me as a seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm: for lov\
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 8, v. 6)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 8, v. 7)Tj
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( We have a little sister, and she hath no breasts.)Tj
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(Song Of Solomon ch. 8, v. 8)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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( Bring no more vain oblations; incense is an abomination unto me; the\
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(sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 1, v. 13)Tj
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( Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 1, v. 18)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 2, v. 4)Tj
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( What mean ye that ye beat my people to pieces, and grind the faces o\
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(Isaiah ch. 3, v. 15)Tj
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( My wellbeloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 1)Tj
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( And he looked that it should bring forth grapes, and it brought fort\
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
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( And he looked for judgment, but behold oppression; for righteousness\
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 7)Tj
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( Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, til\
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
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( Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning, that they may follo\
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 11)Tj
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( Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 20)Tj
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( For all this his anger is not turned away, but his hand is stretched\
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(Isaiah ch. 5, v. 25)Tj
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( In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a\
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T*
(and his train filled the temple.)Tj
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( Above it stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he \
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T*
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( And one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord \
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(full of his glory.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 6, v. 1)Tj
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( Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of uncle\
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( Then said I, Lord, how long?)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 8, v. 13)Tj
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( Wizards that peep and that mutter.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 8, v. 19)Tj
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( The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: they tha\
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(shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined.)Tj
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( Thou hast multiplied the nation, and not increased the joy: they joy\
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(Father, The Prince of Peace.)Tj
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( Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 9, v. 6)Tj
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( The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 9, v. 7)Tj
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( The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie d\
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( And the lion shall eat straw like the ox.)Tj
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( Dragons in their pleasant palaces.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 13, v. 22)Tj
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( How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!)Tj
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( Watchman, what of the night? Watchman, what of the night?)Tj
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( Let us eat and drink; for to morrow we shall die.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 22, v. 13.)Tj
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( Tyre, the crowning city, whose merchants are princes.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 23, v. 8)Tj
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( Howl, ye ships of Tarshish.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 23, v. 14)Tj
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( In this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feas\
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(Isaiah ch. 25, v. 6)Tj
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( He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord God will wipe away\
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(Isaiah ch. 25, v. 8)Tj
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( We have as it were brought forth wind.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 26, v. 18)Tj
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( For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon li\
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T*
(little, and there a little.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 28, v. 10)Tj
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( We have made a covenant with death, and with hell are we at agreemen\
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(Isaiah ch. 28, v. 15)Tj
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( They are drunken, but not with wine.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 29, v. 9)Tj
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( Their strength is to sit still.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 30, v. 7)Tj
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( Speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits.)Tj
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( In quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.)Tj
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( This is the way, walk ye in it.)Tj
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( The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them; and th\
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(blossom as the rose.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 35, v. 1)Tj
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( Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the feeble knees.)Tj
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( The wayfaring men, though fools, shall not err therein.)Tj
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( Set thine house in order: for thou shalt die, and not live.)Tj
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( A bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not\
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( I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 48, v. 18)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 49, v. 15)Tj
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(Zion, Thy God reigneth!)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 55, v. 8)Tj
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all spring forth speedily.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 58, v. 8)Tj
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( They make haste to shed innocent blood.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 59, v. 7)Tj
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( Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is ri\
sen upon thee.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 60, v. 1)Tj
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( The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, a\
nd the opening of the prison )Tj
T*
(to them that are bound;)Tj
T*
( To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord, and the day of vengeanc\
e of our God; to comfort )Tj
T*
(all that mourn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 61, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( To give unto them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the\
garment of praise for the )Tj
T*
(spirit of heaviness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.42047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 61, v. 3)Tj
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( Who is this that cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.67047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 63, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.75456 Tm
( I have trodden the winepress alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.92047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 63, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 421.00456 Tm
( All our righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a \
leaf.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.17047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 64, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.25456 Tm
( Stand by thyself, come not near to me; for I am holier than thou.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 65, v. 5)Tj
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( For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(Isaiah ch. 65, v. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.21 Jeremiah)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 279.25456 Tm
( Can a maid forget her ornaments, or a bride her attire?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.42047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 2, v. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.50456 Tm
( They were as fed horses in the morning: every one neighed after his \
neighbour\222s wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.67047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.75456 Tm
( This people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.92047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 5, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.00456 Tm
( The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their me\
ans; and my people love to )Tj
T*
(have it so: and what will ye do in the end thereof?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.17047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 5, v. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.25456 Tm
( They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly\
, saying, Peace, peace; )Tj
T*
(when there is no peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.42047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 6, v. 14)Tj
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( The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved.)Tj
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(Jeremiah ch. 8, v. 20)Tj
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( Is there no balm in Gilead?)Tj
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(Jeremiah ch. 8, v. 22)Tj
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( Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?)Tj
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(Jeremiah ch. 13, v. 23)Tj
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( Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a \
man of contention to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(whole earth!)Tj
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(Jeremiah ch. 15, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.50456 Tm
( The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.67047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 17, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.75456 Tm
( As the partridge sitteth on eggs, and hatcheth them not; so he that \
getteth riches, and not by )Tj
T*
(right, shall leave them in the midst of his days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.92047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 17, v. 11)Tj
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( Behold, I will make thee a terror to thyself, and to all thy friends\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.17047 Tm
(Jeremiah ch. 20, v. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 486.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.22 Lamentations)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 464.75456 Tm
( How doth the city sit solitary, that was full of people!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.92047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.00456 Tm
( Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? behold, and see if there \
be any sorrow like unto my )Tj
T*
(sorrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.17047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 1, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.25456 Tm
( And I said, My strength and my hope is perished from the Lord:)Tj
T*
( Remembering mine affliction and my misery, the wormwood and the gall\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.42047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 3, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.50456 Tm
( It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.67047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 3, v. 27)Tj
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( He giveth his cheek to him that smiteth him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.92047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 3, v. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.00456 Tm
( O Lord, thou hast seen my wrong: judge thou my cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.17047 Tm
(Lamentations ch. 4, v. 59)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 198.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.23 Ezekiel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 176.75456 Tm
( As is the mother, so is her daughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.92047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 16, v. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.00456 Tm
( The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children\222s teeth are \
set on edge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.17047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 18, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.25456 Tm
( When the wicked man turneth away from his wickedness that he hath co\
mmitted, and doeth )Tj
T*
(that which is lawful and right, he shall save his soul alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.42047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 18, v. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.50456 Tm
( The king of Babylon stood at the parting of the ways.)Tj
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(Ezekiel ch. 21, v. 21)Tj
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( She doted upon the Assyrians her neighbours, captains and rulers clo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(horsemen riding upon horses, all of them desirable young men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 23, v. 12)Tj
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( The hand of the Lord was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit o\
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T*
( Lord, and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of b\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 37, v. 1)Tj
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( Can these bones live?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 37, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them,\
O ye dry bones, hear )Tj
T*
(the word of the Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Ezekiel ch. 37, v. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 523.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.24 Daniel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 501.75456 Tm
( To you it is commanded, O peoples, nations, and languages,)Tj
T*
( That at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sack\
but, psaltery, dulcimer, and )Tj
T*
(all kinds of musick, ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebu\
chadnezzar the king )Tj
T*
(hath set up:)Tj
T*
( And whoso falleth not down and worshippeth shall the same hour be ca\
st into the midst of a )Tj
T*
(burning fiery furnace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 3, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, ye servants of the most high God, \
come forth and come )Tj
T*
(hither.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 3, v. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( In the same hour came forth fingers of a man\222s hand, and wrote ov\
er against the candlestick )Tj
T*
(upon the plaister of the wall of the king\222s palace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 5, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( And this is the writing that was written, MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSI\
N.)Tj
T*
( This is the interpretation of the thing: MENE; God hath numbered thy\
kingdom, and finished )Tj
T*
(it. TEKEL; Thou art weighed in the balances and art found wanting. PERES\
; Thy kingdom is )Tj
T*
(divided, and given to the Medes and Persians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 5, v. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( Now, O king, establish the decree, and sign the writing, that it be \
not changed, according to the )Tj
T*
(law of the Medes and Persians, which altereth not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 6, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( The Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and th\
e hair of his head like )Tj
T*
(the pure wool: his throne was like the fiery flame, and his wheels as bu\
rning fire.)Tj
T*
( A fiery steam issued and came forth from behind him: thousand thousa\
nds ministered unto )Tj
T*
(him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him: the judgment \
was set, and the books )Tj
T*
(were opened.)Tj
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(Daniel ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
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( O Daniel, a man greatly beloved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 10, v. 11)Tj
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( Many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(Daniel ch. 12, v. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.25 Hosea)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.25456 Tm
( They have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Hosea ch. 8, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( I drew them...with bands of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Hosea ch. 11, v. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 545.54173 Tm
( 2.116.2.26 Joel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.25456 Tm
( That which the palmerworm hath left hath the locust eaten.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.42047 Tm
(Joel ch. 1, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.50456 Tm
( I will restore to you the years that the locust hath eaten, the cank\
erworm, and the caterpillar, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and the palmerworm, my great army which I sent among you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.67047 Tm
(Joel ch. 2, v. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.75456 Tm
( And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit \
upon all flesh; and your sons )Tj
T*
(and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your\
young men shall see )Tj
T*
(visions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(Joel ch. 2, v. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( Beat your plowshares into swords, and your pruninghooks into spears.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(Joel ch. 3, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision: for the day of the\
Lord is near in the valley of )Tj
T*
(decision.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(Joel ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 258.29173 Tm
( 2.116.2.27 Amos)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 237.00456 Tm
( Can two walk together, except they be agreed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(Amos ch. 3, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.25456 Tm
( Shall there be evil in a city, and the Lord hath not done it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(Amos ch. 3, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( I have overthrown some of you, as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah, \
and ye were as a )Tj
T*
(firebrand plucked out of the burning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(Amos ch. 4, v. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 98.54173 Tm
( 2.116.2.28 Jonah)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Come, and let us cast lots, that we may know for whose cause this ev\
il is upon us. So they cast )Tj
T*
(lots, and the lot fell upon Jonah.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(Jonah ch. 1, v. 7)Tj
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( Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights.)Tj
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(Jonah ch. 1, v. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.2.29 Micah)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( They shall sit every man under his vine, and under his fig tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 668.42047 Tm
(Micah ch. 4, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 647.50456 Tm
( But thou, Beth-lehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thous\
ands of Judah, yet out of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.67047 Tm
(Micah ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
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( What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love me\
rcy, and to walk humbly )Tj
T*
(with thy God?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.92047 Tm
(Micah ch. 6, v. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 527.79173 Tm
( 2.116.2.30 Nahum)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 506.50456 Tm
( Woe to the bloody city! it is all full of lies and robbery; the prey\
departeth not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.67047 Tm
(Nahum ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 459.54173 Tm
( 2.116.2.31 Habakkuk)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 438.25456 Tm
( Write the vision, and make it plain upon tables, that he may run tha\
t readeth it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.42047 Tm
(Habakkuk ch. 2, v. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 391.29173 Tm
( 2.116.2.32 Zephaniah)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 370.00456 Tm
( Woe to her that is filthy and polluted, to the oppressing city!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(Zephaniah ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 323.04173 Tm
( 2.116.2.33 Haggai)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 301.75456 Tm
( Ye have sown much, and bring in little; ye eat but ye have not enoug\
h...and he that earneth )Tj
T*
(wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.92047 Tm
(Haggai ch. 1, v. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 236.79173 Tm
( 2.116.2.34 Malachi)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.50456 Tm
( But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise \
with healing in his wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.67047 Tm
(Malachi ch. 4, v. 2)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.4624 Tm
( 2.116.3 Apocrypha)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 113.79173 Tm
( 2.116.3.1 1 Esdras)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 92.50456 Tm
( The first wrote, Wine is the strongest. The second wrote, The king i\
s strongest. The third )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wrote, Women are strongest: but above all things)Tj
T*
( Truth beareth away the victory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.67047 Tm
(1 Esdras ch. 3, v. 10)Tj
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( Great is Truth, and mighty above all things.)Tj
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(1 Esdras ch. 4, v. 41.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.3.2 2 Esdras)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Nourish thy children, O thou good nurse; stablish their feet.)Tj
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(2 Esdras ch. 2, v. 25)Tj
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( For the world has lost his youth, and the times begin to wax old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.92047 Tm
(2 Esdras ch. 14, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.00456 Tm
( I shall light a candle of understanding in thine heart, which shall \
not be put out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.17047 Tm
(2 Esdras ch. 14, v. 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 561.04173 Tm
( 2.116.3.3 Tobit)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( So they went forth both, and the young man\222s dog with them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.92047 Tm
(Tobit ch. 5, v. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 492.79173 Tm
( 2.116.3.4 Wisdom of Solomon)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.50456 Tm
( The ear of jealousy heareth all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.67047 Tm
(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 1, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 434.75456 Tm
( Let us crown ourselves with rosebuds, before they be withered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.92047 Tm
(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 398.00456 Tm
( Through envy of the devil came death into the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.17047 Tm
(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 2, v. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 361.25456 Tm
( But the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and there sha\
ll no torment touch them.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In the sight of the unwise they seemed to die: and their departure i\
s taken for misery,)Tj
T*
( And their going from us to be utter destruction: but they are in pea\
ce.)Tj
T*
( For though they be punished in the sight of men, yet is their hope f\
ull of immortality.)Tj
T*
( And having been a little chastised, they shall be greatly rewarded: \
for)Tj
T*
( God proved them, and found them worthy for himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.42047 Tm
(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.50456 Tm
( And in the time of their visitation they shall shine, and run to and\
fro like sparks among the )Tj
T*
(stubble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.67047 Tm
(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 3, v. 7)Tj
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( He, being made perfect in a short time, fulfilled a long time.)Tj
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(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 4, v. 13)Tj
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( We fools accounted his life madness, and his end to be without honou\
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( How is he numbered among the children of God, and his lot is among t\
he saints!)Tj
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(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 4)Tj
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( Even so we in like manner, as soon as we were born, began to draw to\
our end.)Tj
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(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 13)Tj
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( For the hope of the ungodly...passeth away as the remembrance of a g\
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(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 5, v. 14)Tj
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( And love is the keeping of her laws; and the giving heed unto her la\
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(incorruption.)Tj
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(Wisdom Of Solomon ch. 6, v. 18)Tj
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( 2.116.3.5 Ecclesiasticus)Tj
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( For the same things uttered in Hebrew, and translated into another t\
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(force in them: and not only these things, but the law itself, and the pr\
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(books, have no small difference, when they are spoken in their own langu\
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(Ecclesiasticus: The Prologue)Tj
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( For the Lord is full of compassion and mercy, long-suffering, and ve\
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T*
(sins, and saveth in time of affliction.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 2, v. 11)Tj
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( We will fall into the hands of the Lord, and not into the hands of m\
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(is his mercy.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 2, v. 18)Tj
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( Be not curious in unnecessary matters: for more things are shewed un\
to thee than men )Tj
T*
(understand.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 3, v. 23)Tj
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( Be not ignorant of any thing in a great matter or a small.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 5, v. 15)Tj
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( A faithful friend is the medicine of life.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 6, v. 16)Tj
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( Laugh no man to scorn in the bitterness of his soul.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 7, v. 11)Tj
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( Miss not the discourse of the elders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 8, v. 9)Tj
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( Open not thine heart to every man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 8, v. 19)Tj
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( Give not thy soul unto a woman.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 9, v. 2)Tj
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( Forsake not an old friend; for the new is not comparable to him; a n\
ew friend is as new wine; )Tj
T*
(when it is old, thou shalt drink it with pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 9, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Many kings have sat down upon the ground; and one that was never tho\
ught of hath worn the )Tj
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(crown.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 11, v. 5)Tj
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( Judge none blessed before his death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 11, v. 28)Tj
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( He that toucheth pitch shall be defiled therewith.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 13, v. 1)Tj
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( For how agree the kettle and the earthen pot together?)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 13, v. 2)Tj
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( When a rich man is fallen, he hath many helpers: he speaketh things \
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 14, v. 22)Tj
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( When thou hast enough, remember the time of hunger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 18, v. 25)Tj
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( Be not made a beggar by banqueting upon borrowing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 18, v. 33)Tj
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( He that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 19, v. 1)Tj
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( All wickedness is but little to the wickedness of a woman.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 25, v. 19)Tj
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( Neither [give] a wicked woman liberty to gad abroad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 25, v. 25)Tj
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( A merchant shall hardly keep himself from doing wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 26, v. 29)Tj
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( Many have fallen by the edge of the sword: but not so many as have f\
allen by the tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 28, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( And weigh thy words in a balance, and make a door and bar for thy mo\
uth.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 28, v. 25)Tj
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( Envy and wrath shorten the life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 30, v. 24)Tj
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( Leave off first for manners\222 sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 31, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( Wine is as good as life to a man, if it be drunk moderately: what li\
fe is then to a man that is )Tj
T*
(without wine? for it was made to make men glad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 31, v. 27)Tj
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( Leave not a stain in thine honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 33, v. 22)Tj
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( Honour a physician with the honour due unto him for the uses which y\
e may have of him: for )Tj
T*
(the Lord hath created him.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 38, v. 1)Tj
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( He that sinneth before his Maker, Let him fall into the hand of the \
physician.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 38, v. 15)Tj
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( The wisdom of a learned man cometh by opportunity of leisure: and he\
that hath little business )Tj
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(shall become wise.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 38, v. 24)Tj
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( How can he get wisdom...whose talk is of bullocks?)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 38, v. 25)Tj
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( Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers that begat us.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 1)Tj
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( Such as did bear rule in their kingdoms.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 3)Tj
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( Such as found out musical tunes, and recited verses in writing:)Tj
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( Rich men furnished with ability, living peaceably in their habitatio\
ns.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 5)Tj
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( There be of them, that have left a name behind them.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 8)Tj
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( And some there be, which have no memorial.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 513.92047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 9)Tj
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( Their bodies are buried in peace; but their name liveth for evermore\
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 44, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 456.25456 Tm
( As the flower of roses in the spring of the year, as lilies by the r\
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T*
(branches of the frankincense tree in the time of summer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.42047 Tm
(Ecclesiasticus ch. 50, v. 8)Tj
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( Get learning with a great sum of money, and get much gold by her.)Tj
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(Ecclesiasticus ch. 51, v. 28)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.3.6 2 Maccabees)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 333.25456 Tm
( It is a foolish thing to make a long prologue, and to be short in th\
e story itself.)Tj
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(2 Maccabees ch. 2, v. 32)Tj
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( When he was at the last gasp.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.67047 Tm
(2 Maccabees ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
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( 2.116.4 New Testament)Tj
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( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 194.79173 Tm
( 2.116.4.1 St Matthew)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( There came wise men from the east to Jerusalem,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen \
his star in the east, and are )Tj
T*
(come to worship him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 2, v. 1)Tj
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( They presented unto him gifts; gold, and frankincense, and myrrh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 2, v. 11)Tj
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( They departed into their own country another way.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 2, v. 12)Tj
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( In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great\
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(weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are n\
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(St Matthew ch. 2, v. 18. See Jeremiah ch. 31, v. 15)Tj
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( Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 2)Tj
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( The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the\
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(straight.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 3.)Tj
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( John had his raiment of camel\222s hair, and a leathern girdle about\
his loins; and his meat was )Tj
T*
(locusts and wild honey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 4)Tj
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( O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath t\
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(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 7)Tj
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( And now also the axe is laid unto the root of the trees.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 10)Tj
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( This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 3, v. 17)Tj
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( Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth\
out of the mouth of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 4, v. 4.)Tj
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( Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 4, v. 7. See Deuteronomy ch. 6, v. 16)Tj
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( The devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth\
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T*
(the world, and the glory of them.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 4, v. 8)Tj
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( Angels came and ministered unto him.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 4, v. 11)Tj
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( Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 4, v. 19)Tj
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( Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.\
)Tj
T*
( Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.)Tj
T*
( Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.)Tj
T*
( Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for\
they shall be filled.)Tj
T*
( Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy.)Tj
T*
( Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.)Tj
T*
( Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children o\
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 3)Tj
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( Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, \
wherewith shall it be salted?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 13)Tj
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( Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot \
be hid.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 14)Tj
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( Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good work\
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 16)Tj
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( Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am c\
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 17)Tj
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( Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scri\
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T*
(in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 20)Tj
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( Whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 22)Tj
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( Agree with thine adversary quickly, whiles thou art in the way with \
him.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 25)Tj
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( Till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 26)Tj
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( Swear not at all; neither by heaven; for it is God\222s throne:)Tj
T*
( Nor by the earth; for it is his footstool.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 34)Tj
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( Let your communication be Yea, yea; Nay, nay.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 37)Tj
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( Resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, \
turn to him the other also.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 39)Tj
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( Whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 41)Tj
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( He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth r\
ain on the just and on the )Tj
T*
(unjust.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 45)Tj
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( For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even\
the publicans the same?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 46)Tj
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( Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is p\
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(St Matthew ch. 5, v. 48)Tj
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( When thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand\
doeth.)Tj
T*
( That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secr\
et himself shall reward you )Tj
T*
(openly.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 3)Tj
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( Use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do: for they think that the\
y shall be heard for their )Tj
T*
(much speaking.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 7)Tj
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( After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven,\
Hallowed be thy name.)Tj
T*
( Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.)Tj
T*
( Give us this day our daily bread.)Tj
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( And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.)Tj
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( And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine\
is the kingdom, and the )Tj
T*
(power, and the glory, for ever. Amen.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 9. See St Luke ch. 11, v. 2)Tj
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( Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust \
doth corrupt, and where )Tj
T*
(thieves break through and steal:)Tj
T*
( But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 19)Tj
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( Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 21)Tj
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( No man can serve two masters...Ye cannot serve God and mammon.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 24)Tj
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( Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?)Tj
T*
( Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap,\
nor gather into barns.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 25)Tj
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( Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 27)Tj
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( Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neit\
her do they spin:)Tj
T*
( And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not a\
rrayed like one of these.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 28)Tj
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( Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all the\
se things shall be added )Tj
T*
(unto you.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 33)Tj
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( Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take \
thought for the things of )Tj
T*
(itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 6, v. 34)Tj
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( Judge not, that ye be not judged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.00456 Tm
( Why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother\222s eye, but con\
siderest not the beam that is in )Tj
T*
(thine own eye?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.25456 Tm
( Neither cast ye your pearls before swine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.50456 Tm
( Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and \
it shall be opened unto you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 7)Tj
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( Every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 8)Tj
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( Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give\
him a stone?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
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( Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, \
do ye even so to them: )Tj
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(for this is the law and the prophets.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 12)Tj
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( Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction,\
and many there be that go in )Tj
T*
(thereat.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 13)Tj
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( Strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, \
and few there be that find it.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 14)Tj
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( Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep\222s clothing, \
but inwardly they are )Tj
T*
(ravening wolves.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 15)Tj
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( Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 16)Tj
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( By their fruits ye shall know them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell not: for it wa\
s founded upon a rock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Every one that heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them not, sh\
all be likened unto a )Tj
T*
(foolish man, which built his house upon the sand:)Tj
T*
( And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and\
beat upon that house; )Tj
T*
(and it fell: and great was the fall of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 27)Tj
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( For he taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 7, v. 29)Tj
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( Lord I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( I am a man under authority, having soldiers under me: and I say to t\
his man, Go, and he goeth; )Tj
T*
(and to another, Come, and he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he \
doeth it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 10)Tj
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( But the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darknes\
s: there shall be weeping )Tj
T*
(and gnashing of teeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the S\
on of man hath not where to )Tj
T*
(lay his head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Let the dead bury their dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 22)Tj
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( The whole herd of swine ran violently down a steep place into the se\
a, and perished in the )Tj
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(waters.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 8, v. 32)Tj
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( He saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and h\
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(me. And he arose and followed him.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 9)Tj
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( Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 11)Tj
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( They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 12)Tj
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( I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 13)Tj
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( Neither do men put new wine into old bottles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( Thy faith hath made thee whole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 22)Tj
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( The maid is not dead, but sleepeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( He casteth out devils through the prince of the devils.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 34)Tj
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( The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 9, v. 37)Tj
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( Go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 6)Tj
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( Freely ye have received, freely give.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 8)Tj
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( When ye depart out of that house or city, shake off the dust of your\
feet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 14)Tj
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( Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 16)Tj
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( The disciple is not above his master, nor the servant above his lord\
.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 24)Tj
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( Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing? and one of them shall not \
fall on the ground without )Tj
T*
(your Father.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 29.)Tj
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( The very hairs of your head are all numbered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 30)Tj
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( Fear ye not therefore, ye are of more value than many sparrows.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 31)Tj
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( I came not to send peace, but a sword.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 34)Tj
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( A man\222s foes shall be they of his own household.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 36)Tj
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( He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life \
for my sake shall find it.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 39)Tj
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( Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of\
cold water only in the name )Tj
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(of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his rewar\
d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 640.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 10, v. 42)Tj
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( Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 11, v. 3)Tj
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( What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the \
wind?)Tj
T*
( But what went ye out for to see? A man clothed in soft raiment?...)Tj
T*
( But what went ye out for to see? A prophet? yea, I say unto you, and\
more than a prophet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 11, v. 7)Tj
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( We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned unto\
you, and ye have not )Tj
T*
(lamented.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 11, v. 17)Tj
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( Wisdom is justified of her children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 439.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 11, v. 19)Tj
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( Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will giv\
e you rest.)Tj
T*
( Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in h\
eart: and ye shall find )Tj
T*
(rest unto your souls.)Tj
T*
( For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 11, v. 28)Tj
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( He that is not with me is against me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 30 and St Luke ch. 11, v. 23)Tj
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( The blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 31)Tj
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( The tree is known by his fruit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 33)Tj
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( Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 34)Tj
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( Every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereo\
f in the day of judgment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 36)Tj
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( An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 39)Tj
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( Behold, a greater than Solomon is here.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 42)Tj
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( When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry\
places, seeking rest, and )Tj
T*
(findeth none.)Tj
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( Then he saith, I will return into my house from whence I came out; a\
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(findeth it empty, swept, and garnished.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 43)Tj
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( Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wick\
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T*
(enter in and dwell there: and the last state of that man is worse than t\
he first.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 45)Tj
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( Behold my mother and my brethren!)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 12, v. 49)Tj
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( Behold, a sower went forth to sow;)Tj
T*
( And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the wayside, and the fowls cam\
e and devoured them )Tj
T*
(up:)Tj
T*
( Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and fort\
hwith they sprung up, )Tj
T*
(because they had no deepness of earth:)Tj
T*
( And when the sun was up, they were scorched; and because they had no\
root, they withered )Tj
T*
(away.)Tj
T*
( And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprang up and choked them\
:)Tj
T*
( But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hu\
ndredfold, some sixtyfold, )Tj
T*
(some thirtyfold.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 3)Tj
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( He also that received the seed among the thorns is he that heareth t\
he word; and the care of this )Tj
T*
(world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the word, and he becometh \
unfruitful.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 22)Tj
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( His enemy came and sowed tares.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 25)Tj
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( An enemy hath done this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 28)Tj
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( The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a ma\
n took, and sowed in his )Tj
T*
(field:)Tj
T*
( Which indeed is the least of all seeds: but when it is grown, it is \
the greatest among herbs, and )Tj
T*
(becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the bran\
ches thereof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( The kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchant man, seeking goodly pe\
arls:)Tj
T*
( Who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all t\
hat he had, and bought it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Is not this the carpenter\222s son?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 55)Tj
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( A prophet is not without honour, save in his own country, and in his\
own house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 13, v. 57)Tj
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( They took up of the fragments that remained twelve baskets full.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 14, v. 20)Tj
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( In the fourth watch of the night Jesus went unto them, walking on th\
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(St Matthew ch. 14, v. 25)Tj
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( Be of good cheer; it is I; be not afraid.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 14, v. 27)Tj
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( O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 14, v. 31)Tj
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( Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which c\
ometh out of the mouth, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(this defileth a man.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 15, v. 11)Tj
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( They be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind,\
both shall fall into the ditch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 15, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Truth, Lord: yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their ma\
sters\222 table.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 15, v. 27)Tj
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( When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is \
red.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 16, v. 2)Tj
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( Ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern the signs\
of the times?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 16, v. 3)Tj
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( Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the g\
ates of hell shall not prevail )Tj
T*
(against it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 16, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( Get thee behind me, Satan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 16, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose h\
is own soul?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 16, v. 26.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this \
mountain, Remove hence to )Tj
T*
(yonder place; and it shall remove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 17, v. 20)Tj
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( Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not \
enter into the kingdom of )Tj
T*
(heaven.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 3)Tj
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( Whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me.)Tj
T*
( But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me,\
it were better for him that )Tj
T*
(a millstone were hanged abut his neck, and that he were drowned in the d\
epth of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( It must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the\
offence cometh!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 7)Tj
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( If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: it is\
better for thee to enter into life )Tj
T*
(with one eye, rather than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 9)Tj
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( For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I \
in the midst of them.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 20)Tj
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( Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? ti\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Jesus saith unto him I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but)Tj
T*
( Until seventy times seven.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 18, v. 21)Tj
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( What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 6)Tj
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( If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the\
poor, and thou shalt have )Tj
T*
(treasure in heaven.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 21)Tj
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( He went away sorrowful: for he had great possessions.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 22)Tj
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( It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for\
a rich man to enter into the )Tj
T*
(kingdom of God.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 24)Tj
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( With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 19, v. 30)Tj
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( Why stand ye here all the day idle?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 20, v. 6)Tj
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( These last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made them equal \
unto us, which have )Tj
T*
(borne the burden and heat of the day.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 20, v. 12)Tj
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( I will give unto this last, even as unto thee.)Tj
T*
( Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 20, v. 14)Tj
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( It is written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye \
have made it a den of thieves.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 21, v. 13. See Isaiah ch. 56, v. 7)Tj
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( For many are called, but few are chosen.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 22, v. 14)Tj
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( Whose is this image and superscription?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 22, v. 20)Tj
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( Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar\222s; and u\
nto God the things that are )Tj
T*
(God\222s.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 22, v. 21)Tj
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( For in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriag\
e.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 22, v. 30)Tj
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( They make broad their phylacteries, and enlarge the borders of their\
garments,)Tj
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( And love the uppermost rooms at feasts, and the chief seats in the s\
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(St Matthew ch. 23, v. 5)Tj
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( Whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased; and he that shall hum\
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(exalted.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 23, v. 12.)Tj
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( Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of\
mint and anise and )Tj
T*
(cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mer\
cy, and faith: these )Tj
T*
(ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.)Tj
T*
( Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 23, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful ou\
tward, but are within full )Tj
T*
(of dead men\222s bones, and of all uncleanness.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 23, v. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest \
them which are sent unto )Tj
T*
(thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a h\
en gathereth her chickens )Tj
T*
(under her wings, and ye would not!)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 23, v. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubl\
ed: for all these things must )Tj
T*
(come to pass but the end is not yet.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of\
by)Tj
T*
( Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, \(whoso readeth, let hi\
m understand:\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 15. See Daniel ch. 12, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered togeth\
er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and d\
rinking, marrying and )Tj
T*
(giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,)Tj
T*
( And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall \
also the coming of the )Tj
T*
(Son of Man be.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 38)Tj
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( One shall be taken, and the other left.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 24, v. 42)Tj
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( Well done, thou good and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful o\
ver a few things, I will )Tj
T*
(make thee a ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy lord.\
)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 21)Tj
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( Lord, I knew thee that thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast\
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(where thou hast not strawed.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 24)Tj
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( Unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance\
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T*
(not shall be taken away even that which he hath.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 29)Tj
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( And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the l\
eft.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty and ye gave\
me drink:)Tj
T*
( I was a stranger, and ye took me in:)Tj
T*
( Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in pr\
ison, and ye came unto me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 35)Tj
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( Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethr\
en, ye have done it unto )Tj
T*
(me.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 25, v. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( There came unto him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious\
ointment, and poured )Tj
T*
(it on his head, as he sat at meat.)Tj
T*
( But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation saying, To what \
purpose is this waste?)Tj
T*
( For this ointment might have been sold for much, and given to the po\
or.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? And they cove\
nanted with him for )Tj
T*
(thirty pieces of silver.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( It had been good for that man if he had not been born.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( Jesus took bread, and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the d\
isciples, and said, Take, eat; )Tj
T*
(this is my body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 26)Tj
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( This night, before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( Though I should die with thee, yet will I not deny thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( If it be possible, let this cup pass from me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( What, could ye not watch with me one hour?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed\
is willing but the flesh is )Tj
T*
(weak.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 41)Tj
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( Friend, wherefore art thou come?)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( All they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 52)Tj
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( Thy speech bewrayeth thee.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Then began he to curse and to swear, saying, I know not the man. And\
immediately the cock )Tj
T*
(crew.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 26, v. 73)Tj
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( Have thou nothing to do with that just man.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 27, v. 19)Tj
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( He took water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I \
am innocent of the blood )Tj
T*
(of this just person: see ye to it.)Tj
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(St Matthew ch. 27, v. 24)Tj
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( His blood be on us, and on our children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 27, v. 25)Tj
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( He saved others; himself he cannot save.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 27, v. 42)Tj
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( Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?...My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken\
me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 27, v. 46.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( And, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(St Matthew ch. 28, v. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.4.2 St Mark)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 2, v. 27)Tj
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( If a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 3, v. 25)Tj
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( He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 4, v. 9)Tj
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( With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 4, v. 24)Tj
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( My name is Legion: for we are many.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 5, v. 9)Tj
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( Clothed, and in his right mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.92047 Tm
(St Mark ch. 5, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.00456 Tm
( Jesus, immediately knowing in himself that virtue had gone out of hi\
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T*
(press, and said, Who touched my clothes?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.17047 Tm
(St Mark ch. 5, v. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.25456 Tm
( I see men as trees, walking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.42047 Tm
(St Mark ch. 8, v. 24)Tj
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( For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, an\
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(St Mark ch. 8, v. 36.)Tj
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( Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 9, v. 24)Tj
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( Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for\
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(God.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 10, v. 14)Tj
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( Beware of the scribes, which love to go in long clothing, and love s\
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T*
(marketplaces,)Tj
T*
( And the chief seats in the synagogues, and the uppermost rooms at fe\
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T*
( Which devour widows\222 houses, and for a pretence make long prayers\
.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 12, v. 38)Tj
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( And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in two mites.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 12, v. 42)Tj
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( Watch ye therefore: for ye know not when the master of the house com\
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T*
( Lest coming suddenly he find you sleeping.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 13, v. 35)Tj
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( Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.)Tj
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(St Mark ch. 16, v. 15)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.116.4.3 St Luke)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( It seemed good to me also...to write unto thee...most excellent Theo\
philus.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 3)Tj
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( Hail, thou art highly favoured, the Lord is with thee: blessed art t\
hou among women.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 28)Tj
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( My soul doth magnify the Lord,)Tj
T*
( And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.)Tj
T*
( For he hath regarded the low estate of his handmaiden: for, behold, \
from henceforth all )Tj
T*
(generations shall call me blessed.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( He hath shewed strength with his arm; he hath scattered the proud in\
the imagination of their )Tj
T*
(hearts.)Tj
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( He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of lo\
w degree.)Tj
T*
( He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sen\
t empty away.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of deat\
h, to guide our feet into the )Tj
T*
(way of peace.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 79)Tj
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( And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from\
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T*
(the world should be taxed.)Tj
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( She brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling cl\
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( And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, k\
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(flock by night.)Tj
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( And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the \
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(them: and they were sore afraid.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 7)Tj
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( Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 10)Tj
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( Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward me\
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy\
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 29)Tj
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( Wist ye not that I must be about my Father\222s business?)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 49)Tj
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( Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and ma\
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 52)Tj
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( Be content with your wages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 3, v. 14)Tj
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( And the devil, taking him up into a high mountain, shewed unto him a\
ll the kingdoms of the )Tj
T*
(world in a moment of time.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 4, v. 5)Tj
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( Physician, heal thyself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 4, v. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Master, we have toiled all the night, and have taken nothing: nevert\
heless at thy word I will let )Tj
T*
(down the net.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 5, v. 5)Tj
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( No man...having drunk old wine straightway desireth new: for he sait\
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(St Luke ch. 5, v. 39)Tj
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( Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you!)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 6, v. 26)Tj
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( Love your enemies, do good to them which hate you.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 6, v. 27)Tj
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( Judge not, and ye shall not be judged.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 6, v. 37.)Tj
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( Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, an\
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T*
(running over, shall men give into your bosom.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 6, v. 38)Tj
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( Her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 7, v. 47)Tj
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( No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit \
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(St Luke ch. 9, v. 62)Tj
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( Peace be to this house.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 5)Tj
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( For the labourer is worthy of his hire.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 7)Tj
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( I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 18)Tj
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( Blessed are the eyes which see the things which ye see:)Tj
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( For I tell you, that many prophets and kings have desired to see tho\
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 23)Tj
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( A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among th\
ieves.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 30)Tj
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( He passed by on the other side.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 31)Tj
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( He took out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him,\
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(whatsoever thou spend more, when I come again, I will repay thee.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 35)Tj
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( Go, and do thou likewise.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 37)Tj
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( But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and sai\
d,)Tj
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( Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone?\
bid her therefore that she )Tj
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(help me.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 40)Tj
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( But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which\
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(from her.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 10, v. 42)Tj
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( When a strong man armed keepeth his palace, his goods are in peace. \
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(he shall come upon him, and overcome him, he taketh from him all his arm\
our wherein he )Tj
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(trusted, and divideth his spoils.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 11, v. 21)Tj
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( No man, when he hath lighted a candle, putteth it in a secret place,\
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(on a candlestick, that they which come in may see the light.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 11, v. 33)Tj
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( Woe unto you, lawyers! for ye have taken away the key of knowledge.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 11, v. 52)Tj
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( Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is\
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(St Luke ch. 12, v. 6.)Tj
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( Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease, \
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(St Luke ch. 12, v. 19.)Tj
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( Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 12, v. 20)Tj
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( Let your loins be girded about, and your lights burning.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 12, v. 35)Tj
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( When thou art bidden of any man to a wedding, sit not down in the hi\
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( And he that bade thee and him come and say to thee, Give this man pl\
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(shame to take the lowest room.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 8)Tj
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( Friend, go up higher.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 10)Tj
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( For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that humbleth\
himself shall be exalted.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 11.)Tj
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( They all with one consent began to make excuse...I pray thee have me\
excused.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 18)Tj
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( I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 20)Tj
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( Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in \
hither the poor, and the )Tj
T*
(maimed, and the halt, and the blind.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 21)Tj
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( Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 23)Tj
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( For which of you, intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first\
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(whether he have sufficient to finish it?)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 14, v. 28)Tj
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( Leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.92047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 15, v. 4)Tj
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( Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 6)Tj
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( Joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than ove\
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(persons, which need no repentance.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 7)Tj
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( The younger son gathered all together, and took his journey into a f\
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(wasted his substance with riotous living.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 13)Tj
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( He would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine di\
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( I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I h\
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(and before thee,)Tj
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( And am no more worthy to be called thy son: make me as one of thy hi\
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 16)Tj
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( Bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 23)Tj
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( This my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.\
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 24)Tj
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( Which hath devoured thy living with harlots.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 15, v. 30)Tj
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( I cannot dig; to beg I am ashamed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 16, v. 3)Tj
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( Take thy bill, and sit down quickly, and write fifty.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 6)Tj
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( And the Lord commended the unjust steward, because he had done wisel\
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(this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 8)Tj
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( Make to yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness; that, w\
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(receive you into everlasting habitations.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 9)Tj
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( He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much.\
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 10)Tj
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( There was a certain rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine l\
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(sumptuously every day:)Tj
T*
( And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his \
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T*
( And desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man\222\
s table: moreover the )Tj
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( And it came to pass that the beggar died, and was carried by the ang\
els into Abraham\222s bosom.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 19)Tj
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( Between us and you there is a great gulf fixed.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 16, v. 26)Tj
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( It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 17, v. 2)Tj
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( The kingdom of God is within you.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 17, v. 21)Tj
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( Remember Lot\222s wife.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 17, v. 32)Tj
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( Men ought always to pray, and not to faint.)Tj
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( God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 18, v. 11)Tj
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( God be merciful to me a sinner.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 18, v. 13)Tj
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( How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God\
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(St Luke ch. 18, v. 24)Tj
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( Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked servant. Thou \
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(St Luke ch. 19, v. 22)Tj
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( If these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry o\
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(St Luke ch. 19, v. 40)Tj
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( If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things\
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( but now they are hid from thy eyes.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 19, v. 42)Tj
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( And when they heard it, they said, God forbid.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 20, v. 16)Tj
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( In your patience possess ye your souls.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 21, v. 19)Tj
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( He shall shew you a large upper room furnished.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 22, v. 12)Tj
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( I am among you as he that serveth.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 22, v. 27)Tj
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( Nevertheless, not my will, but thine, be done.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 22, v. 42)Tj
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( And the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 22, v. 61)Tj
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( For if they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in t\
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 31)Tj
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( Father, forgive them: for they know not what they do.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 34)Tj
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( Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 42)Tj
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( To day shalt thou be with me in paradise.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 43)Tj
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( Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 46.)Tj
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( He was a good man, and a just.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 23, v. 50)Tj
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( Why seek ye the living among the dead?)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 24, v. 5)Tj
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( Their words seemed to them as idle tales.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 24, v. 11)Tj
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( Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way\
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(St Luke ch. 24, v. 32)Tj
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( He was known of them in breaking of bread.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 24, v. 35)Tj
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( They gave him a piece of a broiled fish, and of an honeycomb.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 24, v. 42)Tj
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( 2.116.4.4 St John)Tj
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( In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Wo\
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(St John ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
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( All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made \
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(St John ch. 1, v. 3)Tj
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( And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it \
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(St John ch. 1, v. 5)Tj
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( There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 6)Tj
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( He was not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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( He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world kn\
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( He came unto his own, and his own received him not.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 10)Tj
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( And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, \(and we beheld his\
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(the only begotten of the Father,\) full of grace and truth.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 14)Tj
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( No man hath seen God at any time.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 18. See 1 John ch. 4, v. 12)Tj
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( I baptize with water: but there standeth one among you, whom ye know\
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( He it is, who coming after me is preferred before me, whose shoe\222\
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( I am not worthy to unloose.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 26)Tj
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( Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 29)Tj
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( Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?)Tj
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(St John ch. 1, v. 46)Tj
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( Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!)Tj
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( Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come.)Tj
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(St John ch. 2, v. 4)Tj
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(St John ch. 2, v. 10)Tj
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( When he had made a scourge of small cords, he drove them all out of \
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(St John ch. 2, v. 15)Tj
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( The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereo\
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(St John ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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( How can these things be?)Tj
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(St John ch. 3, v. 9)Tj
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(should not perish, but have everlasting life.)Tj
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(St John ch. 3, v. 16)Tj
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( Men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.\
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(St John ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
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(St John ch. 4, v. 24)Tj
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( They are white already to harvest.)Tj
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(St John ch. 4, v. 35)Tj
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( Other men laboured, and ye are entered into their labours.)Tj
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(St John ch. 4, v. 38)Tj
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( Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not believe.)Tj
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(St John ch. 4, v. 48)Tj
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( Rise, take up thy bed, and walk.)Tj
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(St John ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
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( He was a burning and a shining light.)Tj
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(St John ch. 5, v. 35)Tj
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( Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: an\
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(St John ch. 5, v. 39)Tj
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( There is a lad here, which hath five barley loaves, and two small fi\
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(among so many?)Tj
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(St John ch. 6, v. 9)Tj
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( Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost.)Tj
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( Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.)Tj
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(St John ch. 6, v. 37)Tj
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( Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more.)Tj
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( And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)Tj
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(St John ch. 8, v. 44)Tj
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( The night cometh, when no man can work.)Tj
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(St John ch. 9, v. 4)Tj
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( He is of age; ask him: he shall speak for himself.)Tj
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(St John ch. 9, v. 21)Tj
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( One thing I know, that, whereas I was blind, now I see.)Tj
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(St John ch. 9, v. 25)Tj
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( I am the door.)Tj
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(St John ch. 10, v. 9)Tj
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( I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sh\
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( The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for t\
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(St John ch. 10, v. 13)Tj
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( Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold.)Tj
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(St John ch. 10, v. 16)Tj
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( Though ye believe not me, believe the works.)Tj
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(St John ch. 10, v. 38)Tj
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( I am the resurrection, and the life)Tj
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(St John ch. 11, v. 25)Tj
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( Jesus wept.)Tj
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(St John ch. 11, v. 35)Tj
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( Ye know nothing at all,)Tj
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(whole nation perish not.)Tj
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(St John ch. 11, v. 49)Tj
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(St John ch. 12, v. 5)Tj
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( The poor always ye have with you.)Tj
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(St John ch. 12, v. 8)Tj
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( Lord, dost thou wash my feet?)Tj
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(St John ch. 13, v. 6)Tj
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( That thou doest, do quickly.)Tj
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(St John ch. 13, v. 27)Tj
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( Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in m\
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(St John ch. 14, v. 1)Tj
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( In my Father\222s house are many mansions...I go to prepare a place \
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(St John ch. 14, v. 2)Tj
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( I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father\
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(St John ch. 14, v. 6)Tj
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( Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me, P\
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(St John ch. 14, v. 9)Tj
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( Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot.)Tj
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(St John ch. 14, v. 22)Tj
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( Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world g\
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(St John ch. 14, v. 27)Tj
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( Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for\
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(St John ch. 15, v. 13)Tj
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( Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you.)Tj
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(St John ch. 15, v. 16)Tj
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( It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Co\
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(you.)Tj
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(St John ch. 16, v. 7)Tj
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( I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.\
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(St John ch. 16, v. 12)Tj
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( A little while, and ye shall not see me: and again, a little while, \
and ye shall see me, because I )Tj
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(go to the Father.)Tj
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(St John ch. 16, v. 16)Tj
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( In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have\
overcome the world.)Tj
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(St John ch. 16, v. 33)Tj
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( While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those t\
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(kept, and none of them is lost but the son of perdition.)Tj
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(St John ch. 17, v. 12)Tj
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( Put up thy sword into the sheath.)Tj
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(St John ch. 18, v. 11)Tj
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( Pilate saith unto him, What is truth?)Tj
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(St John ch. 18, v. 38)Tj
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( Now Barabbas was a robber.)Tj
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(St John ch. 18, v. 40)Tj
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( What I have written I have written.)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 22)Tj
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( Woman, behold thy son!...)Tj
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( Behold thy mother!)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 26)Tj
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( I thirst.)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 28)Tj
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( It is finished.)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 30)Tj
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( The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was y\
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(sepulchre, and seeth the stone taken away from the sepulchre.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 1)Tj
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( So they ran both together: and the other disciple did outrun Peter, \
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(sepulchre.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 4)Tj
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( They have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid hi\
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(St John ch. 20, v. 13)Tj
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( Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? whom seekest thou? Sh\
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(the gardener saith unto him, Sir, if thou have borne him hence, tell me \
where thou hast laid him, )Tj
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(and I will take him away.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 15)Tj
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( Touch me not.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 17.)Tj
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( Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my f\
inger into the print of the )Tj
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(nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 25)Tj
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( Be not faithless, but believing.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 27)Tj
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( Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are t\
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(and yet have believed.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 29)Tj
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( Simon Peter saith unto them, I go a fishing.)Tj
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(St John ch. 21, v. 3)Tj
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( Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more that these?...Feed my lambs\
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( Feed my sheep.)Tj
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(St John ch. 21, v. 16)Tj
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( Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee.)Tj
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(St John ch. 21, v. 20)Tj
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( What shall this man do? ...)Tj
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(St John ch. 21, v. 21)Tj
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(Until the day in which he was taken up.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
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( Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 1, v. 11)Tj
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( And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 2, v. 2)Tj
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( Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia,\
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(about Cyrene, and strangers of Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Ara\
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(speak in our tongues the wonderful works of God.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
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( And all that believed were together, and had all things common.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 2, v. 44)Tj
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( Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 3, v. 6)Tj
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( Walking, and leaping, and praising God.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 6, v. 2)Tj
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( Saul was consenting unto his death.)Tj
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( It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 9, v. 5)Tj
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( The street which is called Straight.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 9, v. 11)Tj
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( Dorcas: this woman was full of good works.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 10, v. 10)Tj
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( God is no respecter of persons.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 10, v. 34.)Tj
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( He was eaten of worms, and gave up the ghost.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 12, v. 23)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 14, v. 11)Tj
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( We also are men of like passions with you.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 14, v. 15)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 16, v. 9)Tj
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( What must I do to be saved?)Tj
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(UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto yo\
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 17, v. 22)Tj
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( God that made the world and all things therein, seeing that he is Lo\
rd of Heaven and earth, )Tj
T*
(dwelleth not in temples made with hands.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 17, v. 24)Tj
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( For in him we live, and move, and have our being.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 17, v. 28)Tj
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( Gallio cared for none of those things.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 18, v. 17)Tj
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( We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 19, v. 2)Tj
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( All with one voice about the space of two hours cried out, Great is \
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 19, v. 34)Tj
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( I go bound in the spirit unto Jerusalem.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 20, v. 22)Tj
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( It is more blessed to give than to receive.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 20, v. 35)Tj
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( But Paul said, I am a man which am a Jew of Tarsus, a city in Cilici\
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 21, v. 39)Tj
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( And the chief captain answered, With a great sum obtained I this fre\
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( And Paul said, But I was free born.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 22, v. 28)Tj
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( A conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 24, v. 16)Tj
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( I appeal unto Caesar.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 25, v. 11)Tj
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( Hast thou appealed unto Caesar? unto Caesar shalt thou go.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 25, v. 12)Tj
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( Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 26, v. 24)Tj
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( For this thing was not done in a corner.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 26, v. 26)Tj
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( Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.)Tj
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(Acts Of The Apostles ch. 26, v. 28)Tj
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( I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this d\
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(29)Tj
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( 2.116.4.6 Romans)Tj
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( Without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 1, v. 9)Tj
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( I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the Barbarians; both to the w\
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(Romans ch. 1, v. 14)Tj
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( The just shall live by faith.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 1, v. 17)Tj
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( Worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 1, v. 25)Tj
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( Patient continuance in well doing.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 2, v. 7)Tj
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( For there is no respect of persons with God.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 2, v. 11.)Tj
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( These...are a law unto themselves.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( Let God be true, but every man a liar.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 3, v. 4)Tj
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( Let us do evil, that good may come.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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( For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 3, v. 23)Tj
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( For where no law is, there is no transgression.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 4, v. 15)Tj
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( Who against hope believed in hope, that he might become the father o\
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(Romans ch. 4, v. 18 \(referring to Abraham\))Tj
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( Hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in o\
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(Ghost which is given unto us.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 5, v. 5)Tj
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( Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 5, v. 20)Tj
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( Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?)Tj
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( God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer in s\
in?)Tj
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(Romans ch. 6, v. 1)Tj
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( We also should walk in newness of life.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 6, v. 4)Tj
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( Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more \
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( For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, h\
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(Romans ch. 6, v. 9)Tj
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( The wages of sin is death.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 6, v. 23)Tj
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( Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law\
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(Romans ch. 7, v. 7)Tj
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( For the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, \
that I do.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 7, v. 19.)Tj
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( O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this\
death?)Tj
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(Romans ch. 7, v. 24)Tj
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( They that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but t\
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(things of the Spirit.)Tj
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( For to be carnally minded is death.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 5)Tj
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( For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye\
have received the Spirit of )Tj
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(adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 15)Tj
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( We are the children of God:)Tj
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( And if the children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with)Tj
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( Christ.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 16)Tj
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( For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain \
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 22)Tj
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( All things work for good to them that love God.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 28)Tj
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( If God be for us, who can be against us?)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 31)Tj
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( For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor pr\
incipalities, nor powers, nor )Tj
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(things present, nor things to come,)Tj
T*
( Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to sepa\
rate us from the love of God, )Tj
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(which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 8, v. 38)Tj
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( Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made\
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(Romans ch. 9, v. 20)Tj
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( I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye pr\
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(Romans ch. 12, v. 1)Tj
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( Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 12, v. 15)Tj
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( Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low estate. Be not wi\
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(Romans ch. 12, v. 16)Tj
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( Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 12, v. 19)Tj
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( Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 12, v. 21)Tj
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( Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers...the powers that b\
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 1)Tj
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( For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 3)Tj
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( Render therefore to all their dues: tribute to whom tribute is due; \
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(to whom fear; honour to whom honour.)Tj
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( Owe no man anything, but to love one another: for he that loveth ano\
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 7)Tj
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( Love is the fulfilling of the law.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 10)Tj
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( Now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation \
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(believed.)Tj
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( The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us therefore cast of\
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 11)Tj
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( Make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 13, v. 14)Tj
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( Doubtful disputations.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 14, v. 1)Tj
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( Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 14, v. 5)Tj
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( Salute one another with an holy kiss.)Tj
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(Romans ch. 16, v. 16)Tj
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( 2.116.4.7 1 Corinthians)Tj
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( The foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 1, v. 27)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 3, v. 6)Tj
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( Stewards of the mysteries of God.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 4, v. 1)Tj
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( We are made a spectacle unto the world, and to angels.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 4, v. 9)Tj
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( Absent in body, but present in spirit.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 5, v. 3)Tj
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( Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 5, v. 6)Tj
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( Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 6, v. 19)Tj
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( It is better to marry than to burn.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
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( The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 7, v. 14)Tj
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( The fashion of this world passeth away.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 7, v. 31)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 8, v. 1)Tj
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(the fruit thereof?)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 7)Tj
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( I am made all things to all men.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 22)Tj
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( Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth\
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(1 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 24)Tj
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(preached to others, I myself should be a castaway.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 25)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 10, v. 23)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 12, v. 4)Tj
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( And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give\
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(up,)Tj
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( Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily \
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( Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;)Tj
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( For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.)Tj
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( But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part s\
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T*
( When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I t\
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T*
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T*
( For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I\
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T*
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( And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest \
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(1 Corinthians ch. 13, v. 1)Tj
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( If the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to\
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(1 Corinthians ch. 14, v. 8)Tj
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( Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted\
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(1 Corinthians ch. 14, v. 34)Tj
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( If they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: f\
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T*
(speak in the church.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 14, v. 35)Tj
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( Let all things be done decently and in order.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 14, v. 40)Tj
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( Last of all he was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time.)Tj
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(the church of God.)Tj
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( But by the grace of God I am what I am.)Tj
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( I laboured more abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the grace o\
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 10)Tj
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( If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most \
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( But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of\
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( For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of th\
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( For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 20)Tj
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( The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 26)Tj
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( If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, wha\
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T*
(dead rise not? let us eat and drink; for to morrow we die.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 32.)Tj
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( Evil communications corrupt good manners.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 33)Tj
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( One star differeth from another star in glory.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 41)Tj
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( So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; i\
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 42)Tj
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( The first man is of the earth, earthy.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 47)Tj
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( Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall a\
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T*
( In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump; for the \
trumpet shall sound, and the )Tj
T*
(dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.)Tj
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( For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must \
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 51)Tj
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( O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 15, v. 55)Tj
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( Quit you like men, be strong.)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 16, v. 13)Tj
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( Let him be Anathema Maran-atha)Tj
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(1 Corinthians ch. 16, v. 22)Tj
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( Our sufficiency is of God;)Tj
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( Who also hath made us able ministers of the new testament; not of th\
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(2 Corinthians ch. 3, v. 5)Tj
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( We have this treasure in earthen vessels.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 4, v. 7)Tj
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(God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.)Tj
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( Now is the accepted time.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 6, v. 2)Tj
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( As having nothing, and yet possessing all things.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 6, v. 10)Tj
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( God loveth a cheerful giver.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 7)Tj
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( For ye suffer fools gladly, seeing ye yourselves are wise.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 9, v. 19)Tj
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( Are they Hebrews? so am I. Are they Israelites? so am I. Are they th\
e seed of Abraham? so am )Tj
T*
(I.)Tj
T*
( Are they ministers of Christ? \(I speak as a fool\) I am more.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 11, v. 22)Tj
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( Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one.)Tj
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( Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered \
shipwreck, a night and a day )Tj
T*
(have I been in the deep;)Tj
T*
( In journeyings often, in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in \
perils by mine own )Tj
T*
(countrymen, in perils by the heathen, in perils of the city, in perils i\
n the wilderness, in perils in )Tj
T*
(the sea, in perils among false brethren; In weariness and painfulness, i\
n watchings often, in )Tj
T*
(hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness.)Tj
T*
( Beside those things that are without, that which cometh upon me dail\
y, the care of all the )Tj
T*
(churches.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 11, v. 24)Tj
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( There was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan t\
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(2 Corinthians ch. 12, v. 7)Tj
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( My strength is made perfect in weakness.)Tj
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(2 Corinthians ch. 12, v. 9)Tj
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( 2.116.4.9 Galatians)Tj
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( The right hands of fellowship.)Tj
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(Galatians ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
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( It is written, that Abraham had two sons, the one by a bondmaid, the\
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( Which things are an allegory.)Tj
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(Galatians ch. 4, v. 22)Tj
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( Ye are fallen from grace.)Tj
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(Galatians ch. 5, v. 4)Tj
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( Meekness, temperance.)Tj
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(Galatians ch. 5, v. 22)Tj
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( Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, tha\
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(Galatians ch. 6, v. 7)Tj
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( Let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, \
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(Galatians ch. 6, v. 9. See 2 Thessalonians 3, v. 13)Tj
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( Ye see how large a letter I have written unto you with mine own hand\
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(Galatians ch. 6, v. 11)Tj
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( 2.116.4.10 Ephesians)Tj
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( Christ came and preached peace to you which were afar off, and to th\
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(Ephesians ch. 2, v. 17)Tj
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( Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace giv\
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(among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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( I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,)Tj
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( Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named,)Tj
T*
( That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be\
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(his Spirit in the inner man.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 3, v. 14)Tj
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( The love of Christ, which passeth knowledge.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
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( Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that \
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T*
(to the power that worketh in us,)Tj
T*
( Unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages,\
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(Ephesians ch. 3, v. 20)Tj
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( I therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk wort\
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(wherewith ye are called.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 4, v. 1)Tj
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( He gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; a\
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T*
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( Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of \
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(Ephesians ch. 5, v. 6)Tj
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( See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise,)Tj
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( Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 5, v. 15)Tj
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( Be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess; but be filled with the Sp\
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(Ephesians ch. 5, v. 18)Tj
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( Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands, as unto the Lord.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 5, v. 22)Tj
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( Ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath.)Tj
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( Not with eyeservice, as menpleasers.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 6, v. 6)Tj
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( Put on the whole armour of God.)Tj
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(Ephesians ch. 6, v. 11)Tj
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T*
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T*
( Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be able\
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T*
(day, and having done all, to stand.)Tj
T*
( Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having\
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T*
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T*
( And your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace;)Tj
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T*
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(Ephesians ch. 6, v. 12)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 2, v. 5)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
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( Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 2, v. 12)Tj
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( Circumcised the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 3, v. 4)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 3, v. 7)Tj
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( Forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto th\
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(before,)Tj
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( I press toward the mark.)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 3, v. 13)Tj
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( Whose God is their belly, and whose glory is their shame.)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 3, v. 19)Tj
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( Rejoice in the Lord alway: and again I say, Rejoice.)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 4, v. 4)Tj
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( The peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your h\
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T*
(Christ Jesus.)Tj
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(Philippians ch. 4, v. 7)Tj
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( Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever\
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T*
(whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever thi\
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T*
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(Philippians ch. 4, v. 8)Tj
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( Touch not; taste not; handle not.)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 1, v. 2)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 4, v. 11)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
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( Pray without ceasing.)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 5, v. 17)Tj
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( Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 5, v. 21)Tj
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( 2.116.4.14 2 Thessalonians)Tj
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( If any would not work, neither should he eat.)Tj
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(1 Thessalonians ch. 3, v. 10)Tj
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( Neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 1, v. 4)Tj
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( Sinners; of whom I am chief.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 2, v. 14)Tj
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( If a man desire the office of a bishop, he desireth a good work.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 3, v. 1)Tj
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( A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, \
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( Not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; but patie\
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( Giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 4, v. 1)Tj
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( Refuse profane and old wives\222 fables, and exercise thyself rather\
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(1 Timothy ch. 4, v. 7)Tj
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( But the younger widows refuse: for when they have begun to wax wanto\
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(will marry;)Tj
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( Having damnation, because they have cast off their first faith.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 5, v. 11)Tj
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( Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach\222s sa\
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(1 Timothy ch. 5, v. 23)Tj
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( For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can car\
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(1 Timothy ch. 6, v. 7)Tj
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( The love of money is the root of all evil.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 6, v. 10)Tj
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( Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 6, v. 12)Tj
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( Rich in good works.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 6, v. 18)Tj
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( Science falsely so called.)Tj
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(1 Timothy ch. 6, v. 20)Tj
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( Hold fast the form of sound words.)Tj
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( Silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts.)Tj
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( Be instant in season, out of season.)Tj
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(Titus ch. 1, v. 15)Tj
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( Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his \
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(hand of the Majesty on high.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 1, v. 1)Tj
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( Without shedding of blood is no remission.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 9, v. 22)Tj
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( It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 10, v. 31)Tj
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( Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things n\
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(Hebrews ch. 11, v. 1)Tj
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( For he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose maker and bui\
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(Hebrews ch. 11, v. 10)Tj
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( These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but havin\
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(on the earth.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 11, v. 13)Tj
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( Of whom the world was not worthy.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 11, v. 38)Tj
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T*
(that is set before us,)Tj
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( Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the\
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(endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right han\
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(Hebrews ch. 12, v. 6)Tj
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( The spirits of just men made perfect.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 12, v. 23)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 13, v. 1)Tj
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( Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 13, v. 8)Tj
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( For here have we no continuing city, but we seek one to come.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 13, v. 14)Tj
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( To do good and to communicate forget not.)Tj
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(Hebrews ch. 13, v. 16)Tj
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( Let patience have her perfect work.)Tj
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(James ch. 1, v. 4)Tj
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( Blessed is the man that endureth temptation: for when he is tried, h\
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(James ch. 1, v. 12)Tj
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( Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh dow\
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(lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.)Tj
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(James ch. 1, v. 17)Tj
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( Be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath:)Tj
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( For the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God.)Tj
T*
( Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, a\
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T*
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( But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your ow\
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( For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto \
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(face in a glass:)Tj
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( For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgett\
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T*
(he was.)Tj
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(James ch. 1, v. 19)Tj
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( If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his tong\
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T*
(heart, this man\222s religion is vain.)Tj
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( Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To vi\
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(widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world\
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(James ch. 1, v. 26)Tj
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( Faith without works is dead.)Tj
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( How great a matter a little fire kindleth.)Tj
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(James ch. 3, v. 5)Tj
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( The tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil.)Tj
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(James ch. 3, v. 8)Tj
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( Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter?\
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(James ch. 3, v. 11)Tj
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(James ch. 4, v. 14)Tj
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( Ye have heard of the patience of Job.)Tj
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(James ch. 5, v. 11)Tj
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( Let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay.)Tj
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(James ch. 5, v. 12)Tj
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( The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.)Tj
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(James ch. 5, v. 16)Tj
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( 2.116.4.20 1 Peter)Tj
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( Jesus Christ: Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye \
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(1 Peter ch. 1, v. 7)Tj
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( All flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of gra\
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( The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 1, v. 24.)Tj
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( As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may g\
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( If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 2)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 9)Tj
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( Abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 11)Tj
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( Honour all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honour the king.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 17)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 20)Tj
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( Bishop of your souls.)Tj
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( Giving honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 3, v. 7)Tj
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( The end of all things is at hand.)Tj
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( Charity shall cover the multitude of sins.)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 4, v. 8)Tj
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(1 Peter ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
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(2 Peter ch. 1, v. 19)Tj
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( They are not afraid to speak evil of dignities.)Tj
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(2 Peter ch. 2, v. 10)Tj
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( The dog is turned to his own vomit again.)Tj
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(2 Peter ch. 2, v. 22)Tj
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( 2.116.4.22 1 John)Tj
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(1 John ch. 1, v. 8)Tj
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(1 John ch. 4, v. 18)Tj
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(1 John ch. 4, v. 20)Tj
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t voice as of a trumpet.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 1, v. 10)Tj
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( What thou seest, write in a book, and send it unto the seven churche\
s which are in Asia.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 1, v. 11)Tj
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( Being turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 1, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as snow; and h\
is eyes were as a flame of )Tj
T*
(fire;)Tj
T*
( And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a furnace; a\
nd his voice as the sound of )Tj
T*
(many waters.)Tj
T*
( And he had in his right hand seven stars: and out of his mouth went \
a sharp twoedged sword: )Tj
T*
( and his countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength.)Tj
T*
( And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 1, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for everm\
ore,)Tj
T*
( Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 1, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love.\
)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 2, v. 4)Tj
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( Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 2, v. 10)Tj
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( I will not blot out his name out of the book of life.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 3, v. 5)Tj
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( I will write upon him my new name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 3, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.50456 Tm
( I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou w\
ert cold or hot.)Tj
T*
( So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will \
spue thee out of my mouth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 3, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( Behold, I stand at the door, and knock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 3, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine stone: \
and there was a rainbow )Tj
T*
(round about the throne, in sight like unto an emerald.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 4, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.25456 Tm
( And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto crystal: an\
d in the midst of the throne, )Tj
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(and round about the throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and beh\
ind.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 4, v. 6)Tj
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( They were full of eyes within: and they rest not day and night, sayi\
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( Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to co\
me.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 4, v. 8)Tj
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( Thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were\
created.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 4, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.00456 Tm
( Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 5, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.25456 Tm
( The four beasts and four and twenty elders fell down before the Lamb\
, having every one of )Tj
T*
(them harps, and golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers of sa\
ints.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 5, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.50456 Tm
( He went forth conquering, and to conquer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 6, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.75456 Tm
( And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him \
was)Tj
T*
( Death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 6, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.00456 Tm
( The kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men, and the\
chief captains, and the )Tj
T*
(mighty men, and every bondman, and every free man, hid themselves in the\
dens and in the rocks )Tj
T*
(of the mountains;)Tj
T*
( And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from th\
e face of him that sitteth )Tj
T*
(upon the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb:)Tj
T*
( For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to sta\
nd?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 6, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.25456 Tm
( A great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and ki\
ndreds, and people, and )Tj
T*
(tongues, stood before the throne, and before the)Tj
T*
( Lamb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 7, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.50456 Tm
( And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elder\
s and the four beasts, and )Tj
T*
(fell before the throne on their faces, and worshipped)Tj
T*
( God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 7, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.75456 Tm
( And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which\
are arrayed in white )Tj
T*
(robes? and whence came they?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 7, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.00456 Tm
( These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed \
their robes, and made )Tj
T*
(them white in the blood of the Lamb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 7, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.25456 Tm
( They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall th\
e sun light on them, nor any )Tj
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(heat.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 7, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.50456 Tm
( God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 7, v. 17)Tj
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( And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven\
about the space of half )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(an hour.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 8, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.00456 Tm
( And the name of the star is called Wormwood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 8, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.25456 Tm
( And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and s\
hall desire to die, and death )Tj
T*
(shall flee from them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 9, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( And there were stings in their tails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 9, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( It was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had eaten it, my\
belly was bitter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 10, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with th\
e sun, and the moon )Tj
T*
(under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 12, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against t\
he dragon; and the )Tj
T*
(dragon fought and his angels.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 12, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( Who is like unto the beast? who is able to make war with him?)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 13, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the\
name of the beast, or the )Tj
T*
(number of his name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 13, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for i\
t is the number of a man; )Tj
T*
(and his number is Six hundred threescore and six.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 13, v. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.25456 Tm
( And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters, and as\
the voice of a great )Tj
T*
(thunder: and I heard the voice of harpers harping with their harps:)Tj
T*
( And they sung as it were a new song...and no man could learn that so\
ng but the hundred and )Tj
T*
(forty and four thousand, which were redeemed from the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 14, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 14, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and t\
hey have no rest day or )Tj
T*
(night, who worship the beast and his image.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 14, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, sai\
th the)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 14, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 15, v. 2)Tj
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( Behold, I come as a thief.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 16, v. 15)Tj
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( And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tong\
ue)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Armageddon.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 16, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.00456 Tm
( I will shew unto thee the judgment of the great whore that sitteth u\
pon many waters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 17, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND )Tj
T*
(ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 17, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.50456 Tm
( And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone, and cast \
it into the sea, saying, Thus )Tj
T*
(with violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be\
found no more at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 18, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he that sat u\
pon him was called )Tj
T*
(Faithful and True.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 19, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.00456 Tm
( And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written, KING OF \
KINGS, AND LORD )Tj
T*
(OF LORDS.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 19, v. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.25456 Tm
( And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil\
, and)Tj
T*
( Satan, and bound him a thousand years.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 20, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( And I saw a great white throne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 20, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell de\
livered up the dead which )Tj
T*
(were in them: and they were judged every man according to their works.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 20, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.00456 Tm
( And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the\
first earth were passed )Tj
T*
(away; and there was no more sea.)Tj
T*
( And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God ou\
t of heaven, prepared )Tj
T*
(as a bride adorned for her husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.17047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 21, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.25456 Tm
( And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall b\
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T*
(sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former\
things are passed away.)Tj
T*
( And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new.\
And he said unto me, )Tj
T*
(Write: for these words are true and faithful.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 21, v. 4)Tj
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( I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of\
life freely.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 21, v. 6)Tj
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( The street of the city was pure gold.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 21, v. 21)Tj
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( And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day: for there shall\
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(Revelation ch. 21, v. 25)Tj
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( And he shewed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, pr\
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0 -1.2 TD
(God and of the Lamb.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 22, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.50456 Tm
( And the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 22, v. 2)Tj
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( And, behold, I come quickly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.92047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 22, v. 12)Tj
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( For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers\
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T*
(whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.)Tj
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(Revelation ch. 22, v. 15)Tj
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( Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.42047 Tm
(Revelation ch. 22, v. 20)Tj
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( 2.116.5 Vulgate)Tj
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( Dominus illuminatio mea, et salus mea, quem timebo?)Tj
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( The Lord is the source of my light and my safety, so whom shall I fe\
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(Psalm 26, v. 1.)Tj
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( Asperges me hyssopo, et mundabor; lavabis me, et super nivem dealbab\
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( You will sprinkle me with hyssop, and I shall be made clean; you wil\
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(made whiter than snow.)Tj
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(Psalm 50, v. 9 \(A. V. Psalm 51, v. 7\).)Tj
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( Cantate Domino canticum novum, quia mirabilia fecit.)Tj
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( Sing to the Lord a new song, because he has done marvellous things.)Tj
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(Psalm 97, v. 1 \(A. V. Psalm 98, v. 1\).)Tj
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( Jubilate Deo, omnis terra; servite Domino in laetitia.)Tj
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( Sing joyfully to God, all the earth; serve the Lord with gladness.)Tj
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(Psalm 99, v. 2.)Tj
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( Beatus vir qui timet Dominum, in mandatis ejus volet nimis!)Tj
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( Happy is the man who fears the Lord, who is only too willing to foll\
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(Psalm 111, v. 1 \(A. V. Psalm 112, v. 1\))Tj
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( Non nobis, Domine, non nobis; sed nomini tuo da gloriam.)Tj
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(Psalm 113, v. 9. \(A. V. Psalm 115, v. 1\).)Tj
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( Laudate Dominum, omnes gentes; laudate eum, omnes populi.)Tj
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( Praise the Lord, all nations; praise him, all people.)Tj
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(Psalm 116, v. 1 \(A.V. Psalm 117, v. 1\))Tj
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( Nisi Dominus aedificaverit domum, in vanum laboraverunt qui aedifica\
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( Nisi Dominus custodierit civitatem, frustra vigilat qui custodit eam\
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( Unless the Lord guards the city, it\222s no use its guard staying aw\
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(Psalm 126, v. 1 \(A. V. Psalm 127, v. 1\). Shortened to Nisi Dominus fru\
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(Edinburgh.)Tj
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( De profundis clamavi ad te, Domine; Domine, exaudi vocem meam.)Tj
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( Up from the depths I have cried to thee, Lord; Lord, hear my voice.)Tj
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(Psalm 129, v. 1 \(A. V. Psalm 130, v. 1\).)Tj
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( Vanitas vanitatum, dixit Ecclesiastes; vanitas vanitatum, et omnia v\
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( Vanity of vanities, said the preacher; vanity of vanities, and every\
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(Ecclesiastes ch. 1, v. 2.)Tj
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( Rorate, coeli, desuper, et nubes pluant Justum; aperiatur terra, et \
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( Drop down dew, heavens, from above, and let the clouds rain down rig\
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(be opened, and a saviour spring to life.)Tj
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(Isaiah ch. 45, v. 8)Tj
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( Benedicite, omnia opera Domini, Domino; laudate et superexaltate eum\
in secula.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Bless the Lord, all the works of the Lord; praise him and exalt him \
above all things for ever.)Tj
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(Daniel ch. 3, v. 57.)Tj
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( Magnificat anima mea Dominum; Et exsultavit spiritus meus in Deo sal\
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( My soul doth magnify the Lord: and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my\
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(St Luke ch. 1, v. 46.)Tj
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( Esurientes implevit bonis, et divites dimisit inanes.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( He hath filled the hungry with good things: and the rich he hath sen\
t empty away.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 1, v. 53.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( Nunc dimittis servum tuum, Domine, secundum verbum tuum in pace.)Tj
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T*
( Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace: according to thy\
word.)Tj
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(St Luke ch. 2, v. 29.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( Pax Vobis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Peace be unto you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(St Luke ch. 24, v. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Quo vadis?)Tj
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T*
( Where are you going?)Tj
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(St John ch. 16, v. 5)Tj
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( Ecce homo.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Behold the man.)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 5)Tj
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( Consummatum est.)Tj
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T*
( It is achieved.)Tj
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(St John ch. 19, v. 30.)Tj
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( Noli me tangere.)Tj
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T*
( Do not touch me.)Tj
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(St John ch. 20, v. 17.)Tj
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( Sicut modo geniti infantes, rationabile, sine dolo lac concupiscite.\
)Tj
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T*
( After the fashion of newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the w\
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(1 Peter ch. 2, v. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.75456 Tm
( Magna est veritas, et praevalet.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Great is truth, and it prevails.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.17047 Tm
(3 Esdras ch. 4, v. 41.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.117 Isaac Bickerstaffe c.1733-c.1808)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But\227why did you kick me downstairs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.42047 Tm
(\221An Expostulation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.50456 Tm
( There was a jolly miller once,)Tj
T*
( Lived on the river Dee;)Tj
T*
( He worked and sang from morn till night;)Tj
T*
( No lark more blithe than he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.67047 Tm
(\221Love in a Village\222 \(a comic opera with music by Thomas Arne, 176\
2\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.75456 Tm
( And this the burthen of his song,)Tj
T*
( For ever used to be,)Tj
T*
( I care for nobody, not I,)Tj
T*
( If no one cares for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.92047 Tm
(\221Love in a Village\222 \(1762\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 160.7124 Tm
( 2.118 E. H. Bickersteth 1825-1906)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Peace, perfect peace, in this dark world of sin?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Blood of Jesus whispers peace within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.17047 Tm
(\221Songs in the House of Pilgrimage\222 \(1875\) \221Peace, perfect pea\
ce\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.9624 Tm
( 2.119 Georges Bidault 1899-1983)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The weak have one weapon: the errors of those who think they are str\
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(In \221Observer\222 15 July 1962)Tj
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( 2.120 Ambrose Bierce 1842-c.1914)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Acquaintance, n. A person whom we know well enough to borrow from, b\
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0 -1.2 TD
(to lend to. A degree of friendship called slight when its object is poor\
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T*
(when he is rich or famous.)Tj
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(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 12)Tj
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( Alliance, n. In international politics, the union of two thieves who\
have their hands so deeply )Tj
T*
(inserted in each other\222s pocket that they cannot separately plunder a\
third.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 16)Tj
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( Applause, n. The echo of a platitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( Auctioneer, n. The man who proclaims with a hammer that he has picke\
d a pocket with his )Tj
T*
(tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( Battle, n. A method of untying with the teeth a political knot that \
would not yield to the tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( Calamity, n....Calamities are of two kinds: misfortune to ourselves,\
and good fortune to others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( Conservative, n. A statesman who is enamoured of existing evils, as \
distinguished from the )Tj
T*
(Liberal, who wishes to replace them with others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Destiny, n. A tyrant\222s authority for crime and a fool\222s excuse\
for failure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Enlarged Devil\222s Dictionary\222 \(1967\) p. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Future, n. That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our fri\
ends are true, and our )Tj
T*
(happiness is assured.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( History, n. An account, mostly false, of events, mostly unimportant,\
which are brought about )Tj
T*
(by rulers, mostly knaves, and soldiers, mostly fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221The Cynic\222s Word Book\222 \(1906\) p. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Patience, n. A minor form of despair, disguised as a virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Dictionary\222 \(1911\) p. 248)Tj
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( Peace, n. In international affairs, a period of cheating between two\
periods of fighting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Dictionary\222 \(1911\) p. 248)Tj
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( Prejudice, n. A vagrant opinion without visible means of support.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Dictionary\222 \(1911\) p. 264)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Saint, n. A dead sinner revised and edited.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Dictionary\222 \(1911\) p. 306)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 49.4624 Tm
( 2.121 Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk 1245-1306)Tj
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( By God, O King, I will neither go nor hang!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Replying to King Edward I\222s \221By God, earl, you shall either go or \
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( \221The Chronicles of Walter of Guisbrough\222 Camden Society Series 3,\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.122 Josh Billings \(Henry Wheeler Shaw\) 1818-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The trouble with people is not that they don\222t know but that they\
know so much that ain\222t so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 637.42047 Tm
(\221Josh Billings\222 Encyclopedia of Wit and Wisdom\222 \(1874\))Tj
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( Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But four times he who gets his blow in fust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.67047 Tm
(\221Josh Billings, his Sayings\222 \(1865\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 550.4624 Tm
( 2.123 Laurence Binyon 1869-1943)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.)Tj
T*
( At the going down of the sun and in the morning)Tj
T*
( We will remember them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221For the Fallen\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.00456 Tm
( Now is the time for the burning of the leaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.17047 Tm
(\221The Ruins\222 \(1942\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.9624 Tm
( 2.124 Nigel Birch \(Baron Rhyl\) 1906-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My God! They\222ve shot our fox!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
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0 -1.2 TD
(November 1947, in Harold Macmillan \221Tides of Fortune\222 \(1969\) ch.\
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15 0 0 15 10 305.2124 Tm
( 2.125 John Bird)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That was the week that was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(Title of satirical BBC television series \(1962-3\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.126 Earl of Birkenhead)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See F. E. Smith \(7.111\) in Volume II)Tj
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( 2.127 Augustine Birrell 1850-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That great dust-heap called \221history\222.)Tj
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(\221Obiter Dicta\222 \(1884\) \221Carlyle\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 110.9624 Tm
( 2.128 Prince Otto von Bismarck 1815-98)Tj
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T*
( Die Politik ist die Lehre von M\366glichen.)Tj
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( Politics is the art of the possible.)Tj
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(In conversation with Meyer von Waldeck, 11 August 1867)Tj
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( Die Vermittelung des Friedens denke ich mir nicht so, dass wir nun b\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Ansichten den Schiedsrichter spielen und sagen...)Tj
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( I do not regard the procuring of peace as a matter in which we shoul\
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T*
(forward.)Tj
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(Speech to the Reichstag, 19 February 1878, in Ludwig Hahn \(ed.\) \221F\
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T*
(und Wirken\222 vol. 3 \(1881\) p. 90)Tj
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( Legt eine m\366glichst starke milit\344rische Kraft...in die Hand de\
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T*
(er die Politik machen k\366nnen, die Ihr w\374nscht; mit Reden und Sch\374\
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T*
(sie sich nicht, sie macht sich nur durch Blut und Eisen.)Tj
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( Place in the hands of the King of Prussia the strongest possible mil\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(matches, and songs; it can only be carried out through blood and iron.)Tj
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(Prussian House of Deputies, 28 January 1886 \(used by Bismarck in the fo\
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T*
(1862\))Tj
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( Herr Ballen, the great shipping magnate, told me that he had heard B\
ismarck say towards the )Tj
T*
(end of his life, \221If there is ever another war in Europe, it will com\
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T*
(thing in the Balkans.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(In \221Hansard\222 16 August 1945, col. 84)Tj
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( A lath of wood painted to look like iron.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(Describing Lord Salisbury; attributed, but vigorously denied by Sidney W\
hitman in \221Personal Reminiscences )Tj
T*
(of Prince Bismarck\222 \(1902\) ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 344.2124 Tm
( 2.129 Sir William Blackstone 1723-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man was formed for society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(\221Commentaries on the Laws of England\222 \(1765\) introduction, sect.\
2.)Tj
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( The king never dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Commentaries on the Laws of England\222 \(1765\) bk. 1, ch. 7)Tj
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( The royal navy of England hath ever been its greatest defence and or\
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0 -1.2 TD
(and natural strength; the floating bulwark of the island.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(\221Commentaries on the Laws of England\222 \(1765\) bk. 1, ch. 13)Tj
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( That the king can do no wrong, is a necessary and fundamental princi\
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T*
(constitution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221Commentaries on the Laws of England\222 \(1765\) bk. 3, ch. 17)Tj
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( It is better that ten guilty persons escape than one innocent suffer\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221Commentaries on the Laws of England\222 \(1765\) bk. 4, ch. 27)Tj
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( 2.130 Robert Blair 1699-1746)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Oft, in the lone church-yard at night I\222ve seen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The schoolboy with a satchel in his hand,)Tj
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( Whistling aloud to keep his courage up...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sudden he starts! and hears, or thinks he hears,)Tj
T*
( The sound of something purring at his heels;)Tj
T*
( Full fast he flies, and dares not look behind him,)Tj
T*
( Till out of breath, he overtakes his fellows.)Tj
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(\221The Grave\222 \(1743\) l. 57.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.131 Eubie Blake \(James Hubert Blake\) 1883-1983)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( If I\222d known I was gonna live this long, I\222d have taken better\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(On reaching the age of 100, in \221Observer\222 13 February 1983)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 563.2124 Tm
( 2.132 William Blake 1757-1827)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( When Sir Joshua Reynolds died)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All Nature was degraded:)Tj
T*
( The King dropped a tear into the Queen\222s ear;)Tj
T*
( And all his pictures faded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(Annotations to The Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds p. cix \221When Sir Josh\
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( To see a world in a grain of sand)Tj
T*
( And a heaven in a wild flower)Tj
T*
( Hold infinity in the palm of your hand)Tj
T*
( And eternity in an hour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( A robin red breast in a cage)Tj
T*
( Puts all Heaven in a rage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.17047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.25456 Tm
( A dog starved at his master\222s gate)Tj
T*
( Predicts the ruin of the State)Tj
T*
( A horse misused upon the road)Tj
T*
( Calls to Heaven for human blood)Tj
T*
( Each outcry of the hunted hare)Tj
T*
( A fibre from the brain does tear)Tj
T*
( A skylark wounded in the wing)Tj
T*
( A cherubim does cease to sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.50456 Tm
( The bat that flits at close of eve)Tj
T*
( Has left the brain that won\222t believe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 25)Tj
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( He who shall hurt the little wren)Tj
T*
( Shall never be beloved by men)Tj
T*
( He who the ox to wrath has moved)Tj
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( Shall never be by woman loved.)Tj
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(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 29)Tj
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( The caterpillar on the leaf)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Kill not the moth nor butterfly)Tj
T*
( For the Last Judgement draweth nigh.)Tj
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(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 37)Tj
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( A truth that\222s told with bad intent)Tj
T*
( Beats all the lies you can invent)Tj
T*
( It is right it should be so)Tj
T*
( Man was made for joy and woe)Tj
T*
( And when this we rightly know)Tj
T*
( Thro\222 the world we safely go)Tj
T*
( Joy and woe are woven fine)Tj
T*
( A clothing for the soul divine.)Tj
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(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 53)Tj
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( The bleat the bark bellow and roar)Tj
T*
( Are waves that beat on heavens shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 71)Tj
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( The strongest poison ever known)Tj
T*
( Came from Caesar\222s laurel crown.)Tj
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(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 97)Tj
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( The whore and gambler by the State)Tj
T*
( Licensed build that nation\222s fate)Tj
T*
( The harlot\222s cry from street to street)Tj
T*
( Shall weave old England\222s winding sheet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( God appears and God is Light)Tj
T*
( To those poor souls who dwell in night)Tj
T*
( But does a human form display)Tj
T*
( To those who dwell in realms of day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Auguries of Innocence\222 \(c.1803\) l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Does the eagle know what is in the pit?)Tj
T*
( Or wilt thou go ask the mole:)Tj
T*
( Can wisdom be put in a silver rod?)Tj
T*
( Or love in a golden bowl?)Tj
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(\221The Book of Thel\222 \(1789\) plate i \221Thel\222s Motto\222)Tj
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( Everything that lives,)Tj
T*
( Lives not alone, nor for itself.)Tj
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(\221The Book of Thel\222 \(1789\) plate 3, l. 26)Tj
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T*
( Thine has a great hook nose like thine)Tj
T*
( Mine has a snub nose like to mine.)Tj
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(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(a\) l. 1)Tj
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( Both read the Bible day and night)Tj
T*
( But thou read\222st black where I read white.)Tj
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(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(a\) l. 13)Tj
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( Was Jesus gentle or did he)Tj
T*
( Give any marks of gentility)Tj
T*
( When twelve years old he ran away)Tj
T*
( And left his parents in dismay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(b\) l. 1)Tj
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( Was Jesus humble or did he)Tj
T*
( Give any proofs of humility)Tj
T*
( Boast of high things with humble tone)Tj
T*
( And give with charity a stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(d\) l. 1)Tj
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( Humility is only doubt)Tj
T*
( And does the sun and moon blot out)Tj
T*
( Rooting over with thorns and stems)Tj
T*
( The buried soul and all its gems)Tj
T*
( This life\222s dim windows of the soul)Tj
T*
( Distorts the heavens from pole to pole)Tj
T*
( And leads you to believe a lie)Tj
T*
( When you see with not thro\222 the eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(d\) l. 99)Tj
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( Was Jesus chaste or did he)Tj
T*
( Give any lessons of chastity)Tj
T*
( The morning blushed fiery red)Tj
T*
( Mary was found in adulterous bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(e\) l. 1)Tj
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( Jesus was sitting in Moses chair)Tj
T*
( They brought the trembling woman there)Tj
T*
( Moses commands she be stoned to death)Tj
T*
( What was the sound of Jesus breath)Tj
T*
( He laid His hand on Moses Law)Tj
T*
( The ancient Heavens in silent awe)Tj
T*
( Writ with curses from pole to pole)Tj
T*
( All away began to roll.)Tj
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( Did Jesus teach doubt or did he)Tj
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( Give any lessons of philosophy)Tj
T*
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( Or call men wise for not believing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Gospel\222 \(c.1818\) \(h\) l. 1)Tj
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( Mutual Forgiveness of each vice,)Tj
T*
( Such are the Gates of Paradise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
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( Truly, my Satan, thou art but a dunce,)Tj
T*
( And dost not know the garment from the man;)Tj
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( Every harlot was a virgin once,)Tj
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T*
( The lost traveller\222s dream under the hill.)Tj
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(\221For the Sexes: The Gates of Paradise\222 \221To the Accuser who is T\
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15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( I must create a system, or be enslaved by another man\222s.)Tj
T*
( I will not reason and compare: my business is to create.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221Chapter 1\222 \(plate 10, l. 20\))Tj
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( Near mournful)Tj
T*
( Ever weeping Paddington.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221Chapter 1\222 \(plate 12, l. 27\))Tj
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( The fields from Islington to Marybone,)Tj
T*
( To Primrose Hill and Saint John\222s Wood)Tj
T*
( Were builded over with pillars of gold;)Tj
T*
( And there Jerusalem\222s pillars stood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Jews\222 \(plate 27, l. 1\) \223Th\
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15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( Pancras and Kentish-town repose)Tj
T*
( Among her golden pillars high)Tj
T*
( Among her golden arches which)Tj
T*
( Shine upon the starry sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Jews\222 \(plate 27, l. 9\) \223Th\
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( For a tear is an intellectual thing;)Tj
T*
( And a sigh is the sword of an Angel King)Tj
T*
( And the bitter groan of the martyr\222s woe)Tj
ET
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( Is an arrow from the Almighty\222s bow!)Tj
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(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Deists\222 \(plate 52, l. 25\) \223\
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( He who would do good to another, must do it in minute particulars)Tj
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( For Art and Science cannot exist but in minutely organized particula\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221Chapter 3\222 \(plate 55, l. 60\))Tj
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( I give you the end of a golden string;)Tj
T*
( Only wind it into a ball:)Tj
T*
( It will lead you in at Heaven\222s gate,)Tj
T*
( Built in Jerusalem\222s wall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.17047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Christians\222 \(plate 77\) \223I \
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( England! awake! awake! awake!)Tj
T*
( Jerusalem thy sister calls!)Tj
T*
( Why wilt thou sleep the sleep of death,)Tj
T*
( And close her from thy ancient walls?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.42047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Christians\222 \(plate 77\) \223En\
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15 0 0 15 10 461.50456 Tm
( And now the time returns again:)Tj
T*
( Our souls exult, and London\222s towers,)Tj
T*
( Receive the Lamb of God to dwell)Tj
T*
( In England\222s green and pleasant bowers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221To the Christians\222 \(plate 77\))Tj
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( I care not whether a man is good or evil; all that I care)Tj
T*
( Is whether he is a wise man or a fool. Go! put off holiness)Tj
T*
( And put on Intellect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.92047 Tm
(\221Jerusalem\222 \(1815\) \221Chapter 4\222 \(plate 91, l. 54\))Tj
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( May God us keep)Tj
T*
( From Single vision and Newton\222s sleep!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.17047 Tm
(In Letter to Thomas Butts, 22 November 1802)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.25456 Tm
( O why was I born with a different face?)Tj
T*
( Why was I not born like the rest of my race?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(In Letter to Thomas Butts, 16 August 1803)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.50456 Tm
( Without contraries is no progression. Attraction and repulsion, reas\
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T*
(hate, are necessary to human existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.67047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221The Argument\222)Tj
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( Energy is Eternal Delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.92047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221The voice of the \
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( The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels and God, \
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T*
(Devils and Hell, is because he was a true Poet, and of the Devil\222s pa\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.17047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221The voice of the \
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( The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.)Tj
ET
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( Prudence is a rich, ugly, old maid courted by Incapacity.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( Bring out number weight and measure in a year of dearth.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( If the fool would persist in his folly he would become wise.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( The pride of the peacock is the glory of God.)Tj
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( The wrath of the lion is the wisdom of God.)Tj
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( The nakedness of woman is the work of God.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( The tygers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( Damn. braces: Bless relaxes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( Exuberance is beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( Sooner murder an infant in its cradle than nurse unacted desires.)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( Truth can never be told so as to be understood, and not be believed.\
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221Proverbs of Hell\222\
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( How do you know but every bird that cuts the airy way)Tj
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( Is an immense world of delight, closed by your senses five?)Tj
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221A Memorable Fancy\
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( He replied: \221All Poets believe that it does, and in ages of imagi\
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221A Memorable Fancy\
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( If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221A Memorable Fancy\
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( I was in a printing house in Hell, and saw the method in which knowl\
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(\221The Marriage of Heaven and Hell\222 \(1790-3\) \221A Memorable Fancy\
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( In England\222s green and pleasant land.)Tj
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( Mock on mock on Voltaire Rousseau)Tj
T*
( Mock on mock on \222tis all in vain)Tj
T*
( You throw the sand against the wind)Tj
T*
( And the wind blows it back again.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 7)Tj
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( Of H\227\222s birth this was the happy lot)Tj
T*
( His mother on his father him begot.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 27)Tj
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T*
( O! Mr Cr[omek] how do ye do.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 29)Tj
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( He has observed the golden rule)Tj
T*
( Till he\222s become the golden fool.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p.30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.50456 Tm
( To forgive enemies H\227does pretend)Tj
T*
( Who never in his life forgave a friend.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 34)Tj
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( The errors of a wise man make your rule)Tj
T*
( Rather than the perfections of a fool.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 42)Tj
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( This is not done by jostling in the street.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 43)Tj
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( He who binds to himself a joy)Tj
T*
( Doth the winged life destroy)Tj
T*
( But he who kisses the joy as it flies)Tj
T*
( Lives in Eternity\222s sunrise.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 99 \221Several Questions Answered\222\227\223He \
who binds to himself a joy\224)Tj
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( What is it men in women do require)Tj
T*
( The lineaments of gratified desire)Tj
T*
( What is it women do in men require)Tj
T*
( The lineaments of gratified desire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 99 \221Several Questions Answered\222\227\223Wha\
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15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( The sword sung on the barren heath)Tj
T*
( The sickle in the fruitful field)Tj
T*
( The sword he sung a song of death,)Tj
T*
( But could not make the sickle yield.)Tj
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(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 105)Tj
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( Abstinence sows sand all over)Tj
T*
( The ruddy limbs and flaming hair)Tj
T*
( But Desire gratified)Tj
T*
( Plants fruits of life and beauty there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Never pain to tell thy love)Tj
T*
( Love that never told can be)Tj
T*
( For the gentle wind does move)Tj
T*
( Silently, invisibly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 115)Tj
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( Soon as she was gone from me)Tj
T*
( A traveller came by)Tj
T*
( Silently, invisibly)Tj
T*
( O was no deny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221MS Note-Book\222 p. 115)Tj
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( Piping down the valleys wild)Tj
T*
( Piping songs of pleasant glee)Tj
T*
( On a cloud I saw a child.)Tj
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( Pipe a song about a Lamb;)Tj
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T*
( Piper pipe that song again\227)Tj
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T*
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T*
( So your chimneys I sweep and in soot I sleep.)Tj
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(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221The Chimney Sweeper\222)Tj
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( To Mercy Pity Peace and Love,)Tj
T*
( All pray in their distress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221The Divine Image\222)Tj
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( For Mercy has a human heart)Tj
T*
( Pity a human face:)Tj
T*
( And Love, the human form divine,)Tj
T*
( And Peace, the human dress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221The Divine Image\222)Tj
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( Then cherish pity, lest you drive an angel from your door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221Holy Thursday\222)Tj
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( Little Lamb who made thee)Tj
T*
( Dost thou know who made thee)Tj
T*
( Gave thee life and bid thee feed.)Tj
T*
( By the stream and o\222er the mead;)Tj
T*
( Gave thee clothing of delight,)Tj
T*
( Softest clothing woolly bright;)Tj
T*
( Gave thee such a tender voice,)Tj
T*
( Making all the vales rejoice!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221The Lamb\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( My mother bore me in the southern wild,)Tj
T*
( And I am black, but O! my soul is white;)Tj
T*
( White as an angel is the English child:)Tj
T*
( But I am black as if bereaved of light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221The Little Black Boy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( When the voices of children are heard on the green)Tj
T*
( And laughing is heard on the hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221Nurse\222s Song\222)Tj
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( Can I see another\222s woe,)Tj
T*
( And not be in sorrow too.)Tj
T*
( Can I see another\222s grief,)Tj
T*
( And not seek for kind relief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Songs of Innocence\222 \(1789\) \221On Another\222s Sorrow\222)Tj
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( Hear the voice of the Bard!)Tj
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(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) introduction)Tj
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( Who countest the steps of the Sun;)Tj
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(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221Ah, Sun-flower!\222)Tj
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( Love seeketh not itself to please,)Tj
T*
( Nor for itself hath any care;)Tj
T*
( But for another gives its ease,)Tj
T*
( And builds a Heaven in Hell\222s despair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Clod and the Pebble\222)Tj
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( Love seeketh only Self to please,)Tj
T*
( To bind another to its delight,)Tj
T*
( Joys in another\222s loss of ease,)Tj
T*
( And builds a Hell in Heaven\222s despite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Clod and the Pebble\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( My mother groaned! my father wept.)Tj
T*
( Into the dangerous world I leapt:)Tj
T*
( Helpless, naked, piping loud;)Tj
T*
( Like a fiend hid in a cloud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221Infant Sorrow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Children of the future age,)Tj
T*
( Reading this indignant page:)Tj
T*
( Know that in a former time,)Tj
T*
( Love! sweet love! was thought a crime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221A Little Girl Lost\222)Tj
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( Then the Parson might preach, and drink, and sing.)Tj
T*
( And we\222d be as happy as birds in the spring:)Tj
T*
( And modest dame Lurch, who is always at church,)Tj
T*
( Would not have bandy children nor fasting nor birch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Little Vagabond\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( I was angry with my friend;)Tj
T*
( I told my wrath, my wrath did end.)Tj
T*
( I was angry with my foe:)Tj
T*
( I told it not, my wrath did grow.)Tj
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T*
( Does thy life destroy.)Tj
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T*
( In the forests of the night;)Tj
T*
( What immortal hand or eye,)Tj
T*
( Could frame thy fearful symmetry?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Tiger\222)Tj
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( What the hand, dare seize the fire?)Tj
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T*
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T*
( What dread hand? and what dread feet?)Tj
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(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Tiger\222)Tj
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T*
( And watered heaven with their tears:)Tj
T*
( Did he smile his work to see?)Tj
T*
( Did he who made the Lamb make thee?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.67047 Tm
(\221Songs of Experience\222 \(1794\) \221The Tiger\222)Tj
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( Cruelty has a human heart,)Tj
T*
( And Jealousy a human face;)Tj
T*
( Terror the human form divine,)Tj
T*
( And Secrecy the human dress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.92047 Tm
(\221A Divine Image\222; etched but not included in \221Songs of Experien\
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( Vision or Imagination is a Representation of what Eternally Exists, \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(\221A Vision of the Last Judgement\222 \(1810\) in \221MS Note-Book\222 \
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( What it will be questioned when the sun rises do you not see a round\
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T*
(a guinea O no no I see an innumerable company of the heavenly host cryin\
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T*
(the Lord God Almighty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221A Vision of the Last Judgement\222 \(1810\) in \221MS Note-Book\222 \
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( I\222ve gotten a rock, I\222ve gotten a reel,)Tj
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T*
( How the weary, weary warl goes round.)Tj
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(\221I\222ve Gotten a Rock, I\222ve Gotten a Reel\222 l. 1)Tj
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T*
( Or find the wood cut where we sauntered a-Maying,\227)Tj
T*
( If the yew-seat\222s away, or the ivy\222s a-wanting,)Tj
T*
( We hate the fine lawn and the new-fashioned planting.)Tj
T*
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T*
( If it tears up one record of blissful old times.)Tj
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(\221When Home We Return\222 l. 7)Tj
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(\221The Wilder Shores of Love\222 \(1954\) pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
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( 2.135 Karen Blixen)Tj
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( Hold the fort, for I am coming.)Tj
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T*
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T*
(pretty much all he knew of French.)Tj
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(In Philip Henry Stanhope \221Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wel\
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T*
(November 1840 \(in a letter to W. Mudford, 8 June 1816, Wellington had s\
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T*
(Genappe; see E. Walford \(compiler\) \221The Words of Wellington\222 \(1\
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T*
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T*
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(\221Midnight Skaters\222 \(1925\))Tj
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T*
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T*
( His health, his honour and his quality taken.)Tj
T*
( This is not what we were formerly told.)Tj
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(\221Report on Experience\222 \(1929\))Tj
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T*
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(\221The Resignation\222 \(1928\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.139 Wilfrid Scawen Blunt 1840-1922)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
(show.)Tj
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(\221My Diaries\222 \(1920\) 15 November 1910)Tj
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( 2.140 Ronald Blythe 1922\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(\221The Age of Illusion\222 \(1963\) ch. 12)Tj
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( An industrial worker would sooner have a \2435 note but a countryman\
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(\221Akenfield\222 \(1969\) ch. 5)Tj
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( 2.141 Boethius \(Anicius Manlius Severinus\) c.476-524)Tj
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( They are provident instead,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Content in the tight hot cell of their hearts)Tj
T*
( To eat dusty bread.)Tj
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(\221Women\222 \(1923\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 2.143 John B. Bogart 1848-1921)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( When a dog bites a man, that is not news, because it happens so ofte\
n. But if a man bites a dog, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that is news.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(In F. M. O\222Brien \221The Story of the [New York] Sun\222 \(1918\) ch.\
10 \(often attributed to Charles A. Dana\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 581.2124 Tm
( 2.144 Niels Bohr 1885-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One of the favourite maxims of my father was the distinction between\
the two sorts of truths, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(profound truths recognized by the fact that the opposite is also a profo\
und truth, in contrast to )Tj
T*
(trivialities where opposites are obviously absurd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 507.67047 Tm
(In S. Rozental \221Niels Bohr\222 \(1967\) p. 328)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 475.4624 Tm
( 2.145 Nicolas Boileau 1636-1711)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Enfin Malherbe vint, et, le premier en France,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fit sentir dans les vers une juste cadence.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( At last came Malherbe, and, first ever in France,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Made a proper flow felt in verse.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221L\222Art po\350tique\222 canto 1, l. 131)Tj
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( Un sot trouve toujours un plus sot qui l\222admire.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A fool can always find a greater fool to admire him.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221L\222Art po\350tique\222 canto 1, l. 232)Tj
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( Qu\222en un lieu, qu\222en un jour, un seul fait accompli)Tj
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( Tienne jusqu\222\341 la fin le th\350\342tre rempli.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let a single completed action, all in one place, all in one day, kee\
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(end of your play.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221L\222Art po\350tique\222 canto 3, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Si j\222\350cris quatre mots, j\222en effacerai trois.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Of every four words I write, I strike out three.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(\221Satire \(2\). A M. Moli\351re\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 136.4624 Tm
( 2.146 Alan Bold 1943\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Scotland, land of the omnipotent No.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221A Memory of Death\222 \(1969\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 66.7124 Tm
( 2.147 Henry St John, Viscount Bolingbroke 1678-1751)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( They make truth serve as a stalking-horse to error.)Tj
ET
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(\221Letters on the Study and Use of History\222 \(1752\) No. 4, pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( They [Thucydides and Xenophon] maintained the dignity of history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Letters on the Study and Use of History\222 \(1752\) No. 5, pt. 2)Tj
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( Nations, like men, have their infancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221On the Study of History\222 Letter 5 in \221Works\222 \(1809\) vol. \
3, p. 414)Tj
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( Truth lies within a little and certain compass, but error is immense\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections upon Exile\222 \(1716\))Tj
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( What a world is this, and how does fortune banter us!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(Letter to Jonathan Swift, 3 August 1714, in Harold Williams \(ed.\) \221\
Correspondence of Jonathan Swift\222 \(1963\) )Tj
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(vol. 2, p. 101)Tj
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( The great mistake is that of looking upon men as virtuous, or thinki\
ng that they can be made so )Tj
T*
(by laws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(Comment \(c.1728\), in Joseph Spence \221Observations, Anecdotes, and Ch\
aracters\222 \(1820, ed. J. M. Osborn, )Tj
T*
(1966\) Anecdote 882)Tj
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( The greatest art of a politician is to render vice serviceable to th\
e cause of virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(Comment \(c.1728\), in Joseph Spence \221Observations, Anecdotes, and Ch\
aracters\222 \(1820, ed. J. M. Osborn, )Tj
T*
(1966\) Anecdote 882)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 439.4624 Tm
( 2.148 Robert Bolt 1924\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Morality\222s not practical. Morality\222s a gesture. A complicated \
gesture learned from books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.92047 Tm
(\221A Man for All Seasons\222 \(1960\) act 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 381.00456 Tm
( [It] profits a man nothing to give his soul for the whole world...Bu\
t for)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wales\227!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.17047 Tm
(\221A Man for All Seasons\222 \(1960\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.149 Andrew Bonar Law 1858-1923)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If, therefore, war should ever come between these two countries [Gre\
at Britain and Germany], )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which Heaven forbid! it will not, I think, be due to irresistible natura\
l laws; it will be due to the )Tj
T*
(want of human wisdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 27 Nov. 1911, col. 167)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( If I am a great man, then all great men are frauds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(In Lord Beaverbrook \221Politicians and the War\222 \(1932\) vol. 2, ch.\
4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 172.4624 Tm
( 2.150 Carrie Jacobs Bond 1862-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you come to the end of a perfect day,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And you sit alone with your thought,)Tj
T*
( While the chimes ring out with a carol gay)Tj
T*
( For the joy that the day has brought,)Tj
T*
( Do you think what the end of a perfect day)Tj
T*
( Can mean to a tired heart,)Tj
T*
( When the sun goes down with a flaming ray,)Tj
ET
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( And the dear friends have to part?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Perfect Day\222 \(1910 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.151 Sir David Bone 1874-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s \221Damn you, Jack\227I\222m all right!\222 with you chaps.)Tj
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(\221Brassbounder\222 \(1910\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.152 Dietrich Bonhoeffer 1906-45)Tj
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T*
( Es ist der Vorzug und das Wesen der Starken, dass sie die grossen En\
tscheidungsfragen stellen )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(und zu ihnen klar Stellung nehmen k\366nnen. Die Schwachen m\374ssen sic\
h immer zwischen )Tj
T*
(Alternativen entscheiden, die nicht die ihren sind.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is the nature, and the advantage, of strong people that they can \
bring out the crucial questions )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and form a clear opinion about them. The weak always have to decide betw\
een alternatives that )Tj
T*
(are not their own.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Ein paar Gedanken \374ber Verschiedenes\222 in \221Widerstand und Er\
gebung\222 \(Resistance and Submission, 1951\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( Jesus nur \221f\374r andere da ist.\222...Gott in Menschengestalt! .\
..nicht die griechische Gott-)Tj
T*
(Menschgestalt des \221Menschen an sich\222, sondern \221der Mensch f\374\
r andere\222, darum der Gekreuzigte.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Jesus is there only for others.... God in human form! not...in the G\
reek divine-human form of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221man in himself\222, but \221the man for others\222, and therefore th\
e crucified.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Entwurf einer Arbeit\222 in \221Widerstand und Ergebung\222 \(Resist\
ance and Submission, 1951\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 377.2124 Tm
( 2.153 General William Booth 1829-1912)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Submerged Tenth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221In Darkest England\222 \(1890\) pt. 1, title of ch. 2, in which Boot\
h defines them as \221three million men, women, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and children, a vast despairing multitude in a condition nominally free,\
but really enslaved\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 292.4624 Tm
( 2.154 Frances Boothby fl. 1670)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m hither come, but what d\222ye think to say?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A woman\222s pen presents you with a play:)Tj
T*
( Who smiling told me I\222d be sure to see)Tj
T*
( That once confirm\222d, the house would empty be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.92047 Tm
(\221Marcelia\222 \(1670\) Prologue)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 168.7124 Tm
( 2.155 James H. Boren 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Guidelines for bureaucrats: \(1\) When in charge, ponder. \(2\) When\
in trouble, delegate. \(3\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(When in doubt, mumble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 8 November 1970, p. 45)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 80.9624 Tm
( 2.156 Jorge Luis Borges 1899-1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( El original es infiel a la traducci\363n.)Tj
ET
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( The original is unfaithful to the translation.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On Henley\222s translation, in \221Sobre el \221Vathek\222de William Bec\
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15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Para uno de esos gn\363sticos, el visible universo era una ilusi\363\
n \363 \(mas precisamente\) un )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sofisma. Los espejos y la paternidad son abominables porque lo multiplic\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( For one of those gnostics, the visible universe was an illusion or, \
more precisely, a sophism. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Mirrors and fatherhood are abominable because they multiply it and exten\
d it.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Tl\366n, Uqbar, Orbis, Tertius\222 \(1941\) in \221Obras Completas\222\
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( The Falklands thing was a fight between two bald men over a comb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.92047 Tm
(In \221Time\222 14 February 1983)Tj
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( 2.157 Cesare Borgia 1476-1507)Tj
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( Aut Caesar, aut nihil.)Tj
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( Caesar or nothing.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.42047 Tm
(Motto inscribed on his sword. John Leslie Garner \221Caesar Borgia\222 \(\
1912\) p. 309)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 482.2124 Tm
( 2.158 George Borrow 1803-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are no countries in the world less known by the British than t\
hese selfsame British )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Islands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Lavengro\222 \(1851\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( There\222s night and day, brother, both sweet things; sun, moon, and\
stars, brother, all sweet )Tj
T*
(things: there\222s likewise a wind on the heath. Life is very sweet, bro\
ther; who would wish to die?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Lavengro\222 \(1851\) ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( Let no one sneer at the bruisers of England\227what were the gladiat\
ors of Rome, or the bull-)Tj
T*
(fighters of Spain, in its palmiest days, compared to England\222s bruise\
rs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Lavengro\222 \(1851\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( A losing trade, I assure you, sir: literature is a drug.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Lavengro\222 \(1851\) ch. 30.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Youth will be served, every dog has his day, and mine has been a fin\
e one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Lavengro\222 \(1851\) ch. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Fear God, and take your own part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221The Romany Rye\222 \(1857\) ch. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.159 Mar\350chal Pierre Bosquet 1810-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( C\222est magnifique, mais ce n\222est pas la guerre.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( It is magnificent, but it is not war.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(On the charge of the Light Brigade at Balaclava, 25 October 1854)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 83.2124 Tm
( 2.160 John Collins Bossidy 1860-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And this is good old Boston,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The home of the bean and the cod,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Where the Lowells talk to the Cabots)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the Cabots talk only to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Verse spoken at Holy Cross College alumni dinner in Boston, Massachusett\
s, 1910, in \221Springfield Sunday )Tj
T*
(Republican\222 14 December 1924)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 671.9624 Tm
( 2.161 Jacques-B\350nigne Bossuet 1627-1704)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222Angleterre, ah, la perfide Angleterre, que le rempart de ses me\
rs rendoit inaccessible aux )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Romains, la foi du Sauveur y est abord\350e.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( England, ah, faithless England, which the protection afforded by its\
seas rendered inaccessible )Tj
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(to the Romans, the faith of the Saviour spread even there.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Premier Sermon pour La F\352te de la Circoncision de Notre Seigneur\222\
.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 2.162 James Boswell 1740-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We may be in some degree whatever character we choose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.92047 Tm
(\221Boswell\222s London Journal\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1950\) 21 Novemb\
er 1762)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 486.00456 Tm
( I think there is a blossom about me of something more distinguished \
than the generality of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221Boswell\222s London Journal\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1950\) 20 Januar\
y 1763)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( I am, I flatter myself, completely a citizen of the world. In my tra\
vels through Holland, )Tj
T*
(Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Corsica, France, I never felt myself from h\
ome.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(\221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1936\) 14 \
August 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 376.50456 Tm
( We [Boswell and Johnson] are both Tories; both convinced of the util\
ity of monarchical )Tj
T*
(power, and both lovers of that reverence and affection for a sovereign w\
hich constitute loyalty, a )Tj
T*
(principle which I take to be absolutely extinguished in Britain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1936\) 13 \
September 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( A page of my Journal is like a cake of portable soup. A little may b\
e diffused into a )Tj
T*
(considerable portion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1936\) 13 \
September 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( I have never yet exerted ambition in rising in the state. But sure I\
am, no man has made his )Tj
T*
(way better to the best company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(\221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(ed. F. A. Pottle, 1936\) 16 \
September 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 194.25456 Tm
( Johnson: Well, we had a good talk.)Tj
T*
( Boswell: Yes, Sir; you tossed and gored several persons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) vol. 2, p. 66 \(Summer 1\
768\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( A man, indeed, is not genteel when he gets drunk; but most vices may\
be committed very )Tj
T*
(genteelly: a man may debauch his friend\222s wife genteelly: he may chea\
t at cards genteelly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) vol. 2, p. 340 \(6 April\
1775\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 73.4624 Tm
( 2.163 Gordon Bottomley 1874-1948)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Your worship is your furnaces,)Tj
ET
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( Which, like old idols, lost obscenes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Have molten bowels; your vision is)Tj
T*
( Machines for making more machines.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221To Ironfounders and Others\222 \(1912\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 2.164 Horatio Bottomley 1860-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No, reaping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(Reply to a prison visitor who asked if he were sewing, in S. T. Felstead\
\221Horatio Bottomley\222 \(1936\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( Gentlemen: I have not had your advantages. What poor education I hav\
e received has been )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gained in the University of Life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Speech at the Oxford Union, 2 December 1920, in Beverley Nichols \22125\222\
\(1926\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 2.165 Dion Boucicault \(Dionysius Lardner Boursiquot 1820-90\) 1820-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Men talk of killing time, while time quietly kills them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.92047 Tm
(\221London Assurance\222 \(1841\) act 2, sc. 1.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 2.166 Antoine Boulay de la Meurthe 1761-1840)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( C\222est pire qu\222un crime, c\222est une faute.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is worse than a crime, it is a blunder.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(On hearing of the execution of the Duc d\222Enghien, 1804, in C.-A. Sain\
te-Beuve \221Nouveaux Lundis\222 \(1870\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vol. 12, p. 52)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 368.2124 Tm
( 2.167 Sir Harold Edwin Boulton 1859-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When Adam and Eve were dispossessed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of the garden hard by Heaven,)Tj
T*
( They planted another one down in the west,)Tj
T*
( \222Twas Devon, glorious Devon!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.67047 Tm
(\221Glorious Devon\222 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.75456 Tm
( Speed, bonnie boat, like a bird on the wing,)Tj
T*
( \221Onward,\222 the sailors cry;)Tj
T*
( Carry the lad that\222s born to be king,)Tj
T*
( Over the sea to Skye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.92047 Tm
(\221Skye Boat Song\222 \(1908\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 153.7124 Tm
( 2.168 Matthew Boulton 1728-1809)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I sell here, Sir, what all the world desires to have\227power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(Speaking to Boswell of his engineering works, in James Boswell \221The L\
ife of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vol. 2, p. 459 \(22 March 1776\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 68.9624 Tm
( 2.169 F. W. Bourdillon 1852-1921)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The night has a thousand eyes,)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( And the day but one;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yet the light of the bright world dies,)Tj
T*
( With the dying sun.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The mind has a thousand eyes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the heart but one;)Tj
T*
( Yet the light of a whole life dies,)Tj
T*
( When love is done.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.42047 Tm
(\221Among the Flowers\222 \(1878\) \221Light\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 593.2124 Tm
( 2.170 Lord Bowen 1835-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The rain, it raineth on the just)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And also on the unjust fella:)Tj
T*
( But chiefly on the just, because)Tj
T*
( The unjust steals the just\222s umbrella.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(In Walter Sichel \221Sands of Time\222 \(1923\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( When I hear of an \221equity\222 in a case like this, I am reminded \
of a blind man in a dark room\227)Tj
T*
(looking for a black hat\227which isn\222t there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(In John Alderson Foote \221Pie-Powder\222 \(1911\) p. 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 414.7124 Tm
( 2.171 E. E. Bowen 1836-1901)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Forty years on, when afar and asunder)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Parted are those who are singing to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221Forty Years On\222 \(Harrow School Song, published 1886\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Follow up! Follow up! Follow up! Follow up! Follow up!)Tj
T*
( Till the field ring again and again,)Tj
T*
( With the tramp of the twenty-two men,)Tj
T*
( Follow up!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.42047 Tm
(\221Forty Years On\222 \(Harrow School Song, published 1886\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.2124 Tm
( 2.172 Elizabeth Bowen 1899-1973)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The innocent are so few that two of them seldom meet\227when they do\
, their victims lie strewn )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(around.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221The Death of the Heart\222 \(1938\) pt. 1, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( It is about five o\222clock in an evening that the first hour of spr\
ing strikes\227autumn arrives in the )Tj
T*
(early morning, but spring at the close of a winter day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221The Death of the Heart\222 \(1938\) pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( Some people are moulded by their admirations, others by their hostil\
ities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221The Death of the Heart\222 \(1938\) pt. 2, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( There is no end to the violations committed by children on children,\
quietly talking alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(\221The House in Paris\222 \(1935\) pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
ET
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( Fate is not an eagle, it creeps like a rat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The House in Paris\222 \(1935\) pt. 2, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Jealousy is no more than feeling alone against smiling enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The House in Paris\222 \(1935\) pt. 2, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( It is not only our fate but our business to lose innocence, and once\
we have lost that, it is futile )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to attempt a picnic in Eden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Out of a Book\222 in \221Orion III\222 \(ed. Rosamund Lehmann et al,\
1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( A high altar on the move.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Describing Edith Sitwell, in V. Glendinning \221Edith Sitwell\222 \(1981\
\) ch. 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 2.173 David Bowie \(David Jones\) 1947\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ground control to Major Tom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(\221Space Oddity\222 \(1969 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 506.9624 Tm
( 2.174 William Lisle Bowles 1762-1850)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The cause of Freedom is the cause of God!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221A Poetical Address to the Right Honourable Edmund Burke\222 \(1791\)\
l. 78)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 437.2124 Tm
( 2.175 Sir Maurice Bowra 1898-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I\222m a man more dined against than dining.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(In John Betjeman \221Summoned by Bells\222 \(1960\) ch. 9.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.75456 Tm
( My dear fellow, buggers can\222t be choosers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(On being told he could not marry anyone as plain as his fianc\350e, in H\
ugh Lloyd-Jones \221Maurice Bowra: a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Celebration\222 \(1974\) p. 150 \(possibly apocryphal\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 315.7124 Tm
( 2.176 Lord Brabazon \(Baron Brabazon of Tara\) 1884-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you cannot say what you are going to say in twenty minutes you ou\
ght to go away and write )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a book about it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard \(Lords\)\222 21 June 1955, col. 207)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 227.9624 Tm
( 2.177 Charles Brackett 1892-1969, Billy Wilder 1906-, and D. M. Marshma\
n Jr.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Joe Gillis: You used to be in pictures. You used to be big. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Norma Desmond: I am big. It\222s the pictures that got small.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Sunset Boulevard\222 \(1950 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 140.2124 Tm
( 2.178 Charles Brackett 1892-1969, Billy Wilder 1906-, and Walter Reisch\
1903-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ninotchka: Why should you carry other people\222s bags?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Porter: Well, that\222s my business, Madame.)Tj
T*
( Ninotchka: That\222s no business. That\222s social injustice. )Tj
T*
( Porter: That depends on the tip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221Ninotchka\222 \(1939 film\))Tj
ET
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( 2.179 E. E. Bradford 1860-1944)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I walked with Will through bracken turning brown,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pale yellow, orange, dun and golden-red.)Tj
T*
( \221God made the country and man made the town\227)Tj
T*
( And woman made Society,\222 he said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 654.92047 Tm
(\221Society\222.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 622.7124 Tm
( 2.180 John Bradford c.1510-55)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But for the grace of God there goes John Bradford.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 585.17047 Tm
(On seeing a group of criminals being led to their execution, in \221Dict\
ionary of National Biography\222 \(often )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(echoed in the form \221There but for the grace of God go I\222\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 537.9624 Tm
( 2.181 F. H. Bradley \(Francis Herbert Bradley\) 1846-1924)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Metaphysics is the finding of bad reasons for what we believe upon i\
nstinct; but to find these )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reasons is no less an instinct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.42047 Tm
(\221Appearance and Reality\222 \(1893\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.50456 Tm
( The world is the best of all possible worlds, and everything in it i\
s a necessary evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(\221Appearance and Reality\222 \(1893\) preface \(on optimism\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( Where everything is bad it must be good to know the worst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.92047 Tm
(\221Appearance and Reality\222 \(1893\) preface \(on pessimism\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.00456 Tm
( That the glory of this world...is appearance leaves the world more g\
lorious, if we feel it is a )Tj
T*
(show of some fuller splendour; but the sensuous curtain is a deception..\
.if it hides some )Tj
T*
(colourless movement of atoms, some...unearthly ballet of bloodless categ\
ories.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.17047 Tm
(\221Principles of Logic\222 \(1883\) bk. 3, pt. 2, ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 303.9624 Tm
( 2.182 Omar Bradley 1893-1981)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on t\
he Mount.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.42047 Tm
(Speech on Armistice Day, 1948, in \221Collected Writings\222 \(1967\) vo\
l. 1, p. 588)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.50456 Tm
( The world has achieved brilliance without conscience. Ours is a worl\
d of unclear giants and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ethical infants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.67047 Tm
(Speech on Armistice Day, 1948, in \221Collected Writings\222 \(1967\) vo\
l. 1, p.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 179.4624 Tm
( 2.183 John Bradshaw 1602-59)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.92047 Tm
(Suppositious epitaph. Henry S. Randall \221The Life of Thomas Jefferson\222\
\(1865\) vol. 3, appendix 4, p. 585)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 109.7124 Tm
( 2.184 Anne Bradstreet c.1612-72)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I am obnoxious to each carping tongue,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who sayes my hand a needle better fits,)Tj
T*
( A poet\222s pen, all scorne, I should thus wrong;)Tj
ET
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( For such despight they cast on female wits:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If what I doe prove well, it won\222t advance,)Tj
T*
( They\222ll say it\222s stolne, or else, it was by chance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Prologue\222 \(1650\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Let Greeks be Greeks, and Women what they are,)Tj
T*
( Men have precedency, and still excel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Prologue\222 \(1650\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( This meane and unrefin\351d stuffe of mine,)Tj
T*
( Will make your glistering gold but more to shine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Prologue\222 \(1650\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 559.4624 Tm
( 2.185 Ernest Bramah \(Ernest Bramah Smith\) 1868-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is a mark of insincerity of purpose to spend one\222s time in loo\
king for the sacred Emperor in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the low-class tea-shops.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Wallet of Kai Lung\222 \(1900\) p. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( In his countenance this person read an expression of no-encouragemen\
t towards his venture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221The Wallet of Kai Lung\222 \(1900\) p. 224)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( The whole narrative is permeated with the odour of joss-sticks and h\
onourable high-)Tj
T*
(mindedness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221The Wallet of Kai Lung\222 \(1900\) p. 330)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.2124 Tm
( 2.186 James Bramston c.1694-1744)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What\222s not destroyed by Time\222s devouring hand?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where\222s Troy, and where\222s the Maypole in the Strand?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221The Art of Politics\222 \(1729\) l. 71)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 292.4624 Tm
( 2.187 Georges Braque 1882-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222Art est fait pour troubler, la Science rassure.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Art is meant to disturb, science reassures.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Le Jour et la nuit: Cahiers 1917-52\222 p. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( La v\350rit\350 existe; on n\222invente que le mensonge.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Truth exists; only lies are invented.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Le Jour et la nuit: Cahiers 1917-52\222 p. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 142.4624 Tm
( 2.188 Richard Brathwaite c.1588-1673)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To Banbury came I, O profane one!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where I saw a Puritane-one)Tj
T*
( Hanging of his cat on Monday)Tj
T*
( For killing of a mouse on Sunday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221Barnabee\222s Journal\222 \(1638\) pt. 1, st. 4)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 748.7124 Tm
( 2.189 Irving Brecher 1914\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222ll bet your father spent the first year of your life throwing r\
ocks at the stork.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 711.17047 Tm
(\221At the Circus\222 \(Marx Brothers film, 1939\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 690.25456 Tm
( Time wounds all heals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 674.42047 Tm
(\221Go West\222 \(Marx Brothers film, 1940\); \221heels\222 may well hav\
e been intended, but is not given thus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 642.2124 Tm
( 2.190 Bertolt Brecht 1898-1956)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo Ui.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The resistible rise of Arturo Ui.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.92047 Tm
(Title of play \(1941\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 562.00456 Tm
( Und der Haifisch, der hat Z\344hne Und die tr\344gt er im Gesicht Un\
d Macheath, der hat ein Messer )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Doch das Messer sieht man nicht.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Oh, the shark has pretty teeth, dear, And he shows them pearly white\
.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Just a jack-knife has Macheath, dear And he keeps it out of sight.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.42047 Tm
(\221Die Dreigroschenoper\222 \(1928\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.50456 Tm
( Erst kommt das Fressen, dann kommt die Moral.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Food comes first, then morals.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.92047 Tm
(\221Die Dreigroschenoper\222 \(1928\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.00456 Tm
( Was ist ein Einbruch in eine Bank gegen die Gr\374ndung einer Bank?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( What is robbing a bank compared with founding a bank?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(\221Die Dreigroschenoper\222 \(1928\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( Andrea: Ungl\374cklich das Land, das keine Helden hat!...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Galilei: Nein. Ungl\374cklich das Land, das Helden n\366tig hat.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Andrea: Unhappy the land that has no heroes!...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Galileo: No. Unhappy the land that needs heroes.)Tj
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(\221Leben des Galilei\222 \(1939\) sc. 13)Tj
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( Man merkts, hier ist zu lang kein Krieg gewesen. Wo soll da Moral he\
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T*
(Frieden, das ist nur Schlamperei, erst der Krieg schafft Ordnung.)Tj
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( One observes, they have gone too long without a war here. What is th\
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(\221Mutter Courage\222 \(1939\) sc. 1)Tj
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( Weil ich ihm nicht trau, wir sind befreundet.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Because I don\222t trust him, we are friends.)Tj
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(\221Mutter Courage\222 \(1939\) sc. 3)Tj
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( Die sch\366nsten Pl\344n sind schon zuschanden geworden durch die Kl\
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( The finest plans are always ruined by the littleness of those who ou\
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(the Emperor himself can actually do nothing.)Tj
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( Der Krieg findet immer einen Ausweg.)Tj
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( War always finds a way.)Tj
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(\221Mutter Courage\222 \(1939\) sc. 6)Tj
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( Sagen Sie mir nicht, dass Friede ausgebrochen ist, wo ich eben neue \
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( Don\222t tell me peace has broken out, when I\222ve just bought some\
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(\221Mutter Courage\222 \(1939\) sc. 8)Tj
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( 2.191 Gerald Brenan 1894\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Those who have some means think that the most important thing in the\
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0 -1.2 TD
(know that it is money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 550.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts in a Dry Season\222 \(1978\) p. 22.)Tj
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( Religions are kept alive by heresies, which are really sudden explos\
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T*
(religions do not produce them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts in a Dry Season\222 \(1978\) p. 45)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.192 Nicholas Breton c.1545-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We rise with the lark and go to bed with the lamb.)Tj
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(\221The Court and Country\222 \(1618\) para. 8)Tj
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( I wish my deadly foe, no worse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Than want of friends, and empty purse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221A Farewell to Town\222 \(1577\))Tj
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( In the merry month of May,)Tj
T*
( In a morn by break of day,)Tj
T*
( Forth I walked by the wood side,)Tj
T*
( Whenas May was in his pride:)Tj
T*
( There I spied all alone,)Tj
T*
( Phillida and Coridon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Phillida and Coridon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Come little babe, come silly soul,)Tj
T*
( Thy father\222s shame, thy mother\222s grief,)Tj
T*
( Born as I doubt to all our dole,)Tj
T*
( And to thy self unhappy chief:)Tj
T*
( Sing lullaby and lap it warm,)Tj
T*
( Poor soul that thinks no creature harm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221A Sweet Lullaby\222)Tj
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( 2.193 Aristide Briand 1862-1932)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Les hautes parties contractantes d\350clarent solennellement...qu\222\
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(mutuelles...le r\351glement ou la solution de tous les diff\350rends ou \
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(que par des moyens pacifiques.)Tj
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( The high contracting powers solemnly declare...that they condemn rec\
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T*
(solution of all disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever \
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T*
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(Draft, 20 June 1927, which became part of the Kellogg Pact, 1928, in \221\
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( 2.194 Robert Bridges 1844-1930)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
( In large white flakes falling on the city brown,)Tj
T*
( Stealthily and perpetually settling and loosely lying,)Tj
T*
( Hushing the latest traffic of the drowsy town.)Tj
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(\221London Snow\222 \(1890\))Tj
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( All night it fell, and when full inches seven)Tj
T*
( It lay in the depth of its uncompacted lightness,)Tj
T*
( The clouds blew off from a high and frosty heaven;)Tj
T*
( And all woke earlier for the unaccustomed brightness)Tj
T*
( Of the winter dawning, the strange unheavenly glare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221London Snow\222 \(1890\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( So sweet love seemed that April morn,)Tj
T*
( When first we kissed beside the thorn,)Tj
T*
( So strangely sweet, it was not strange)Tj
T*
( We thought that love could never change.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( But I can tell\227let truth be told\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That love will change in growing old;)Tj
T*
( Though day by day is nought to see,)Tj
T*
( So delicate his motions be.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221So sweet love seemed\222 \(1894\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 194.2124 Tm
( 2.195 John Bright 1811-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The angel of death has been abroad throughout the land; you may almo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(his wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(Referring to the effects of the war in the Crimea, in \221Hansard\222, 2\
3 February 1855, col. 1761)Tj
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( I am for \221Peace, retrenchment, and reform\222, the watchword of t\
he great Liberal party 30 years )Tj
T*
(ago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(Speech at Birmingham, 28 April 1859, in \221The Times\222 29 April 1859)Tj
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( My opinion is that the Northern States will manage somehow to muddle\
through.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(Said during the American Civil War, in Justin McCarthy \221Reminiscences\
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( England is the mother of Parliaments.)Tj
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(Speech at Birmingham, 18 January 1865, in \221The Times\222 19 January 1\
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( The right hon Gentleman...has retired into what may be called his po\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222, 13 March 1866, col. 219)Tj
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( This party of two is like the Scotch terrier that was so covered wit\
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T*
(which was the head and which was the tail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222, 13 March 1866, col. 220)Tj
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( Force is not a remedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Birmingham Junior Liberal Club, 16 November 1880, in \221T\
he Times\222 17 November 1880)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The knowledge of the ancient languages is mainly a luxury.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Letter in \221Pall Mall Gazette\222, 30 November 1886)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.196 Anthelme Brillat-Savarin 1755-1826)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Dis-moi ce que tu manges, je te dirai ce que tu es.)Tj
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( Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what you are.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Physiologie du Go\373t\222 \(1825\) \221Aphorismes pour servir de pr\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.197 David Broder 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Anybody that wants the presidency so much that he\222ll spend two ye\
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0 -1.2 TD
(campaigning for it is not to be trusted with the office.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Washington Post\222 18 July 1973, p. A 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.198 Alexander Brome 1620-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have been in love, and in debt, and in drink,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This many and many a year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Other Poems\222 \(2nd ed., 1664\) pt. 1 \221The Mad Lover\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( Come, blessed peace, we once again implore,)Tj
T*
( And let our pains be less, or power more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Other Poems\222 \(1668\) \221The Riddle\222 \(written 1664\
\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 200.2124 Tm
( 2.199 Jacob Bronowski 1908-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The world can only be grasped by action, not by contemplation...The \
hand is the cutting edge )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.67047 Tm
(\221The Ascent of Man\222 \(1973\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.75456 Tm
( The essence of science: ask an impertinent question, and you are on \
the way to a pertinent )Tj
T*
(answer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221The Ascent of Man\222 \(1973\) ch. 4)Tj
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( The wish to hurt, the momentary intoxication with pain, is the looph\
ole through which the )Tj
T*
(pervert climbs into the minds of ordinary men.)Tj
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( 2.200 Anne Bront\353 1820-49)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Because the road is rough and long,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Shall we despise the skylark\222s song?)Tj
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(\221Views of Life\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.201 Charlotte Bront\353 1816-55)Tj
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( We wore a web in childhood,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A web of sunny air;)Tj
T*
( We dug a spring in infancy)Tj
T*
( Of water pure and fair;)Tj
T*
( We sowed in youth a mustard seed,)Tj
T*
( We cut an almond rod;)Tj
T*
( We are now grown up to riper age\227)Tj
T*
( Are they withered in the sod?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(\22119 December 1835\222)Tj
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( Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion.\
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T*
(assail the last. To pluck the mask from the face of the Pharisee, is not\
to lift an impious hand to )Tj
T*
(the Crown of Thorns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(\221Jane Eyre\222 \(2nd ed., 1848\) preface)Tj
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( Women are supposed to be very calm generally: but women feel just as\
men feel; they need )Tj
T*
(exercise for their faculties, and a field for their efforts as much as t\
heir brothers do; they suffer )Tj
T*
(from too rigid a restraint, too absolute a stagnation, precisely as men \
would suffer...it is )Tj
T*
(thoughtless to condemn them, or laugh at them, if they seek to do more t\
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T*
(pronounced necessary for their sex.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(\221Jane Eyre\222 \(1847\) ch. 12)Tj
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( As his curate, his comrade, all would be right...There would be rece\
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T*
(would be only mine, to which he never came; and sentiments growing there\
, fresh and sheltered, )Tj
T*
(which his austerity could never blight, nor his measured warrior-march t\
rample down. But as his )Tj
T*
(wife...forced to keep the fire of my nature continually low, to compel i\
t to burn inwardly and )Tj
T*
(never utter a cry...this would be unendurable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221Jane Eyre\222 \(1847\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.50456 Tm
( Reader, I married him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.67047 Tm
(\221Jane Eyre\222 \(1847\) ch. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.75456 Tm
( Of late years an abundant shower of curates has fallen upon the Nort\
h of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.92047 Tm
(\221Shirley\222 \(1849\) opening words)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.202 Emily Bront\353 1818-48)Tj
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( No coward soul is mine,)Tj
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( No trembler in the world\222s storm-troubled sphere:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I see Heaven\222s glories shine,)Tj
T*
( And faith shines equal, arming me from fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Last Lines\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Though earth and moon were gone)Tj
T*
( And suns and universes ceased to be)Tj
T*
( And thou wert left alone)Tj
T*
( Every existence would exist in thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Last Lines\222)Tj
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( Oh! dreadful is the check\227intense the agony\227)Tj
T*
( When the ear begins to hear, and the eye begins to see;)Tj
T*
( When the pulse begins to throb, the brain to think again;)Tj
T*
( The soul to feel the flesh, and the flesh to feel the chain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Prisoner\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Cold in the earth\227and fifteen wild Decembers,)Tj
T*
( From those brown hills, have melted into spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Remembrance\222 \(1846\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Sweet Love of youth, forgive, if I forget thee,)Tj
T*
( While the world\222s tide is bearing me along;)Tj
T*
( Other desires and other hopes beset me,)Tj
T*
( Hopes which obscure, but cannot do thee wrong!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Remembrance\222 \(1846\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( But when the days of golden dreams had perished,)Tj
T*
( And even Despair was powerless to destroy,)Tj
T*
( Then did I learn how existence could be cherished,)Tj
T*
( Strengthened, and fed without the aid of joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Remembrance\222 \(1846\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( If all else perished, and he remained, I should still continue to be\
; and if all else remained, and )Tj
T*
(he were annihilated, the universe would turn to a mighty stranger: I sho\
uld not seem a part of it. )Tj
T*
(My love for Linton is like the foliage in the woods; time will change it\
, I\222m well aware, as winter )Tj
T*
(changes the trees\227My love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks \
beneath:\227a source of little )Tj
T*
(visible delight, but necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Wuthering Heights\222 \(1847\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( I lingered round them, under that benign sky: watched the moths flut\
tering among the heath )Tj
T*
(and hare-bells; listened to the soft wind breathing through the grass; a\
nd wondered how any one )Tj
T*
(could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Wuthering Heights\222 \(1847\) closing words)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 69.7124 Tm
( 2.203 Patrick Bront\353 1777-1861)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No quailing, Mrs Gaskell! no drawing back!)Tj
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(Apropos her undertaking to write the life of Charlotte Bront\353, in her\
letter to Ellen Nussey, 24 July 1855, in J. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(A. V. Chapple and A. Pollard \(eds.\) \221The Letters of Mrs Gaskell\222\
\(1966\) Letter 257)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 2.204 Henry Brooke 1703-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For righteous monarchs,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Justly to judge, with their own eyes should see;)Tj
T*
( To rule o\222er freemen, should themselves be free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 634.42047 Tm
(\221Earl of Essex\222 \(performed 1750, published 1761\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 602.2124 Tm
( 2.205 Rupert Brooke 1887-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Blow out, you bugles, over the rich Dead!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There\222s none of these so lonely and poor of old,)Tj
T*
( But, dying, has made us rarer gifts than gold.)Tj
T*
( These laid the world away; poured out the red)Tj
T*
( Sweet wine of youth; gave up the years to be)Tj
T*
( Of work and joy, and that unhoped serene,)Tj
T*
( That men call age; and those that would have been,)Tj
T*
( Their sons, they gave, their immortality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 438.67047 Tm
(\221The Dead\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 417.75456 Tm
( Honour has come back, as a king, to earth,)Tj
T*
( And paid his subjects with a royal wage;)Tj
T*
( And Nobleness walks in our ways again;)Tj
T*
( And we have come into our heritage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.92047 Tm
(\221The Dead\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 327.00456 Tm
( The cool kindliness of sheets, that soon)Tj
T*
( Smooth away trouble; and the rough male kiss)Tj
T*
( Of blankets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.17047 Tm
(\221The Great Lover\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 254.25456 Tm
( Fish say, they have their stream and pond;)Tj
T*
( But is there anything beyond?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.42047 Tm
(\221Heaven\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.50456 Tm
( One may not doubt that, somehow, good)Tj
T*
( Shall come of water and of mud;)Tj
T*
( And sure, the reverent eye must see)Tj
T*
( A purpose in liquidity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Heaven\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Fat caterpillars drift around,)Tj
T*
( And Paradisal grubs are found;)Tj
T*
( Unfading moths, immortal flies,)Tj
T*
( And the worm that never dies.)Tj
ET
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( And in that Heaven of all their wish,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There shall be no more land, say fish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Heaven\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Just now the lilac is in bloom,)Tj
T*
( All before my little room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Unkempt about those hedges blows)Tj
T*
( An English unofficial rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Curates, long dust, will come and go)Tj
T*
( On lissom, clerical, printless toe;)Tj
T*
( And oft between the boughs is seen)Tj
T*
( The sly shade of a Rural Dean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( God! I will pack, and take a train,)Tj
T*
( And get me to England once again!)Tj
T*
( For England\222s the one land, I know,)Tj
T*
( Where men with Splendid Hearts may go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( For Cambridge people rarely smile,)Tj
T*
( Being urban, squat, and packed with guile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( They love the Good; they worship Truth;)Tj
T*
( They laugh uproariously in youth;)Tj
T*
( \(And when they get to feeling old,)Tj
T*
( They up and shoot themselves, I\222m told\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Stands the Church clock at ten to three?)Tj
T*
( And is there honey still for tea?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Vicarage, Grantchester\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Now, God be thanked Who has matched us with His hour,)Tj
T*
( And caught our youth, and wakened us from sleeping,)Tj
T*
( With hand made sure, clear eye, and sharpened power,)Tj
T*
( To turn, as swimmers into cleanness leaping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Peace\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Naught broken save this body, lost but breath;)Tj
T*
( Nothing to shake the laughing heart\222s long peace there)Tj
T*
( But only agony, and that has ending;)Tj
T*
( And the worst friend and enemy is but Death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Peace\222 \(1914\))Tj
ET
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( If I should die, think only this of me:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That there\222s some corner of a foreign field)Tj
T*
( That is for ever England. There shall be)Tj
T*
( In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;)Tj
T*
( A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,)Tj
T*
( Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam,)Tj
T*
( A body of England\222s, breathing English air,)Tj
T*
( Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And think, this heart, all evil shed away,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A pulse in the eternal mind, no less)Tj
T*
( Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given;)Tj
T*
( Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day;)Tj
T*
( And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness,)Tj
T*
( In hearts at peace, under an English heaven.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Soldier\222 \(1914\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.2124 Tm
( 2.206 Anita Brookner 1938\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And what is the most potent myth of all?...The tortoise and the hare\
...In real life, of course, it is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the hare who wins. Every time...You could argue that the hare might be a\
ffected by the tortoise )Tj
T*
(lobby\222s propaganda, might become more prudent, circumspect, slower, i\
n fact. But the hare is )Tj
T*
(always convinced of his own superiority; he simply does not recognize th\
e tortoise as a worthy )Tj
T*
(adversary. That is why the hare wins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Hotel du Lac\222 \(1984\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Good women always think it is their fault when someone else is being\
offensive. Bad women )Tj
T*
(never take the blame for anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Hotel du Lac\222 \(1984\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 270.7124 Tm
( 2.207 Thomas Brooks 1608-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For \(magna est veritas et praevalebit\) great is truth, and shall p\
revail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221The Crown and Glory of Christianity\222 \(1662\) p. 407.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 200.9624 Tm
( 2.208 Robert Barnabas Brough 1828-60)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( My Lord Tomnoddy is thirty-four;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Earl can last but a few years more.)Tj
T*
( My Lord in the Peers will take his place:)Tj
T*
( Her Majesty\222s councils his words will grace.)Tj
T*
( Office he\222ll hold and patronage sway;)Tj
T*
( Fortunes and lives he will vote away;)Tj
T*
( And what are his qualifications?\227one!)Tj
T*
( He\222s the Earl of Fitzdotterel\222s eldest son.)Tj
ET
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(\221Songs of the Governing Classes\222 \(1855\) \221My Lord Tomnoddy\222\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 2.209 Lord Brougham \(Henry Peter, Baron Brougham and Vaux\) 1778-1868)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In my mind, he was guilty of no error\227he was chargeable with no e\
xaggeration\227he was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(betrayed by his fancy into no metaphor, who once said, that all we see a\
bout us, King, Lords, and )Tj
T*
(Commons, the whole machinery of the State, all the apparatus of the syst\
em, and its varied )Tj
T*
(workings, end in simply bringing twelve good men into a box.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 7 February 1828, col. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( Look out, gentlemen, the schoolmaster is abroad!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Speech, London Mechanics\222 Institute, 1825)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive; easy \
to govern, but impossible to )Tj
T*
(enslave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Attributed; no source found)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 2.210 Heywood Broun 1888-1939)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Just as every conviction begins as a whim so does every emancipator \
serve his apprenticeship )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as a crank. A fanatic is a great leader who is just entering the room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221New York World\222 6 February 1928, p. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.9624 Tm
( 2.211 H. Rap Brown \(Hubert Geroid Brown\) 1943\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I say violence is necessary. It is as American as cherry pie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.42047 Tm
(Speech at Washington, 27 July 1967, in \221Washington Post\222 28 July 1\
967, p. A7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 350.2124 Tm
( 2.212 John Brown 1715-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I have seen some extracts from Johnson\222s Preface to his Shakespea\
re...No feeling nor pathos in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(him! Altogether upon the high horse, and blustering about Imperial Trage\
dy!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.67047 Tm
(Letter to Garrick, 27 October 1765, in \221The Private Correspondence of\
David Garrick\222 \(1831\) vol. 1, p. 204)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 262.4624 Tm
( 2.213 John Brown 1800-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now, if it is deemed necessary that I should forfeit my life for the\
furtherance of the ends of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(justice, and mingle my blood further with the blood of my children, and \
with the blood of )Tj
T*
(millions in this slave country whose rights are disregarded by wicked, c\
ruel, and unjust )Tj
T*
(enactments, I submit: so let it be done!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(Last speech to the court, 2 November 1859, in H. S. Commayer \221Documen\
ts of American History\222 \(7th ed.\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty l\
and will never be purged )Tj
T*
(away but with blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(Last statement, 2 December 1859, in R. J. Hinton \221John Brown and His \
Men\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 83.9624 Tm
( 2.214 Lew Brown \(Louis Brownstein\) 1893-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life is just a bowl of cherries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1931\))Tj
ET
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( 2.215 Thomas Brown 1663-1704)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A little before you made a leap into the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 706.67047 Tm
(\221Letters from the Dead to the Living\222 \(1702\) \221Answer to Mr Jo\
seph Haines\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 685.75456 Tm
( I do not love thee, Dr Fell.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The reason why I cannot tell;)Tj
T*
( But this alone I know full well,)Tj
T*
( I do not love thee, Dr Fell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.92047 Tm
(Written while an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 583.7124 Tm
( 2.216 T. E. Brown \(Thomas Edward Brown\) 1830-97)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 546.17047 Tm
(\221My Garden\222 \(1893\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 525.25456 Tm
( O blackbird, what a boy you are!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How you do go it!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.42047 Tm
(\221Vespers\222 \(1900\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 459.2124 Tm
( 2.217 Cecil Browne 1932\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But not so odd)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As those who choose)Tj
T*
( A Jewish God,)Tj
T*
( But spurn the Jews.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.67047 Tm
(Reply to verse by William Norman Ewer.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.4624 Tm
( 2.218 Coral Browne 1913-91)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Listen, dear, you couldn\222t write fuck on a dusty venetian blind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(To a Hollywood script-writer who had presumed to criticise the \221writi\
ng\222 in Alan Bennett\222s An Englishman )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Abroad, in \221Guardian\222 31 May 1991, obituary notice)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 250.7124 Tm
( 2.219 Sir Thomas Browne 1605-82)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oblivion is a kind of Annihilation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.17047 Tm
(\221Christian Morals\222 \(1716\) pt. 1, sect. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.25456 Tm
( He who discommendeth others obliquely commendeth himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.42047 Tm
(\221Christian Morals\222 \(1716\) pt. 1, sect. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.50456 Tm
( As for that famous network of Vulcan, which enclosed Mars and Venus,\
and caused that )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unextinguishable laugh in heaven, since the gods themselves could not di\
scern it, we shall not pry )Tj
T*
(into it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.67047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.75456 Tm
( Life itself is but the shadow of death, and souls departed but the s\
hadows of the living. All )Tj
T*
(things fall under this name. The sun itself is but the dark simulacrum, \
and light but the shadow of )Tj
T*
(God.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Flat and flexible truths are beat out by every hammer; but Vulcan an\
d his whole forge sweat to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(work out Achilles his armour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The quincunx of heaven runs low, and \222tis time to close the five \
ports of knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( All things began in order, so shall they end, and so shall they begi\
n again; according to the )Tj
T*
(ordainer of order and mystical mathematics of the city of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Nor will the sweetest delight of gardens afford much comfort in slee\
p; wherein the dullness of )Tj
T*
(that sense shakes hands with delectable odours; and though in the bed of\
Cleopatra, can hardly )Tj
T*
(with any delight raise up the ghost of a rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Though Somnus in Homer be sent to rouse up Agamemnon, I find no such\
effects in these )Tj
T*
(drowsy approaches of sleep. To keep our eyes open longer were but to act\
our Antipodes. The )Tj
T*
(huntsmen are up in America, and they are already past their first sleep \
in Persia. But who can be )Tj
T*
(drowsy at that hour which freed us from everlasting sleep? or have slum\
bering thoughts at that )Tj
T*
(time, when sleep itself must end, and as some conjecture all shall awake\
again?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Cyrus\222 \(1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Old mortality, the ruins of forgotten times.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) Epistle Dedicatory)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( With rich flames and hired tears they solemnized their obsequies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Men have lost their reason in nothing so much as their religion, whe\
rein stones and clouts )Tj
T*
(make martyrs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( Were the happiness of the next world as closely apprehended as the f\
elicities of this, it were a )Tj
T*
(martyrdom to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( The long habit of living indisposeth us for dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( But to subsist in bones, and be but pyramidally extant, is a fallacy\
in duration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Generations pass while some trees stand, and old families last not t\
hree oaks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( To be nameless in worthy deeds exceeds an infamous history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( The iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and deals wit\
h the memory of men )Tj
T*
(without distinction to merit perpetuity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 751.75456 Tm
( The night of time far surpasseth the day, and who knows when was the\
equinox?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( Diurnity is a dream and folly of expectation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.25456 Tm
( Man is a noble animal, splendid in ashes, and pompous in the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( Ready to be any thing, in the ecstasy of being ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.67047 Tm
(\221Hydriotaphia\222 \(Urn Burial, 1658\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.75456 Tm
( At my devotion I love to use the civility of my knee, my hat, and ha\
nd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( Many from...an inconsiderate zeal unto truth, have too rashly charge\
d the troops of error, and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(remain as trophies unto the enemies of truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( A man may be in as just possession of truth as of a city, and yet be\
forced to surrender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( As for those wingy mysteries in divinity and airy subtleties in reli\
gion, which have unhinged )Tj
T*
(the brains of better heads, they never stretched the pia mater of mine; \
methinks there be not )Tj
T*
(impossibilities enough in religion for an active faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( I love to lose myself in a mystery, to pursue my reason to an O alti\
tudo!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.00456 Tm
( Who can speak of eternity without a solecism, or think thereof witho\
ut an ecstasy? Time we )Tj
T*
(may comprehend, \222tis but five days elder than ourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( I have often admired the mystical way of Pythagoras, and the secret \
magic of numbers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( We carry within us the wonders we seek without us: there is all Afri\
ca and her prodigies in us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( All things are artificial, for nature is the art of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.92047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.00456 Tm
( Obstinacy in a bad cause, is but constancy in a good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( Persecution is a bad and indirect way to plant religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.50456 Tm
( Not wrung from speculations and subtleties, but from common sense, a\
nd observation;not )Tj
T*
(picked from the leaves of any author, but bred among the weeds and tares\
of mine own brain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.75456 Tm
( I am not so much afraid of death, as ashamed thereof; \222tis the ve\
ry disgrace and ignominy of )Tj
T*
(our natures, that in a moment can so disfigure us that our nearest frien\
ds, wife, and children, )Tj
ET
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(stand afraid and start at us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Certainly there is no happiness within this circle of flesh, nor is \
it in the optics of these eyes to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(behold felicity; the first day of our Jubilee is death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( He forgets that he can die who complains of misery, we are in the po\
wer of no calamity, while )Tj
T*
(death is in our own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 1, sect. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( All places, all airs make unto me one country: I am in England, ever\
ywhere, and under any )Tj
T*
(meridian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( If there be any among those common objects of hatred I do condemn an\
d laugh at, it is that )Tj
T*
(great enemy of reason, virtue and religion, the multitude, that numerous\
piece of monstrosity, )Tj
T*
(which taken asunder seem men, and the reasonable creatures of God; but c\
onfused together, make )Tj
T*
(but one great beast, and a monstrosity more prodigious than Hydra.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( This trivial and vulgar way of coition; it is the foolishest act a w\
ise man commits in all his life, )Tj
T*
(nor is there any thing that will more deject his cooled imagination, whe\
n he shall consider what )Tj
T*
(an odd and unworthy piece of folly he hath committed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Sure there is music even in the beauty, and the silent note which Cu\
pid strikes, far sweeter than )Tj
T*
(the sound of an instrument. For there is music wherever there is a harmo\
ny, order or proportion; )Tj
T*
(and thus far we may maintain the music of the spheres; for those well-or\
dered motions, and )Tj
T*
(regular paces, though they give no sound unto the ear, yet to the unders\
tanding they strike a note )Tj
T*
(most full of harmony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( We all labour against our own cure, for death is the cure of all dis\
eases.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( For the world, I count it not an inn, but an hospital, and a place, \
not to live, but to die in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( There is surely a piece of divinity in us, something that was before\
the elements, and owes no )Tj
T*
(homage unto the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( We term sleep a death, and yet it is waking that kills us, and destr\
oys those spirits which are )Tj
T*
(the house of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Religio Medici\222 \(1643\) pt. 2, sect. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Half our days we pass in the shadow of the earth; and the brother of\
death exacteth a third part )Tj
T*
(of our lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(S. Wilkin \(ed.\) \221Sir Thomas Browne\222s Works\222 \(1835\) vol. 4,\
p. 355 \221On Dreams\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( That children dream not in the first half year, that men dream not i\
n some countries, are to me )Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(sick men\222s dreams, dreams out of the ivory gate, and visions before m\
idnight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(S. Wilkin \(ed.\) \221Sir Thomas Browne\222s Works\222 \(1835\) vol. 4,\
p. 359 \221On Dreams\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 2.220 William Browne c.1590-1643)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Underneath this sable hearse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lies the subject of all verse;)Tj
T*
( Sidney\222s sister, Pembroke\222s mother,)Tj
T*
( Death, ere thou hast slain another,)Tj
T*
( Fair and learn\222d, and good as she,)Tj
T*
( Time shall throw a dart at thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.42047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on the Countess Dowager of Pembroke\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 545.2124 Tm
( 2.221 Sir William Browne 1692-1774)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The King to Oxford sent a troop of horse,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Tories own no argument but force:)Tj
T*
( With equal skill to Cambridge books he sent,)Tj
T*
( For Whigs admit no force but argument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.67047 Tm
(Reply to Trapp\222s epigram, in J. Nichols \221Literary Anecdotes\222 vo\
l. 3 \(1812\) p. 330.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 421.4624 Tm
( 2.222 Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1806-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The works of women are symbolical.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We sew, sew, prick our fingers, dull our sight,)Tj
T*
( Producing what? A pair of slippers, sir,)Tj
T*
( To put on when you\222re weary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, l. 456)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.00456 Tm
( Near all the birds)Tj
T*
( Will sing at dawn,\227and yet we do not take)Tj
T*
( The chaffering swallow for the holy lark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.17047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, l. 951)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.25456 Tm
( God answers sharp and sudden on some prayers,)Tj
T*
( And thrusts the thing we have prayed for in our face,)Tj
T*
( A gauntlet with a gift in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 2, l. 952)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( I think it frets the saints in heaven to see)Tj
T*
( How many desolate creatures on the earth)Tj
T*
( Have learnt the simple dues of fellowship)Tj
T*
( and social comfort, in a hospital.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.67047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 3, l. 1121)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.75456 Tm
( Nay, if there\222s room for poets in this world)Tj
T*
( A little overgrown \(I think there is\))Tj
ET
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( Their sole work is to represent the age,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their age, not Charlemagne\222s...)Tj
T*
( King Arthur\222s self)Tj
T*
( Was commonplace to Lady Guenever;)Tj
T*
( And Camelot to minstrels seemed as flat)Tj
T*
( As Fleet Street to our poets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 5, l. 210)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Since when was genius found respectable?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 6, l. 275)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( The devil\222s most devilish when respectable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 7, l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Earth\222s crammed with heaven,)Tj
T*
( And every common bush afire with God:)Tj
T*
( But only he who sees, takes off his shoes;)Tj
T*
( The rest sit round it, and pluck blackberries,)Tj
T*
( And daub their natural faces unaware)Tj
T*
( More and more, from the first similitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Aurora Leigh\222 \(1857\) bk. 7, l. 821)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( And kings crept out again to feel the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Crowned and Buried\222 \(1844\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers,)Tj
T*
( Ere the sorrow comes with years?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Cry of the Children\222 \(1844\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( And lips say, \221God be pitiful,\222)Tj
T*
( Who ne\222er said, \221God be praised.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Cry of the Human\222 \(1844\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( I tell you, hopeless grief is passionless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Grief\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Deep-hearted man, express)Tj
T*
( Grief for thy dead in silence like to death;)Tj
T*
( Most like a monumental statue set)Tj
T*
( In everlasting watch and moveless woe,)Tj
T*
( Till itself crumble to the dust beneath.)Tj
T*
( Touch it: the marble eyelids are not wet\227)Tj
T*
( If it could weep, it could arise and go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Grief\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Or from Browning some \221Pomegranate\222, which, if cut deep down t\
he middle,)Tj
T*
( Shows a heart within blood-tinctured, of a veined humanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Lady Geraldine\222s Courtship\222 \(1844 st. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( \221Yes,\222 I answered you last night;)Tj
ET
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( \221No,\222 this morning, sir, I say.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Colours seen by candle-light)Tj
T*
( Will not look the same by day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady\222s Yes\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( What was he doing, the great god Pan,)Tj
T*
( Down in the reeds by the river?)Tj
T*
( Spreading ruin and scattering ban,)Tj
T*
( Splashing and paddling with hoofs of a goat,)Tj
T*
( And breaking the golden lilies afloat)Tj
T*
( With the dragon-fly on the river.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221A Musical Instrument\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Straightway I was \222ware,)Tj
T*
( So weeping, how a mystic shape did move)Tj
T*
( Behind me, and drew me backward by the hair)Tj
T*
( And a voice said in mastery while I strove...)Tj
T*
( \221Guess now who holds thee?\222\227\222Death\222, I said. But, the\
re,)Tj
T*
( The silver answer rang...\222Not Death, but Love.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Sonnets from the Portuguese\222 \(1850\) no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( For frequent tears have run)Tj
T*
( The colours from my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnets from the Portuguese\222 \(1850\) no. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnets from the Portuguese\222 \(1850\) no. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( I love thee with the breath,)Tj
T*
( Smiles, tears, of all my life!\227and if God choose,)Tj
T*
( I shall but love thee better after death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnets from the Portuguese\222 \(1850\) no. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Thou large-brained woman and large-hearted man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221To George Sand\227A Desire\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( And the rolling anapaestic)Tj
T*
( Curled like vapour over shrines!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Wine of Cyprus\222 \(1844\) st. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.7124 Tm
( 2.223 Sir Frederick Browning 1896-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I think we might be going a bridge too far.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(Expressing reservations about the Arnhem \221Market Garden\222 operation\
to Field Marshal Montgomery on 10 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(September 1944, in R. E. Urquhart \221Arnhem\222 \(1958\) p. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 74.9624 Tm
( 2.224 Robert Browning 1812-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Burrow awhile and build, broad on the roots of things.)Tj
ET
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(\221Abt Vogler\222 \(1864\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( On the earth the broken arcs; in the heaven, a perfect round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Abt Vogler\222 \(1864\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The high that proved too high, the heroic for earth too hard,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The passion that left the ground to lose itself in the sky,)Tj
T*
( Are music sent up to God by the lover and the bard;)Tj
T*
( Enough that he heard it once: we shall hear it by and by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Abt Vogler\222 \(1864\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( I feel for the common chord again...)Tj
T*
( The C Major of this life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Abt Vogler\222 \(1864\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Ah, but a man\222s reach should exceed his grasp,)Tj
T*
( Or what\222s a heaven for?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Andrea del Sarto\222 \(1855\) l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Re-coin thyself and give it them to spend,\227)Tj
T*
( It all comes to the same thing at the end,)Tj
T*
( Since mine thou wast, mine art, and mine shalt be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Any Wife to Any Husband\222 \(1855\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( But, thanks to wine-lees and democracy,)Tj
T*
( We\222ve still our stage where truth calls spade a spade!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Aristophanes\222 Apology\222 \(1875\) l. 409)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,)Tj
T*
( Never doubted clouds would break,)Tj
T*
( Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,)Tj
T*
( Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,)Tj
T*
( Sleep to wake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Asolando\222 \(1889\) \221Epilogue\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Greet the unseen with a cheer!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Asolando\222 \(1889\) \221Epilogue\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( I find earth not grey but rosy,)Tj
T*
( Heaven not grim but fair of hue.)Tj
T*
( Do I stoop? I pluck a posy.)Tj
T*
( Do I stand and stare? All\222s blue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221At the \223Mermaid\224\222 \(1876\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( There spoke up a brisk little somebody,)Tj
T*
( Critic and whippersnapper, in a rage)Tj
T*
( To set things right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Balaustion\222s Adventure\222 \(1871\) l. 306)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Don\222t you know,)Tj
T*
( I promised, if you\222d watch a dinner out,)Tj
ET
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( We\222d see truth dawn together?\227truth that peeps)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Over the glasses\222 edge when dinner\222s done,)Tj
T*
( And body gets its sop and holds its noise)Tj
T*
( And leaves soul free a little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Just when we are safest, there\222s a sunset-touch,)Tj
T*
( A fancy from a flower-bell, some one\222s death,)Tj
T*
( A chorus-ending from Euripides,\227)Tj
T*
( And that\222s enough for fifty hopes and fears)Tj
T*
( As old and new at once as nature\222s self,)Tj
T*
( To rap and knock and enter in our soul,)Tj
T*
( Take hands and dance there, a fantastic ring,)Tj
T*
( Round the ancient idol, on his base again,\227)Tj
T*
( The grand Perhaps!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 182)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( All we have gained then by our unbelief)Tj
T*
( Is a life of doubt diversified by faith,)Tj
T*
( For one of faith diversified by doubt:)Tj
T*
( We called the chess-board white,\227we call it black.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 209)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Our interest\222s on the dangerous edge of things,)Tj
T*
( The honest thief, the tender murderer,)Tj
T*
( The superstitious atheist, demirep)Tj
T*
( That loves and saves her soul in new French books\227)Tj
T*
( We watch while these in equilibrium keep)Tj
T*
( The giddy line midway.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 395)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( You, for example, clever to a fault,)Tj
T*
( The rough and ready man who write apace,)Tj
T*
( Read somewhat seldomer, think perhaps even less.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 420)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( No, when the fight begins within himself,)Tj
T*
( A man\222s worth something.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 693)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( He said true things, but called them by wrong names.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Bishop Blougram\222s Apology\222 \(1855\) l. 996)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( And have I not Saint Praxed\222s ear to pray)Tj
T*
( Horses for ye, and brown Greek manuscripts,)Tj
T*
( And mistresses with great smooth marbly limbs?)Tj
T*
( \227That\222s if ye carve my epitaph aright.)Tj
ET
EMC
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Bishop Orders his Tomb\222 \(1845\) l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( And then how I shall lie through centuries,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hear the blessed mutter of the mass,)Tj
T*
( And see God made and eaten all day long,)Tj
T*
( And feel the steady candle-flame, and taste)Tj
T*
( Good strong thick stupefying incense-smoke!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Bishop Orders his Tomb\222 \(1845\) l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I was so young, I loved him so, I had)Tj
T*
( No mother, God forgot me, and I fell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221A Blot in the \221Scutcheon\222 \(1843\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Boot, saddle, to horse, and away!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Boot and Saddle\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( How well I know what I mean to do)Tj
T*
( When the long dark autumn-evenings come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( I shall be found by the fire, suppose,)Tj
T*
( O\222er a great wise book as beseemeth age,)Tj
T*
( While the shutters flap as the cross-wind blows)Tj
T*
( And I turn the page, and I turn the page,)Tj
T*
( Not verse now, only prose!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( I will speak now,)Tj
T*
( No longer watch you as you sit)Tj
T*
( Reading by fire-light, that great brow)Tj
T*
( And the spirit-small hand propping it,)Tj
T*
( Mutely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( When earth breaks up and heaven expands,)Tj
T*
( How will the change strike me and you)Tj
T*
( In the house not made with hands?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 27.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Oh, the little more, and how much it is!)Tj
T*
( And the little less, and what worlds away!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( If two lives join, there is oft a scar,)Tj
T*
( They are one and one, with a shadowy third;)Tj
T*
( One near one is too far.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221By the Fireside\222 \(1855\) st. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( And it is good to cheat the pair, and gibe,)Tj
T*
( Letting the rank tongue blossom into speech.)Tj
ET
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( Setebos, Setebos, and Setebos!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Thinketh, He dwelleth i\222 the cold o\222 the moon.)Tj
T*
( \221Thinketh He made it, with the sun to match,)Tj
T*
( But not the stars; the stars came otherwise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Caliban upon Setebos\222 \(1864\) l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( \221Let twenty pass, and stone the twenty-first,)Tj
T*
( Loving not, hating not, just choosing so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Caliban upon Setebos\222 \(1864\) l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Dauntless the slug-horn to my lips I set,)Tj
T*
( And blew. \221Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came\222 \(1855\) st. 34.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( In the natural fog of the good man\222s mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Christmas-Eve\222 \(1850\) l. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( The raree-show of Peter\222s successor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Christmas Eve\222 \(1850\) l. 1242)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( For the preacher\222s merit or demerit,)Tj
T*
( It were to be wished the flaws were fewer)Tj
T*
( In the earthen vessel, holding treasure)Tj
T*
( Which lies as safe in a golden ewer;)Tj
T*
( But the main thing is, does it hold good measure?)Tj
T*
( Heaven soon sets right all other matters!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Christmas Eve\222 \(1850\) l. 1311)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( And I have written three books on the soul,)Tj
T*
( Proving absurd all written hitherto,)Tj
T*
( And putting us to ignorance again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Cleon\222 \(1855\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( What is he buzzing in my ears?)Tj
T*
( \221Now that I come to die,)Tj
T*
( Do I view the world as a vale of tears?\222)Tj
T*
( Ah, reverend sir, not I!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Confessions\222 \(1864\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( We loved, sir\227used to meet:)Tj
T*
( How sad and bad and mad it was\227)Tj
T*
( But then, how it was sweet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Confessions\222 \(1864\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Stung by the splendour of a sudden thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221A Death in the Desert\222 \(1864\) l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( For I say, this is death and the sole death,)Tj
T*
( When a man\222s loss comes to him from his gain,)Tj
T*
( Darkness from light, from knowledge ignorance,)Tj
ET
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( And lack of love from love made manifest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Death in the Desert\222 \(1864\) l. 482)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Progress, man\222s distinctive mark alone,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not God\222s, and not the beasts\222: God is, they are,)Tj
T*
( Man partly is and wholly hopes to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Death in the Desert\222 \(1864\) l. 586)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( With the beanflowers\222 boon,)Tj
T*
( And the blackbird\222s tune,)Tj
T*
( And May, and June!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221De Gustibus\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Italy, my Italy!)Tj
T*
( Queen Mary\222s saying serves for me\227)Tj
T*
( \(When fortune\222s malice)Tj
T*
( Lost her\227Calais\)\227)Tj
T*
( Open my heart and you will see)Tj
T*
( Graved inside of it, \221Italy\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221De Gustibus\222 \(1855\) pt. 2, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Reads verse and thinks she understands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221D\356s Aliter Visum\222 \(1864\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Sure of the Fortieth spare Arm-chair)Tj
T*
( When gout and glory seat me there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221D\356s Aliter Visum\222 \(1864\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( \222Tis well averred,)Tj
T*
( A scientific faith\222s absurd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Easter-Day\222 \(1850\) l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( At last awake)Tj
T*
( From life, that insane dream we take)Tj
T*
( For waking now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Easter-Day\222 \(1850\) l. 479)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Karshish, the picker-up of learning\222s crumbs,)Tj
T*
( The not-incurious in God\222s handiwork.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221An Epistle...of Karshish\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Beautiful Evelyn Hope is dead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Evelyn Hope\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( You will wake, and remember, and understand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Evelyn Hope\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( So absolutely good is truth, truth never hurts)Tj
T*
( The teller.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Fifine at the Fair\222 \(1872\) st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( I must learn Spanish, one of these days,)Tj
ET
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( Only for that slow sweet name\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Flower\222s Name\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( If you get simple beauty and naught else,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You get about the best thing God invents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Fra Lippo Lippi\222 \(1855\) l. 217)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( This world\222s no blot for us,)Tj
T*
( Nor blank; it means intensely, and means good:)Tj
T*
( To find its meaning is my meat and drink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Fra Lippo Lippi\222 \(1855\) l. 313)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Our low life was the level\222s and the night\222s;)Tj
T*
( He\222s for the morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( This is our master, famous calm and dead,)Tj
T*
( Borne on our shoulders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Yea, but we found him bald too, eyes like lead,)Tj
T*
( Accents uncertain:)Tj
T*
( \221Time to taste life,\222 another would have said,)Tj
T*
( \221Up with the curtain!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Yea, this in him was the peculiar grace)Tj
T*
( \(Hearten our chorus!\))Tj
T*
( That before living he\222d learn how to live\227)Tj
T*
( No end to learning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( He said, \221What\222s time? Leave Now for dogs and apes!)Tj
T*
( Man has Forever.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( That low man seeks a little thing to do,)Tj
T*
( Sees it and does it:)Tj
T*
( This high man, with a great thing to pursue,)Tj
T*
( Dies ere he knows it.)Tj
T*
( That low man goes on adding one to one,)Tj
T*
( His hundred\222s soon hit:)Tj
T*
( This high man, aiming at a million,)Tj
T*
( Misses an unit.)Tj
T*
( That, has the world here\227should he need the next,)Tj
T*
( Let the world mind him!)Tj
T*
( This, throws himself on God, and unperplexed)Tj
T*
( Seeking shall find him.)Tj
ET
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(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Lofty designs must close in like effects:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Loftily lying,)Tj
T*
( Leave him\227still loftier than the world suspects,)Tj
T*
( Living and dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Grammarian\222s Funeral\222 \(1855\) l. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The Lord will have mercy on Jacob yet,)Tj
T*
( And again in his border see Israel set.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Holy-Cross Day\222 \(1855\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( We withstood Christ then? Be mindful how)Tj
T*
( At least we withstand Barabbas now!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Holy-Cross Day\222 \(1855\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Oh, to be in England)Tj
T*
( Now that April\222s there,)Tj
T*
( And whoever wakes in England)Tj
T*
( Sees, some morning, unaware,)Tj
T*
( That the lowest boughs and the brushwood sheaf)Tj
T*
( Round the elm-tree bole are in tiny leaf,)Tj
T*
( While the chaffinch sings on the orchard bough)Tj
T*
( In England\227now!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Home-Thoughts, from Abroad\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( That\222s the wise thrush; he sings each song twice over,)Tj
T*
( Lest you should think he never could recapture)Tj
T*
( The first fine careless rapture!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Home-Thoughts, from Abroad\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Nobly, nobly Cape Saint Vincent to the North-west died away;)Tj
T*
( Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Home-Thoughts, from the Sea\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( \221Here and here did England help me: how can I help England?\222\227\
say,)Tj
T*
( Whoso turns as I, this evening, turn to God to praise and pray,)Tj
T*
( While Jove\222s planet rises yonder, silent over Africa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Home-Thoughts, from the Sea\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( \221With this same key)Tj
T*
( Shakespeare unlocked his heart,\222 once more!)Tj
T*
( Did Shakespeare? If so, the less Shakespeare he!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221House\222 \(1876\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( I sprang to the stirrup, and Joris, and he;)Tj
T*
( I galloped, Dirck galloped, we galloped all three.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix\222 \(1845\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( A man can have but one life and one death,)Tj
ET
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( One heaven, one hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221In a Balcony\222 \(1855\) l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I count life just a stuff)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To try the soul\222s strength on, educe the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221In a Balcony\222 \(1855\) l. 651)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The moth\222s kiss, first!)Tj
T*
( Kiss me as if you made believe)Tj
T*
( You were not sure, this eve,)Tj
T*
( How my face, your flower, had pursed)Tj
T*
( Its petals up...)Tj
T*
( The bee\222s kiss, now!)Tj
T*
( Kiss me as if you entered gay)Tj
T*
( My heart at some noonday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221In a Gondola\222 \(1842\) l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( \221You\222re wounded!\222 \221Nay,\222 the soldier\222s pride)Tj
T*
( Touched to the quick, he said:)Tj
T*
( \221I\222m killed, Sire!\222 And his chief beside,)Tj
T*
( Smiling the boy fell dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Incident of the French Camp\222 \(1842\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Ignorance is not innocence but sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Inn Album\222 \(1875\) canto 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( The swallow has set her six young on the rail,)Tj
T*
( And looks sea-ward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221James Lee\222s Wife\222 \(1864\) pt. 3, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Oh, good gigantic smile o\222 the brown old earth,)Tj
T*
( This autumn morning!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221James Lee\222s Wife\222 \(1864\) pt. 7, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Good, to forgive;)Tj
T*
( Best, to forget!)Tj
T*
( Living, we fret;)Tj
T*
( Dying, we live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221La Saisiaz\222 \(1878\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( I said\227Then, dearest, since \222tis so,)Tj
T*
( Since now at length my fate I know,)Tj
T*
( Since nothing all my love avails,)Tj
T*
( Since all, my life seemed meant for, fails,)Tj
T*
( Since this was written and needs must be\227)Tj
T*
( My whole heart rises up to bless)Tj
T*
( Your name in pride and thankfulness!)Tj
T*
( Take back the hope you gave,\227I claim)Tj
ET
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( Only a memory of the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Last Ride Together\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Who knows but the world may end tonight?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Last Ride Together\222 \(1855\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( My soul)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Smoothed itself out, a long-cramped scroll)Tj
T*
( Freshening and fluttering in the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Last Ride Together\222 \(1855\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Had I said that, had I done this,)Tj
T*
( So might I gain, so might I miss.)Tj
T*
( Might she have loved me? just as well)Tj
T*
( She might have hated, who can tell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Last Ride Together\222 \(1855\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Look at the end of work, contrast)Tj
T*
( The petty done, the undone vast,)Tj
T*
( This present of theirs with the hopeful past!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Last Ride Together\222 \(1855\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( \222Tis an awkward thing to play with souls,)Tj
T*
( And matter enough to save one\222s own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221A Light Woman\222 \(1855\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Just for a handful of silver he left us,)Tj
T*
( Just for a riband to stick in his coat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Lost Leader\222 \(1845\) \(referring to Wordsworth\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( We that had loved him so, followed him, honoured him,)Tj
T*
( Lived in his mild and magnificent eye,)Tj
T*
( Learned his great language, caught his clear accents,)Tj
T*
( Made him our pattern to live and to die!)Tj
T*
( Shakespeare was of us, Milton was for us,)Tj
T*
( Burns, Shelley, were with us\227they watch from their graves!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Lost Leader\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Never glad confident morning again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Lost Leader\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( All\222s over, then: does truth sound bitter)Tj
T*
( As one at first believes?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Lost Mistress\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Oppression makes the wise man mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Luria\222 \(1846\) act 4, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Kentish Sir Byng stood for his King,)Tj
T*
( Bidding the crop-headed Parliament swing:)Tj
T*
( And, pressing a troop unable to stoop)Tj
ET
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( And see the rogues flourish and honest folk droop,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Marched them along, fifty-score strong,)Tj
T*
( Great-hearted gentlemen, singing this song.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God for King Charles! Pym and such carles)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To the Devil that prompts \222em their treasonous parles!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Marching Along\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.50456 Tm
( And find a poor devil has ended his cares)Tj
T*
( At the foot of your rotten-runged rat-riddled stairs?)Tj
T*
( Do I carry the moon in my pocket?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.67047 Tm
(\221Master Hugues of Saxe-Gotha\222 \(1855\) st. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.75456 Tm
( A tap at the pane, the quick sharp scratch)Tj
T*
( And blue spurt of a lighted match,)Tj
T*
( And a voice less loud, through its joys and fears,)Tj
T*
( Than the two hearts beating each to each!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221Meeting at Night\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( Ah, did you once see Shelley plain,)Tj
T*
( And did he stop and speak to you)Tj
T*
( And did you speak to him again?)Tj
T*
( How strange it seems, and new!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Memorabilia\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( There\222s a more hateful form of foolery\227)Tj
T*
( The social sage\222s, Solomon of saloons)Tj
T*
( And philosophic diner-out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Mr Sludge, \223The Medium\224\222 \(1864\) l. 773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( That\222s my last Duchess painted on the wall,)Tj
T*
( Looking as if she were alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221My Last Duchess\222 \(1842\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( She had)Tj
T*
( A heart\227how shall I say?\227too soon made glad,)Tj
T*
( Too easily impressed; she liked whate\222er)Tj
T*
( She looked on, and her looks went everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221My Last Duchess\222 \(1842\) l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Never the time and the place)Tj
T*
( And the loved one all together!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Never the Time and the Place\222 \(1883\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( A lion who dies of an ass\222s kick,)Tj
T*
( The wronged great soul of an ancient Master.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Old Pictures in Florence\222 \(1855\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( What\222s come to perfection perishes.)Tj
T*
( Things learned on earth, we shall practise in heaven:)Tj
ET
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( Works done least rapidly, Art most cherishes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221Old Pictures in Florence\222 \(1855\) st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Dante, who loved well because he hated,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hated wickedness that hinders loving.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(\221One Word More\222 \(1855\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.00456 Tm
( God be thanked, the meanest of his creatures)Tj
T*
( Boasts two soul-sides, one to face the world with,)Tj
T*
( One to show a woman when he loves her!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.17047 Tm
(\221One Word More\222 \(1855\) st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.25456 Tm
( God is the perfect poet,)Tj
T*
( Who in his person acts his own creations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.42047 Tm
(\221Paracelsus\222 \(1835\) pt. 2, l. 648)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.50456 Tm
( Measure your mind\222s height by the shade it casts!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Paracelsus\222 \(1835\) pt. 3, l. 821)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( I give the fight up: let there be an end,)Tj
T*
( A privacy, an obscure nook for me.)Tj
T*
( I want to be forgotten even by God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(\221Paracelsus\222 \(1835\) pt. 5, l. 363)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Round the cape of a sudden came the sea,)Tj
T*
( And the sun looked over the mountain\222s rim:)Tj
T*
( And straight was a path of gold for him,)Tj
T*
( And the need of a world of men for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(\221Parting at Morning\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.25456 Tm
( It was roses, roses, all the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221The Patriot\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.50456 Tm
( The air broke into a mist with bells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.67047 Tm
(\221The Patriot\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.75456 Tm
( Sun-treader, life and light be thine for ever!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.92047 Tm
(\221Pauline\222 \(1833\) l. 151 \(referring to Shelley\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.00456 Tm
( Ah, thought which saddens while it soothes!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.17047 Tm
(\221Pictor Ignotus\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.25456 Tm
( Rats!)Tj
T*
( They fought the dogs and killed the cats,)Tj
T*
( And bit the babies in the cradles,)Tj
T*
( And ate the cheeses out of the vats,)Tj
T*
( And licked the soup from the cooks\222 own ladles,)Tj
T*
( Split open the kegs of salted sprats,)Tj
T*
( Made nests inside men\222s Sunday hats,)Tj
T*
( And even spoiled the women\222s chats)Tj
T*
( By drowning their speaking)Tj
ET
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( With shrieking and squeaking)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In fifty different sharps and flats.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Pied Piper of Hamelin\222 \(1842\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( So munch on, crunch on, take your nuncheon,)Tj
T*
( Breakfast, supper, dinner, luncheon!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Pied Piper of Hamelin\222 \(1842\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The year\222s at the spring)Tj
T*
( And day\222s at the morn;)Tj
T*
( Morning\222s at seven;)Tj
T*
( The hill-side\222s dew-pearled;)Tj
T*
( The lark\222s on the wing;)Tj
T*
( The snail\222s on the thorn:)Tj
T*
( God\222s in his heaven\227)Tj
T*
( All\222s right with the world!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Pippa Passes\222 \(1841\) pt. 1, l. 221)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( You\222ll look at least on love\222s remains,)Tj
T*
( A grave\222s one violet:)Tj
T*
( Your look?\227that pays a thousand pains.)Tj
T*
( What\222s death? You\222ll love me yet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Pippa Passes\222 \(1841\) pt. 3, l. 314)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( All service ranks the same with God\227)Tj
T*
( With God, whose puppets, best and worst,)Tj
T*
( Are we: there is no last nor first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Pippa Passes\222 \(1841\) epilogue ad fin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Stand still, true poet that you are!)Tj
T*
( I know you; let me try and draw you.)Tj
T*
( Some night you\222ll fail us: when afar)Tj
T*
( You rise, remember one man saw you,)Tj
T*
( Knew you, and named a star!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Popularity\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( All her hair)Tj
T*
( In one long yellow string I wound)Tj
T*
( Three times her little throat around,)Tj
T*
( And strangled her. No pain felt she;)Tj
T*
( I am quite sure she felt no pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Porphyria\222s Lover\222 \(1842\) l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Fear death?\227to feel the fog in my throat,)Tj
T*
( The mist in my face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Prospice\222 \(1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( I was ever a fighter, so\227one fight more,)Tj
ET
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( The best and the last!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I would hate that death bandaged my eyes, and forbore,)Tj
T*
( And bade me creep past.)Tj
T*
( No! let me taste the whole of it, fare like my peers)Tj
T*
( The heroes of old,)Tj
T*
( Bear the brunt, in a minute pay glad life\222s arrears)Tj
T*
( Of pain, darkness and cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Prospice\222 \(1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Grow old along with me!)Tj
T*
( The best is yet to be,)Tj
T*
( The last of life, for which the first was made:)Tj
T*
( Our times are in His hand)Tj
T*
( Who saith, \221A whole I planned,)Tj
T*
( Youth shows but half; trust God: see all nor be afraid!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail:)Tj
T*
( What I aspired to be,)Tj
T*
( And was not, comforts me:)Tj
T*
( A brute I might have been, but would not sink i\222 the scale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( For note, when evening shuts,)Tj
T*
( A certain moment cuts)Tj
T*
( The deed off, calls the glory from the grey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Fancies that broke through language and escaped.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Fool! All that is, at all,)Tj
T*
( Lasts ever, past recall;)Tj
T*
( Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Time\222s wheel runs back or stops: potter and clay endure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( He fixed thee \222mid this dance)Tj
T*
( Of plastic circumstance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( My times be in Thy hand!)Tj
T*
( Perfect the cup as planned!)Tj
T*
( Let age approve of youth, and death complete the same!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Rabbi Ben Ezra\222 \(1864\) st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Youth means love,)Tj
ET
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( Vows can\222t change nature, priests are only men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 1, l. 1056)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O lyric Love, half-angel and half-bird)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all a wonder and a wild desire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 1, l. 1391)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( So, Pietro craved an heir,)Tj
T*
( \(The story always old and always new\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 2, l. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Go practise if you please)Tj
T*
( With men and women: leave a child alone)Tj
T*
( For Christ\222s particular love\222s sake!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 3, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( In the great right of an excessive wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 3, l. 1055)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Through such souls alone)Tj
T*
( God stooping shows sufficient of His light)Tj
T*
( For us i\222 the dark to rise by. And I rise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 7, l. 1843)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Faultless to a fault.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 9, l. 1175.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Why comes temptation but for man to meet)Tj
T*
( And master and make crouch beneath his foot,)Tj
T*
( And so be pedestalled in triumph?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 10, l. 1184)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( White shall not neutralize the black, nor good)Tj
T*
( Compensate bad in man, absolve him so:)Tj
T*
( Life\222s business being just the terrible choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 10, l. 1235)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( There\222s a new tribunal now)Tj
T*
( Higher than God\222s,\227the educated man\222s!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 10, l. 1975)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Into that sad obscure sequestered state)Tj
T*
( Where God unmakes but to remake the soul)Tj
T*
( He else made first in vain; which must not be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 10, l. 2129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( It is the glory and good of Art,)Tj
T*
( That Art remains the one way possible)Tj
T*
( Of speaking truth, to mouths like mine, at least.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221The Ring and the Book\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 12, l. 838)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( \222Tis not what man Does which exalts him, but what man Would do!)Tj
ET
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(\221Saul\222 \(1855\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I want to know a butcher paints,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A baker rhymes for his pursuit,)Tj
T*
( Candlestick-maker much acquaints)Tj
T*
( His soul with song, or, haply mute,)Tj
T*
( Blows out his brains upon the flute!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Shop\222 \(1876\) st. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( There\222s a great text in Galatians,)Tj
T*
( Once you trip on it, entails)Tj
T*
( Twenty-nine distinct damnations,)Tj
T*
( One sure, if another fails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister\222 \(1842\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Sidney\222s self, the starry paladin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Sordello\222 \(1840\) bk. 1, l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Still more labyrinthine buds the rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Sordello\222 \(1840\) bk. 1, l. 476)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( A touch divine\227)Tj
T*
( And the scaled eyeball owns the mystic rod;)Tj
T*
( Visibly through his garden walketh God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Sordello\222 \(1840\) bk. 1, l. 502)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Any nose)Tj
T*
( May ravage with impunity a rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Sordello\222 \(1840\) bk. 6, l. 881)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The glory dropped from their youth and love,)Tj
T*
( And both perceived they had dreamed a dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Statue and the Bust\222 \(1855\) l. 152)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( The soldier-saints, who row on row,)Tj
T*
( Burn upward each to his point of bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Statue and the Bust\222 \(1855\) l. 222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( And the sin I impute to each frustrate ghost)Tj
T*
( Is\227the unlit lamp and the ungirt loin,)Tj
T*
( Though the end in sight was a vice, I say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221The Statue and the Bust\222 \(1863 revision\) l. 246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Oh Galuppi, Baldassaro, this is very sad to find!)Tj
T*
( I can hardly misconceive you; it would prove me deaf and blind;)Tj
T*
( But although I take your meaning, \222tis with such a heavy mind!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221A Toccata of Galuppi\222s\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Hark, the dominant\222s persistence till it must be answered to!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221A Toccata of Galuppi\222s\222 \(1855\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( What of soul was left, I wonder, when the kissing had to stop?)Tj
ET
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(\221A Toccata of Galuppi\222s\222 \(1855\) st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Dear dead women, with such hair, too\227what\222s become of all the \
gold)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Used to hang and brush their bosoms? I feel chilly and grown old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221A Toccata of Galuppi\222s\222 \(1855\) st. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Grand rough old Martin Luther)Tj
T*
( Bloomed fables\227flowers on furze,)Tj
T*
( The better the uncouther:)Tj
T*
( Do roses stick like burrs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Twins\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( I would that you were all to me,)Tj
T*
( You that are just so much, no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Two in the Campagna\222 \(1855\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I pluck the rose)Tj
T*
( And love it more than tongue can speak\227)Tj
T*
( Then the good minute goes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Two in the Campagna\222 \(1855\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Only I discern\227)Tj
T*
( Infinite passion, and the pain)Tj
T*
( Of finite hearts that yearn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Two in the Campagna\222 \(1855\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Let\222s contend no more, Love,)Tj
T*
( Strive nor weep:)Tj
T*
( All be as before, Love,)Tj
T*
( \227Only sleep!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221A Woman\222s Last Word\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( I knew you once: but in Paradise,)Tj
T*
( If we meet, I will pass nor turn my face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Worst of It\222 \(1864\) st. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Ay, dead! and were yourself alive, good Fitz,)Tj
T*
( How to return your thanks would pass my wits.)Tj
T*
( Kicking you seems the common lot of curs\227)Tj
T*
( While more appropriate greeting lends you grace:)Tj
T*
( Surely to spit there glorifies your face\227)Tj
T*
( Spitting from lips once sanctified by Hers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(Rejoinder to Edward Fitzgerald, who had \221thanked God my wife was dead\
\222, in \221Athenaeum\222 13 July 1889.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 104.9624 Tm
( 2.225 Robert I the Bruce 1554-1631)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now, God be with you, my children: I have breakfasted with you and s\
hall sup with my Lord )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Jesus Christ this night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(In Robert Fleming \221The Fulfilling of the Scripture\222 \(3rd ed., 169\
3\) p. 372)Tj
ET
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( 2.226 Beau Brummell \(George Bryan Brummell\) 1778-1840)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who\222s your fat friend?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 709.67047 Tm
(Referring to the Prince of Wales, in Capt. Jesse \221Life of George Brum\
mell\222 \(1844\) vol. 1, p. 273)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 688.75456 Tm
( [Brummell] used to say that, whether it was summer or winter, he alw\
ays liked to have the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(morning well-aired before he got up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 654.92047 Tm
(Charles Macfarlane \221Reminiscences of a Literary Life\222 \(1917\) ch.\
27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 634.00456 Tm
( No perfumes, but very fine linen, plenty of it, and country washing.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 618.17047 Tm
(In \221Memoirs of Harriette Wilson\222 \(1825\) vol. 1, p. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 597.25456 Tm
( Shut the door, Wales.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.42047 Tm
(To the Prince of Wales \(attributed\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 549.2124 Tm
( 2.227 William Jennings Bryan 1860-1925)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The humblest citizen of all the land, when clad in the armor of a ri\
ghteous cause, is stronger )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than all the hosts of error.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 493.67047 Tm
(Speech at the Democratic National Convention, Chicago, 1896, in \221The \
First Battle. A Story of the Campaign )Tj
T*
(of 1896\222 \(1896\) vol. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.75456 Tm
( You shall not press down upon the brow of labour this crown of thorn\
s, you shall not crucify )Tj
T*
(mankind upon a cross of gold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(Speech at the Democratic National Convention, Chicago, 1896, in \221The \
First Battle. A Story of the Campaign )Tj
T*
(of 1896\222 \(1896\) vol. 1, ch. 10)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 376.7124 Tm
( 2.228 Martin Buber 1878-1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Der Mensch wird am Du zum Ich.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Through the Thou a person becomes I.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221Ich und Du\222 \(1923\) in \221Werke\222 \(1962\) vol. 1, p. 97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 285.2124 Tm
( 2.229 John Buchan \(first Baron Tweedsmuir\) 1875-1940)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Back to Glasgow to do some work for the cause,\222 I said lightl\
y. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Just so,\222 he said, with a grin. \221It\222s a great life if y\
ou don\222t weaken.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(\221Mr Standfast\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.75456 Tm
( An atheist is a man who has no invisible means of support.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.92047 Tm
(In H. E. Fosdick \221On Being a Real Person\222 \(1943\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 160.7124 Tm
( 2.230 Robert Buchanan 1841-1901)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( She just wore)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Enough for modesty\227no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.17047 Tm
(\221White Rose and Red\222 \(1873\) pt. 1, sect. 5, l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.25456 Tm
( The sweet post-prandial cigar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.42047 Tm
(\221De Berny\222 \(1874\))Tj
ET
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( 2.231 Frank Buchman 1878-1961)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I thank heaven for a man like Adolf Hitler, who built a front line o\
f defence against the anti-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Christ of Communism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221New York World-Telegram\222 26 August 1936)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Suppose everybody cared enough, everybody shared enough, wouldn\222t\
everybody have )Tj
T*
(enough? There is enough in the world for everyone\222s need, but not eno\
ugh for everyone\222s greed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Remaking the World\222 \(1947\) p. 56)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 610.4624 Tm
( 2.232 Gene Buck \(Edward Eugene Buck\) 1885-1957 and Herman Ruby 1891-1\
959)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That Shakespearian rag,\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Most intelligent, very elegant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221That Shakespearian Rag\222 \(1912 song\).)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 522.7124 Tm
( 2.233 George Villiers, Second Duke of Buckingham 1628-87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The world is made up for the most part of fools and knaves, both irr\
econcilable foes to truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The Dramatic Works\222 \(1715\) vol. 2 \221To Mr Clifford On his Hum\
ane Reason\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( What a devil is the plot good for, but to bring in fine things?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Rehearsal\222 \(1672\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Ay, now the plot thickens very much upon us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221The Rehearsal\222 \(1672\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 379.4624 Tm
( 2.234 John Sheffield, First Duke of Buckingham and Normanby 1648-1721)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Learn to write well, or not to write at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay upon Satire\222 \(1689\) last line)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 309.7124 Tm
( 2.235 H. J. Buckoll 1803-71)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Lord, dismiss us with Thy blessing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thanks for mercies past receive.)Tj
T*
( Pardon all, their faults confessing;)Tj
T*
( Time that\222s lost may all retrieve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221Psalms and Hymns for the Use of Rugby School Chapel\222 \(1850\) \221\
Lord, Dismiss us with Thy Blessing\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.9624 Tm
( 2.236 J. B. Buckstone 1802-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( On such an occasion as this,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All time and nonsense scorning,)Tj
T*
( Nothing shall come amiss,)Tj
T*
( And we won\222t go home till morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221Billy Taylor\222 \(performed 1829\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.2124 Tm
( 2.237 Eustace Budgell 1686-1737)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What Cato did, and Addison approved)Tj
ET
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( Cannot be wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(Lines found on his desk after he too committed suicide, 4 May 1737, in C\
olley Cibber \221The Lives of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Poets\222 \(1753\) vol. 5 \221The Life of Eustace Budgell\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 689.4624 Tm
( 2.238 Comte de Buffon \(George-Louis Leclerc\) 1707-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ces choses sont hors de l\222homme, le style est l\222homme m\352me.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( These things [subject matter] are external to the man; style is the \
man.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(\221Discours sur le style\222; address given to the Acad\350mie Fran\347\
aise, 25 August 1753)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( Le g\350nie n\222est qu\222une plus grande aptitude \341 la patience\
.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Genius is only a greater aptitude for patience.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.67047 Tm
(In H\350rault de S\350chelles \221Voyage \341 Montbar\222 \(1803\) p. 15\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 539.4624 Tm
( 2.239 Arthur Buller 1874-1944)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There was a young lady named Bright,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whose speed was far faster than light;)Tj
T*
( She set out one day)Tj
T*
( In a relative way)Tj
T*
( And returned on the previous night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.92047 Tm
(\221Relativity\222 in \221Punch\222 19 December 1923)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.7124 Tm
( 2.240 Ivor Bulmer-Thomas 1905\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If he ever went to school without any boots it was because he was to\
o big for them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.17047 Tm
(Referring to Harold Wilson in a speech at the Conservative Party Confere\
nce, in \221Manchester Guardian\222 13 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(October 1949)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 312.9624 Tm
( 2.241 Count von B\374low 1849-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mit einem Worte: wir wollen niemand in den Schatten stellen aber wir\
verlangen auch unseren )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Platz an der Sonne.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( In a word, we desire to throw no one into the shade [in East Asia], \
but we also demand our )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(own place in the sun.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 217.67047 Tm
(Reichstag, 6 December 1897)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.4624 Tm
( 2.242 Edward George Bulwer-Lytton \(first Baron Lytton\) 1803-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Here Stanley meets,\227how Stanley scorns, the glance!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The brilliant chief, irregularly great,)Tj
T*
( Frank, haughty, rash,\227the Rupert of Debate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.92047 Tm
(Referring to Edward Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, in \221The New Timon\222\
\(1846\) pt. 1, sect. 3, l. 202.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.00456 Tm
( Out-babying Wordsworth and out-glittering Keats.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.17047 Tm
(Referring to Tennyson, in \221The New Timon\222 \(1846\) pt. 2, sect. 1,\
l. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.25456 Tm
( Beneath the rule of men entirely great)Tj
ET
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( The pen is mightier than the sword.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Richelieu\222 \(1839\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 307.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 2.243 Edward Robert Bulwer, Earl of Lytton)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Owen Meredith \(1.114\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.244 Alfred Bunn c.1796-1860)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I dreamed that I dwelt in marble halls)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With vassals and serfs at my side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221The Bohemian Girl\222 \(1843\) act 2 \221The Gipsy Girl\222s Dream\222\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 562.4624 Tm
( 2.245 Luis Bu\361uel 1900-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The discreet charm of the bourgeoisie.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(Title of film \(1972\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( Gr\342ce \341 Dieu, je suis toujours ath\350e.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Thanks to God, I am still an atheist.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(In \221Le Monde\222 16 December 1959)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 412.4624 Tm
( 2.246 John Bunyan 1628-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As I walked through the wilderness of this world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1, opening words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( The name of the slough was Despond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Christian: Gentlemen, Whence came you, and whither do you go? forma\
list and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hypocrisy: We were born in the land of Vainglory, and we are going \
for praise to Mount Sion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( It is an hard matter for a man to go down into the valley of Humilia\
tion...and to catch no slip )Tj
T*
(by the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( A foul Fiend coming over the field to meet him; his name is Apollyon\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( It beareth the name of Vanity-Fair, because the town where \222tis k\
ept, is lighter than vanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Hanging is too good for him, said Mr Cruelty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Yet my great-grandfather was but a water-man, looking one way, and r\
owing another: and I )Tj
T*
(got most of my estate by the same occupation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( They are for religion when in rags and contempt; but I am for him wh\
en he walks in his golden )Tj
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(slippers, in the sunshine and with applause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Now Giant Despair had a wife, and her name was Diffidence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( A grievous crab-tree cudgel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( They came to the Delectable Mountains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Sleep is sweet to the labouring man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1.)Tj
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( Then I saw that there was a way to Hell, even from the gates of heav\
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(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
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( So I awoke, and behold it was a dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1678\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( A man that could look no way but downwards, with a muckrake in his h\
and.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2.)Tj
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( One leak will sink a ship, and one sin will destroy a sinner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2)Tj
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( He that is down needs fear no fall,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He that is low no pride.)Tj
T*
( He that is humble ever shall)Tj
T*
( Have God to be his guide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2 \221Shepherd Boy\222s S\
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15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( A very zealous man...difficulties, lions, or Vanity-Fair, he feared \
not at all: \222Twas only sin, )Tj
T*
(death, and Hell that was to him a terror.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2 \(of Mr Fearing\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( A man there was, tho\222 some did count him mad,)Tj
T*
( The more he cast away, the more he had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2)Tj
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( Mercy laboured much for the poor...an ornament to her profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( Who would true valour see,)Tj
T*
( Let him come hither;)Tj
T*
( One here will constant be,)Tj
T*
( Come wind, come weather.)Tj
T*
( There\222s no discouragement)Tj
T*
( Shall make him once relent)Tj
T*
( His first avowed intent)Tj
T*
( To be a pilgrim.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Do but themselves confound\227)Tj
T*
( His strength the more is.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2)Tj
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( The last words of Mr Despondency were, Farewell night, welcome day. \
His daughter went )Tj
T*
(through the river singing, but none could understand what she said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( I am going to my Fathers, and tho\222 with great difficulty I am got\
hither, yet now I do not repent )Tj
T*
(me of all the trouble I have been at to arrive where I am. My sword, I g\
ive to him that shall )Tj
T*
(succeed me in my pilgrimage, and my courage and skill to him that can ge\
t it. My marks and )Tj
T*
(scars I carry with me, to be a witness for me, that I have fought his ba\
ttles, who will now be my )Tj
T*
(rewarder...So he passed over, and the trumpets sounded for him on the ot\
her side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2 \(Mr Valiant-for-Truth\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( I have formerly lived by hearsay and faith, but now I go where I sha\
ll live by sight, and shall )Tj
T*
(be with Him in whose company I delight myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Pilgrim\222s Progress\222 \(1684\) pt. 2 \(Mr Standfast\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 432.7124 Tm
( 2.247 Samuel Dickinson Burchard 1812-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are Republicans and don\222t propose to leave our party and ident\
ify ourselves with the party )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(whose antecedents are rum, Romanism, and rebellion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.17047 Tm
(Speech, New York City, 29 October 1884)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 344.9624 Tm
( 2.248 Anthony Burgess 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A clockwork orange.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1962\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.50456 Tm
( It was the afternoon of my eighty-first birthday, and I was in bed w\
ith my catamite when Ali )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(announced that the archbishop had come to see me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221Earthly Powers\222 \(1980\) p. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.75456 Tm
( He said it was artificial respiration, but now I find I am to have h\
is child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(\221Inside Mr Enderby\222 \(1963\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 183.7124 Tm
( 2.249 Gelett Burgess 1866-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I never saw a Purple Cow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I never hope to see one;)Tj
T*
( But I can tell you, anyhow,)Tj
T*
( I\222d rather see than be one!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221The Burgess Nonsense Book\222 \(1914\) \221The Purple Cow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( Ah, yes! I wrote the \221Purple Cow\222\227)Tj
T*
( I\222m sorry, now, I wrote it!)Tj
ET
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( But I can tell you anyhow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I\222ll kill you if you quote it!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Burgess Nonsense Book\222 \(1914\) \221Confessional\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.250 John William Burgon 1813-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Match me such marvel, save in Eastern clime,\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A rose-red city\227\221half as old as Time\222!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Petra\222 \(1845\) l. 131.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 2.251 Sir John Burgoyne 1722-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You have only, when before your glass, to keep pronouncing to yourse\
lf nimini-pimini\227the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lips cannot fail of taking their plie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221The Heiress\222 \(1786\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 511.4624 Tm
( 2.252 Edmund Burke 1729-97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The conduct of a losing party never appears right: at least it never\
can possess the only )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(infallible criterion of wisdom to vulgar judgements\227success.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.92047 Tm
(\221Letter to a Member of the National Assembly\222 \(1791\) p. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 435.00456 Tm
( Those who have been once intoxicated with power, and have derived an\
y kind of emolument )Tj
T*
(from it, even though for but one year, can never willingly abandon it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.17047 Tm
(\221Letter to a Member of the National Assembly\222 \(1791\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.25456 Tm
( Tyrants seldom want pretexts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Letter to a Member of the National Assembly\222 \(1791\) p. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( You can never plan the future by the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221Letter to a Member of the National Assembly\222 \(1791\) p. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.75456 Tm
( To innovate is not to reform.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.92047 Tm
(\221A Letter to a Noble Lord\222 \(1796\) p. 20)Tj
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( The king, and his faithful subjects, the lords and commons of this r\
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T*
(which no man can break.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221A Letter to a Noble Lord\222 \(1796\) p. 54.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.25456 Tm
( I know many have been taught to think that moderation, in a case lik\
e this, is a sort of treason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol on the Affairs of America\222 \(17\
77\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( Between craft and credulity, the voice of reason is stifled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol\222 \(1777\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.75456 Tm
( Liberty too must be limited in order to be possessed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol\222 \(1777\) p. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( Nothing in progression can rest on its original plan. We may as well\
think of rocking a grown )Tj
T*
(man in the cradle of an infant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.17047 Tm
(\221Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol\222 \(1777\) p. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.25456 Tm
( Among a people generally corrupt, liberty cannot long exist.)Tj
ET
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(\221Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol\222 \(1777\) p. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( All men that are ruined are ruined on the side of their natural prop\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Letters on a Regicide Peace\222 Letter 1 \(1796\))Tj
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( Example is the school of mankind, and they will learn at no other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Letters on a Regicide Peace\222 Letter 1 \(1796\))Tj
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( Never, no never, did Nature say one thing and Wisdom say another.)Tj
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(\221Letters on a Regicide Peace\222 Letter 3 \(1797\))Tj
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( Well it is known that ambition can creep as well as soar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221Letters on a Regicide Peace\222 Letter 3 \(1797\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( There is, however, a limit at which forbearance ceases to be a virtu\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221Observations on a late Publication on the Present State of the Natio\
n\222 \(1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( It is a general popular error to imagine the loudest complainers for\
the public to be the most )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(anxious for its welfare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221Observations on...the Present State of the Nation\222 \(1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( No passion so effectually robs the mind of all its powers of acting \
and reasoning as fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221On the Sublime and Beautiful\222 \(1757\) pt. 2, sect. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( Custom reconciles us to everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221On the Sublime and Beautiful\222 \(1757\) pt. 4, sect. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( I flatter myself that I love a manly, moral, regulated liberty as we\
ll as any gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( Whenever our neighbour\222s house is on fire, it cannot be amiss for\
the engines to play a little on )Tj
T*
(our own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( A state without the means of some change is without the means of its\
conservation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.00456 Tm
( Make the Revolution a parent of settlement, and not a nursery of fut\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.25456 Tm
( People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward t\
o their ancestors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.42047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( Government is a contrivance of human wisdom to provide for human wan\
ts. Men have a right )Tj
T*
(that these wants should be provided for by this wisdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.75456 Tm
( The age of chivalry is gone.\227That of sophisters, economists, and \
calculators, has succeeded; )Tj
T*
(and the glory of Europe is extinguished for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 112)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( The unbought grace of life, the cheap defence of nations, the nurse \
of manly sentiment and )Tj
T*
(heroic enterprise is gone! It is gone, that sensibility of principle, th\
at chastity of honour, which )Tj
T*
(felt a stain like a wound, which inspired courage whilst it mitigated fe\
rocity, which ennobled )Tj
T*
(whatever it touched, and under which vice itself lost half its evil, by \
losing all its grossness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 113)Tj
ET
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( This barbarous philosophy, which is the offspring of cold hearts and\
muddy understandings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 713.50456 Tm
( In the groves of their academy, at the end of every vista, you see n\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.67047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 115.)Tj
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( Kings will be tyrants from policy when subjects are rebels from prin\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 116)Tj
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( Learning will be cast into the mire, and trodden down under the hoof\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.25456 Tm
( Man is by his constitution a religious animal; atheism is against no\
t only our reason, but our )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(instincts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.42047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 135.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 548.50456 Tm
( A perfect democracy is therefore the most shameless thing in the wor\
ld.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.67047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 139)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 511.75456 Tm
( Nobility is a graceful ornament to the civil order. It is the Corint\
hian capital of polished society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 205)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 475.00456 Tm
( Superstition is the religion of feeble minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 234)Tj
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( He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our sk\
ill. Our antagonist is our )Tj
T*
(helper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.42047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.50456 Tm
( Our patience will achieve more than our force.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.67047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.75456 Tm
( Good order is the foundation of all good things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.92047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 351)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.00456 Tm
( Every politician ought to sacrifice to the graces; and to join compl\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Revolution in France\222 \(1790\) p. 352)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 273.25456 Tm
( The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.42047 Tm
(Speech on the Middlesex Election, 7 February 1771, in \221The Speeches\222\
\(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.50456 Tm
( It is the nature of all greatness not to be exact; and great trade w\
ill always be attended with )Tj
T*
(considerable abuses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.67047 Tm
(Speech \221On American Taxation\222 19 April 1774)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.75456 Tm
( Falsehood has a perennial spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.92047 Tm
(Speech \221On American Taxation\222 19 April 1774)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.00456 Tm
( To tax and to please, no more than to love and to be wise, is not gi\
ven to men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On American Taxation\222 19 April 1774)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.25456 Tm
( Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgeme\
nt; and he betrays, instead )Tj
T*
(of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.42047 Tm
(Speech to the Electors of Bristol, 3 November 1774)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.50456 Tm
( I have in general no very exalted opinion of the virtue of paper gov\
ernment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 37.67047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
ET
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( The concessions of the weak are the concessions of fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 730.92047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
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( When we speak of the commerce with our colonies, fiction lags after \
truth; invention is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unfruitful, and imagination cold and barren.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 676.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
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( The use of force alone is but temporary. It may subdue for a moment;\
but it does not remove )Tj
T*
(the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not governed, which is \
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T*
(conquered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 603.42047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 582.50456 Tm
( Nothing less will content me, than whole America.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 566.67047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 545.75456 Tm
( Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be found.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 529.92047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 509.00456 Tm
( All Protestantism, even the most cold and passive, is a sort of diss\
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T*
(prevalent in our northern colonies is a refinement on the principle of r\
esistance; it is the )Tj
T*
(dissidence of dissent, and the Protestantism of the Protestant religion.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 436.25456 Tm
( I do not know the method of drawing up an indictment against an whol\
e people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.42047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 399.50456 Tm
( It is not, what a lawyer tells me I may do; but what humanity, reaso\
n, and justice, tell me I )Tj
T*
(ought to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.67047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.75456 Tm
( Freedom and not servitude is the cure of anarchy; as religion, and n\
ot atheism, is the true )Tj
T*
(remedy for superstition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.92047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.00456 Tm
( Instead of a standing revenue, you will have therefore a perpetual q\
uarrel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 253.25456 Tm
( Parties must ever exist in a free country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.42047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.50456 Tm
( Slavery they can have anywhere. It is a weed that grows in every soi\
l.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.67047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.75456 Tm
( Deny them this participation of freedom, and you break that sole bon\
d, which originally made, )Tj
T*
(and must still preserve the unity of the empire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.92047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.00456 Tm
( It is the love of the people; it is their attachment to their govern\
ment, from the sense of the )Tj
T*
(deep stake they have in such a glorious institution, which gives you you\
r army and your navy, )Tj
T*
(and infuses into both that liberal obedience, without which your army wo\
uld be a base rabble, and )Tj
T*
(your navy nothing but rotten timber.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
ET
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Magnanimity in politics is not seldom the truest wisdom; and a great\
empire and little minds )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(go ill together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( By adverting to the dignity of this high calling, our ancestors have\
turned a savage wilderness )Tj
T*
(into a glorious empire: and have made the most extensive, and the only h\
onourable conquests; )Tj
T*
(not by destroying, but by promoting the wealth, the number, the happines\
s of the human race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Speech \221On Conciliation with America\222 22 March 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Individuals pass like shadows; but the commonwealth is fixed and sta\
ble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 11 February 1780, col. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The people are the masters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 11 February 1780, col. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Speech at Bristol, previous to the Late Election\222 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Every other conqueror of every other description has left some monum\
ent, either of state or )Tj
T*
(beneficence, behind him. Were we to be driven out of India this day, not\
hing would remain to tell )Tj
T*
(that it had been possessed, during the inglorious period of our dominion\
, by anything better than )Tj
T*
(the orang-outang or the tiger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(Speech on Fox\222s East India Bill, 1 December 1783)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Your governor stimulates a rapacious and licentious soldiery to the \
personal search of women, )Tj
T*
(lest these unhappy creatures should avail themselves of the protection o\
f their sex to secure any )Tj
T*
(supply for their necessities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(Speech on Fox\222s East India Bill, 1 December 1783 \(referring to Warre\
n Hastings\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(Speech at County Meeting of Buckinghamshire, 1784)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Religious persecution may shield itself under the guise of a mistake\
n and over-zealous piety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(Speech, 18 February 1788, in E. A. Bond \(ed.\) \221Speeches...in the T\
rial of Warren Hastings\222 \(1859\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( An event has happened, upon which it is difficult to speak, and impo\
ssible to be silent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(Speech, 5 May 1789, in E. A. Bond \(ed.\) \221Speeches...in the Trial o\
f Warren Hastings\222 \(1859\) vol. 2, p. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( At last dying in the last dyke of prevarication.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(Speech, 7 May 1789, in E. A. Bond \(ed.\) \221Speeches...in the Trial o\
f Warren Hastings\222 \(1859\) vol. 2, p. 179)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( There is but one law for all, namely, that law which governs all law\
\227the law of our Creator, )Tj
T*
(the law of humanity, justice, equity, the law of nature and of nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(Speech, 28 May 1794, in E. A. Bond \(ed.\) \221Speeches...in the Trial \
of Warren Hastings\222 \(1859\) vol. 4, p. 377)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Old religious factions are volcanoes burnt out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(Speech on the Petition of the Unitarians, 11 May 1792, in \221The Works\222\
vol. 5 \(1812\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Dangers by being despised grow great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(Speech on the Petition of the Unitarians, 11 May 1792, in \221The Works\222\
vol. 5 \(1812\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( And having looked to government for bread, on the very first scarcit\
y they will turn and bite )Tj
T*
(the hand that fed them.)Tj
ET
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts and Details on Scarcity\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( To complain of the age we live in, to murmur at the present possesso\
rs of power, to lament the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(past, to conceive extravagant hopes of the future, are the common dispos\
itions of the greatest part )Tj
T*
(of mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I am not one of those who think that the people are never in the wro\
ng. They have been so, )Tj
T*
(frequently and outrageously, both in other countries and in this. But I \
do say, that in all disputes )Tj
T*
(between them and their rulers, the presumption is at least upon a par in\
favour of the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The power of the crown, almost dead and rotten as Prerogative, has g\
rown up anew, with much )Tj
T*
(more strength, and far less odium, under the name of Influence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( We must soften into a credulity below the milkiness of infancy to th\
ink all men virtuous. We )Tj
T*
(must be tainted with a malignity truly diabolical, to believe all the wo\
rld to be equally wicked )Tj
T*
(and corrupt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, \
one by one, an unpitied )Tj
T*
(sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Of this stamp is the cant of Not men, but measures; a sort of charm \
by which many people get )Tj
T*
(loose from every honourable engagement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( It is therefore our business carefully to cultivate in our minds, to\
rear to the most perfect vigour )Tj
T*
(and maturity, every sort of generous and honest feeling that belongs to \
our nature. To bring the )Tj
T*
(dispositions that are lovely in private life into the service and conduc\
t of the commonwealth; so )Tj
T*
(to be patriots, as not to forget we are gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents\222 \(1770\) p. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Laws, like houses, lean on one another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221A Tract on the Popery Laws\222 \(planned c.1765\) ch. 3, pt. 1 in \221\
The Works\222 vol. 5 \(1812\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( In all forms of Government the people is the true legislator.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221A Tract on the Popery Laws\222 ch. 3, pt. 1 in \221The Works\222 vol\
. 5 \(1812\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( People crushed by law have no hopes but from power. If laws are thei\
r enemies, they will be )Tj
T*
(enemies to laws; and those, who have much to hope and nothing to lose, w\
ill always be )Tj
T*
(dangerous, more or less.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(Letter to Charles James Fox, 8 October 1777, in \221The Correspondence o\
f Edmund Burke\222 vol. 3 \(1961\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( The silent touches of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(Letter to William Smith, 29 January 1795, in \221The Correspondence of E\
dmund Burke\222 vol. 8 \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( Somebody has said, that a king may make a nobleman but he cannot mak\
e a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(Letter to William Smith, 29 January 1795, in \221The Correspondence of E\
dmund Burke\222 vol. 8 \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( His virtues were his arts.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Inscription on the pedestal of the statue of the Marquis of Rockingham i\
n Wentworth Park)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Not merely a chip of the old \221block\222, but the old block itself\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(On the younger Pitt\222s First Speech, 1781)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The cold neutrality of an impartial judge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(J. P. Brissot \221To his Constituents\222 \(1794\) \221Translator\222s P\
reface\222 \(written by Burke\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( It is necessary only for the good man to do nothing for evil to triu\
mph.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(Attributed \(in a number of forms\) to Burke, but not found in his writi\
ngs.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.7124 Tm
( 2.253 Johnny Burke 1908-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every time it rains, it rains)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pennies from heaven.)Tj
T*
( Don\222t you know each cloud contains)Tj
T*
( Pennies from heaven?)Tj
T*
( You\222ll find your fortune falling)Tj
T*
( All over town)Tj
T*
( Be sure that your umbrella)Tj
T*
( Is upside down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Pennies from Heaven\222 \(1936 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( Like Webster\222s Dictionary, we\222re Morocco bound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221The Road to Morocco\222 \(1942 film\) title song)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.2124 Tm
( 2.254 Lord Burleigh)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See William Cecil \(3.60\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 2.255 Fanny Burney \(Mme d\222Arblay\) 1752-1840)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A little alarm now and then keeps life from stagnation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 3, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( There is nothing upon the face of the earth so insipid as a medium. \
Give me love or hate! a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(friend that will go to jail for me, or an enemy that will run me through\
the body!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 3, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( It\222s a delightful thing to think of perfection; but it\222s vastl\
y more amusing to talk of errors and )Tj
T*
(absurdities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 3, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( Vice is detestable; I banish all its appearances from my coteries; a\
nd I would banish its reality, )Tj
T*
(too, were I sure I should then have any thing but empty chairs in my dra\
wing-room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 5, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( The cure of a romantic first flame is a better surety to subsequent \
discretion, than all the )Tj
T*
(exhortations of all the fathers, and mothers, and guardians, and maiden \
aunts in the universe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 5, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.00456 Tm
( O, we all acknowledge our faults, now; \222tis the mode of the day: \
but the acknowledgement )Tj
ET
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(passes for current payment; and therefore we never amend them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 6, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( No man is in love when he marries. He may have loved before; I have \
even heard he has )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sometimes loved after: but at the time never. There is something in the \
formalities of the )Tj
T*
(matrimonial preparations that drive away all the little cupidons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Camilla\222 \(1796\) bk. 6, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Travelling is the ruin of all happiness! There\222s no looking at a \
building here after seeing Italy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Cecilia\222 \(1782\) bk. 4, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( \221True, very true, ma\222am,\222 said he, yawning, \221one really \
lives no where; one does but vegetate, )Tj
T*
(and wish it all at an end.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Cecilia\222 \(1782\) bk. 7, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( \221The whole of this unfortunate business,\222 said Dr Lyster, \221\
has been the result of pride and )Tj
T*
(prejudice.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Cecilia\222 \(1782\) bk. 10, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( \221Do you come to the play without knowing what it is?\222 \221O ye\
s, Sir, yes, very frequently; I have )Tj
T*
(no time to read play-bills; one merely comes to meet one\222s friends, a\
nd show that one\222s alive.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Evelina\222 \(1778\) Letter 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( The freedom with which Dr Johnson condemns whatever he disapproves i\
s astonishing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Diary and Letters...1778-1840\222 23 August 1778)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( The delusive seduction of martial music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Diary and Letters...1778-1840\222 5-6 May 1802)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Such a set of tittle tattle, prittle prattle visitants! Oh dear! I a\
m so sick of the ceremony and )Tj
T*
(fuss of these fall lall people! So much dressing\227chit chat\227complim\
entary nonsense\227In short, a )Tj
T*
(country town is my detestation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 17 July 1768 in \221The Early Journals and Letters of Fa\
nny Burney\222 \(ed. L. E. Troide, 1988\) vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( O! how short a time does it take to put an end to a woman\222s liber\
ty!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 20 July 1768 in \221The Early Journals and Letters of Fa\
nny Burney\222 \(ed. L. E. Troide, 1988\) vol. 1 )Tj
T*
(\(referring to a wedding\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.2124 Tm
( 2.256 John Burns 1858-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Thames is liquid history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(To an American who had compared the Thames disparagingly with the Missis\
sippi, in \221Daily Mail\222 25 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(January 1943)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 148.4624 Tm
( 2.257 Robert Burns 1759-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O thou! whatever title suit thee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Auld Hornie, Satan, Nick, or Clootie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221Address to the Deil\222 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Ye high, exalted, virtuous dames,)Tj
T*
( Tied up in godly laces,)Tj
ET
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( Before ye gie poor Frailty names,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Suppose a change o\222 cases:)Tj
T*
( A dear-lov\222d lad, convenience snug,)Tj
T*
( A treach\222rous inclination\227)Tj
T*
( But, let me whisper in your lug,)Tj
T*
( Ye\222re aiblins nae temptation.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Then gently scan your brother man,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Still gentler sister woman;)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 they may gang a kennin wrang,)Tj
T*
( To step aside is human.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221Address to the Unco Guid\222 \(1787\); aiblins perhaps)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( Ae fond kiss, and then we sever;)Tj
T*
( Ae fareweel, and then for ever!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221Ae fond Kiss\222 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( Flow gently, sweet Afton, among thy green braes,)Tj
T*
( Flow gently, I\222ll sing thee a song in thy praise.)Tj
T*
( My Mary\222s asleep by thy murmuring stream,)Tj
T*
( Flow gently, sweet Afton, disturb not her dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Afton Water\222 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Should auld acquaintance be forgot)Tj
T*
( And never brought to mind?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Auld Lang Syne\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( We\222ll tak a cup o\222 kindness yet,)Tj
T*
( For auld lang syne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Auld Lang Syne\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( And there\222s a hand, my trusty fiere!)Tj
T*
( And gie\222s a hand o\222thine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221Auld Lang Syne\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Freedom and Whisky gang thegither!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221The Author\222s Earnest Cry and Prayer\222 \(1786\) l. 185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Ay, waulkin, Oh,)Tj
T*
( Waulkin still and weary:)Tj
T*
( Sleep I can get nane,)Tj
T*
( For thinking on my dearie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Ay Waukin O\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Ye banks and braes o\222 bonny Doon,)Tj
T*
( How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair;)Tj
T*
( How can ye chant, ye little birds,)Tj
T*
( And I sae weary fu\222 o\222 care!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221The Banks o\222 Doon\222 \(1792\))Tj
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( Thou minds me o\222 departed joys,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Departed, never to return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221The Banks o\222 Doon\222 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( And my fause luver stole my rose,)Tj
T*
( But ah! he left the thorn wi\222 me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221The Banks o\222 Doon\222 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.00456 Tm
( O saw ye bonnie Lesley)Tj
T*
( As she gaed o\222er the border?)Tj
T*
( She\222s gane, like Alexander,)Tj
T*
( To spread her conquests farther.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To see her is to love her,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And love but her for ever;)Tj
T*
( For Nature made her what she is)Tj
T*
( And never made anither!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(\221Bonnie Lesley\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( Gin a body meet a body)Tj
T*
( Comin thro\222 the rye,)Tj
T*
( Gin a body kiss a body)Tj
T*
( Need a body cry?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(\221Comin thro\222 the rye\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.75456 Tm
( Contented wi\222 little and cantie wi\222 mair,)Tj
T*
( Whene\222er I forgather wi\222 Sorrow and Care,)Tj
T*
( I gie them a skelp, as they\222re creeping alang,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 a cog o\222 gude swats and an auld Scotish sang.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.92047 Tm
(\221Contented wi\222 little\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.00456 Tm
( Th\222 expectant wee-things, toddlin\222, stacher through)Tj
T*
( To meet their Dad, wi\222 flichterin\222 noise an\222 glee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.17047 Tm
(\221The Cotter\222s Saturday Night\222 \(1786\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.25456 Tm
( They never sought in vain that sought the Lord aright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.42047 Tm
(\221The Cotter\222s Saturday Night\222 \(1786\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 203.50456 Tm
( The healsome porritch, chief of Scotia\222s food.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.67047 Tm
(\221The Cotter\222s Saturday Night\222 \(1786\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.75456 Tm
( The sire turns o\222er, wi\222 patriarchal grace,)Tj
T*
( The big ha\222-Bible, ance his father\222s pride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.92047 Tm
(\221The Cotter\222s Saturday Night\222 \(1786\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.00456 Tm
( From scenes like these old Scotia\222s grandeur springs,)Tj
T*
( That makes her loved at home, revered abroad:)Tj
T*
( Princes and Lords are but the breath of kings,)Tj
T*
( \221An honest man\222s the noblest work of God.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.17047 Tm
(\221The Cotter\222s Saturday Night\222 \(1786\) st. 19.)Tj
ET
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( I wasna fou, but just had plenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.42047 Tm
(\221Death and Dr Hornbook\222 \(1787\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.50456 Tm
( On ev\222ry hand it will allow\222d be,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He\222s just\227nae better than he shou\222d be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.67047 Tm
(\221A Dedication to G[avin] H[amilton]\222 \(1786\) l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.75456 Tm
( There\222s threesome reels, there\222s foursome reels,)Tj
T*
( There\222s hornpipes and strathspeys, man,)Tj
T*
( But the ae best dance e\222er cam to the land)Tj
T*
( Was, the deil\222s awa wi\222 th\222 Exciseman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.92047 Tm
(\221The Deil\222s awa wi\222 th\222Exciseman\222 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.00456 Tm
( Perhaps it may turn out a sang;)Tj
T*
( Perhaps, turn out a sermon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.17047 Tm
(\221Epistle to a Young Friend\222 \(1786\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.25456 Tm
( I waive the quantum o\222the sin;)Tj
T*
( The hazard of concealing;)Tj
T*
( But och! it hardens a\222 within,)Tj
T*
( And petrifies the feeling!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.42047 Tm
(\221Epistle to a Young Friend\222 \(1786\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.50456 Tm
( An atheist-laugh\222s a poor exchange)Tj
T*
( For Deity offended!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.67047 Tm
(\221Epistle to a Young Friend\222 \(1786\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.75456 Tm
( Gie me ae spark o\222 Nature\222s fire,)Tj
T*
( That\222s a\222 the learning I desire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.92047 Tm
(\221Epistle to J. L[aprai]k\222 \(1786\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.00456 Tm
( For thus the royal mandate ran,)Tj
T*
( When first the human race began,)Tj
T*
( \221The social, friendly, honest man,)Tj
T*
( Whate\222er he be,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis he fulfils great Nature\222s plan,)Tj
T*
( And none but he\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.17047 Tm
(\221To the same\222 [John Lapraik] st. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.25456 Tm
( The rank is but the guinea\222s stamp,)Tj
T*
( The man\222s the gowd for a\222 that!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.42047 Tm
(\221For a\222 that and a\222 that\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.50456 Tm
( A man\222s a man for a\222 that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.67047 Tm
(\221For a\222 that and a\222 that\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.75456 Tm
( Green grow the rashes, O,)Tj
T*
( Green grow the rashes, O;)Tj
T*
( The sweetest hours that e\222er I spend,)Tj
T*
( Are spent among the lasses, O.)Tj
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(\221Green Grow the Rashes\222 \(1787\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Auld nature swears, the lovely dears)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her noblest work she classes, O;)Tj
T*
( Her prentice han\222 she tried on man,)Tj
T*
( An\222 then she made the lasses, O.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Green Grow the Rashes\222 \(1787\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O, gie me the lass that has acres o\222 charms,)Tj
T*
( O, gie me the lass wi\222 the weel-stockit farms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hey for a Lass wi\222 a Tocher\222 \(1799\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Here, some are thinkin\222 on their sins,)Tj
T*
( An\222 some upo\222 their claes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Holy Fair\222 \(1786\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Leeze me on drink! it gi\222es us mair)Tj
T*
( Than either school or college.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Holy Fair\222 \(1786\) st. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( There\222s some are fou o\222 love divine;)Tj
T*
( There\222s some are fou o\222 brandy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221The Holy Fair\222 \(1786\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( O L\227d thou kens what zeal I bear,)Tj
T*
( When drinkers drink, and swearers swear,)Tj
T*
( And singin\222 there, and dancin\222 here,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 great an\222 sma\222;)Tj
T*
( For I am keepet by thy fear,)Tj
T*
( Free frae them a\222.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But yet\227O L\227d\227confess I must\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( At times I\222m fash\222d wi\222 fleshly lust...)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( O L\227d\227yestreen\227thou kens\227wi\222 Meg\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy pardon I sincerely beg!)Tj
T*
( O may \222t ne\222er be a living plague,)Tj
T*
( To my dishonour!)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll ne\222er lift a lawless leg)Tj
T*
( Again upon her.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Willie\222s Prayer\222 \(1785\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 146.25456 Tm
( There\222s death in the cup\227so beware!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221Inscription on a Goblet\222 \(published 1834\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.50456 Tm
( It was a\222 for our rightfu\222 King)Tj
T*
( We left fair Scotland\222s strand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(\221It was a\222 for our Rightfu\222 King\222 \(1796\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.75456 Tm
( John Anderson my jo, John,)Tj
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( When we were first acquent,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Your locks were like the raven,)Tj
T*
( Your bonny brow was brent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221John Anderson my Jo\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I once was a maid, tho\222 I cannot tell when,)Tj
T*
( And still my delight is in proper young men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Jolly Beggars\222 \(1799\) l. 57 \(also known as \221Love and Li\
berty\227A Cantata\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Partly wi\222 love o\222ercome sae sair,)Tj
T*
( And partly she was drunk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Jolly Beggars\222 \(1799\) l. 183)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( A fig for those by law protected!)Tj
T*
( Liberty\222s a glorious feast!)Tj
T*
( Courts for cowards were erected,)Tj
T*
( Churches built to please the priest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Jolly Beggars\222 \(1799\) l. 254)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Life is all a variorum,)Tj
T*
( We regard not how it goes;)Tj
T*
( Let them cant about decorum,)Tj
T*
( Who have characters to lose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Jolly Beggars\222 \(1799\) l. 270)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Some have meat and cannot eat,)Tj
T*
( Some cannot eat that want it:)Tj
T*
( But we have meat and we can eat,)Tj
T*
( Sae let the Lord be thankit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221The Kirkudbright Grace\222 \(1790\) \(also known as \221The Selkirk \
Grace\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( I\222ve seen sae mony changefu\222 years,)Tj
T*
( On earth I am a stranger grown:)Tj
T*
( I wander in the ways of men,)Tj
T*
( Alike unknowing and unknown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Lament for James, Earl of Glencairn\222 \(1793\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Nature\222s law,)Tj
T*
( That man was made to mourn)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Man was made to Mourn\222 st. 4 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Man\222s inhumanity to man)Tj
T*
( Makes countless thousands mourn!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Man was made to Mourn\222 st. 7 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( O Death, the poor man\222s dearest friend,)Tj
T*
( The kindest and the best!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Man was made to Mourn\222 st. 11 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( May coward shame distain his name,)Tj
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( The wretch that dares not die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221McPherson\222s Farewell\222 \(1788\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Go fetch to me a pint o\222 wine,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An\222 fill it in a silver tassie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221My Bonnie Mary\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( My heart\222s in the Highlands, my heart is not here;)Tj
T*
( My heart\222s in the Highlands a-chasing the deer;)Tj
T*
( Chasing the wild deer, and following the roe,)Tj
T*
( My heart\222s in the Highlands, wherever I go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221My Heart\222s in the Highlands\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the North;)Tj
T*
( The birth-place of valour, the country of worth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221My Heart\222s in the Highlands\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( The minister kiss\222d the fiddler\222s wife,)Tj
T*
( An\222 could na preach for thinkin\222 o\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221My Love She\222s but a Lassie yet\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( The wan moon sets behind the white wave,)Tj
T*
( And time is setting with me, Oh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Open the door to me, Oh\222 \(1793\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( O, my Luve\222s like a red, red rose)Tj
T*
( That\222s newly sprung in June;)Tj
T*
( O my Luve\222s like the melodie)Tj
T*
( That\222s sweetly play\222d in tune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221A Red Red Rose\222 \(1796\) \(derived from various folk-songs\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Scots, wha hae wi\222 Wallace bled,)Tj
T*
( Scots, wham Bruce has aften led,)Tj
T*
( Welcome to your gory bed,\227)Tj
T*
( Or to victorie.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Now\222s the day, and now\222s the hour;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( See the front o\222 battle lour;)Tj
T*
( See approach proud Edward\222s power,)Tj
T*
( Chains and slaverie.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Robert Bruce\222s March to Bannockburn\222 \(1799\) \(also known as \
\221Scots, Wha Hae\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( Liberty\222s in every blow!)Tj
T*
( Let us do\227or die!!!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Robert Bruce\222s March to Bannockburn\222 \(1799\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Good Lord, what is man! for as simple he looks,)Tj
T*
( Do but try to develop his hooks and his crooks,)Tj
T*
( With his depths and his shallows, his good and his evil,)Tj
T*
( All in all he\222s a problem must puzzle the devil.)Tj
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(\221Sketch\222 inscribed to Charles James Fox \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( His ancient, trusty, drouthy crony,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tam lo\222ed him like a vera brither;)Tj
T*
( They had been fou for weeks thegither.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.00456 Tm
( Kings may be blest, but Tam was glorious,)Tj
T*
( O\222er a\222 the ills o\222 life victorious!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( But pleasures are like poppies spread,)Tj
T*
( You seize the flow\222r, its bloom is shed;)Tj
T*
( Or like the snow falls in the river,)Tj
T*
( A moment white\227then melts for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.42047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.50456 Tm
( Nae man can tether time or tide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.67047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.75456 Tm
( Inspiring, bold John Barleycorn,)Tj
T*
( What dangers thou canst make us scorn!)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 tippenny, we fear nae evil;)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 usquebae, we\222ll face the devil!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.92047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.00456 Tm
( As Tammie glowr\222d, amaz\222d, and curious,)Tj
T*
( The mirth and fun grew fast and furious.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.25456 Tm
( Tam tint his reason a\222 thegither,)Tj
T*
( And roars out\227\222Weel done, Cutty-sark!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.42047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.50456 Tm
( Ah Tam! ah Tam! thou\222ll get thy fairin\222!)Tj
T*
( In hell they\222ll roast thee like a herrin!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.67047 Tm
(\221Tam o\222 Shanter\222 \(1791\) l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.75456 Tm
( A man may drink and no be drunk;)Tj
T*
( A man may fight and no be slain;)Tj
T*
( A man may kiss a bonnie lass,)Tj
T*
( And aye be welcome back again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.92047 Tm
(\221There was a Lass\222 \(1788\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.00456 Tm
( Fair fa\222 your honest, sonsie face,)Tj
T*
( Great chieftain o\222 the puddin\222-race!)Tj
T*
( Aboon them a\222 ye tak your place,)Tj
T*
( Painch, tripe, or thairm:)Tj
T*
( Weel are ye wordy o\222 a grace)Tj
T*
( As lang\222s my arm.)Tj
ET
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(\221To a Haggis\222 \(1787\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O wad some Pow\222r the giftie gie us)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To see oursels as others see us!)Tj
T*
( It wad frae mony a blunder free us,)Tj
T*
( And foolish notion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221To a Louse\222 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Wee, sleekit, cow\222rin\222, tim\222rous beastie,)Tj
T*
( O what a panic\222s in thy breastie!)Tj
T*
( Thou need na start awa sae hasty,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 bickering brattle!)Tj
T*
( I wad be laith to rin an\222 chase thee,)Tj
T*
( Wi\222 murd\222ring pattle!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221To a Mouse\222 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( I\222m truly sorry Man\222s dominion)Tj
T*
( Has broken Nature\222s social union,)Tj
T*
( An\222 justifies that ill opinion)Tj
T*
( Which makes thee startle,)Tj
T*
( At me, thy poor, earth-born companion,)Tj
T*
( An\222 fellow-mortal!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221To a Mouse\222 \(1786\))Tj
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( The best laid schemes o\222 mice an\222 men)Tj
T*
( Gang aft a-gley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221To a Mouse\222 \(1786\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Come, Firm Resolve, take thou the van,)Tj
T*
( Thou stalk o\222 carl-hemp in man!)Tj
T*
( And let us mind, faint heart ne\222er wan)Tj
T*
( A lady fair;)Tj
T*
( Wha does the utmost that he can,)Tj
T*
( Will whyles do mair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221To Dr Blacklock\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Just now I\222ve taen the fit o\222 rhyme,)Tj
T*
( My barmie noddle\222s working prime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221To J. S[mith]\222 \(1786\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Some rhyme a neebor\222s name to lash;)Tj
T*
( Some rhyme \(vain thought!\) for needfu\222 cash;)Tj
T*
( Some rhyme to court the countra clash,)Tj
T*
( An\222 raise a din;)Tj
T*
( For me, an aim I never fash;)Tj
T*
( I rhyme for fun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221To J. S[mith]\222 \(1786\) st. 5)Tj
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( An\222 fareweel dear, deluding woman,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The joy of joys!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221To J. S[mith]\222 \(1786\) st. 14)Tj
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( Their sighan\222, cantan\222, grace-proud faces,)Tj
T*
( Their three-mile prayers, and half-mile graces.)Tj
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(\221To the Rev. John M\222Math\222 \(published 1808\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( We labour soon, we labour late,)Tj
T*
( To feed the titled knave, man;)Tj
T*
( And a\222 the comfort we\222re to get,)Tj
T*
( Is that ayont the grave, man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Tree of Liberty\222 \(published 1838\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( His lock\351d, lettered, braw brass collar,)Tj
T*
( Shew\222d him the gentleman and scholar.)Tj
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(\221The Twa Dogs\222 \(1786\) l. 13)Tj
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( An\222 there began a lang digression)Tj
T*
( About the lords o\222 the creation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Twa Dogs\222 \(1786\) l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Rejoiced they were na men, but dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Twa Dogs\222 \(1786\) l. 236)Tj
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( All in this mottie, misty clime,)Tj
T*
( I backward mus\222d on wasted time,)Tj
T*
( How I had spent my youthfu\222 prime)Tj
T*
( An\222 done nae-thing,)Tj
T*
( But stringing blethers up to rhyme)Tj
T*
( For fools to sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Vision\222 \(1785\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( What can a young lassie, what shall a young lassie,)Tj
T*
( What can a young lassie do wi\222 an auld man?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221What can a Young Lassie do wi\222 an Auld Man\222 \(1792\))Tj
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( O whistle, an\222 I\222ll come to you, my lad:)Tj
T*
( O whistle, an\222 I\222ll come to you, my lad:)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 father and mither and a\222 should gae mad,)Tj
T*
( O whistle, and I\222ll come to you, my lad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Whistle, an\222 I\222ll come to you, my Lad\222 \(1788\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( It is the moon, I ken her horn,)Tj
T*
( That\222s blinkin in the lift sae hie;)Tj
T*
( She shines sae bright to wyle us hame,)Tj
T*
( But by my sooth she\222ll wait a wee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Willie Brew\222d a Peck o\222 Maut\222 \(1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Don\222t let the awkward squad fire over me.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 2.258 William S. Burroughs 1914\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( What we on earth call God is a little tribal God who has made an awf\
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(\221Paris Review\222 Fall 1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.259 Sir Fred Burrows 1887-1973)Tj
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T*
( Unlike my predecessors I have devoted more of my life to shunting an\
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0 -1.2 TD
(hunting and shooting.)Tj
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(Speech as last Governor of undivided Bengal \(1946-7\), having been a fo\
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T*
(of Railwaymen. \221Daily Telegraph\222 24 April 1973, obituary notice)Tj
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( 2.260 Benjamin Hapgood Burt 1880-1950)Tj
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( One evening in October, when I was one-third sober,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An\222 taking home a \221load\222 with manly pride;)Tj
T*
( My poor feet began to stutter, so I lay down in the gutter,)Tj
T*
( And a pig came up an\222 lay down by my side;)Tj
T*
( Then we sang \221It\222s all fair weather when good fellows get toge\
ther,\222)Tj
T*
( Till a lady passing by was heard to say:)Tj
T*
( \221You can tell a man who \223boozes\224 by the company he chooses\222\
)Tj
T*
( And the pig got up and slowly walked away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.92047 Tm
(\221The Pig Got Up and Slowly Walked Away\222 \(1933 song\))Tj
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( When you\222re all dressed up and no place to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.261 Nat Burton)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( There\222ll be bluebirds over the white cliffs of Dover,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tomorrow, just you wait and see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221The White Cliffs of Dover\222 \(1941 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 230.2124 Tm
( 2.262 Sir Richard Burton 1821-90)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Don\222t be frightened; I am recalled. Pay, pack, and follow at conv\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(Note to Isabel Burton, 19 August 1871, on being replaced as British Cons\
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0 -1.2 TD
(\221The Life of Captain Sir Richard F. Burton\222 \(1893\) vol. 1, ch. 2\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.263 Robert Burton \(\221Democritus Junior\222\) 1577-1640)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( All my joys to this are folly,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Naught so sweet as Melancholy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221The Author\222s Abstra\
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( I write of melancholy, by being busy to avoid melancholy.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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( Like watermen, that row one way and look another.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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( Him that makes shoes go barefoot himself.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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( Frascatorius...freely grants all poets to be mad, so doth Scaliger, \
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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( A loose, plain, rude writer.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) \221Democritus to the Read\
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( What, if a dear year come or dearth, or some loss? And were it not t\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 1, sect. 2, member 3, \
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( I may not here omit those two main plagues, and common dotages of hu\
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T*
(women, which have infatuated and besotted myriads of people. They go com\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 1, sect. 2, member 3, \
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( Hinc quam sit calamus saevior ense patet.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 1, sect. 2, member 4, \
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, sect. 3, member 1, \
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( Every thing, saith Epictetus, hath two handles, the one to be held b\
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, sect. 3, member 3, \
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( Who cannot give good counsel? \222tis cheap, it costs them nothing.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, sect. 3, member 3, \
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( What is a ship but a prison?)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, sect. 3, member 4, \
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( All places are distant from Heaven alike.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 2, sect. 3, member 4, \
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 1, member 1, \
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( To enlarge or illustrate this power and effect of love is to set a c\
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( No cord nor cable can so forcibly draw, or hold so fast, as love can\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 2, member 1, \
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( To these crocodile\222s tears they will add sobs, fiery sighs, and s\
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0 -1.2 TD
(colour, leanness.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 2, member 2, \
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( Diogenes struck the father when the son swore.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 2, member 2, \
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( England is a paradise for women, and hell for horses: Italy a paradi\
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T*
(women, as the diverb goes.)Tj
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(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 3, member 1, \
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( One religion is as true as another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sect. 4, member 2, \
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( Be not solitary, be not idle.)Tj
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(Final words, in \221The Anatomy of Melancholy\222 \(1621-51\) pt. 3, sec\
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( 2.264 Hermann Busenbaum 1600-68)Tj
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( Cum finis est licitus, etiam media sunt licita.)Tj
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(\221Histoire Amoureuse des Gaules: Maximes d\222Amour\222 \(1665\) pt. 2\
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(Letter to the Comte de Limoges, 18 October 1677, in \221Lettres de...Com\
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( 2.266 Joseph Butler 1692-1752)Tj
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( It has come, I know not how, to be taken for granted, by many person\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221The Analogy of Religion\222 \(1736\) \221Advertisement\222)Tj
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( But to us, probability is the very guide of life.)Tj
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(\221The Analogy of Religion\222 \(1736\) \221Introduction\222)Tj
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( Things and actions are what they are, and the consequences of them w\
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( No artificial class distinction can long prevail in a society like o\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221True and False Democracy\222 \(1907\) ch. 2)Tj
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( An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less.)Tj
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(Commencement address at Columbia University)Tj
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( 2.268 Samuel Butler 1612-80)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( He\222d run in debt by disputation,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And pay with ratiocination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.17047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 77)Tj
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( For rhetoric he could not ope)Tj
T*
( His mouth, but out there flew a trope.)Tj
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(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 81)Tj
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( For all a rhetorician\222s rules)Tj
T*
( Teach nothing but to name his tools.)Tj
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(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 89)Tj
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( A Babylonish dialect)Tj
T*
( Which learned pedants much affect.)Tj
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(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 93)Tj
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( What ever sceptic could inquire for;)Tj
T*
( For every why he had a wherefore.)Tj
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(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 131)Tj
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( He knew what\222s what, and that\222s as high)Tj
T*
( As metaphysic wit can fly.)Tj
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(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 149)Tj
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( Such as take lodgings in a head)Tj
T*
( That\222s to be let unfurnished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.67047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.75456 Tm
( And still be doing, never done:)Tj
T*
( As if Religion were intended)Tj
T*
( For nothing else but to be mended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.00456 Tm
( Compound for sins, they are inclined to,)Tj
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( By damning those they have no mind to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 213)Tj
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( The trenchant blade, Toledo trusty,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For want of fighting was grown rusty,)Tj
T*
( And eat into it self, for lack)Tj
T*
( Of some body to hew and hack.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 357)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( For rhyme the rudder is of verses,)Tj
T*
( With which like ships they steer their courses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 457)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Great actions are not always true sons)Tj
T*
( Of great and mighty resolutions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 1, l. 877)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Cleric before, and Lay behind;)Tj
T*
( A lawless linsy-woolsy brother,)Tj
T*
( Half of one order, half another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 3, l. 1226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Learning, that cobweb of the brain,)Tj
T*
( Profane, erroneous, and vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 1 \(1663\), canto 3, l. 1339)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( She that with poetry is won,)Tj
T*
( Is but a desk to write upon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 2 \(1664\), canto 1, l. 591)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Love is a boy, by poets styled,)Tj
T*
( Then spare the rod, and spoil the child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 2 \(1664\), canto 1, l. 843)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Oaths are but words, and words but wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 2 \(1664\), canto 2, l. 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Doubtless the pleasure is as great)Tj
T*
( Of being cheated, as to cheat.)Tj
T*
( As lookers-on feel most delight,)Tj
T*
( That least perceive a juggler\222s sleight;)Tj
T*
( And still the less they understand,)Tj
T*
( The more th\222 admire his sleight of hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 2 \(1664\), canto 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( What makes all doctrines plain and clear?)Tj
T*
( About two hundred pounds a year.)Tj
T*
( And that which was proved true before,)Tj
T*
( Prove false again? Two hundred more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 3 \(1680\), canto 1, l. 1277)Tj
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( He that complies against his will,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is of his own opinion still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 3 \(1680\), canto 3, l. 547)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( For Justice, though she\222s painted blind,)Tj
T*
( Is to the weaker side inclined.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 3 \(1680\), canto 3, l. 709)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( For money has a power above)Tj
T*
( The stars and fate, to manage love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hudibras\222 pt. 3 \(1680\) \221The Lady\222s Answer to the Knight\222\
l. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( All love at first, like generous wine,)Tj
T*
( Ferments and frets, until \222tis fine;)Tj
T*
( But when \222tis settled on the lee,)Tj
T*
( And from th\222 impurer matter free,)Tj
T*
( Becomes the richer still, the older,)Tj
T*
( And proves the pleasanter, the colder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Genuine Remains\222 \(1759\) \221Miscellaneous Thoughts\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( The law can take a purse in open court,)Tj
T*
( Whilst it condemns a less delinquent for\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Genuine Remains\222 \(1759\) \221Miscellaneous Thoughts\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 395.9624 Tm
( 2.269 Samuel Butler 1835-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It has been said that though God cannot alter the past, historians c\
an; it is perhaps because they )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(can be useful to Him in this respect that He tolerates their existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221Erewhon Revisited\222 \(1901\) ch. 14.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( Adversity, if a man is set down to it by degrees, is more supportabl\
e with equanimity by most )Tj
T*
(people than any great prosperity arrived at in a single lifetime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(\221The Way of All Flesh\222 \(1903\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.75456 Tm
( All animals, except man, know that the principal business of life is\
to enjoy it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221The Way of All Flesh\222 \(1903\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( The advantage of doing one\222s praising for oneself is that one can\
lay it on so thick and exactly )Tj
T*
(in the right places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Way of All Flesh\222 \(1903\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Young as he was, his instinct told him that the best liar is he who \
makes the smallest amount of )Tj
T*
(lying go the longest way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221The Way of All Flesh\222 \(1903\) ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( \222Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have lost at all\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Way of All Flesh\222 \(1903\) ch. 67.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( It was very good of God to let Carlyle and Mrs Carlyle marry one ano\
ther and so make only )Tj
T*
(two people miserable instead of four, besides being very amusing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Letters between Samuel Butler and Miss E. M. A. Savage 1871-1885\222\
\(1935\) 21 November 1884)Tj
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( Life is one long process of getting tired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 1)Tj
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( All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of \
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0 -1.2 TD
(beyond its income.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 1)Tj
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( The history of art is the history of revivals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( An apology for the Devil: It must be remembered that we have only he\
ard one side of the case. )Tj
T*
(God has written all the books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( A definition is the enclosing a wilderness of idea within a wall of \
words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( To live is like to love\227all reason is against it, and all healthy\
instinct for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( The public buys its opinions as it buys its meat, or takes in its mi\
lk, on the principle that it is )Tj
T*
(cheaper to do this than to keep a cow. So it is, but the milk is more li\
kely to be watered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( An honest God\222s the noblest work of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Further Extracts from Notebooks\222 \(1934\) p. 26.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( The three most important things a man has are, briefly, his private \
parts, his money, and his )Tj
T*
(religious opinions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Further Extracts from Notebooks\222 \(1934\) p. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Jesus! with all thy faults I love thee still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Further Extracts from Notebooks\222 \(1934\) p. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Conscience is thoroughly well-bred and soon leaves off talking to th\
ose who do not wish to )Tj
T*
(hear it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Further Extracts from Notebooks\222 \(1934\) p. 279)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instru\
ment as one goes on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(Speech at the Somerville Club, 27 February 1895, in R. A. Streatfield \221\
Essays on Life, Art and )Tj
T*
(Science\222 \(1904\) p. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Dusty, cobweb-covered, maimed, and set at naught,)Tj
T*
( Beauty crieth in an attic, and no man regardeth.)Tj
T*
( O God! O Montreal!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Psalm of Montreal\222, in \221Spectator\222 18 May 1878)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Yet meet we shall, and part, and meet again)Tj
T*
( Where dead men meet, on lips of living men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Athenaeum\222 4 January 1902)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 68.2124 Tm
( 2.270 William Butler 1535-1618)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God neve\
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(On the strawberry, in Izaak Walton \221The Compleat Angler\222 \(3rd ed.\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 2.271 Max Bygraves 1922\227)Tj
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( See Eric Sykes and Max Bygraves \(7.193\) in Volume II)Tj
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( 2.272 John Byrom 1692-1763)Tj
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( I am content, I do not care,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wag as it will the world for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Careless Content\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( Some say, that Signor Bononcini,)Tj
T*
( Compared to Handel\222s a mere ninny;)Tj
T*
( Others aver, to him, that Handel)Tj
T*
( Is scarcely fit to hold a candle.)Tj
T*
( Strange! that such high dispute should be)Tj
T*
( \222Twixt Tweedledum and Tweedledee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221Miscellaneous Poems\222 \(1773\) \221On the Feuds between Handel and\
Bononcini\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( Stones towards the earth descend;)Tj
T*
( Rivers to the ocean roll;)Tj
T*
( Ev\222ry motion has some end;\227)Tj
T*
( What is thine, beloved soul?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(\221The Soul\222s Tendency towards its True Centre\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( God bless the King, I mean the Faith\222s Defender;)Tj
T*
( God bless\227no harm in blessing\227the Pretender;)Tj
T*
( But who Pretender is, or who is King,)Tj
T*
( God bless us all\227that\222s quite another thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221Miscellaneous Poems\222 \(1773\) vol. 1 \221To an Officer in the Arm\
y, Extempore, Intended to allay the Violence )Tj
T*
(of Party-Spirit\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 257.2124 Tm
( 2.273 Lord Byron \(George Gordon, Sixth Baron Byron\) 1788-1824)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Proud Wellington, with eagle beak so curled,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That nose, the hook where he suspends the world!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.67047 Tm
(\221The Age of Bronze\222 \(1823\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.75456 Tm
( For what were all these country patriots born?)Tj
T*
( To hunt, and vote, and raise the price of corn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.92047 Tm
(\221The Age of Bronze\222 \(1823\) st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.00456 Tm
( Year after year they voted cent per cent)Tj
T*
( Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions\227why? for rent!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221The Age of Bronze\222 \(1823\) st. 14)Tj
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( Did\222st ever see a gondola?...)Tj
T*
( It glides along the water looking blackly,)Tj
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( Just like a coffin clapt in a canoe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Beppo\222 \(1818\) st. 19)Tj
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( In short, he was a perfect cavaliero,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And to his very valet seemed a hero.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Beppo\222 \(1818\) st. 33.)Tj
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( Our cloudy climate, and our chilly women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Beppo\222 \(1818\) st. 49)Tj
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( A pretty woman as was ever seen,)Tj
T*
( Fresh as the Angel o\222er a new inn door.)Tj
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(\221Beppo\222 \(1818\) st. 57)Tj
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( His heart was one of those which most enamour us,)Tj
T*
( Wax to receive, and marble to retain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Beppo\222 \(1818\) st. 34)Tj
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( Where the virgins are soft as the roses they twine,)Tj
T*
( And all, save the spirit of man, is divine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Bride of Abydos\222 \(1813\) canto 1, st. 1)Tj
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( Such was Zuleika, such around her shone)Tj
T*
( The nameless charms unmark\222d by her alone\227)Tj
T*
( The light of love, the purity of grace,)Tj
T*
( The mind, the Music breathing from her face,)Tj
T*
( The heart whose softness harmonized the whole,)Tj
T*
( And oh! that eye was in itself a Soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Bride of Abydos\222 \(1813\) canto 1, st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( I have looked out)Tj
T*
( In the vast desolate night in search of him;)Tj
T*
( And when I saw gigantic shadows in)Tj
T*
( The umbrage of the walls of Eden, chequered)Tj
T*
( By the far-flashing of the cherubs\222 swords,)Tj
T*
( I watched for what I thought his coming: for)Tj
T*
( With fear rose longing in my heart to know)Tj
T*
( What \222twas which shook us all\227but nothing came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Cain\222 \(1821\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 266)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( The laughing dames in whom he did delight,)Tj
T*
( Whose large blue eyes, and snowy hands,)Tj
T*
( Might shake the saintship of an anchorite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 1, st. 11)Tj
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( Adieu, adieu! my native shore)Tj
T*
( Fades o\222er the waters blue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 1, st. 13)Tj
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( Lo! where the Giant on the mountain stands,)Tj
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( His blood-red tresses deep\222ning in the sun,)Tj
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T*
( And eye that scorcheth all it glares upon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 1, st. 39)Tj
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( Here all were noble, save Nobility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 1, st. 85)Tj
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( Cold is the heart, fair Greece! that looks on thee,)Tj
T*
( Nor feels as lovers o\222er the dust they lov\222d;)Tj
T*
( Dull is the eye that will not weep to see)Tj
T*
( Thy walls defaced, thy mouldering shrines removed)Tj
T*
( By British hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( None are so desolate but something dear,)Tj
T*
( Dearer than self, possesses or possessed)Tj
T*
( A thought, and claims the homage of a tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Dark Sappho! could not verse immortal save)Tj
T*
( That breast imbued with such immortal fire?)Tj
T*
( Could she not live who life eternal gave?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Fair Greece! sad relic of departed worth!)Tj
T*
( Immortal, though no more! though fallen, great!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Hereditary bondsmen! know ye not)Tj
T*
( Who would be free themselves must strike the blow?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( What is the worst of woes that wait on age?)Tj
T*
( What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow?)Tj
T*
( To view each loved one blotted from life\222s page,)Tj
T*
( And be alone on earth, as I am now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 2, st. 98)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Once more upon the waters! yet once more!)Tj
T*
( And the waves bound beneath me as a steed)Tj
T*
( That knows his rider.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( The wandering outlaw of his own dark mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Years steal)Tj
T*
( Fire from the mind as vigour from the limb;)Tj
T*
( And life\222s enchanted cup but sparkles near the brim.)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Where rose the mountains, there to him were friends;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where roll\222d the ocean, thereon was his home;)Tj
T*
( Where a blue sky, and glowing clime, extends,)Tj
T*
( He had the passion and the power to roam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The very knowledge that he lived in vain,)Tj
T*
( That all was over on this side the tomb,)Tj
T*
( Had made Despair a smilingness assume.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( He rushed into the field, and, foremost fighting, fell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The earth is covered thick with other clay,)Tj
T*
( Which her own clay shall cover, heaped and pent,)Tj
T*
( Rider and horse,\227friend, foe,\227in one red burial blent!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( But life will suit)Tj
T*
( Itself to Sorrow\222s most detested fruit,)Tj
T*
( Like to the apples on the Dead Sea\222s shore,)Tj
T*
( All ashes to the taste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Quiet to quick bosoms is a hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( I live not in myself, but I become)Tj
T*
( Portion of that around me; and to me,)Tj
T*
( High mountains are a feeling, but the hum)Tj
T*
( Of human cities torture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( His love was passion\222s essence:\227as a tree)Tj
T*
( On fire by lightning, with ethereal flame)Tj
T*
( Kindled he was, and blasted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 107 \(of \
Edward Gibbon\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( I have not loved the world, nor the world me;)Tj
T*
( I have not flattered its rank breath, nor bowed)Tj
T*
( To its idolatries a patient knee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 113)Tj
ET
EMC
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( I stood)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Among them, but not of them; in a shroud)Tj
T*
( Of thoughts which were not their thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 3, st. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The moon is up, and yet it is not night;)Tj
T*
( Sunset divides the sky with her\227a sea)Tj
T*
( Of glory streams along the Alpine height)Tj
T*
( Of blue Friuli\222s mountains; Heaven is free)Tj
T*
( From clouds, but of all colours seems to be)Tj
T*
( Melted to one vast Iris of the West,)Tj
T*
( Where the day joins the past eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Italia! oh Italia! thou who hast)Tj
T*
( The fatal gift of beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Oh Rome! my country! city of the soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Alas! our young affections run to waste,)Tj
T*
( Or water but the desert.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 120)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Of its own beauty is the mind diseased.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Time, the avenger! unto thee I lift)Tj
T*
( My hands, and eyes, and heart, and crave of thee a gift.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( But I have lived, and have not lived in vain:)Tj
T*
( My mind may lose its force, my blood its fire,)Tj
T*
( And my frame perish even in conquering pain;)Tj
T*
( But there is that withini me which shall tire)Tj
T*
( Torture and Time, and breathe when I expire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( There were his young barbarians all at play,)Tj
T*
( There was their Dacian mother\227he, their sire,)Tj
T*
( Butchered to make a Roman holiday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( A ruin\227yet what ruin! from its mass)Tj
T*
( Walls, palaces, half-cities, have been reared.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand;)Tj
T*
( When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall;)Tj
ET
EMC
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( And when Rome falls\227the World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The Lord of the unerring bow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The God of life, and poesy, and light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Oh! that the desert were my dwelling-place,)Tj
T*
( With one fair spirit for my minister,)Tj
T*
( That I might all forget the human race,)Tj
T*
( And, hating no one, love but only her!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 177)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( There is a pleasure in the pathless woods,)Tj
T*
( There is a rapture on the lonely shore,)Tj
T*
( There is society, where none intrudes,)Tj
T*
( By the deep sea and, music in its roar:)Tj
T*
( I love not man the less, but nature more,)Tj
T*
( From these our interviews, in which I steal)Tj
T*
( From all I may be, or have been before,)Tj
T*
( To mingle with the universe, and feel)Tj
T*
( What I can ne\222er express, yet cannot all conceal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( When, for a moment, like a drop of rain,)Tj
T*
( He sinks into thy depths with bubbling groan,)Tj
T*
( Without a grave, unknelled, uncoffined, and unknown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 179)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Dark-heaving;\227boundless, endless, and sublime\227)Tj
T*
( The image of eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Childe Harold\222s Pilgrimage\222 \(1812-18\) canto 4, st. 183 \(the\
sea\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( The glory and the nothing of a name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Churchill\222s Grave\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Such hath it been\227shall be\227beneath the sun)Tj
T*
( The many still must labour for the one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 1, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( There was a laughing devil in his sneer.)Tj
T*
( That raised emotions both of rage and fear;)Tj
T*
( And where his frown of hatred darkly fell,)Tj
T*
( Hope withering fled, and Mercy sighed farewell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 1, st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Deep in my soul that tender secret dwells,)Tj
T*
( Lonely and lost to light for evermore,)Tj
T*
( Save when to thine my heart responsive swells,)Tj
ET
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( Then trembles into silence as before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 1, st. 14 \221Medora\222s Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The spirit burning but unbent,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( May writhe, rebel\227the weak alone repent!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 2, st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Oh! too convincing\227dangerously dear\227)Tj
T*
( In woman\222s eye the unanswerable tear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 2, st. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( And she for him had given)Tj
T*
( Her all on earth, and more than all in heaven!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 3, st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( He left a Corsair\222s name to other times,)Tj
T*
( Linked with one virtue, and a thousand crimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Corsair\222 \(1814\) canto 3, st. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run,)Tj
T*
( Along Morea\222s hills the setting sun;)Tj
T*
( Not, as in northern climes, obscurely bright,)Tj
T*
( But one unclouded blaze of living light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Curse of Minerva\222 \(1812\) l. 1 and \221The Corsair\222 \(181\
4\) canto 3, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( A land of meanness, sophistry, and mist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221The Curse of Minerva\222 \(1812\) l. 138 \(of Scotland\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Each breeze from foggy mount and marshy plain)Tj
T*
( Dilutes with drivel every drizzly brain,)Tj
T*
( Till, burst at length, each wat\222ry head o\222erflows,)Tj
T*
( Foul as their soil, and frigid as their snows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Curse of Minerva\222 \(1812\) l. 139 \(of Scotland\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold,)Tj
T*
( And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold;)Tj
T*
( And the sheen of their spears was like stars on the sea,)Tj
T*
( When the blue wave rolls nightly on deep Galilee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221The Destruction of Sennacherib\222 \(1815\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast,)Tj
T*
( And breathed in the face of the foe as he passed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Destruction of Sennacherib\222 \(1815\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( And Coleridge, too, has lately taken wing,)Tj
T*
( But, like a hawk encumber\222d with his hood,)Tj
T*
( Explaining metaphysics to the nation\227)Tj
T*
( I wish he would explain his explanation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, dedication st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( The intellectual eunuch Castlereagh.)Tj
ET
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(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, dedication st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( My way is to begin with the beginning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( But\227Oh! ye lords of ladies intellectual,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Inform us truly, have they not hen-pecked you all?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Married, charming, chaste, and twenty-three.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 59 \(Donna Julia\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( What men call gallantry, and gods adultery,)Tj
T*
( Is much more common where the climate\222s sultry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Christians have burnt each other, quite persuaded)Tj
T*
( That all the Apostles would have done as they did.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( He thought about himself, and the whole earth,)Tj
T*
( Of man the wonderful, and of the stars,)Tj
T*
( And how the deuce they ever could have birth;)Tj
T*
( And then he thought of earthquakes, and of wars,)Tj
T*
( How many miles the moon might have in girth,)Tj
T*
( Of air-balloons, and of the many bars)Tj
T*
( To perfect knowledge of the boundless skies;)Tj
T*
( And then he thought of Donna Julia\222s eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( \222Twas strange that one so young should thus concern)Tj
T*
( His brain about the action of the sky;)Tj
T*
( If you think \222twas philosophy that this did,)Tj
T*
( I can\222t help thinking puberty assisted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( A little still she strove, and much repented,)Tj
T*
( And whispering \221I will ne\222er consent\222\227consented.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Sweet is revenge\227especially to women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 124.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Pleasure\222s a sin, and sometimes sin\222s a pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( Man\222s love is of man\222s life a thing apart,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis woman\222s whole existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 194)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( A panoramic view of hell\222s in training,)Tj
T*
( After the style of Virgil and of Homer,)Tj
ET
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( So that my name of Epic\222s no misnomer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 200)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( So for a good old-gentlemanly vice,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I think I must take up with avarice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 1, st. 216)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( There\222s nought, no doubt, so much the spirit calms)Tj
T*
( As rum and true religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( A solitary shriek, the bubbling cry)Tj
T*
( Of some strong swimmer in his agony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Let us have wine and women, mirth and laughter,)Tj
T*
( Sermons and soda-water the day after.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Man, being reasonable, must get drunk;)Tj
T*
( The best of life is but intoxication;)Tj
T*
( Glory, the grape, love, gold, in these are sunk)Tj
T*
( The hopes of all men, and of every nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 179)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( They looked up to the sky, whose floating glow)Tj
T*
( Spread like a rosy ocean, vast and bright;)Tj
T*
( They gazed upon the glittering sea below,)Tj
T*
( Whence the broad moon rose circling into sight;)Tj
T*
( They heard the wave\222s splash, and the wind so low,)Tj
T*
( And saw each other\222s dark eyes darting light)Tj
T*
( Into each other\227and, beholding this,)Tj
T*
( Their lips drew near, and clung into a kiss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( And thus they form a group that\222s quite antique,)Tj
T*
( Half naked, loving, natural, and Greek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 194)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Alas! the love of women! it is known)Tj
T*
( To be a lovely and a fearful thing!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 2, st. 199)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( In her first passion woman loves her lover,)Tj
T*
( In all the others all she loves is love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( \222Tis melancholy, and a fearful sign)Tj
T*
( Of human frailty, folly, also crime,)Tj
T*
( That love and marriage rarely can combine,)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Although they both are born in the same clime;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Marriage from love, like vinegar from wine\227)Tj
T*
( A sad, sour, sober beverage\227by time)Tj
T*
( Is sharpened from its high celestial flavour,)Tj
T*
( Down to a very homely household savour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Think you, if Laura had been Petrarch\222s wife,)Tj
T*
( He would have written sonnets all his life?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( All tragedies are finished by a death,)Tj
T*
( All comedies are ended by a marriage;)Tj
T*
( The future states of both are left to faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Dreading that climax of all human ills,)Tj
T*
( The inflammation of his weekly bills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( He was the mildest mannered man)Tj
T*
( That ever scuttled ship or cut a throat,)Tj
T*
( With such true breeding of a gentleman,)Tj
T*
( You never could divine his real thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( But Shakespeare also says, \222tis very silly )Tj
T*
( \221To gild refined gold, or paint the lily.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 76.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( The mountains look on Marathon\227)Tj
T*
( And Marathon looks on the sea;)Tj
T*
( And musing there an hour alone,)Tj
T*
( I dreamed that Greece might still be free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 86 \(3\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( For what is left the poet here?)Tj
T*
( For Greeks a blush\227for Greece a tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 86 \(6\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Milton\222s the prince of poets\227so we say;)Tj
T*
( A little heavy, but no less divine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( A drowsy frowzy poem, called the \221Excursion\222,)Tj
T*
( Writ in a manner which is my aversion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( We learn from Horace, Homer sometimes sleeps;)Tj
T*
( We feel without him: Wordsworth sometimes wakes.)Tj
ET
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(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 98.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Ave Maria! \222tis the hour of prayer!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ave Maria! \222tis the hour of love!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 3, st. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Now my sere fancy \221falls into the yellow)Tj
T*
( Leaf,\222 and imagination droops her pinion,)Tj
T*
( And the sad truth which hovers o\222er my desk)Tj
T*
( Turns what was once romantic to burlesque.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 4, st. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( And if I laugh at any mortal thing,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis that I may not weep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 4, st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( \221Whom the gods love die young\222 was said of yore.)Tj
T*
( And many deaths do they escape by this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 4, st.12.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( I\222ve stood upon Achilles\222 tomb,)Tj
T*
( And heard Troy doubted; time will doubt of Rome.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 4, st. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( When amatory poets sing their loves)Tj
T*
( In liquid lines mellifluously bland,)Tj
T*
( And pair their rhymes as Venus yokes her doves.)Tj
T*
( They little think what mischief is in store.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 5, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( And is this blood, then, form\222d but to be shed?)Tj
T*
( Can every element our elements mar?)Tj
T*
( And air\227earth\227water\227fire live\227and we dead?)Tj
T*
( We, whose minds comprehend all things?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 5, st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( That all-softening, overpowering knell,)Tj
T*
( The tocsin of the soul\227the dinner bell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 5, st. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Why don\222t they knead two virtuous souls for life)Tj
T*
( Into that moral centaur, man and wife?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 5, st. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( There is a tide in the affairs of women,)Tj
T*
( Which, taken at the flood, leads\227God knows where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 6, st. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( A lady of a \221certain age\222, which means)Tj
T*
( Certainly aged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 6, st. 69)Tj
ET
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( \221Let there be light! said God, and there was light!\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Let there be blood!\222 says man, and there\222s a sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 7, st. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( That water-land of Dutchmen and of ditches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 10, st. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( When Bishop Berkeley said \221there was no matter\222,)Tj
T*
( And proved it\227\222twas no matter what he said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 11, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( And, after all, what is a lie? \222Tis but)Tj
T*
( The truth in masquerade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 11, st. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( \222Tis strange the mind, that very fiery particle,)Tj
T*
( Should let itself be snuffed out by an article.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 11, st. 60 \(on Keats \221who was kil\
led off by one critique\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( For talk six times with the same single lady,)Tj
T*
( And you may get the wedding dresses ready.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 12, st. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Merely innocent flirtation,)Tj
T*
( Not quite adultery, but adulteration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 12, st. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure;)Tj
T*
( Men love in haste, but they detest at leisure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 13, st. 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Cervantes smiled Spain\222s chivalry away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 13, st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( The English winter\227ending in July,)Tj
T*
( To recommence in August.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 13, st. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Society is now one polished horde,)Tj
T*
( Formed of two mighty tribes, the Bores and Bored.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 13, st. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( Of all the horrid, hideous notes of woe,)Tj
T*
( Sadder than owl-songs or the midnight blast,)Tj
T*
( Is that portentous phrase, \221I told you so.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 14, st. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( \222Tis strange\227but true; for truth is always strange;)Tj
T*
( Stranger than fiction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 14, st. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( All present life is but an Interjection,)Tj
T*
( An \221Oh!\222 or \221Ah!\222 of joy or misery,)Tj
ET
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( Or a \221Ha! ha!\222 or \221Bah!\222\227a yawn, or \221Pooh!\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of which perhaps the latter is most true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 15, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A lovely being, scarcely formed or moulded,)Tj
T*
( A rose with all its sweetest leaves yet folded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 15, st. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( \222Tis wonderful what fable will not do!)Tj
T*
( \222Tis said it makes reality more bearable:)Tj
T*
( But what\222s reality? Who has it\222s clue?)Tj
T*
( Philosophy? No; she too much rejects.)Tj
T*
( Religion? Yes; but which of all her sects?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 15, st. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Between two worlds life hovers like a star,)Tj
T*
( \222Twixt night and morn, upon the horizon\222s verge.)Tj
T*
( How little do we know that which we are!)Tj
T*
( How less what we may be!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 15, st. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( The worlds beyond this world\222s perplexing waste)Tj
T*
( Had more of her existence for in her)Tj
T*
( There was a depth of feeling to embrace)Tj
T*
( Thoughts, boundless, deep, but silent too as space.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Don Juan\222 \(1819-24\) canto 16, st. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( The mind can make)Tj
T*
( Substance, and people planets of its own)Tj
T*
( With beings brighter than have been, and give)Tj
T*
( A breath to forms which can outlive all flesh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Dream\222 \(1816\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( I\222ll publish, right or wrong:)Tj
T*
( Fools are my theme, let satire be my song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( A man must serve his time to every trade)Tj
T*
( Save censure\227critics all are ready made.)Tj
T*
( Take hackneyed jokes from Miller, got by rote,)Tj
T*
( With just enough of learning to misquote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Each country Book-club bows the knee to Baal,)Tj
T*
( And, hurling lawful Genius from the throne,)Tj
T*
( Erects a shrine and idol of its own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 138)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Who, both by precept and example, shows)Tj
ET
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( That prose is verse, and verse is merely prose,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Convinving all by demonstration plain,)Tj
T*
( Poetic souls delight in prose insane;)Tj
T*
( And Christmas stories tortured into rhyme,)Tj
T*
( Contain the essence of the true sublime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 241 \(of Wordswor\
th\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Be warm, but pure; be amorous, but be chaste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 306)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( The petrifactions of a plodding brain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 416)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Then let Ausonia, skilled in every art)Tj
T*
( To soften manners, but corrupt the heart,)Tj
T*
( Pour her erotic follies o\222er the town,)Tj
T*
( To sanction Vice, and hunt Decorum down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 618)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Lords too are bards, such things at times befall,)Tj
T*
( And \222tis some praise in peers to write at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 719)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Let simple Wordsworth chime his childish verse,)Tj
T*
( And brother Coleridge lull the babe at nurse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 917)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( And glory, like the phoenix midst her fires,)Tj
T*
( Exhales her odours, blazes, and expires.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221English Bards and Scotch Reviewers\222 \(1809\) l. 959)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Dusky like night, but night with all her stars,)Tj
T*
( Or cavern sparkling with its native spars;)Tj
T*
( With eyes that were a language and a spell,)Tj
T*
( A form like Aphrodite\222s in her shell,)Tj
T*
( With all her loves around her on the deep,)Tj
T*
( Voluptuous as the first approach of sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Island\222 \(1823\) canto 2, st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Beside the jutting rock the few appeared,)Tj
T*
( Like the last remnant of the red-deer\222s herd;)Tj
T*
( Their eyes were feverish, and their aspect worn,)Tj
T*
( But still the hunter\222s blood was on their horn,)Tj
T*
( A little stream came tumbling from the height,)Tj
T*
( And straggling into ocean as it might,)Tj
T*
( Its bounding crystal frolicked in the ray,)Tj
T*
( And gushed from cliff to crag with saltless spray...)Tj
T*
( To this young spring they rushed,\227all feelings first)Tj
ET
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( Absorbed in passion\222s and in nature\222s thirst,\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drank as they do who drink their last, and threw)Tj
T*
( Their arms aside to revel in its dew;)Tj
T*
( Cooled their scorched throats, and washed the gory stains)Tj
T*
( From wounds whose only bandage might be chains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221The Island\222 \(1823\) canto 3, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Friendship is Love without his wings!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Amiti\350 est l\222amour sans ailes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Sorrow is knowledge: they who know the most)Tj
T*
( Must mourn the deepest o\222er the fatal truth,)Tj
T*
( The Tree of Knowledge is not that of Life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Manfred\222 \(1817\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( How beautiful is all this visible world!)Tj
T*
( How glorious in its action and itself!)Tj
T*
( But we, who name ourselves its sovereigns, we,)Tj
T*
( Half dust, half deity, alike unfit)Tj
T*
( To sink or soar, with our mix\222d essence make)Tj
T*
( A conflict of its elements, and breathe)Tj
T*
( The breath of degradation and of pride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Manfred\222 \(1817\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( I linger yet with nature, for the night)Tj
T*
( Hath been to me a more familiar face)Tj
T*
( Than that of man; and in her starry shade)Tj
T*
( Of dim and solitary loveliness)Tj
T*
( I learned the language of another world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Manfred\222 \(1817\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Old man! \222tis not so difficult to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Manfred\222 \(2nd ed., 1819\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 151)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( You have deeply ventured;)Tj
T*
( But all must do so who would greatly win.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Marino Faliero\222 \(1821\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( \222Tis done\227but yesterday a King!)Tj
T*
( And armed with Kings to strive\227)Tj
T*
( And now thou art a nameless thing:)Tj
T*
( So abject\227yet alive!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte\222 \(1814\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( The Arbiter of others\222 fate)Tj
T*
( A Suppliant for his own!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte\222 \(1814\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( The Cincinnatus of the West.)Tj
ET
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(\221Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte\222 \(1814\) st. 19 \(of George Washington\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( It is not in the storm nor in the strife)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We feel benumbed, and wish to be no more,)Tj
T*
( But in the after-silence on the shore,)Tj
T*
( When all is lost, except a little life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221On hearing that Lady Byron was ill\222 \(published 1832\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( My days are in the yellow leaf;)Tj
T*
( The flowers and fruits of love are gone;)Tj
T*
( The worm, the canker, and the grief)Tj
T*
( Are mine alone!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221On This Day I Complete my Thirty-Sixth Year\222 \(1824\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( My hair is grey, but not with years,)Tj
T*
( Nor grew it white)Tj
T*
( In a single night,)Tj
T*
( As men\222s have grown from sudden fears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Prisoner of Chillon\222 \(1816\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( She walks in beauty, like the night)Tj
T*
( Of cloudless climes and starry skies;)Tj
T*
( And all that\222s best of dark and bright)Tj
T*
( Meet in her aspect and her eyes:)Tj
T*
( Thus mellowed to that tender light)Tj
T*
( Which heaven to gaudy day denies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221She Walks in Beauty\222 \(1815\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Born in the garret, in the kitchen bred,)Tj
T*
( Promoted thence to deck her mistress\222 head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221A Sketch from Private Life\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Eternal spirit of the chainless mind!)Tj
T*
( Brightest in dungeons, Liberty! thou art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Sonnet on Chillon\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( So, we\222ll go no more a roving)Tj
T*
( So late into the night,)Tj
T*
( Though the heart be still as loving,)Tj
T*
( And the moon be still as bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221So we\222ll go no more a-roving\222 \(written 1817, published 1830\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story;)Tj
T*
( The days of our youth are the days of our glory;)Tj
T*
( And the myrtle and ivy of sweet two-and-twenty)Tj
T*
( Are worth all your laurels, though ever so plenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Stanzas Written on the Road between Florence and Pisa\222 November 1\
821)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( I knew it was love, and I felt it was glory.)Tj
ET
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(\221Stanzas Written on the Road between Florence and Pisa\222 November 1\
821)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( There\222s not a joy the world can give like that it takes away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Stanzas for Music\222 March 1815)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( I am ashes where once I was fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221To the Countess of Blessington\222 \(written 1823, published 1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Still I can\222t contradict, what so oft has been said,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Though women are angels, yet wedlock\222s the devil.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221To Eliza\222 \(1806\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( And when we think we lead, we are most led.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Foscari\222 \(1821\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 361)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( The angels all were singing out of tune,)Tj
T*
( And hoarse with having little else to do,)Tj
T*
( Excepting to wind up the sun and moon,)Tj
T*
( Or curb a runaway young star or two.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( And when the gorgeous coffin was laid low,)Tj
T*
( It seemed the mockery of hell to fold)Tj
T*
( The rottenness of eighty years in gold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 10 \(on the burial of Georg\
e III\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( In whom his qualities are reigning still,)Tj
T*
( Except that household virtue, most uncommon,)Tj
T*
( Of constancy to a bad, ugly woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( As he drew near, he gazed upon the gate)Tj
T*
( Ne\222er to be entered more by him or Sin,)Tj
T*
( With such a glance of supernatural hate,)Tj
T*
( As made Saint Peter wish himself within;)Tj
T*
( He pattered with his keys at a great rate,)Tj
T*
( And sweated through his apostolic skin:)Tj
T*
( Of course his perspiration was but ichor,)Tj
T*
( Or some such other spiritual liquor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Yet still between his Darkness and his Brightness)Tj
T*
( There passed a mutual glance of great politeness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Satan met his ancient friend)Tj
T*
( With more hauteur, as might an old Castilian)Tj
T*
( Poor noble meet a mushroom rich civilian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( And when the tumult dwindled to a calm,)Tj
ET
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( I left him practising the hundredth psalm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Judgement\222 \(1822\) st. 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( When we two parted)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In silence and tears,)Tj
T*
( Half broken-hearted)Tj
T*
( To sever for years,)Tj
T*
( Pale grew thy cheek and cold,)Tj
T*
( Colder thy kiss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221When we two parted\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( If I should meet thee)Tj
T*
( After long years,)Tj
T*
( How should I greet thee?\227)Tj
T*
( With silence and tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221When we two parted\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( The man is mad, Sir, mad, frightful as a Mandrake, and lean as a rut\
ting Stag, and all about a )Tj
T*
(bitch not worth a Bank token.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(Referring to the Revd. Robert Bland in a letter to John Cam Hobhouse, 16\
November 1811: L. A. Marchand )Tj
T*
(\(ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 2 \(1973\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( My Princess of Parallelograms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(Referring to Annabella Milbanke, a keen amateur mathematician, in a lett\
er to Lady Melbourne, 18 October )Tj
T*
(1812: L. A. Marchand \(ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 v\
ol. 2 \(1973\). Byron explains: \221Her proceedings )Tj
T*
(are quite rectangular, or rather we are two parallel lines prolonged to \
infinity side by side but never to meet\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 362.25456 Tm
( We have progressively improved into a less spiritual species of tend\
erness\227but the seal is not )Tj
T*
(yet fixed though the wax is preparing for the impression.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.42047 Tm
(On his relationship with Lady Frances Webster, in a letter to Lady Melbo\
urne, 14 October 1813: L. A. )Tj
T*
(Marchand \(ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 3 \(1974\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.50456 Tm
( I by no means rank poetry high in the scale of intelligence\227this \
may look like affectation\227)Tj
T*
(but it is my real opinion\227it is the lava of the imagination whose eru\
ption prevents an earthquake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.67047 Tm
(Letter to Annabella Milbanke, 29 November 1813, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\)\
\221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 )Tj
T*
(vol. 3 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( I prefer the talents of action\227of war\227of the senate\227or even\
of science\227to all the )Tj
T*
(speculations of those mere dreamers of another existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(Letter to Annabella Milbanke, 29 November 1813, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\)\
\221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 )Tj
T*
(vol. 3 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( What is hope? nothing but the paint on the face of Existence; the le\
ast touch of truth rubs it off, )Tj
T*
(and then we see what a hollow-cheeked harlot we have got hold of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Moore, 28 October 1815, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\) \221\
Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 4 )Tj
T*
(\(1975\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( Like other parties of the kind, it was first silent, then talky, the\
n argumentative, then )Tj
T*
(disputatious, then unintelligible, then altogethery, then inarticulate, \
and then drunk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Moore, 31 October 1815, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\) \221\
Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 4 )Tj
ET
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(\(1975\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Wordsworth\227stupendous genius! damned fool! These poets run about \
their ponds though they )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(cannot fish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Fragment of a letter, recorded in the diary of Henry Crabb Robinson, Dec\
ember 1 1816: L. A. Marchand \(ed.\) )Tj
T*
( \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 5 \(1976\) p. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Love in this part of the world is no sinecure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Murray from Venice, 27 December 1816, in L. A. Marchand \(\
ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and )Tj
T*
(Journals\222 vol. 5 \(1976\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 612.75456 Tm
( I hate things all fiction...there should always be some foundation o\
f fact for the most airy fabric )Tj
T*
(and pure invention is but the talent of a liar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.92047 Tm
(Letter to John Murray from Venice, April 2 1817, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\
\) \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. )Tj
T*
(5 \(1976\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 543.00456 Tm
( Is it not life, is it not the thing?\227Could any man have written i\
t\227who has not lived in the )Tj
T*
(world?\227and tooled in a post-chaise? in a hackney coach? in a gondola?\
Against a wall? in a )Tj
T*
(court carriage? in a vis a vis?\227on a table?\227and under it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(On \221Don Juan\222 in a letter to Douglas Kinnaird, October 26 1819: L\
. A. Marchand \(ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and )Tj
T*
(Journals\222 vol. 6 \(1978\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 455.25456 Tm
( The reading or non-reading a book\227will never keep down a single p\
etticoat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 439.42047 Tm
(Letter to Richard Hoppner, October 29 1819, in L. A. Marchand \(ed.\) \221\
Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 vol. 6 )Tj
T*
(\(1978\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.50456 Tm
( Such writing is a sort of mental masturbation\227he is always f\227g\
g\227g his imagination.\227I )Tj
T*
(don\222t mean that he is indecent but viciously soliciting his own ideas\
into a state which is neither )Tj
T*
(poetry nor any thing else but a Bedlam vision produced by raw pork and o\
pium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(On Keats in a letter to John Murray, November 9 1820: L. A. Marchand \(\
ed.\) \221Byron\222s Letters and Journals\222 )Tj
T*
(vol. 7 \(1979\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( I awoke one morning and found myself famous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(Referring to the instantaneous success of \221Childe Harold\222, in Thom\
as Moore \221Letters and Journals of Lord )Tj
T*
(Byron\222 \(1830\) vol. 1, p. 346)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( You should have a softer pillow than my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(To his wife, who had rested her head on his breast, in E. C. Mayne \(ed.\
\) \221The Life and Letters of Anne )Tj
T*
(Isabella, Lady Noel Byron\222 \(1929\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 198.78038 Tm
( 3.0 C)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( )Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.1 James Branch Cabell 1879-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man possesses nothing certainly save a brief loan of his own body.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221Jurgen\222 \(1919\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.75456 Tm
( The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worl\
ds; and the pessimist fears )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(this is true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221The Silver Stallion\222 \(1926\) bk. 4, ch. 26)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 748.7124 Tm
( 3.2 Augustus Caesar)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Augustus \(1.118\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.3 Irving Caesar 1895\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Picture you upon my knee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Just tea for two and two for tea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 638.42047 Tm
(\221Tea for Two\222 \(1925 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 606.2124 Tm
( 3.4 Julius Caesar c.100-44 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Gaul as a whole is divided into three parts.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 546.92047 Tm
(\221De Bello Gallico\222 bk. 1, sect. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 526.00456 Tm
( Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Men are nearly always willing to believe what they wish.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.42047 Tm
(\221De Bello Gallico\222 bk. 3, sect. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.50456 Tm
( Caesar\222s wife must be above suspicion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.67047 Tm
(Oral tradition based on Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 \221Julius Caesa\
r\222 ch. 10, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.75456 Tm
( Caesar, when he first went into Gaul, made no scruple to profess \221\
That he had rather be first in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a village than second at Rome\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.92047 Tm
(Francis Bacon \221The Advancement of Learning\222 pt. 2, ch. 23, sect. 3\
6, based on Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 )Tj
T*
(\221Julius Caesar\222 ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 361.00456 Tm
( Thou hast Caesar and his fortune with thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 345.17047 Tm
(Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 \221Julius Caesar\222 ch. 38, sect. 3 \(\
translated by T. North, 1579\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 324.25456 Tm
( The die is cast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.42047 Tm
(At the crossing of the Rubicon, in Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222\
\221Divus Julius\222 sect. 32 \(often quoted in )Tj
T*
(Latin \221Iacta alea est\222 but originally spoken in Greek\). Plutarch \
\221Parallel Lives\222 \221Pompey\222 ch. 60, sect. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.50456 Tm
( Veni, vidi, vici.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I came, I saw, I conquered.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.92047 Tm
(Inscription displayed in Caesar\222s Pontic triumph, according to Sueton\
ius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Divus Julius\222 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sect. 37 or, according to Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 \221Julius Cae\
sar\222 ch. 50, sect. 2, written in a letter by Caesar, )Tj
T*
(announcing the victory of Zela which concluded the Pontic campaign)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.00456 Tm
( Et tu, Brute?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( You too Brutus?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.42047 Tm
(Traditional rendering of Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Divu\
s Julius\222 sect. 82: Some have written that )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(when Marcus Brutus rushed at him, he said in Greek, \221You too, my chil\
d?\222.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 99.2124 Tm
( 3.5 John Cage 1912\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have nothing to say and I am saying it and that is poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.67047 Tm
(\221Lecture on nothing\222 \(1961\))Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.9624 Tm
( 3.6 James M. Cain 1892-1977)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The postman always rings twice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1934\) and play \(1936\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 683.2124 Tm
( 3.7 Sir Joseph Cairns 1920\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The betrayal of Ulster, the cynical and entirely undemocratic banish\
ment of its properly elected )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Parliament and a relegation to the status of a fuzzy wuzzy colony is, I \
hope, a last betrayal )Tj
T*
(contemplated by Downing Street because it is the last that Ulster will c\
ountenance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Speech on retiring as Lord Mayor of Belfast, 31 May 1972, in \221Daily T\
elegraph\222 1 June 1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 577.4624 Tm
( 3.8 Pedro Calder\363n de La Barca 1600-81)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Aun en sue\361os)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( no se pierde el hacer bien.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Even in dreams good works are not wasted.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221La Vida es Sue\361o\222 \(1636\) \221Segunda Jornada\222 l. 2146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Qu\350 es la vida? Un frenes\355.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Qu\350 es la vida? Una ilusi\363n,)Tj
T*
( una sombra, una ficci\363n,)Tj
T*
( y el mayor bien es peque\361o;)Tj
T*
( que toda la vida es sue\361o,)Tj
T*
( y los sue\361os, sue\361os son.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What is life? a frenzy. What is life? An illusion, a shadow, a ficti\
on. And the greatest good is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of slight worth, as all life is a dream, and dreams are dreams.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221La Vida es Sue\361o\222 \(1636\) \221Segunda Jornada\222 l. 2183.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 301.4624 Tm
( 3.9 Caligula \(Gaius Julius Caesar Germanicus\) A.D. 12-41)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Utinam populus Romanus unam cervicem haberet!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Would that the Roman people had but one neck!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(In Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Gaius Caligula\222 sect. 3\
0)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 209.9624 Tm
( 3.10 James Callaghan \(Baron Callaghan of Cardiff\) 1912\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A lie can be half-way around the world before truth has got his boot\
s on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 1 November 1976, col. 976)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 140.2124 Tm
( 3.11 Callimachus c.305-c.240 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I abhor, too, the roaming lover, nor do I drink from every well; I l\
oathe all things held in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(common.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Epigram 28 in R. Pfeiffer \(ed.\) \221Callimachus\222 \(1949-53\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( A great book is like great evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(Fragment 465 in R. Pfeiffer \(ed.\) \221Callimachus\222 \(1949-53\); pr\
overbially reduced to \221Great book, great evil\222)Tj
ET
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( 3.12 Charles Alexandre de Calonne 1734-1802)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Madame, si c\222est possible, c\222est fait; impossible? cela se fer\
a.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Madam, if a thing is possible, consider it done; the impossible? tha\
t will be done.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 686.42047 Tm
(In J. Michelet \221Histoire de la R\350volution Fran\347aise\222 \(1847\)\
vol. 1, pt. 2, sect. 8; better known as the US )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Armed Forces slogan, \221The difficult we do immediately; the impossible\
takes a little longer.\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 639.2124 Tm
( 3.13 C. S. Calverley 1831-84)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The farmer\222s daughter hath soft brown hair;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese\))Tj
T*
( And I met with a ballad, I can\222t say where,)Tj
T*
( Which wholly consisted of lines like these.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 547.67047 Tm
(\221Ballad\222 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 526.75456 Tm
( And this song is considered a perfect gem,)Tj
T*
( And as to the meaning, it\222s what you please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 492.92047 Tm
(\221Ballad\222 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 472.00456 Tm
( O Beer! O Hodgson, Guinness, Allsopp, Bass!)Tj
T*
( Names that should be on every infant\222s tongue!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 438.17047 Tm
(\221Beer\222 \(1861\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 417.25456 Tm
( Life is with such all beer and skittles;)Tj
T*
( They are not difficult to please)Tj
T*
( About their victuals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.42047 Tm
(\221Contentment\222 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.50456 Tm
( For king-like rolls the Rhine,)Tj
T*
( And the scenery\222s divine,)Tj
T*
( And the victuals and the wine)Tj
T*
( Rather good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.67047 Tm
(\221Dover to Munich\222 \(1861\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 253.75456 Tm
( For I\222ve read in many a novel that, unless they\222ve souls that \
grovel,)Tj
T*
( Folks prefer in fact a hovel to your dreary marble halls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.92047 Tm
(\221In the Gloaming\222 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.00456 Tm
( How Eugene Aram, though a thief, a liar, and a murderer,)Tj
T*
( Yet, being intellectual, was amongst the noblest of mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.17047 Tm
(\221Of Reading\222 \(1861\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 132.9624 Tm
( 3.14 General Cambronne 1770-1842)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La Garde meurt, mais ne se rend pas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The Guards die but do not surrender.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.67047 Tm
(Attributed to Cambronne when called upon to surrender at Waterloo, 1815,\
and reported in the newspapers. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Cambronne denied the saying at a banquet at Nantes, 19 September 1830. H\
. Houssaye \221La Garde meurt et ne )Tj
T*
(se rend pas\222 \(1907\))Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 741.4624 Tm
( 3.15 Lord Camden \(Charles Pratt, Earl Camden\) 1714-94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Taxation and representation are inseparable...whatever is a man\222s\
own, is absolutely his own; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(no man hath a right to take it from him without his consent either expre\
ssed by himself or )Tj
T*
(representative; whoever attempts to do it, attempts an injury; whoever d\
oes it, commits a robbery; )Tj
T*
(he throws down and destroys the distinction between liberty and slavery.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.92047 Tm
(Speech in the House of Lords, on the taxation of Americans by the Britis\
h parliament, \221Hansard\222 10 February )Tj
T*
(1766, col. 177.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 602.7124 Tm
( 3.16 William Camden 1551-1623)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A gentleman falling off his horse brake his neck ... A good friend m\
ade this good epitaph...)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( My friend, judge not me,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou seest I judge not thee.)Tj
T*
( Betwixt the stirrup and the ground)Tj
T*
( Mercy I asked, mercy I found.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.42047 Tm
(\221Remains Concerning Britain\222 \(1605\) \221Epitaphs\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 457.2124 Tm
( 3.17 Mrs Patrick Campbell \(Beatrice Stella Campbell\) 1865-1940)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It doesn\222t matter what you do in the bedroom as long as you don\222\
t do it in the street and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(frighten the horses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.67047 Tm
(In Daphne Fielding \221The Duchess of Jermyn Street\222 \(1964\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.75456 Tm
( The deep, deep peace of the double-bed after the hurly-burly of the \
chaise-longue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.92047 Tm
(Describing her recent marriage, in Alexander Woollcott \221While Rome Bu\
rns\222 \(1934\) \221The First Mrs )Tj
T*
(Tanqueray\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 317.7124 Tm
( 3.18 Roy Campbell 1901-57)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Giraffes!\227a People)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who live between the earth and skies,)Tj
T*
( Each in his lone religious steeple,)Tj
T*
( Keeping a light-house with his eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.17047 Tm
(\221Dreaming Spires\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.25456 Tm
( You praise the firm restraint with which they write\227)Tj
T*
( I\222m with you there, of course:)Tj
T*
( They use the snaffle and the curb all right,)Tj
T*
( But where\222s the bloody horse?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.42047 Tm
(\221On Some South African Novelists\222 \(1930\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 103.2124 Tm
( 3.19 Thomas Campbell 1777-1844)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There was silence deep as death,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the boldest held his breath)Tj
T*
( For a time.)Tj
ET
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(\221Battle of the Baltic\222 \(1809\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Let us think of them that sleep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Full many a fathom deep,)Tj
T*
( By thy wild and stormy steep,)Tj
T*
( Elsinore!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Battle of the Baltic\222 \(1809\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O leave this barren spot to me!)Tj
T*
( Spare, woodman, spare the beechen tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Beech-Tree\222s Petition\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( To-morrow let us do or die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Gertrude of Wyoming\222 \(1809\) pt. 3, st. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( On the green banks of Shannon, when Sheelah was nigh,)Tj
T*
( No blithe Irish lad was so happy as I;)Tj
T*
( No harp like my own could so cheerily play,)Tj
T*
( And wherever I went was my poor dog Tray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Harper\222 \(1799\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Better be courted and jilted)Tj
T*
( Than never be courted at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Jilted Nymph\222 \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( A chieftain to the Highlands bound)Tj
T*
( Cries, \221Boatman, do not tarry!)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll give thee a silver pound)Tj
T*
( To row us o\222er the ferry.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Lord Ullin\222s Daughter\222 \(1809\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( \222Tis distance lends enchantment to the view,)Tj
T*
( And robes the mountain in its azure hue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Pleasures of Hope\222 \(1799\) pt. 1, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Hope, for a season, bade the world farewell,)Tj
T*
( And Freedom shrieked\227as Kosciusko fell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Pleasures of Hope\222 \(1799\) pt. 1, l. 381)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( What millions died\227that Caesar might be great!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Pleasures of Hope\222 \(1799\) pt. 2, l. 174)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( What though my wing\351d hours of bliss have been,)Tj
T*
( Like angel-visits, few and far between?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Pleasures of Hope\222 \(1799\) pt. 2, l. 375)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( With thunders from her native oak)Tj
T*
( She quells the floods below.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Ye Mariners of England\222 \(1801\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( An original something, fair maid, you would win me)Tj
T*
( To write\227but how shall I begin?)Tj
ET
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( For I fear I have nothing original in me\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Excepting Original Sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221To a Young Lady, Who Asked Me to Write Something Original for Her Al\
bum\222 \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Now Barabbas was a publisher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 3.20 Thomas Campion 1567-1620)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My sweetest Lesbia let us live and love,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And though the sager sort our deeds reprove,)Tj
T*
( Let us not weigh them: Heav\222n\222s great lamps do dive)Tj
T*
( Into their west, and straight again revive,)Tj
T*
( But soon as once set is our little light,)Tj
T*
( Then must we sleep one ever-during night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.67047 Tm
(\221A Book of Airs\222 \(1601\) no. 1; translation of Catullus \221Carmi\
na\222 no. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.75456 Tm
( When to her lute Corinna sings,)Tj
T*
( Her voice revives the leaden strings,)Tj
T*
( And both in highest notes appear,)Tj
T*
( As any challenged echo clear.)Tj
T*
( But when she doth of mourning speak,)Tj
T*
( Ev\222n with her sighs the strings do break.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(\221A Book of Airs\222 \(1601\) no. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( Follow your Saint, follow with accents sweet;)Tj
T*
( Haste you, sad notes, fall at her flying feet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221A Book of Airs\222 \(1601\) no. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( Good thoughts his only friends,)Tj
T*
( His wealth a well-spent age,)Tj
T*
( The earth his sober inn)Tj
T*
( And quiet pilgrimage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221A Book of Airs\222 \(1601\) no. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( There is a garden in her face,)Tj
T*
( Where roses and white lilies grow;)Tj
T*
( A heav\222nly paradise is that place,)Tj
T*
( Wherein all pleasant fruits do flow.)Tj
T*
( There cherries grow, which none may buy)Tj
T*
( Till \221Cherry ripe\222 themselves do cry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221The Fourth Book of Airs\222 \(1617\) no. 7.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( Those cherries fairly do enclose)Tj
T*
( Of orient pearl a double row;)Tj
T*
( Which when her lovely laughter shows,)Tj
T*
( They look like rosebuds filled with snow.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Fourth Book of Airs\222 \(1617\) no. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Rose-cheeked Laura, come;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sing thou smoothly with thy beauty\222s)Tj
T*
( Silent music, either other)Tj
T*
( Sweetly gracing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Laura\222 \(1602\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Kind are her answers,)Tj
T*
( But her performance keeps no day;)Tj
T*
( Breaks time, as dancers)Tj
T*
( From their own music when they stray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Third Book of Airs\222 \(1617\) no. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore,)Tj
T*
( Never tired pilgrim\222s limbs affected slumber more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Two Books of Airs\222 \(1612/1613\) no. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 486.7124 Tm
( 3.21 Albert Camus 1913-60)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Intellectuel = celui qui se d\350double.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( An intellectual is someone whose mind watches itself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Carnets, 1935-42\222 p. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( La politique et le sort des hommes sont form\350s par des hommes san\
s id\350al et sans grandeur. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Ceux qui ont une grandeur en eux ne font pas de politique.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Politics and the fate of mankind are formed by men without ideals an\
d without greatness. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Those who have greatness within them do not go in for politics.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.92047 Tm
(\221Carnets, 1935-42\222 p. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.00456 Tm
( Vous savez ce qu\222est le charme: une mani\351re de s\222entendre r\
\350pondre oui sans avoir pos\350 )Tj
T*
(aucune question claire.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( You know what charm is: a way of getting the answer yes without havi\
ng asked any clear )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(question.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.42047 Tm
(\221La Chute\222 p. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.50456 Tm
( Nous sommes tous des cas exceptionnels. Nous voulons tous faire appe\
l de quelque chose! )Tj
T*
(Chacun exige d\222\352tre innocent, \341 tout prix, m\352me si, pour cel\
a, il faut accuser le genre humain et le )Tj
T*
(ciel.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We are all special cases. We all want to appeal to something! Everyo\
ne insists on his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(innocence, at all costs, even if it means accusing the rest of the human\
race and heaven.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221La Chute\222 p. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( Nous nous confions rarement \341 ceux qui sont meilleurs que nous.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We seldom confide in those who are better than ourselves.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221La Chute\222 p. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Je vais vous dire un grand secret, mon cher. N\222attendez pas le ju\
gement dernier. Il a lieu tous )Tj
ET
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Q
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(les jours.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I\222ll tell you a great secret, my friend. Don\222t wait for the la\
st judgement. It happens every day.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(\221La Chute\222 p. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.50456 Tm
( Aujourd\222hui, maman est morte. Ou peut-\352tre hier, je ne sais pa\
s.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Mother died today. Or perhaps it was yesterday, I don\222t know.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 656.92047 Tm
(\221L\222\310tranger\222 p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 636.00456 Tm
( Qu\222est-ce qu\222un homme r\350volt\350 ? Un homme qui dit non.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( What is a rebel? A man who says no.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 598.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Homme r\350volt\350\222 p. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 577.50456 Tm
( Toutes les r\350volutions modernes ont abouti \341 un renforcement d\
e l\222\310tat.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( All modern revolutions have ended in a reinforcement of the State.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Homme r\350volt\350\222 p. 221)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( Tout r\350volutionnaire finit en oppresseur ou en h\350r\350tique.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Every revolutionary ends as an oppressor or a heretic.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Homme r\350volt\350\222 p. 306)Tj
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( La lutte elle-m\352me vers les sommets suffit \341 remplir un coeur \
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(Sisyphe heureux.)Tj
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T*
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T*
( So we clap on Dutch bottoms just twenty per cent.)Tj
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(Dispatch, in cipher, to the English Ambassador at the Hague, 31 January \
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T*
(Canning\222s Rhyming \221Dispatch\222 to Sir Charles Bagot\222 \(1905\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( A steady patriot of the world alone,)Tj
T*
( The friend of every country but his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(Referring to the Jacobin, in \221New Morality\222 \(1821\) l. 113.)Tj
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( And finds, with keen discriminating sight,)Tj
T*
( Black\222s not so black;\227nor white so very white.)Tj
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(\221New Morality\222 \(1821\) l. 199)Tj
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( Give me the avowed, erect and manly foe;)Tj
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T*
( But of all plagues, good Heaven, thy wrath can send,)Tj
T*
( Save me, oh, save me, from the candid friend.)Tj
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( Pitt is to Addington)Tj
T*
( As London is to Paddington.)Tj
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(\221The Oracle\222 \(c.1803\))Tj
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( Man, only\227rash, refined, presumptuous man,)Tj
T*
( Starts from his rank, and mars creation\222s plan.)Tj
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(\221The Progress of Man\222 \(1799\) l. 55)Tj
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( Whene\222er with haggard eyes I view)Tj
T*
( This Dungeon, that I\222m rotting in,)Tj
T*
( I think of those Companions true)Tj
T*
( Who studied with me at the U\227)Tj
T*
( \227NIVERSITY OF GOTTINGEN,\227)Tj
T*
( \227NIVERSITY OF GOTTINGEN.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Song\222)Tj
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( Away with the cant of \221Measures not men\222!\227the idle supposit\
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T*
(the horses that draw the chariot along. If the comparison must be made, \
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T*
(taken, men are everything, measures comparatively nothing.)Tj
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(House of Commons, 1801)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(Speech on the affairs of Portugal, in \221Hansard\222 12 December 1826, \
col. 397)Tj
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( You well know how soon one of these stupendous masses, now reposing \
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T*
(perfect stillness, would upon any call of patriotism or of necessity, as\
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T*
(animated thing, instinct with life and motion: how soon it would ruffle,\
as it were its swelling )Tj
T*
(plumage, how quickly it would put forth all its beauty and its bravery, \
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T*
(elements of strength and waken its dormant thunder...Such is England her\
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T*
(passive and motionless, she silently concentrates the power to be put fo\
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T*
(occasion.)Tj
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(Speech at Plymouth, 12 December 1823, referring to the men of war lying \
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T*
(Seton Watson \221Britain in Europe 1789-1914\222 \(1945\) p. 85)Tj
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( 3.24 Hughie Cannon 1877-1912)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Won\222t you come home Bill Bailey, won\222t you come home?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.92047 Tm
(\221Bill Bailey, Won\222t You Please Come Home\222 \(1902 song\))Tj
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( 3.25 Truman Capote 1924-84)Tj
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T*
( Other voices, other rooms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1948\))Tj
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( 3.26 Al Capp \(Alfred Gerard Caplin\) 1907-79)Tj
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( A product of the untalented, sold by the unprincipled to the utterly\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(On abstract art, in \221National Observer\222 1 July 1963.)Tj
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( 3.27 Marquis Domenico Caracciolo 1715-89)Tj
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T*
( Il y a en Angleterre soixante sectes religieuses diff\350rentes, et \
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(Attributed in \221Notes and Queries\222 December 1968)Tj
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( 3.28 Ethna Carbery \(Anna MacManus\) 1866-1902)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, Kathaleen N\355 Houlihan, your road\222s a thorny way,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And \222tis a faithful soul would walk the flints with you for aye,)Tj
T*
( Would walk the sharp and cruel flints until his locks grew grey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221The Passing of the Gael\222 \(1902\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 3.29 Richard Carew 1555-1620)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Will you have all in all for prose and verse? take the miracle of ou\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Sir Philip Sidney.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.42047 Tm
(William Camden \221Remains concerning Britain\222 \(1614\) \221The Excel\
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( He that loves a rosy cheek,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Or, from star-like eyes, doth seek)Tj
T*
( Fuel to maintain his fires;)Tj
T*
( As old Time makes these decay,)Tj
T*
( So his flames must waste away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.67047 Tm
(\221Disdain Returned\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.75456 Tm
( The Muses\222 garden with pedantic weeds)Tj
T*
( O\222erspread, was purged by thee; the lazy seeds)Tj
T*
( Of servile imitation thrown away,)Tj
T*
( And fresh invention planted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.92047 Tm
(\221An Elegy upon the Death of Dr John Donne\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.00456 Tm
( Here lies a king, that ruled as he thought fit)Tj
T*
( The universal monarchy of wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.17047 Tm
(\221An Elegy upon the Death of Dr John Donne\222)Tj
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( The purest soul that e\222er was sent)Tj
T*
( Into a clayey tenement.)Tj
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(\221Epitaph On the Lady Mary Villiers\222)Tj
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( Know, Celia \(since thou art so proud,\))Tj
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T*
( Thou had\222st in the forgotten crowd)Tj
T*
( Of common beauties lived unknown,)Tj
T*
( Had not my verse extolled thy name,)Tj
T*
( And with it imped the wings of fame.)Tj
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(\221Ingrateful Beauty Threatened\222)Tj
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( Good to the poor, to kindred dear,)Tj
T*
( To servants kind, to friendship clear,)Tj
T*
( To nothing but herself severe.)Tj
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(\221Inscription on the Tomb of Lady Mary Wentworth\222)Tj
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T*
( To every Grace, she justified)Tj
T*
( A chaste polygamy, and died.)Tj
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(\221Inscription on the Tomb of Lady Mary Wentworth\222)Tj
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( Give me more love or more disdain;)Tj
T*
( The torrid or the frozen zone:)Tj
T*
( Bring equal ease unto my pain;)Tj
T*
( The temperate affords me none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Mediocrity in Love Rejected\222)Tj
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( Though a stranger to this place,)Tj
T*
( Bewail in theirs thine own hard case:)Tj
T*
( For thou perhaps at thy return)Tj
T*
( Mayst find thy darling in an urn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221On the Lady Mary Villiers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Ask me no more where Jove bestows,)Tj
T*
( When June is past, the fading rose;)Tj
T*
( For in your beauty\222s orient deep)Tj
T*
( These flowers, as in their causes, sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221A Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Ask me no more whither doth haste)Tj
T*
( The nightingale when May is past;)Tj
T*
( For in your sweet dividing throat)Tj
T*
( She winters and keeps warm her note.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221A Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Ask me no more if east or west)Tj
T*
( The Phoenix builds her spicy nest;)Tj
T*
( For unto you at last she flies,)Tj
T*
( And in your fragrant bosom dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221A Song\222)Tj
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( When thou, poor excommunicate)Tj
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T*
( The full reward and glorious fate)Tj
T*
( Which my strong faith shall purchase me,)Tj
T*
( Then curse thine own inconstancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221To My Inconstant Mistress\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.31 Henry Carey c.1687-1743)Tj
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( Let your little verses flow)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Let the verse the subject fit,)Tj
T*
( Little subject, little wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.42047 Tm
(\221Namby-Pamby: or, A Panegyric on the New Versification\222 \(1725\))Tj
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( As an actor does his part,)Tj
T*
( So the nurses get by heart)Tj
T*
( Namby-pamby\222s little rhymes,)Tj
T*
( Little jingle, little chimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221Namby-Pamby: or, A Panegyric on the New Versification\222 \(1725\))Tj
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( Of all the girls that are so smart)Tj
T*
( There\222s none like pretty Sally,)Tj
T*
( She is the darling of my heart,)Tj
T*
( And she lives in our alley.)Tj
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(\221Sally in our Alley\222 \(1729\))Tj
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( 3.32 Jane Carlyle \(Jane Baille Welsh Carlyle\) 1801-66)Tj
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( I am not at all the sort of person you and I took me for.)Tj
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(Letter to Thomas Carlyle, 7 May 1822, in C. R. Sanders et al. \(eds.\) \
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( 3.33 Thomas Carlyle 1795-1881)Tj
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( A witty statesman said, you might prove anything by figures.)Tj
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(\221Chartism\222 \(1839\) ch. 2)Tj
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( Surely of all \221rights of man\222, this right of the ignorant man \
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0 -1.2 TD
(gently or forcibly, held in the true course by him, is the indisputables\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.67047 Tm
(\221Chartism\222 \(1839\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.75456 Tm
( In epochs when cash payment has become the sole nexus of man to man.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(\221Chartism\222 \(1839\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( The \221golden-calf of self-love.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Burns\222)Tj
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( The foul sluggard\222s comfort: \221It will last my time.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Count Cagliostro.\
Flight Last\222)Tj
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( Thou wretched fraction, wilt thou be the ninth part even of a tailor\
?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.67047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Francia\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 712.75456 Tm
( What is all knowledge too but recorded experience, and a product of \
history; of which, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(therefore, reasoning and belief, no less than action and passion, are es\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.92047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221On History\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.00456 Tm
( History is the essence of innumerable biographies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.17047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221On History\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.25456 Tm
( A well-written Life is almost as rare as a well-spent one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.42047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Jean Paul Friedri\
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( There is no life of a man, faithfully recorded, but is a heroic poem\
of its sort, rhymed or )Tj
T*
(unrhymed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 550.67047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Sir Walter Scott\222\
)Tj
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( Under all speech that is good for anything there lies a silence that\
is better. Silence is deep as )Tj
T*
(Eternity; speech is shallow as Time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.92047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Sir Walter Scott\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 475.00456 Tm
( To the very last he [Napoleon] had a kind of idea; that, namely, of \
La carri\351re ouverte aux )Tj
T*
(talents, The tools to him that can handle them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.17047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Sir Walter Scott\222\
\(La carri\351re... Career open to the talents\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 420.25456 Tm
( It can be said of him, when he departed, he took a man\222s life alo\
ng with him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.42047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Sir Walter Scott\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.50456 Tm
( This idle habit of \221accounting for the moral sense\222...The mora\
l sense, thank God, is a thing you )Tj
T*
(will never \221account for\222...By no greatest happiness principle, gre\
atest nobleness principle, or any )Tj
T*
(principle whatever, will you make that in the least clearer than it alre\
ady is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Shooting Niagara:\
and After?\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.75456 Tm
( It is the Age of Machinery, in every outward and inward sense of tha\
t word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.92047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Signs of the Time\
s\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 274.00456 Tm
( The Bible-Society...is found, on inquiry, to be...a machine for conv\
erting the Heathen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.17047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Signs of the Time\
s\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.25456 Tm
( Thought, he [Dr Cabanis] is inclined to hold, is still secreted by t\
he brain; but then Poetry and )Tj
T*
(Religion \(and it is really worth knowing\) are \221a product of the sma\
ller intestines\222!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.42047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221Signs of the Time\
s\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.50456 Tm
( The three great elements of modern civilization, Gunpowder, Printing\
, and the Protestant )Tj
T*
(Religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.67047 Tm
(\221Critical and Miscellaneous Essays\222 \(1838\) \221The State of Germ\
an Literature\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 127.75456 Tm
( \221Genius\222 \(which means transcendent capacity of taking trouble\
, first of all\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.92047 Tm
(\221History of Frederick the Great\222 \(1858\) bk. 4, ch. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.00456 Tm
( Happy the people whose annals are blank in history-books!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.17047 Tm
(\221History of Frederick the Great\222 \(1858\) bk. 16, ch. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.25456 Tm
( A whiff of grapeshot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.42047 Tm
(\221History of the French Revolution\222 \(1837\) vol. 1, bk. 5, ch. 3)Tj
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( History a distillation of rumour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 731.67047 Tm
(\221History of the French Revolution\222 \(1837\) vol. 1, bk. 7, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 710.75456 Tm
( The difference between Orthodoxy or My-doxy and Heterodoxy or Thy-do\
xy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 694.92047 Tm
(\221History of the French Revolution\222 \(1837\) vol. 2, bk. 4, ch. 2)Tj
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( The seagreen Incorruptible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 658.17047 Tm
(Referring to Robespierre, in \221History of the French Revolution\222 \(\
1837\) vol. 2, bk. 4, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 637.25456 Tm
( France was long a despotism tempered by epigrams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 621.42047 Tm
(\221History of the French Revolution\222 \(1837\) vol. 3, bk. 7, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 600.50456 Tm
( Aristocracy of the Moneybag.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.67047 Tm
(\221History of the French Revolution\222 \(1837\) vol. 3, bk. 7, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.75456 Tm
( Worship is transcendent wonder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 547.92047 Tm
(\221On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic\222 \(1841\) \221The Hero as\
Divinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.00456 Tm
( In books lies the soul of the whole Past Time; the articulate audibl\
e voice of the Past, when the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(body and material substance of it has altogether vanished like a dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 493.17047 Tm
(\221On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic\222 \(1841\) \221The Hero as\
Man of Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 472.25456 Tm
( The true University of these days is a collection of books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 456.42047 Tm
(\221On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic\222 \(1841\) \221The Hero as\
Man of Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 435.50456 Tm
( Adversity is sometimes hard upon a man; but for one man who can stan\
d prosperity, there are a )Tj
T*
(hundred that will stand adversity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.67047 Tm
(\221On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic\222 \(1841\) \221The Hero as\
Man of Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.75456 Tm
( I hope we English will long maintain our grand talent pour le silenc\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.92047 Tm
(\221On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic\222 \(1841\) \221The Hero as\
King\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.00456 Tm
( Maid-servants, I hear people complaining, are getting instructed in \
the \221ologies\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.17047 Tm
(\221Inaugural Address at Edinburgh\222, 2 April 1866, on being installed\
as Rector of the University)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 307.25456 Tm
( A Parliament speaking through reporters to Buncombe and the twenty-s\
even millions mostly )Tj
T*
(fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.42047 Tm
(\221Latter-Day Pamphlets\222 \(1850\) \221Parliaments\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.50456 Tm
( The Dismal Science.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.67047 Tm
(On political economy in \221Latter-Day Pamphlets\222 \(1850\) \221The Pr\
esent Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.75456 Tm
( Little other than a redtape talking-machine, and unhappy bag of parl\
iamentary eloquence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.92047 Tm
(Describing himself, in \221Latter-Day Pamphlets\222 \(1850\) \221The Pre\
sent Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.00456 Tm
( Transcendental moonshine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.17047 Tm
(\221The Life of John Sterling\222 \(1851\) pt. 1, ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.25456 Tm
( Captains of industry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.42047 Tm
(\221Past and Present\222 \(1843\) bk. 4, ch. 4 \(title\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.50456 Tm
( He who first shortened the labour of copyists by device of Movable T\
ypes was disbanding )Tj
T*
(hired armies, and cashiering most Kings and Senates, and creating a whol\
e new democratic )Tj
T*
(world: he had invented the art of printing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.67047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
ET
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( Man is a tool-using animal...Without tools he is nothing, with tools\
he is all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Whoso has sixpence is sovereign \(to the length of sixpence\) over a\
ll men; commands cooks to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(feed him, philosophers to teach him, kings to mount guard over him,\227t\
o the length of sixpence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Language is called the garment of thought: however, it should rather\
be, language is the flesh-)Tj
T*
(garment, the body, of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The end of man is an action and not a thought, though it were the no\
blest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 2, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The everlasting No.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 2, ch. 7 \(title\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Man\222s unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is b\
ecause there is an Infinite in )Tj
T*
(him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 2, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Be no longer a chaos, but a world, or even worldkin. Produce! Produc\
e!)Tj
T*
( Were it but the pitifullest infinitesimal fraction of a product, pro\
duce it in God\222s name! \222Tis )Tj
T*
(the utmost thou hast in thee: out with it, then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Sartor Resartus\222 \(1834\) bk. 2, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( A good book is the purest essence of a human soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(Speech in support of the London Library, 24 June 1840, in F. Harrison \221\
Carlyle and the London )Tj
T*
(Library\222 \(1907\) p. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( \221Gad! she\222d better!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(On hearing that Margaret Fuller \221accept [ed] the universe\222, in Wil\
liam James \221The Varieties of Religious )Tj
T*
(Experience\222 \(1902\) lecture 2, p. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( Macaulay is well for a while, but one wouldn\222t live under Niagara\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(In R. M. Milnes \221Notebook\222 \(1838\) p. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( If Jesus Christ were to come to-day, people would not even crucify h\
im.)Tj
T*
( They would ask him to dinner, and hear what he had to say, and make \
fun of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(In D. A. Wilson \221Carlyle at his Zenith\222 \(1927\) p. 238)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 199.4624 Tm
( 3.34 Andrew Carnegie 1835-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The man who dies...rich dies disgraced.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221North American Review\222 June 1889 \221Wealth\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 129.7124 Tm
( 3.35 Dale Carnegie 1888-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( How to win friends and influence people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1936\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 59.9624 Tm
( 3.36 Julia A. Carney 1823-1908)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Little drops of water,)Tj
ET
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( Little grains of sand,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Make the mighty ocean)Tj
T*
( And the beauteous land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(\221Little Things\222 \(1845\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.2124 Tm
( 3.37 Joseph Edwards Carpenter 1813-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What are the wild waves saying)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sister, the whole day long,)Tj
T*
( That ever amid our playing,)Tj
T*
( I hear but their low lone song?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.67047 Tm
(\221What are the Wild Waves Saying?\222 \(1854\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 542.4624 Tm
( 3.38 J. L. Carr)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You have not had thirty years\222 experience...You have had one year\
\222s experience 30 times.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.92047 Tm
(\221The Harpole Report\222 \(1972\) p. 128)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 472.7124 Tm
( 3.39 Lewis Carroll \(Charles Lutwidge Dodgson\) 1832-98)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( \221What is the use of a book\222, thought Alice, \221without pictur\
es or conversations?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.25456 Tm
( \221Curiouser and curiouser!\222 cried Alice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.42047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.50456 Tm
( How doth the little crocodile)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Improve his shining tail,)Tj
T*
( And pour the waters of the Nile)Tj
T*
( On every golden scale!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.67047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.75456 Tm
( How cheerfully he seems to grin,)Tj
T*
( How neatly spreads his claws,)Tj
T*
( And welcomes little fishes in)Tj
T*
( With gently smiling jaws!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.92047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 196.00456 Tm
( \221I\222ll be judge, I\222ll be jury,\222 said cunning old Fury;)Tj
T*
( \221I\222ll try the whole cause, and condemn you to death.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.25456 Tm
( \221You are old, Father William,\222 the young man said,)Tj
T*
( \221And your hair has become very white;)Tj
T*
( And yet you incessantly stand on your head\227)Tj
T*
( Do you think, at your age, it is right?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.42047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.50456 Tm
( \221I have answered three questions, and that is enough,\222)Tj
ET
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( Said his father; \221don\222t give yourself airs!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Do you think I can listen all day to such stuff?)Tj
T*
( Be off, or I\222ll kick you downstairs!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Speak roughly to your little boy,)Tj
T*
( And beat him when he sneezes;)Tj
T*
( He only does it to annoy,)Tj
T*
( Because he knows it teases.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( \221Then you should say what you mean,\222 the March Hare went on. \221\
I do,\222 Alice hastily replied; )Tj
T*
(\221at least\227at least I mean what I say\227that\222s the same thing, \
you know.\222 \221Not the same thing a )Tj
T*
(bit!\222 said the Hatter. \221Why, you might just as well say that \223I\
see what I eat\224 is the same thing as )Tj
T*
(\223I eat what I see!\224\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Twinkle, twinkle, little bat!)Tj
T*
( How I wonder what you\222re at!)Tj
T*
( Up above the world you fly!)Tj
T*
( Like a teatray in the sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 7.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( \221Take some more tea,\222 the March Hare said to Alice, very earne\
stly. \221I\222ve had nothing yet,\222 )Tj
T*
(Alice replied in an offended tone, \221so I can\222t take more.\222 \221\
You mean you can\222t take less,\222 said the )Tj
T*
(Hatter: \221it\222s very easy to take more than nothing.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Everything\222s got a moral, if you can only find it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Take care of the sense, and the sounds will take care of themselves.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 9.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( \221That\222s nothing to what I could say if I chose,\222 the Duches\
s replied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( \221That\222s the reason they\222re called lessons,\222 the Gryphon \
remarked: \221because they lessen from )Tj
T*
(day to day.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( \221Will you walk a little faster?\222 said a whiting to a snail,)Tj
T*
( \221There\222s a porpoise close behind us, and he\222s treading on m\
y tail.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Will you, won\222t you, will you, won\222t you, will you join the da\
nce?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( \221Where shall I begin, please your Majesty?\222 he asked. \221Begi\
n at the beginning,\222 the King said, )Tj
T*
(gravely, \221and go on till you come to the end: then stop.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 12)Tj
ET
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( No! No! Sentence first\227verdict afterwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Alice\222s Adventures in Wonderland\222 \(1865\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( \222Twas brillig, and the slithy toves)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( All mimsy were the borogoves,)Tj
T*
( And the mome raths outgrabe.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( \221Beware the Jabberwock, my son!)Tj
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( The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!\222)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( And as in uffish thought he stood,)Tj
T*
( The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,)Tj
T*
( Came whiffling through the tulgey wood,)Tj
T*
( And burbled as it came!)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One, two! One, two! And through and through)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!)Tj
T*
( He left it dead, and with its head)Tj
T*
( He went galumphing back.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \221And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come to my arms, my beamish boy!)Tj
T*
( O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!\222)Tj
T*
( He chortled in his joy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( Curtsey while you\222re thinking what to say. It saves time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.75456 Tm
( Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in \
the same place. If you want )Tj
T*
(to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.00456 Tm
( Speak in French when you can\222t think of the English for a thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.25456 Tm
( If you think we\222re wax-works, you ought to pay, you know. Wax-wor\
ks weren\222t made to be )Tj
T*
(looked at for nothing. Nohow!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.50456 Tm
( \221Contrariwise,\222 continued Tweedledee, \221if it was so, it mig\
ht be; and if it were so, it would be: )Tj
T*
(but as it isn\222t, it ain\222t. That\222s logic.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( The Walrus and the Carpenter)Tj
T*
( Were walking close at hand;)Tj
T*
( They wept like anything to see)Tj
T*
( Such quantities of sand:)Tj
ET
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( \221If this were only cleared away,\222)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( \221If seven maids with seven mops)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Swept it for half a year,)Tj
T*
( Do you suppose,\222 the Walrus said,)Tj
T*
( \221That they could get it clear?\222)Tj
T*
( \221I doubt it,\222 said the Carpenter,)Tj
T*
( And shed a bitter tear.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( \221The time has come,\222 the Walrus said,)Tj
T*
( \221To talk of many things:)Tj
T*
( Of shoes\227and ships\227and sealing wax\227)Tj
T*
( Of cabbages\227and kings\227)Tj
T*
( And why the sea is boiling hot\227)Tj
T*
( And whether pigs have wings.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( But answer came there none\227)Tj
T*
( And this was scarcely odd because)Tj
T*
( They\222d eaten every one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( \221You know,\222 he said very gravely, \221it\222s one of the most \
serious things that can possibly happen )Tj
T*
(to one in a battle\227to get one\222s head cut off.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( The rule is, jam to-morrow and jam yesterday\227but never jam today.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( \221It\222s a poor sort of memory that only works backwards,\222 the\
Queen remarked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Consider anything, only don\222t cry!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 5)Tj
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( Why, sometimes I\222ve believed as many as six impossible things bef\
ore breakfast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 5)Tj
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( With a name like yours, you might be any shape, almost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
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( They gave it me,\227for an un-birthday present.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.75456 Tm
( \221There\222s glory for you!\222 )Tj
T*
( \221I don\222t know what you mean by \223glory\224,\222 Alice said. \
)Tj
T*
( \221I meant, \223there\222s a nice knock-down argument for you!\224\222\
)Tj
T*
( \221But \223glory\224 doesn\222t mean \223a nice knock-down argument\
\224,\222 Alice objected. )Tj
T*
( \221When I use a word,\222 Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful t\
one, \221it means just what I )Tj
ET
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(choose it to mean\227neither more nor less.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
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( You see it\222s like a portmanteau\227there are two meanings packed \
up into one word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
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( \221I can repeat poetry as well as other folk if it comes to that\227\
\222 \221Oh, it needn\222t come to that!\222 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Alice hastily said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
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( The little fishes of the sea,)Tj
T*
( They sent an answer back to me.)Tj
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( The little fishes\222 answer was)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221We cannot do it, Sir, because\227\222)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 6)Tj
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( He\222s an Anglo-Saxon Messenger\227and those are Anglo-Saxon attitu\
des.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 513.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 492.25456 Tm
( The other Messenger\222s called Hatta. I must have two you know\227t\
o come and go. One to )Tj
T*
(come, and one to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 437.50456 Tm
( \221There\222s nothing like eating hay when you\222re faint.\222...\222\
I didn\222t say there was nothing better,\222 )Tj
T*
(the King replied, \221I said there was nothing like it.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 382.75456 Tm
( \221I\222m sure nobody walks much faster than I do!\222 \221He can\222\
t do that,\222 said the King, \221or else he\222d )Tj
T*
(have been here first.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 328.00456 Tm
( It\222s as large as life, and twice as natural!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.25456 Tm
( I\222ll tell thee everything I can:)Tj
T*
( There\222s little to relate.)Tj
T*
( I saw an aged, aged man,)Tj
T*
( A-sitting on a gate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.50456 Tm
( He said, \221I look for butterflies)Tj
T*
( That sleep among the wheat:)Tj
T*
( I make them into mutton-pies,)Tj
T*
( And sell them in the street.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.75456 Tm
( Or madly squeeze a right-hand foot)Tj
T*
( Into a left-hand shoe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.92047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.00456 Tm
( No admittance till the week after next!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.17047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 9)Tj
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( It isn\222t etiquette to cut any one you\222ve been introduced to. R\
emove the joint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 732.42047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 711.50456 Tm
( Un-dish-cover the fish, or dishcover the riddle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 695.67047 Tm
(\221Through the Looking-Glass\222 \(1872\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 674.75456 Tm
( He would answer to \221Hi!\222 or to any loud cry,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Such as \221Fry me!\222 or \221Fritter-my-wig!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 640.92047 Tm
(\221The Hunting of the Snark\222 \(1876\) \221Fit the First: The Landing\
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15 0 0 15 10 620.00456 Tm
( His intimate friends called him \221Candle-ends\222,)Tj
T*
( And his enemies, \221Toasted-cheese\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 586.17047 Tm
(\221The Hunting of the Snark\222 \(1876\) \221Fit the First: The Landing\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 565.25456 Tm
( But the principal failing occurred in the sailing,)Tj
T*
( And the Bellman, perplexed and distressed,)Tj
T*
( Said he had hoped, at least, when the wind blew due East,)Tj
T*
( That the ship would not travel due West!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.42047 Tm
(\221The Hunting of the Snark\222 \(1876\) \221Fit the Second: The Bellma\
n\222s Speech\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.50456 Tm
( But oh, beamish nephew, beware of the day,)Tj
T*
( If your Snark be a Boojum! For then)Tj
T*
( You will softly and suddenly vanish away,)Tj
T*
( And never be met with again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.67047 Tm
(\221The Hunting of the Snark\222 \(1876\) \221Fit the Third: The Baker\222\
s Tale\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.75456 Tm
( They sought it with thimbles, they sought it with care;)Tj
T*
( They pursued it with forks and hope;)Tj
T*
( They threatened its life with a railway-share;)Tj
T*
( They charmed it with smiles and soap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.92047 Tm
(\221The Hunting of the Snark\222 \(1876\) \221Fit the Fifth: The Beaver\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 293.00456 Tm
( I never loved a dear Gazelle\227)Tj
T*
( Nor anything that cost me much:)Tj
T*
( High prices profit those who sell,)Tj
T*
( But why should I be fond of such?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.17047 Tm
(\221Phantasmagoria\222 \(1869\) \221Theme with Variations\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.25456 Tm
( He thought he saw an Elephant,)Tj
T*
( That practised on a fife:)Tj
T*
( He looked again, and found it was)Tj
T*
( A letter from his wife.)Tj
T*
( \221At length I realize,\222 he said,)Tj
T*
( \221The bitterness of life!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.42047 Tm
(\221Sylvie and Bruno\222 \(1889\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.50456 Tm
( He thought he saw a Rattlesnake)Tj
T*
( That questioned him in Greek,)Tj
T*
( He looked again and found it was)Tj
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( The Middle of Next Week.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221The one thing I regret,\222 he said,)Tj
T*
( \221Is that it cannot speak!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.67047 Tm
(\221Sylvie and Bruno\222 \(1889\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 667.4624 Tm
( 3.40 William Herbert Carruth 1859-1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some call it evolution,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And others call it God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(\221Each In His Own Tongue, and Other Poems\222 \(1908\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 579.7124 Tm
( 3.41 Edward Carson \(Baron Carson\) 1854-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My only great qualification for being put at the head of the Navy is\
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0 -1.2 TD
( I am very much at sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(In Ian Colvin \221Life of Lord Carson\222 \(1936\) vol. 3, ch. 23)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 491.9624 Tm
( 3.42 Henry Carter d. 1806)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From distant climes, o\222er widespread seas we come,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Though not with much \350clat or beat of drum;)Tj
T*
( True patriots we; for be it understood,)Tj
T*
( We left our country for our country\222s good.)Tj
T*
( No private views disgraced our generous zeal,)Tj
T*
( What urged our travels was our country\222s weal;)Tj
T*
( And none will doubt but that our emigration)Tj
T*
( Has proved most useful to the British nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.42047 Tm
(Prologue, written for, but not recited at, the opening of the Playhouse,\
Sydney, New South Wales, 16 January )Tj
T*
(1796, when the actors were principally convicts. A. W. Jose and H. J. Ca\
rter \(eds.\) \221The Australian )Tj
T*
(Encyclopaedia\222 \(1927\) p. 139. Previously attributed to George Barri\
ngton \(b. 1755\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 266.2124 Tm
( 3.43 Sydney Carter 1915\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s God they ought to crucify)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Instead of you and me,)Tj
T*
( I said to the carpenter)Tj
T*
( A-hanging on the tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Friday Morning\222 \(1967\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( I danced in the morning)Tj
T*
( When the world was begun)Tj
T*
( And I danced in the moon)Tj
T*
( And the stars and the sun)Tj
T*
( And I came down from heaven)Tj
T*
( And I danced on the earth\227)Tj
T*
( At Bethlehem I had my birth.)Tj
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( Dance then wherever you may be,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I am the Lord of the Dance, said he,)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll lead you all, wherever you may be)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll lead you all in the dance, said he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Lord of the Dance\222 \(1967\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.9624 Tm
( 3.44 John Cartwright 1740-1824)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One man shall have one vote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(\221The People\222s Barrier Against Undue Influence\222 \(1780\) ch. 1 \221\
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0 -1.2 TD
(politics\222 no. 68)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 566.2124 Tm
( 3.45 Lucius Cassius Longinus Ravilla late 2nd cent. B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cui bono?)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To whose profit?)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.92047 Tm
(In Cicero \221Pro Roscio Amerino\222 ch. 84 and \221Pro Milone\222 ch. 1\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 3.46 Ted Castle \(Baron Castle of Islington\) 1907-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In place of strife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.17047 Tm
(Title of Labour Government\222s White Paper, 17 January 1969, suggested \
by Castle to his wife, Barbara Castle, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(then Secretary of State for Employment. Barbara Castle \221Diaries\222 \(\
1984\) 15 January 1969)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.9624 Tm
( 3.47 Harry Castling and C. W. Murphy)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let\222s all go down the Strand!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let\222s all go down the Strand!)Tj
T*
( I\222ll be leader, you can march behind)Tj
T*
( Come with me, and see what we can find)Tj
T*
( Let\222s all go down the Strand!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Let\222s All Go Down the Strand!\222 \(1909 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 248.2124 Tm
( 3.48 Fidel Castro 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La historia me absolv\350ra.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( History will absolve me.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(Title of pamphlet \(1953\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 156.7124 Tm
( 3.49 Revd Edward Caswall 1814-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Jesu, the very thought of Thee)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With sweetness fills the breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Jesu, The Very Thought of Thee\222 \(1849 hymn\) translation of \221\
Jesu dulcis memoria, dans vera cordis gaudia\222; )Tj
T*
(often attributed to St Bernard \(1090-1153\), though of uncertain origin\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( My God, I love Thee; not because)Tj
T*
( I hope for heaven thereby.)Tj
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(\221My God, I Love Thee\222 \(1849 hymn\) translation of \221O deus ego \
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(attributed to St Francis Xavier \(1506-52\), though of uncertain origin)Tj
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( 3.50 Willa Cather 1873-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The history of every country begins in the heart of a man or a woman\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 670.42047 Tm
(\221O Pioneers!\222 \(1913\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 649.50456 Tm
( I like trees because they seem more resigned to the way they have to\
live than other things do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 633.67047 Tm
(\221O Pioneers!\222 \(1913\) pt. 2, ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 601.4624 Tm
( 3.51 Empress Catherine the Great 1729-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Moi, je serai autocrate: c\222est mon m\350tier. Et le bon Dieu me p\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I shall be an autocrat: that\222s my trade. And the good Lord will f\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.17047 Tm
(Attributed.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 509.9624 Tm
( 3.52 Cato The Elder or the Censor, \(Marcus Porcius Cabo\) 234-149 B.C.\
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Delenda est Carthago.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Carthage must be destroyed.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(In Pliny the Elder \221Naturalis Historia\222 bk. 15, ch. 74)Tj
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( Rem tene; verba sequentur.)Tj
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T*
( Grasp the subject, the words will follow.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(In Caius Julius Victor \221Ars Rhetorica\222 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 359.9624 Tm
( 3.53 Catullus \(Gaius Valerius Catullus\) c.84-c.54 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cui dono lepidum novum libellum)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Arido modo pumice expolitum?)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Here\222s my small book out, nice and new,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fresh-bound\227whom shall I give it to?)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Carmina\222 no. 1 \(translated by Sir William Marris\))Tj
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( Namque tu solebas)Tj
T*
( Meas esse aliquid putare nugas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For you used to think my trifles were worth something.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Carmina\222 no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( Plus uno maneat perenne saeclo.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( May it live and last for more than a century.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Lugete, O Veneres Cupidinesque,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et quantum est hominum venustiorum.)Tj
T*
( Passer mortuus est meae puellae,)Tj
T*
( Passer, deliciae meae puellae.)Tj
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( Mourn, you powers of Charm and Desire, )Tj
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( and all you who are endowed with charm.)Tj
T*
( My lady\222s sparrow is dead, )Tj
T*
( the sparrow which was my lady\222s darling.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Carmina\222 no. 3)Tj
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( Qui nunc it per iter tenebricosum)Tj
T*
( Illuc, unde negant redire quemquam.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( Sed haec prius fuere.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( All this is over now.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.25456 Tm
( Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Rumoresque senum severiorum)Tj
T*
( Omnes unius aestimemus assis.)Tj
T*
( Soles occidere et redire possunt:)Tj
T*
( Nobis cum semel occidit brevis lux)Tj
T*
( Nox est perpetua una dormienda.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( Da mi basia mille, deinde centum,)Tj
T*
( Dein mille altera, dein secunda centum,)Tj
T*
( Deinde usque altera mille, deinde centum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Give me a thousand kisses, then a hundred, then another thousand, th\
en a second hundred, then )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(yet another thousand, then a hundred.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( Miser Catulle, desinas ineptire,)Tj
T*
( Et quod vides perisse perditum ducas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Poor Catullus, drop your silly fancies, and what you see is lost let\
it be lost.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.50456 Tm
( Paene insularum, Sirmio, insularumque)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ocelle...)Tj
T*
( O quid solutis est beatius curis?)Tj
T*
( Cum mens onus reponit, ac peregrino)Tj
T*
( Labore fessi venimus larem ad nostrum,)Tj
T*
( Desideratoque acquiescimus lecto.)Tj
T*
( Hoc est quod unum est pro laboribus tantis.)Tj
T*
( Salve O venusta Sirmio atque hero gaude;)Tj
T*
( Gaudete vosque O Lydiae lacus undae;)Tj
T*
( Ridete quidquid est domi cachinnorum.)Tj
ET
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( Sirmio, bright eye of peninsulas and islands...Ah, what is more bles\
sed than to put cares away, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(when the mind lays by its burden, and tired with labour of far travel we\
have come to our own )Tj
T*
(home and rest on the couch we have longed for? This it is which alone is\
worth all these toils. )Tj
T*
(Hail, sweet Sirmio, and make cheer for your master. Rejoice ye too, wate\
rs of the Lydian lake, )Tj
T*
(and laugh out aloud all the laughter you have at your command.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Nam risu inepto res ineptior nulla est.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For there is nothing sillier than a silly laugh.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 39.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( Iam ver egelidos refert tepores.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Now Spring restores balmy warmth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.25456 Tm
( Gratias tibi maximas Catullus)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Agit pessimus omnium poeta,)Tj
T*
( Tanto pessimus omnium poeta,)Tj
T*
( Quanto tu optimus omnium\222s patronum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Catullus gives you warmest thanks,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And he the worst of poets ranks;)Tj
T*
( As much the worst of bards confessed,)Tj
T*
( As you of advocates the best.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 49 \(translated by Sir William Marris\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.75456 Tm
( Ille mi par esse deo videtur,)Tj
T*
( Ille, si fas est, superare divos,)Tj
T*
( Qui sedens adversus identidem te)Tj
T*
( Spectat et audit)Tj
T*
( Dulce ridentem, misero quod omnis)Tj
T*
( Eripit sensus mihi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Like to a god he seems to me,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Above the gods, if so may be,)Tj
T*
( Who sitting often close to thee)Tj
T*
( May see and hear)Tj
T*
( Thy lovely laugh: ah, luckless man!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 51 \(translated by Sir William Marris, being itself \
a translation of Sappho\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.25456 Tm
( Caeli, Lesbia nostra, Lesbia illa,)Tj
T*
( Illa Lesbia, quam Catullus unam)Tj
T*
( Plus quam se atque suos amavit omnes,)Tj
T*
( Nunc in quadriviis et angiportis)Tj
T*
( Glubit magnanimos Remi nepotes.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O Caelius, our Lesbia, that Lesbia whom Catullus once loved uniquely\
, more than himself and )Tj
ET
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(more than all his own, now at the crossroads and in the alleyways has it\
off with the high-minded )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(descendants of Remus.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Ut flos in saeptis secretus nascitur hortis,)Tj
T*
( Ignotus pecori, nullo contusus aratro,)Tj
T*
( Quem mulcent aurae, firmat sol, educat imber;)Tj
T*
( Multi illum pueri, multae optavere puellae.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( As a flower grows concealed in an enclosed garden, unknown to the ca\
ttle, bruised by no )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(plough, which the breezes caress, the sun makes strong, and the rain bri\
ngs out; many boys and )Tj
T*
(many girls long for it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.75456 Tm
( Sed mulier cupido quod dicit amanti,)Tj
T*
( In vento et rapida scribere oportet aqua.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But what a woman says to her lusting lover it is best to write in wi\
nd and swift-flowing water.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 473.25456 Tm
( Desine de quoquam quicquam bene velle mereri,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Aut aliquem fieri posse putare pium.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Give up wanting to deserve any thanks from anyone, or thinking that \
anybody can be grateful.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.75456 Tm
( Siqua recordanti benefacta priora voluptas)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Est homini.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If a man can take any pleasure in recalling the thought of kindnesse\
s done.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( Difficile est longum subito deponere amorem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( It is difficult suddenly to lay aside a long-cherished love.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Si vitam puriter egi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( If I have led a pure life.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 203.25456 Tm
( O di, reddite mi hoc pro pietate mea.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( O gods, grant me this in return for my piety.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.75456 Tm
( Chommoda dicebat, si quando commoda vellet)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dicere, et insidias Arrius hinsidias.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Arrius, if he wanted to say \221amenities\222 used to say \221hameni\
ties\222, and for \221intrigue\222 \221hintrigue\222.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( Odi et amo: quare id faciam, fortasse requiris.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.)Tj
ET
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( I hate and I love: why I do so you may well ask. I do not know, but \
I feel it happen and am in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(agony.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Multas per gentes et multa per aequora vectus)Tj
T*
( Advenio has miseras, frater, ad inferias,)Tj
T*
( Ut te postremo donarem munere mortis)Tj
T*
( Et mutam nequiquam alloquerer cinerem.)Tj
T*
( Quandoquidem fortuna mihi tete abstulit ipsum,)Tj
T*
( Heu miser indigne frater adempte mihi,)Tj
T*
( Nunc tamen interea haec prisco quae more parentum)Tj
T*
( Tradita sunt tristi munere ad inferias,)Tj
T*
( Accipe fraterno multum manantia fletu,)Tj
T*
( Atque in perpetuum, frater, ave atque vale.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( By many lands and over many a wave)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I come, my brother, to your piteous grave,)Tj
T*
( To bring you the last offering in death)Tj
T*
( And o\222er dumb dust expend an idle breath;)Tj
T*
( For fate has torn your living self from me,)Tj
T*
( And snatched you, brother, O, how cruelly!)Tj
T*
( Yet take these gifts, brought as our fathers bade)Tj
T*
( For sorrow\222s tribute to the passing shade;)Tj
T*
( A brother\222s tears have wet them o\222er and o\222er;)Tj
T*
( And so, my brother, hail, and farewell evermore!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Carmina\222 no. 101 \(translated by Sir William Marris\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( At non effugies meos iambos.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But you shall not escape my iambics.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(R. A. B. Mynors \(ed.\) \221Catulli Carmina\222 \(1958\) \221Fragment 3\
\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 245.9624 Tm
( 3.54 Charles Causley 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O are you the boy)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who would wait on the quay)Tj
T*
( With the silver penny)Tj
T*
( And the apricot tree?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Nursery Rhyme of Innocence and Experience\222 \(1951\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Timothy Winters comes to school)Tj
T*
( With eyes as wide as a football-pool,)Tj
T*
( Ears like bombs and teeth like splinters:)Tj
T*
( A blitz of a boy is Timothy Winters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Timothy Winters\222 \(1957\))Tj
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( 3.55 Constantine Cavafy 1863-1933)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you set out for Ithaka)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( ask that your way be long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Ithaka\222 \(translated by E. Keeley and P. Sherrard\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Have Ithaka always in your mind.)Tj
T*
( Your arrival there is what you are destined for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Ithaka\222 \(translated by E. Keeley and P. Sherrard\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.75456 Tm
( Ithaka gave you the splendid jouney.)Tj
T*
( Without her you would not have set out.)Tj
T*
( She hasn\222t anything else to give you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.92047 Tm
(\221Ithaka\222 \(translated by E. Keeley and P. Sherrard\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.00456 Tm
( What are we all waiting for, gathered together like this on the publ\
ic square?)Tj
T*
( The Barbarians are coming today.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.17047 Tm
(\(Waiting for the Barbarians, 1904\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.25456 Tm
( And now, what will become of us without the barbarians?)Tj
T*
( Those people were a kind of solution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.42047 Tm
(\221Waiting for the Barbarians\222 \(translated by E. Keeley and P. Sher\
rard\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.50456 Tm
( You will find no new places, no other seas,)Tj
T*
( The town will follow you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.67047 Tm
(\(The Town, 1911\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 373.4624 Tm
( 3.56 Edith Cavell 1865-1915)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Standing, as I do, in view of God and eternity, I realize that patri\
otism is not enough. I must )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(Words spoken in prison the night before her execution, in \221The Times\222\
23 October 1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 285.7124 Tm
( 3.57 Margaret Cavendish \(Duchess of Newcastle\) c.1624-74)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Greek, Latin poets, I could never read,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor their historians, but our English Speed;)Tj
T*
( I could not steal their wit, nor plots out take;)Tj
T*
( All my plays\222 plots, my own poor brain did make.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Plays\222 \(1662\) \221To the Readers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Marriage is the grave or tomb of wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Plays\222 \(1662\) p. 525)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( If Nature had not befriended us with beauty, and other good graces, \
to help us to insinuate our )Tj
T*
(selves into men\222s affections, we should have been more enslaved than \
any other of Nature\222s )Tj
T*
(creatures she hath made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Sociable Letters\222 \(1664\) p. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( But for the most part, women are not educated as they should be, I m\
ean those of quality; oft )Tj
T*
(their education is only to dance, sing, and fiddle, to write complimenta\
l letters, to read romances, )Tj
ET
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(to speak some languages that is not their native...their parents take mo\
re care of their feet than )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(their head, more of their words than their reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Sociable Letters\222 \(1664\) p. 50)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 3.58 Count Cavour \(Camillo Benso di Cavour\) 1810-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Noi siamo pronti a proclamare nell\222 Italia questo gran principio:\
Libera Chiesa in libero Stato.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We are ready to proclaim throughout Italy this great principle: a fr\
ee church in a free state.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Speech, 27 March 1861, in William de la Rive \221Reminiscences of the Li\
fe and Character of Count )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Cavour\222 \(1862\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 580.4624 Tm
( 3.59 William Caxton c.1421-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The worshipful father and first founder and embellisher of ornate el\
oquence in our English, I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mean Master Geoffrey Chaucer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(Caxton\222s edition \(c.1478\) of Chaucer\222s translation of Boethius \221\
De Consolacione Philosophie\222 epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.00456 Tm
( It is notoriously known through the universal world that there be ni\
ne worthy and the best that )Tj
T*
(ever were. That is to wit three paynims, three Jews, and three Christian\
men. As for the paynims )Tj
T*
(they were...the first Hector of Troy...the second Alexander the Great; a\
nd the third Julius Caesar...)Tj
T*
(As for the three Jews...the first was Duke Joshua...the second David, Ki\
ng of Jerusalem; and the )Tj
T*
(third Judas Maccabaeus...And sith the said Incarnation...was first the n\
oble Arthur...The second )Tj
T*
(was Charlemagne or Charles the Great...and the third and last was Godfre\
y of Bouillon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(Sir Thomas Malory \221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.25456 Tm
( I, according to my copy, have done set it in imprint, to the intent \
that noble men may see and )Tj
T*
(learn the noble acts of chivalry, the gentle and virtuous deeds that som\
e knights used in those )Tj
T*
(days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(Sir Thomas Malory \221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) prologue)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 293.2124 Tm
( 3.60 William Cecil \(Lord Burghley\) 1520-98\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What! all this for a song?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(To Queen Elizabeth, on being ordered to make a gratuity of \243100 to Sp\
enser in return for some poems, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Edmund Spenser \221The Faerie Queene\222 \(1751\) \221The Life of Mr Edm\
und Spenser\222 by Thomas Birch)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 208.4624 Tm
( 3.61 Cervantes Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra 1547-1616)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( El Caballero de la Triste Figura.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The Knight of the Doleful Countenance.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 1, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.25456 Tm
( La mejor salsa del mundo es el hambre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Hunger is the best sauce in the world.)Tj
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(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 5)Tj
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( El pan comido y la compa\361\355a deshecha.)Tj
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T*
( With the bread eaten up, up breaks the company.)Tj
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(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 7)Tj
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( No todos podemos ser frailes y muchos son los caminos por donde llev\
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( We cannot all be friars, and many are the ways by which God leads hi\
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(Religion is knight-errantry.)Tj
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(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 8 \(to Sancho, on his asking whe\
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T*
(become monks\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Es un untreverado loco, lleno de l\371cidos intervalos.)Tj
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( He\222s a muddle-headed fool, with frequent lucid intervals.)Tj
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(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 18 \(Don Lorenzo of Don Quixote\)\
)Tj
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( Dos linages s\363los hay en el mundo, como dec\355a una abuela m\355\
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( There are only two families in the world, as a grandmother of mine u\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 510.67047 Tm
(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 20)Tj
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( Digo, paciencia y barajar.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What I say is, patience, and shuffle the cards.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( La diligencia es madre de la buena ventura y la pereza, su contrario\
, jam s lleg\363 al t\350rmino que )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Diligence is the mother of good fortune, and idleness, its opposite,\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Bien haya el que invent\363 el sue\361o, capa que cubre todos los hu\
manos pensamientos, manjar )Tj
T*
(que quita la hambre, agua que ahuyenta la sed, fuego que calienta el fr\355\
o, fr\355o que templa el ardor, )Tj
T*
(y, finalmente, moneda general con que todas las cosas se compran, balanz\
a y peso que iguala al )Tj
T*
(pastor con el rey y al simple con el discreto.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Blessings on him who invented sleep, the mantle that covers all huma\
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0 -1.2 TD
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, the cold that moderates heat, )Tj
T*
(and, lastly, the common currency that buys all things, the balance and w\
eight that equalises the )Tj
T*
(shepherd and the king, the simpleton and the sage.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Don Quixote\222 \(1605\) pt. 2, ch. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Los buenos pintores imitan la naturaleza, pero los malos la vomitan.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Good painters imitate nature, bad ones spew it up.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(\221El Licenciado Vidriera\222 in \221Novelas Ejemplares\222 \(1613\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.75456 Tm
( Puesto ya el pie en el estribo.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( With one foot already in the stirrup.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(Apprehending his own, imminent death: \221Los Trabajos de Persiles y Si\
gismunda\222 \(1617\) preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.9624 Tm
( 3.62 John Chalkhill c.1600-42)Tj
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( Oh, the gallant fisher\222s life,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It is the best of any)Tj
T*
( \222Tis full of pleasure, void of strife,)Tj
T*
( And \222tis beloved of many.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221Piscator\222s Song\222 in Izaac Walton \221The Compleat Angler\222 \(\
1653-76\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 648.2124 Tm
( 3.63 Joseph Chamberlain 1836-1914)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In politics, there is no use looking beyond the next fortnight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.67047 Tm
(In letter from A. J. Balfour to 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, 24 March 1886\
, in A. J. Balfour \221Chapters of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Autobiography\222 \(1930\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 574.75456 Tm
( Provided that the City of London remains, as it is at present, the c\
learing-house of the world, )Tj
T*
(any other nation may be its workshop.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.92047 Tm
(Speech at the Guildhall, 19 January 1904, in \221The Times\222 20 Januar\
y 1904)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.00456 Tm
( The day of small nations has long passed away. The day of Empires ha\
s come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.17047 Tm
(Speech at Birmingham, 12 May 1904, in \221The Times\222 13 May 1904)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.25456 Tm
( We are not downhearted. The only trouble is we cannot understand wha\
t is happening to our )Tj
T*
(neighbours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.42047 Tm
(Speech at Smethwick, 18 January 1906 \(referring to a constituency which\
had remained unaffected by an )Tj
T*
(electoral landslide\) in \221The Times\222 19 January 1906)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 402.2124 Tm
( 3.64 Neville Chamberlain 1869-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In war, whichever side may call itself the victor, there are no winn\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.67047 Tm
(Speech at Kettering, 3 July 1938, in \221The Times\222 4 July 1938)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.75456 Tm
( How horrible, fantastic, incredible it is that we should be digging \
trenches and trying on gas-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(masks here because of a quarrel in a far away country between people of \
whom we know nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.92047 Tm
(On Germany\222s annexation of the Sudetenland: radio broadcast, 27 Septe\
mber 1938, in \221The Times\222 28 )Tj
T*
(September 1938)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 274.00456 Tm
( This is the second time in our history that there has come back from\
Germany to Downing )Tj
T*
(Street peace with honour. I believe it is peace for our time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(Speech from window of 10 Downing Street, 30 September 1938, in \221The T\
imes\222 1 October 1938.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.25456 Tm
( Whatever may be the reason\227whether it was that Hitler thought he \
might get away with what )Tj
T*
(he had got without fighting for it, or whether it was that after all the\
preparations were not )Tj
T*
(sufficiently complete\227however, one thing is certain\227he missed the \
bus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.42047 Tm
(Speech at Central Hall, Westminster, 4 April 1940, in \221The Times\222 \
5 April 1940)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 135.2124 Tm
( 3.65 Haddon Chambers 1860-1921)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The long arm of coincidence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.67047 Tm
(\221Captain Swift\222 \(1888\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 65.4624 Tm
( 3.66 Nicolas-S\350bastien Chamfort 1741-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Vivre est une maladie dont le sommeil nous soulage toutes les 16 heu\
res. C\222est un palliatif. La )Tj
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(mort est le rem\351de.)Tj
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( Living is an illness to which sleep provides relief every sixteen ho\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Maximes et Pens\350es\222 \(1796\) ch. 2)Tj
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( Des qualit\350s trop sup\350rieures rendent souvent un homme moins p\
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(pas au march\350 avec des lingots; on y va avec de l\222argent ou de la \
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( Qualities too elevated often unfit a man for society. We don\222t ta\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.92047 Tm
(\221Maximes et Pens\350es\222 \(1796\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 582.00456 Tm
( L\222amour, tel qu\222il existe dans la soci\350t\350, n\222est que \
l\222\350change de deux fantaisies et le contact de )Tj
T*
(deux \350pidermes.)Tj
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( Love, in the form in which it exists in society, is nothing but the \
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.42047 Tm
(\221Maximes et Pens\350es\222 \(1796\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.50456 Tm
( Je dirais volontiers des m\350taphysiciens ce que Scaliger disait de\
s Basques, on dit qu\222ils )Tj
T*
(s\222entendent, mais je n\222en crois rien.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am tempted to say of metaphysicians what Scaliger used to say of t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(to understand one another, but I don\222t believe a word of it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(\221Maximes et Pens\350es\222 \(1796\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( Les pauvres sont les n\351gres de l\222Europe.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The poor are Europe\222s blacks.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Maximes et Pens\350es\222 \(1796\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Sois mon fr\351re, ou je te tue.)Tj
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T*
( Be my brother, or I kill you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.45747 TD
( His interpretation of Fraternit\350 ou la mort Fraternity or death, \
in P. R.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Anguis \(ed.\) \221Oeuvres Compl\351tes\222 \(1824\) vol. 1 \221Not\
ice Historique sur la)Tj
T*
( Vie et les \310crits de Chamfort\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.67 Harry Champion 1866-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Charles Collins, E. A. Sheppard, and Fred Terry \(3.145\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.68 John Chandler 1806-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Conquering kings their titles take)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the foes they captive make:)Tj
T*
( Jesu, by a nobler deed,)Tj
T*
( From the thousands He hath freed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(\221Hymns Ancient and Modern\222 \(translated from Latin\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 43.4624 Tm
( 3.69 Raymond Chandler 1888-1959)Tj
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( It was about eleven o\222clock in the morning, mid October, with the\
sun not shining and a look )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of hard wet rain in the clearness of the foothills. I was wearing my pow\
der-blue suit, with dark )Tj
T*
(blue shirt, tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool sock\
s with dark blue clocks on )Tj
T*
(them. I was neat, clean, shaved and sober, and I didn\222t care who knew\
it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(\221The Big Sleep\222 \(1939\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.00456 Tm
( It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained \
glass window.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221Farewell, My Lovely\222 \(1940\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( A big hard-boiled city with no more personality than a paper cup.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221The Little Sister\222 \(1949\) ch. 26 \(of Los Angeles\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who i\
s neither tarnished nor )Tj
T*
(afraid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221Atlantic Monthly\222 December 1944 \221The Simple Art of Murder\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( If my books had been any worse, I should not have been invited to Ho\
llywood, and if they had )Tj
T*
(been any better, I should not have come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(Letter to Charles W. Morton, 12 Dec. 1945, in Dorothy Gardiner and Kathe\
rine S. Walker \221Raymond )Tj
T*
(Chandler Speaking\222 \(1962\) p. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.00456 Tm
( Would you convey my compliments to the purist who reads your proofs \
and tell him or her that )Tj
T*
(I write in a sort of broken-down patois which is something like the way \
a Swiss waiter talks, and )Tj
T*
(that when I split an infinitive, God damn it, I split it so it will stay\
split.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.17047 Tm
(Letter to Edward Weeks, 18 January 1947, in F. MacShane \221Life of Raym\
ond Chandler\222 \(1976\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 378.9624 Tm
( 3.70 Coco Chanel \(Gabrielle Bonheur\) 1883-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Art is ugly things that become beautiful; fashion is beautiful thing\
s that become ugly.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.71 Charlie Chaplin \(Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin\) 1889-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All I need to make a comedy is a park, a policeman and a pretty girl\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.67047 Tm
(\221My Autobiography\222 \(1964\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 254.4624 Tm
( 3.72 Arthur Chapman 1873-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Out where the handclasp\222s a little stronger,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Out where the smile dwells a little longer,)Tj
T*
( That\222s where the West begins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.92047 Tm
(\221Out Where the West Begins\222 \(1916\) p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 148.7124 Tm
( 3.73 George Chapman c.1559-c.1634)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I know an Englishman,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Being flattered, is a lamb; threatened, a lion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.17047 Tm
(\221Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany\222 \(1654\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.25456 Tm
( Who to himself is law, no law doth need, Offends no law, and is a ki\
ng indeed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.42047 Tm
(\221Bussy D\222Ambois\222 \(1607-8\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
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( Oh my fame,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Live in despite of murder! Take thy wings)Tj
T*
( And haste thee where the grey eyed Morn perfumes)Tj
T*
( Her rosy chariot with Sabaean spices!)Tj
T*
( Fly, where the Evening from th\222Iberian vales)Tj
T*
( Takes on her swarthy shoulders Hecate,)Tj
T*
( Crowned with a grove of oaks; fly where men feel)Tj
T*
( The burning axletree, and those that suffer)Tj
T*
( Beneath the chariot of the snowy Bear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.17047 Tm
(\221Bussy D\222Ambois\222 \(1607-8\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( Man is a torch borne in the wind; a dream)Tj
T*
( But of a shadow, summed with all his substance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Bussy D\222Ambois\222 \(1607-8\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( There is no danger to a man, that knows What life and death is; ther\
e\222s not any law, Exceeds )Tj
T*
(his knowledge; neither is it lawful That he should stoop to any other la\
w, He goes before them, )Tj
T*
(and commands them all, That to himself is a law rational.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Conspiracy of Charles, Duke of Byron\222 \(1608\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( O incredulity! the wit of fools,)Tj
T*
( That slovenly will spit on all things fair,)Tj
T*
( The coward\222s castle, and the sluggard\222s cradle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221De Guiana\222 l. 82, verses prefixed to Lawrence Keymis \221A Relati\
on of the Second Voyage to Guiana\222 \(1596\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( We have watered our houses in Helicon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221May-Day\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 3; occasionally misread as \221We ha\
ve watered our horses in Helicon\222. A. H. )Tj
T*
(Holaday \(ed.\) \221The Plays of George Chapman: The Comedies\222 \(197\
0\) p. 383)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( For one heat, all know, doth drive out another, One passion doth exp\
el another still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221Monsieur D\222Olive\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.50456 Tm
( I am ashamed the law is such an ass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Revenge for Honour\222 \(1654\) act 3, sc. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( They\222re only truly great who are truly good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(\221Revenge for Honour\222 \(1654\) act 5, sc. 2, last line)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( A poem, whose subject is not truth, but things like truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Revenge of Bussy D\222Ambois\222 \(1613\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Danger, the spur of all great minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221The Revenge of Bussy D\222Ambois\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( And let a scholar all Earth\222s volumes carry,)Tj
T*
( He will be but a walking dictionary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Tears of Peace\222 \(1609\) l. 530)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 70.4624 Tm
( 3.74 Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones\
, and Michael Palin)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Graham Chapman 1941-89)Tj
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( John Cleese 1939\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Terry Gilliam 1940\227)Tj
T*
( Eric Idle 1943\227)Tj
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( Terry Jones 1942\227)Tj
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( I\222m a lumberjack)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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( I sleep all night)Tj
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( And I work all day.)Tj
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(\221Monty Python\222s Big Red Book\222 \(1971\))Tj
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( And now for something completely different.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(Catch-phrase popularized in \221Monty Python\222s Flying Circus\222 \(BB\
C TV programme, 1969-74\))Tj
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( This parrot is no more! It has ceased to be! It\222s expired and gon\
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T*
(late parrot! It\222s a stiff! Bereft of life it rests in peace\227if you\
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T*
(be pushing up the daisies! It\222s rung down the curtain and joined the \
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T*
(parrot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Monty Python\222s Flying Circus\222 \(BBC TV programme, 1969\))Tj
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( 3.75 King Charles I 1629-49)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never make a defence or apology before you be accused.)Tj
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(Letter to Lord Wentworth, 3 September 1636, in Sir Charles Petrie \(ed.\)\
\221Letters of King Charles I\222 \(1935\))Tj
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( I see all the birds are flown.)Tj
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(In the House of Commons, 4 January 1642, after attempting to arrest the \
Five Members: \221Hansard )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Parliamentary History to the year 1803\222 vol. 2 \(1807\) col. 1010)Tj
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( Sweet-heart, now they will cut off thy father\222s head. Mark, child\
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T*
(my head, and perhaps make thee a king. But mark what I say: you must no\
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T*
(your brothers Charles and James do live.)Tj
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(Said to Prince Henry, in \221Reliquiae Sacrae Carolinae\222 \(1650\) p. \
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( As to the King, the laws of the land will clearly instruct you for t\
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T*
(I desire their liberty and freedom, as much as any body: but I must tell\
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T*
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T*
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t is nothing pertaining to \222em. )Tj
T*
(A subject and a sovereign are clean different things...If I would have g\
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T*
(way, for to have all laws changed according to the power of the sword, I\
needed not to have come )Tj
T*
(here; and therefore I tell you \(and I pray God it be not laid to your c\
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T*
(the people.)Tj
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(Speech on the scaffold, 30 January 1649. J. Rushworth \221Historical Col\
lections\222 pt. 4, vol. 2 \(1701\) p. 1429)Tj
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( I die a Christian, according to the profession of the Church of Engl\
and, as I found it left me by )Tj
T*
(my father.)Tj
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(In J. Rushworth \221Historical Collections\222 pt. 4, vol. 2 \(1701\) p.\
1430)Tj
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( This is very true: for my words are my own, and my actions are my mi\
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(Reply to Lord Rochester\222s epitaph on him.)Tj
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( Better than a play.)Tj
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(On the debates in the House of Lords on Lord Ross\222s Divorce Bill, 167\
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T*
(II\222 \(1931\) p. 209)Tj
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( He [Charles II] said once to myself, he was no atheist, but he could\
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T*
(a man miserable only for taking a little pleasure out of the way.)Tj
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(Bishop Gilbert Burnet \221History of My Own Time\222 \(1724\) vol. 1, bk\
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( He [Lauderdale] told me, the king spoke to him to let that [Presbyte\
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T*
(religion for gentlemen.)Tj
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(Bishop Gilbert Burnet \221History of My Own Time\222 \(1724\) vol. 1, bk\
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( His nonsense suits their nonsense.)Tj
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(Said of Woolly, afterward Bishop of Clonfert \(\221a very honest man, bu\
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T*
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T*
(My Own Time\222 \(1724\) vol. 1, bk. 2, ch. 11)Tj
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( Let not poor Nelly starve.)Tj
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(Referring to Nell Gwyn, his mistress, in Bishop Gilbert Burnet \221Histo\
ry of My Own Time\222 \(1724\) vol. 1, bk. )Tj
T*
(3, p. 609)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.00456 Tm
( Never in the way, nor out of the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.17047 Tm
(Of Lord Godolphin, who had been raised as page to the king, in Bishop Gi\
lbert Burnet \221History of My Own )Tj
T*
(Time\222 \(1724\) vol. 2, bk. 3, ch. 11, note)Tj
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( I am sure no man in England will take away my life to make you King.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.42047 Tm
(To his brother James, in William King \221Political & Literary Anecdotes\
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( He had been, he said, an unconscionable time dying; but he hoped tha\
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(Lord Macaulay \221The History of England\222 \(1849\) vol. 1, ch. 4)Tj
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( 3.77 Emperor Charles V 1500-58)Tj
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(Attributed)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( A monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much-loved and elegant friend\
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(Describing the proposed extension to the National Gallery, London: spee\
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(Architects, 30 May 1984, in \221The Times\222 31 May 1984.)Tj
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( 3.79 Pierre Charron 1541-1603)Tj
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( The true science and study of man is man.)Tj
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(\221De la Sagesse\222 \(1601\) bk. 1, preface.)Tj
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( 3.80 Salmon Portland Chase 1808-73)Tj
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( The Constitution, in all its provisions, looks to an indestructible \
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0 -1.2 TD
(indestructible States.)Tj
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(Decision in Texas v. White, 7 Wallace, 725)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.81 Earl of Chatham)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See William Pitt \(4.64\) in Volume II)Tj
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( 3.82 Chateaubriand Fran\347ois-Ren\350, Viconte de Chateaubriand 1768-1\
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( L\222\350crivain original n\222est pas celui qui n\222imite personne\
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(\221G\350nie du Christianisme\222 \(1802\))Tj
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( 3.83 Geoffrey Chaucer c.1343-1400)Tj
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(Line references are to The Riverside Chaucer \(ed. F. N. Robinson, 3rd e\
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( Ful craftier to pley she was)Tj
T*
( Than Athalus, that made the game)Tj
T*
( First of the ches, so was his name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.42047 Tm
(\221The Book of the Duchess\222 l. 662)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.50456 Tm
( Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote)Tj
T*
( The droghte of March hath perced to the roote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.75456 Tm
( And smale foweles maken melodye,)Tj
T*
( That slepen al the nyght with open ye)Tj
T*
( \(So priketh hem nature in hir corages\),)Tj
T*
( Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 9)Tj
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( He loved chivalrie,)Tj
T*
( Trouthe and honour, fredom and curteisie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 45)Tj
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( He was a verray, parfit gentil knyght.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 72)Tj
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( He was as fressh as is the month of May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 92)Tj
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( He koude songes make and wel endite.)Tj
ET
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( Curteis he was, lowely, and servysable,)Tj
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( And carf biforn his fader at the table.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 99)Tj
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( Hire gretteste ooth was but by Seinte Loy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 120)Tj
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( Ful weel she soong the service dyvyne,)Tj
T*
( Entuned in hir nose ful semely;)Tj
T*
( And Frenssh she spak ful faire and fetisly,)Tj
T*
( After the scole of Stratford atte Bowe,)Tj
T*
( For Frenssh of Parys was to hire unknowe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( She wolde wepe, if that she saugh a mous)Tj
T*
( Kaught in a trappe, if it were deed or bledde.)Tj
T*
( Of smale houndes hadde she that she fedde)Tj
T*
( With rosted flessh, or milk and wastel-breed.)Tj
T*
( But soore wepte she if oon of hem were deed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 144)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Of smal coral aboute hire arm she bar)Tj
T*
( A peire of bedes, gauded al with grene,)Tj
T*
( And theron heng a brooch of gold ful sheene,)Tj
T*
( On which ther was first write a crowned A,)Tj
T*
( And after Amor vincit omnia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 158.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( He yaf nat of that text a pulled hen,)Tj
T*
( That seith that hunters ben nat hooly men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 177)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Somwhat he lipsed, for his wantownesse,)Tj
T*
( To make his Englissh sweete upon his tonge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 264)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( A Clerk there was of Oxenford also,)Tj
T*
( That unto logyk hadde longe ygo.)Tj
T*
( As leene was his hors as is a rake,)Tj
T*
( And he was nat right fat, I undertake,)Tj
T*
( But looked holwe, and therto sobrely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( For hym was levere have at his beddes heed)Tj
T*
( Twenty bookes, clad in blak or reed,)Tj
T*
( Of Aristotle and his philosophie)Tj
T*
( Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sautrie.)Tj
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( But al be that he was a philosophre,)Tj
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( Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 293)Tj
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( And gladly wolde he lerne and gladly teche.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 308)Tj
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( Nowher so bisy a man as he ther nas,)Tj
T*
( And yet he semed bisier than he was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 321)Tj
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( For he was Epicurus owene sone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 336)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( It snewed in his hous of mete and drynke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 345)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Housbondes at chirche dore she hadde fyve,)Tj
T*
( Withouten oother compaignye in youthe\227)Tj
T*
( But thereof nedeth nat to speke as nowthe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 460)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( This noble ensample to his sheep he yaf,)Tj
T*
( That first he wroghte, and afterward he taughte.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 496)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( If gold ruste, what shall iren do?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 500)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( But Cristes loore and his apostels twelve)Tj
T*
( He taughte; but first he folwed it hymselve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 527)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( A Somonour was ther with us in that place,)Tj
T*
( That hadde a fyr-reed cherubynnes face,)Tj
T*
( For saucefleem he was, with eyen narwe.)Tj
T*
( As hoot he was and lecherous as a sparwe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 623)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Wel loved he garleek, oynons, and eek lekes,)Tj
T*
( And for to drynken strong wyn, reed as blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 634)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( His walet, biforn him in his lappe,)Tj
T*
( Bretful of pardoun, comen from Rome al hoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 686)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( He hadde a croys of latoun ful of stones,)Tj
T*
( And in a glas he hadde pigges bones.)Tj
T*
( But with thise relikes, whan that he fond)Tj
T*
( A povre person dwellynge upon lond,)Tj
T*
( Upon a day he gat hym moore moneye)Tj
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( Than that the person gat in monthes tweye;)Tj
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( And thus, with feyned flaterye and japes,)Tj
T*
( He made the person and the peple his apes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The General Prologue\222 l. 699)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
(\221O stormy peple! Unsad and evere untrewe!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Clerk\222s Tale\222 l. 995)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Grisilde is deed, and eek hire pacience,)Tj
T*
( And bothe atones buryed in Ytaille;)Tj
T*
( For which I crie in open audience)Tj
T*
( No wedded man so hardy be t\222assaille)Tj
T*
( His wyves pacience in trust to fynde)Tj
T*
( Grisildis, for in certein he shal faille.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Clerk\222s Tale: Lenvoy de Chaucer\222\
l. 1177)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Ye archewyves, stondeth at defense,)Tj
T*
( Syn ye be strong as is a greet camaille;)Tj
T*
( Ne suffreth nat that men yow doon offense.)Tj
T*
( And sklendre wyves, fieble as in bataille,)Tj
T*
( Beth egre is a tygre yond in Ynde;)Tj
T*
( Ay clappeth as a mille, I yow consaille.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Clerk\222s Tale: Lenvoy de Chaucer\222\
l. 1195)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Be ay of chiere as light as leef on lynde,)Tj
T*
( And lat hym care, and wepe, and wrynge, and waille!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Clerk\222s Tale: Lenvoy de Chaucer\222\
l. 1211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( For o thyng, sires, saufly dar I seye,)Tj
T*
( That freendes everych oother moot obeye,)Tj
T*
( If they wol longe holden compaignye.)Tj
T*
( Love wol nat been constreyned by maistrye.)Tj
T*
( When maistrie comth, the God of Love anon)Tj
T*
( Beteth his wynges, and farewel, he is gon!)Tj
T*
( Love is a thyng as any spirit free.)Tj
T*
( Wommen, of kynde, desiren libertee,)Tj
T*
( And nat to been constreyned as a thral;)Tj
T*
( And so doon men, if I sooth seyen shal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Franklin\222s Tale\222 l. 761)Tj
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( Til that the brighte sonne loste his hewe;)Tj
T*
( For th\222 orisonte hath reft the sonne his lyght\227)Tj
T*
( This is as muche to seye as it was nyght.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Franklin\222s Tale\222 l. 1016)Tj
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( Trouthe is the hyeste thyng that man may kepe.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Franklin\222s Tale\222 l. 1479)Tj
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( The carl spak oo thing, but he thoghte another.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Friar\222s Tale\222 l. 1568)Tj
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( And therefore, at the kynges court, my brother,)Tj
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( Ech man for hymself, ther is noon oother.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 1181)Tj
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( And whan a beest is deed he hath no peyne;)Tj
T*
( But man after his deeth moot wepe and pleyne.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 1319)Tj
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( The bisy larke, messager of day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 1491)Tj
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( For pitee renneth soone in gentil herte.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 1761)Tj
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( The smylere with the knyf under the cloke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 1999)Tj
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( Up roos the sonne, and up roos Emelye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 2273)Tj
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( What is this world? what asketh men to have?)Tj
T*
( Now with his love, now in his colde grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Knight\222s Tale\222 l. 2777)Tj
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( She is mirour of alle curteisye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Man of Law\222s Tale\222 l. 166)Tj
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( Have ye nat seyn somtyme a pale face,)Tj
T*
( Among a prees, of hym that hath be lad)Tj
T*
( Toward his deeth, wher as hym gat no grace,)Tj
T*
( And swich a colour in his face hath had)Tj
T*
( Men myghte knowe his fact that was bistad)Tj
T*
( Amonges alle the faces in that route?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Man of Law\222s Tale\222 l. 645)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Lat take a cat, and fostre hym wel with milk)Tj
T*
( And tendre flessh, and make his couche of silk,)Tj
T*
( And lay hym seen a mous go by the wal,)Tj
T*
( Anon he weyveth milk and flessh and al,)Tj
T*
( And every deyntee that is in that hous,)Tj
T*
( Swich appetit hath he to ete a mous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Manciple\222s Tale\222 l. 175)Tj
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( Kepe wel they tonge, and thenk upon the crowe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Manciple\222s Tale\222 l. 362)Tj
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( And what is better than wisedoom? Womman. And)Tj
T*
( what is bettre than a good womman? Nothyng.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Tale of Melibee\222 l. 1107)Tj
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( \221Tehee!\222 quod she, and clapte the wyndow to.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Miller\222s Tale\222 l. 3740)Tj
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( For certein, whan that Fortune list to flee,)Tj
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( Ther may no man the cours of hire withholde.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Monk\222s Tale\222 l. 1995)Tj
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( Ful wys is he that kan hymselven knowe!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Monk\222s Tale\222 l. 2139)Tj
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( Redeth the grete poete of Ytaille)Tj
T*
( That highte Dant, for he kan al devyse)Tj
T*
( Fro point to point; nat o word wol he faille.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Monk\222s Tale\222 l. 2460)Tj
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( His coomb was redder than the fyn coral,)Tj
T*
( And batailled as it were a castel wal;)Tj
T*
( His byle was blak, and as the jeet it shoon;)Tj
T*
( Lyk asure were his legges and his toon;)Tj
T*
( His nayles whitter than the lylye flour,)Tj
T*
( And lyk the burned gold was his colour,)Tj
T*
( This gentil cok hadde in his governaunce)Tj
T*
( Sevene hennes for to doon al his plesaunce,)Tj
T*
( Whiche were his sustres and his paramours,)Tj
T*
( And wonder lyk to hym, as of colours;)Tj
T*
( Of whiche the faireste hewed on hir throte)Tj
T*
( Was cleped fair damoysele Pertelote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Nun\222s Priest\222s Tale\222 l. 28\
59)Tj
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( Whan that the month in which the world bigan,)Tj
T*
( That highte March, whan God first maked man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Nun\222s Priest\222s Tale\222 l. 31\
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( And on a Friday fil al this meschaunce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Nun\222s Priest\222s Tale\222 l. 33\
41)Tj
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( Mordre wol out; that se we day by day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Nun\222s Priest\222s Tale\222 l. 30\
52)Tj
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( Thanne peyne I me to strecche forth the nekke,)Tj
T*
( And est and west upon the peple I bekke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Pardoner\222s Prologue\222 l. 395)Tj
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( O wombe! O bely! O stynkyng cod)Tj
T*
( Fulfilled of dong and of corrupcioun!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Pardoner\222s Tale\222 l. 534)Tj
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( \221What, carl, with sory grace!\222)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Pardoner\222s Tale\222 l. 717)Tj
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( And lightly as it comth, so wol we spende.)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Pardoner\222s Tale\222 l. 781)Tj
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( Yet in oure asshen olde is fyr yreke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Reeve\222s Prologue\222 l. 3882)Tj
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( \221The gretteste clerkes been noght wisest men.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Reeve\222s Tale\222 l. 4054)Tj
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( So was hir joly whistle wel ywet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Reeve\222s Tale\222 l. 4155)Tj
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( Thou lookest as thou woldest fynde an hare,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For evere upon the ground I se thee stare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221Prologue to Sir Thopas\222 l. 696)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( He hadde a semely nose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221Sir Thopas\222 l. 729)Tj
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( \221By God,\222 quod he, \221for pleynly, at a word,)Tj
T*
( Thy drasty rymyng is nat worth a toord!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221Sir Thopas\222 l. 929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( Experience, though noon auctoritee)Tj
T*
( Were in this world, is right ynogh for me)Tj
T*
( To speke of wo that is in mariage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Prologue\222 l. 1\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Yblessed be god that I have wedded fyve!)Tj
T*
( Welcome the sixte, whan that evere he shal.)Tj
T*
( For sothe, I wol nat kepe me chaast in al.)Tj
T*
( Whan myn housbonde is fro the world ygon,)Tj
T*
( Som Cristen man shall wedde me anon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Prologue\222 l. 4\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( But\227Lord Crist!\227what that it remembreth me)Tj
T*
( Upon my yowthe, and on my jolitee,)Tj
T*
( It tikleth me aboute myn herte roote.)Tj
T*
( Unto this day it dooth myn herte boote)Tj
T*
( That I have had my world as in my time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Prologue\222 l. 4\
69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( And for to se, and eek for to be seye)Tj
T*
( Of lusty folk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Prologue\222 l. 5\
52)Tj
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( But yet I hadde alwey a coltes tooth.)Tj
T*
( Gat-tothed I was, and that bicam me weel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Prologue\222 l. 6\
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( Of which mayde anon, maugree hir heed,)Tj
T*
( By verray force, he rafte hire maydenhed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Tale\222 l. 887)Tj
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( \221Wommen desiren to have sovereynetee)Tj
T*
( As wel over hir housbond as hir love.\222)Tj
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(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Tale\222 l. 1037)Tj
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( That he is gentil that dooth gentil dedis.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Canterbury Tales\222 \221The Wife of Bath\222s Tale\222 l. 1170)Tj
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( Venus clerk Ovide,)Tj
T*
( That hath ysowen wonder wide)Tj
T*
( The grete god of Loves name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The House of Fame\222 l. 1487)Tj
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( A thousand tymes have I herd men telle)Tj
T*
( That ther ys joy in hevene and peyne in helle,)Tj
T*
( And I acorde wel that it ys so;)Tj
T*
( But, natheles, yet wot I wel also)Tj
T*
( That ther nis noon dwellyng in this contree)Tj
T*
( That eyther hath in hevene or helle ybe,)Tj
T*
( Ne may of hit noon other weyes witen)Tj
T*
( But as he hath herd seyd or founde it writen;)Tj
T*
( For by assay ther may no man it preve.)Tj
T*
( But God forbede but men shulde leve)Tj
T*
( Wel more thing then men han seen with ye!)Tj
T*
( Men shal not wenen every thing a lye)Tj
T*
( But yf himself yt seeth, or elles dooth;)Tj
T*
( For, God wot, thing is never the lasse sooth,)Tj
T*
( Thogh every wight ne may it nat ysee.)Tj
T*
( Bernard the monk ne saugh nat all, pardee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221The Legend of Good Women\222 \221The Prologue\222 l. l)Tj
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( And as for me, though that I konne but lyte,)Tj
T*
( On bokes for to rede I me delyte,)Tj
T*
( And to hem yive I feyth and ful credence,)Tj
T*
( And in myn herte have hem in reverence)Tj
T*
( So hertely, that ther is game noon)Tj
T*
( That fro my bokes maketh me to goon,)Tj
T*
( But yt be seldom on the holyday,)Tj
T*
( Save, certeynly, whan that the month of May)Tj
T*
( Is comen, and that I here the foules synge,)Tj
T*
( And that the floures gynnen for to sprynge,)Tj
T*
( Farewel my bok and my devocioun!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221The Legend of Good Women\222 \221The Prologue\222 l. 29)Tj
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( Of al the floures in the mede,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Swiche as men callen daysyes in our toun.)Tj
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(\221The Legend of Good Women\222 \221The Prologue\222 l. 41)Tj
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( That wel by reson men it calle may)Tj
T*
( The \221dayesye,\222 or elles the \221ye of day,\222)Tj
T*
( The emperice and flour of floures alle.)Tj
T*
( I pray to God that faire mote she falle,)Tj
T*
( And alle that loven floures, for hire sake!)Tj
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(\221The Legend of Good Women\222 \221The Prologue\222 l. 183)Tj
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( And she was fayr as is the rose in May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Legend of Good Women\222 \221Cleopatra\222 l. 613)Tj
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( That lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne,)Tj
T*
( Th\222 assay so hard, so sharp the conquerynge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Parliament of Fowls\222 l. 1.)Tj
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( Thou shalt make castels thanne in Spayne)Tj
T*
( And dreme of joye, all but in vayne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Romaunt of the Rose\222 l. 2573)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( For it is seyd, \221Man maketh ofte a yerde)Tj
T*
( With which the maker is hymself ybeten)Tj
T*
( In sondry manere.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 1, l. 740)Tj
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( But love a womman that she woot it nought,)Tj
T*
( And she wol quyte it that show shalt nat fele;)Tj
T*
( Unknowe, unkist, and lost, that is unsought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 1, l. 807)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( O wynd, O wynd, the weder gynneth clere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 2, l. 2)Tj
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( So longe mote ye lyve, and alle proude,)Tj
T*
( Til crowes feet be growe under youre y\353.)Tj
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(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 2, l. 402)Tj
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( And we shall speek of the somwhat, I trowe,)Tj
T*
( Whan thow art gon, to don thyn eris glowe!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 2, l. 1021)Tj
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( It is nought good a slepyng hound to wake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 3, l. 764)Tj
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( For I have seyn of a ful misty morwe)Tj
T*
( Folowen ful ofte a myrie someris day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 3, l. 1060)Tj
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( Right as an aspes leef she gan to quake.)Tj
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(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 3, l. 1200)Tj
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( And as the newe abaysed nygthyngale,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That stynteth first whan she bygynneth to synge.)Tj
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(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 3, l. 1233)Tj
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( For of fortunes sharpe adversitee)Tj
T*
( The worst kynde of infortune is this,)Tj
T*
( A man to han ben in prosperitee,)Tj
T*
( And it remembren, whan it passed is.)Tj
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(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 3, l. 1625.)Tj
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( Oon ere it herde, at tother out it wente.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 4, l. 434)Tj
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( But manly sette the world on six and sevene;)Tj
T*
( And if thow deye a martyr, go to hevene!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 4, l. 622)Tj
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( For tyme ylost may nought recovered be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 4, l. 1283)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Ye, fare wel al the snow of ferne yere!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1176)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Ek gret effect men write in place lite;)Tj
T*
( Th\222 entente is al, and nat the lettres space.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1629)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Go, litel bok, go, litel myn tragedye,)Tj
T*
( Ther God thi makere yet, er that he dye,)Tj
T*
( So sende myght to make in som comedye!)Tj
T*
( But litel bok, no makyng thow n\222envie,)Tj
T*
( But subgit be to alle poesye;)Tj
T*
( And kis the steppes, where as thow seest pace)Tj
T*
( Virgile, Ovide, Omer, Lucan, and Stace.)Tj
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( And for ther is so gret diversite)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In Englissh and in writyng of oure tonge,)Tj
T*
( So prey I God that non myswrite the,)Tj
T*
( Ne the mysmetre for defaute of tonge;)Tj
T*
( And red wherso thow be, or elles songe,)Tj
T*
( That thow be understonde, God I biseche!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1786)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( And whan that he was slayn in this manere,)Tj
T*
( His lighte goost ful blisfully is went)Tj
T*
( Up to the holughnesse of the eighthe spere,)Tj
T*
( In convers letyng everich element;)Tj
T*
( And ther he saugh, with ful avysement)Tj
T*
( The erratik sterres, herkenyng armonye)Tj
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( With sownes ful of hevenyssh melodie.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And down from thennes faste he gan avyse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Embraced is, and fully gan despise)Tj
T*
( This wrecched world, and held al vanite)Tj
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( To respect of the pleyn felicite)Tj
T*
( That is in hevene above.)Tj
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(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1807)Tj
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( O yonge, fresshe folkes, he or she,)Tj
T*
( In which that love up groweth with youre age,)Tj
T*
( Repeyreth hom fro worldly vanyte,)Tj
T*
( And of youre herte up casteth the visage)Tj
T*
( To thilke God that after his ymage)Tj
T*
( Yow made, and thynketh al nys but a faire,)Tj
T*
( This world that passeth soone as floures faire.)Tj
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( And loveth hym the which that right for love)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Upon a crois, our soules for to beye,)Tj
T*
( First start, and roos, and sit in hevene above;)Tj
T*
( For he nyl falsen no wight, dar I seye,)Tj
T*
( That wol his herte al holly on hym leye.)Tj
T*
( And syn he best to love is, and most meke,)Tj
T*
( What nedeth feynede loves for to seke?)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Lo here, of payens corsed olde rites!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lo here, what alle hire goddes may availle!)Tj
T*
( Lo here, thise wrecched worldes appetites!)Tj
T*
( Lo here, the fyn and guerdoun for travaille)Tj
T*
( Of Jove, Appollo, of Mars, of swich rascaille!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1835)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.25456 Tm
( O moral Gower, this book I directe)Tj
T*
( To the.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus and Criseyde\222 bk. 5, l. 1856)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.50456 Tm
( Flee fro the prees, and dwelle with sothfastnesse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(\221Truth: Balade de Bon Conseyle\222 l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.75456 Tm
( Forth, pilgrim, forth! Forth, beste, out of thy stal!)Tj
T*
( Know thy contree, look up, thank God of al;)Tj
T*
( Hold the heye wey, and lat thy gost thee lede,)Tj
T*
( And trowth thee shal delivere, it is no drede.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.92047 Tm
(\221Truth: Balade de Bon Conseyle\222 l. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 42.7124 Tm
( 3.84 Anton Chekhov 1860-1904)Tj
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( When a lot of remedies are suggested for a disease, that means it ca\
n\222t be cured.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221The Cherry Orchard\222 \(1904\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( Great God in Heaven, the Cherry Orchard is now mine...I\222ve bought\
the estate where my father )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and grandfather were slaves, where they weren\222t even allowed inside t\
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T*
(dreaming, I must be imagining it all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(\221The Cherry Orchard\222 \(1904\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( Medvedenko: Why do you wear black all the time?)Tj
T*
( Masha: I\222m in mourning for my life, I\222m unhappy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221The Seagull\222 \(1896\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( Nina: Your play\222s hard to act, there are no living people in it.\
)Tj
T*
( Treplev: Living people! We should show life neither as it is nor as\
it ought to be, but as we see )Tj
T*
(it in our dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221The Seagull\222 \(1896\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.00456 Tm
( Women can\222t forgive failure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(\221The Seagull\222 \(1896\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( Nina: I\222m a seagull. No, that\222s wrong. Remember you shot a se\
agull? A man happened to )Tj
T*
(come along, saw it and killed it, just to pass the time. A plot for a sh\
ort story.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.42047 Tm
(\221The Seagull\222 \(1896\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.50456 Tm
( People don\222t notice whether it\222s winter or summer when they\222\
re happy. If I lived in Moscow I )Tj
T*
(don\222t think I\222d care what the weather was like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.67047 Tm
(\221The Three Sisters\222 \(1901\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.75456 Tm
( Man has been endowed with reason, with the power to create, so that \
he can add to what he\222s )Tj
T*
(been given. But up to now he hasn\222t been a creator, only a destroyer.\
Forests keep disappearing, )Tj
T*
(rivers dry up, wild life\222s become extinct, the climate\222s ruined an\
d the land grows poorer and )Tj
T*
(uglier every day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221Uncle Vanya\222 \(1897\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( A woman can become a man\222s friend only in the following stages\227\
first an acquaintance, next )Tj
T*
(a mistress, and only then a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(\221Uncle Vanya\222 \(1897\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.25456 Tm
( When a woman isn\222t beautiful, people always say, \221You have lov\
ely eyes, you have lovely )Tj
T*
(hair.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.42047 Tm
(\221Uncle Vanya\222 \(1897\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.50456 Tm
( In Anna Karenina and Onegin not a single problem is solved, but they\
satisfy you completely )Tj
T*
(just because all their problems are correctly presented. The court is ob\
liged to submit the case )Tj
T*
(fairly, but let the jury do the deciding, each according to its own judg\
ement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.67047 Tm
(Letter to Alexei Suvorin, 27 October 1888, in L. Hellman \(ed.\) \221Se\
lected Letters of Anton Chekhov\222 \(1955, )Tj
T*
(translated by S. Lederer\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.75456 Tm
( It is necessary that on the stage everything should be as complex an\
d simple as life. People are )Tj
T*
(having dinner, and while they\222re having it, their future happiness ma\
y be decided or their lives )Tj
T*
(may be about to be shattered.)Tj
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(Letter to Alexei Suvorin, 4 May 1889)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.85 Apsley Cherry-Garrard 1882-1959)Tj
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( See E. L. Atkinson \(1.111\))Tj
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( 3.86 Lord Chesterfield \(Philip Dormer Stanhope, fourth Earl of Chester\
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( Unlike my subject will I frame my song,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It shall be witty and it sha\222n\222t be long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(Epigram on \221Long\222 Sir Thomas Robinson in the \221Dictionary of Nat\
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15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( The picture, placed the busts between,)Tj
T*
( Gives satire all his strength:)Tj
T*
( Wisdom and Wit are little seen,)Tj
T*
( But Folly at full length.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221On Mr Nash\222s Present of his own Picture at Full Length, fixed bet\
ween the Busts of Mr Pope and Sir Is. )Tj
T*
(Newton\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 486.00456 Tm
( In scandal, as in robbery, the receiver is always thought as bad as \
the thief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(\221Advice to his Son\222 \(1775\) \221Rules for Conversation: Private S\
candal\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 449.25456 Tm
( In matters of religion and matrimony I never give any advice; becaus\
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T*
(anybody\222s torments in this world or the next laid to my charge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to Arthur Charles Stanhope, Esq.\222 \(1817\) Letter to A. C\
. Stanhope, 12 October 1765)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.50456 Tm
( Religion is by no means a proper subject of conversation in a mixed \
company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(Letter 142 in the Earl of Carnarvon \(ed.\) \221Letters...to his Godson\
and Successor\222\(1890\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Cunning is the dark sanctuary of incapacity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(Letter to his godson and heir, to be delivered after his own death, in t\
he Earl of Carnarvon \(ed.\) \221Letters...to )Tj
T*
(his Godson and Successor\222\(1890\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.00456 Tm
( In my opinion, parsons are very like men, and neither the better nor\
the worse for wearing a )Tj
T*
(black gown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 5 April 1746)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.25456 Tm
( The knowledge of the world is only to be acquired in the world, and \
not in a closet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 4 October 1746)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.50456 Tm
( An injury is much sooner forgotten than an insult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.67047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 9 October 1746)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.75456 Tm
( Courts and camps are the only places to learn the world in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 2 October 1747)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.00456 Tm
( Take the tone of the company that you are in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 9 October 1747)Tj
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( Do as you would be done by is the surest method that I know of pleas\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 88.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 16 October 1747)Tj
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( I recommend to you to take care of minutes: for hours will take care\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 6 November 1747.)Tj
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( Advice is seldom welcome; and those who want it the most always like\
it the least.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 29 January 1748)Tj
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( Speak of the moderns without contempt, and of the ancients without i\
dolatry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 27 February 1748)Tj
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( Wear your learning, like your watch in a private pocket: and do not \
merely pull it out and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(strike it, merely to show that you have one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 22 February 1748)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( In my mind, there is nothing so illiberal and so ill-bred, as audibl\
e laughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 9 March 1748.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Women, then, are only children of a larger growth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 5 September 1748.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( It must be owned, that the Graces do not seem to be natives of Great\
Britain; and I doubt, the )Tj
T*
(best of us here have more of rough than polished diamond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 18 November 1748)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 20 July 1749)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( Putting moral virtues at the highest, and religion at the lowest, re\
ligion must still be allowed to )Tj
T*
(be a collateral security, at least, to virtue; and every prudent man wil\
l sooner trust to two )Tj
T*
(securities than to one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 8 January 1750)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Knowledge may give weight, but accomplishments give lustre, and many\
more people see than )Tj
T*
(weigh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 8 May 1750)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( It is commonly said, and more particularly by Lord Shaftesbury, that\
ridicule is the best test of )Tj
T*
(truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) 6 February 1752.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( The chapter of knowledge is very short, but the chapter of accidents\
is a very long one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221Letters to his Son\222 \(1774\) Letter to Solomon Dayrolles, 16 Febr\
uary 1753)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( I...could not help reflecting in my way upon the singular ill-luck o\
f this my dear country, )Tj
T*
(which, as long as ever I remember it, and as far back as I have read, ha\
s always been governed by )Tj
T*
(the only two or three people, out of two or three millions, totally inca\
pable of governing, and )Tj
T*
(unfit to be trusted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(M. Maty \(ed.\) \221Miscellaneous Works\222 \(1777\) vol. 2 \221Miscell\
aneous Pieces\222 no. 45 \(first published in \221The )Tj
T*
(World\222 7 October 1756\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Tyrawley and I have been dead these two years; but we don\222t choos\
e to have it known.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934\) \(3 April 1\
773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Give Dayrolles a chair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(Last words, in W. H. Craig \221Life of Lord Chesterfield\222 \(1907\) p.\
343)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.2124 Tm
( 3.87 G. K. Chesterton 1874-1936)Tj
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( I tell you naught for your comfort,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yea, naught for your desire,)Tj
T*
( Save that the sky grows darker yet)Tj
T*
( And the sea rises higher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of the White Horse\222 \(1911\) bk. 1, p. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( For the great Gaels of Ireland)Tj
T*
( Are the men that God made mad,)Tj
T*
( For all their wars are merry,)Tj
T*
( And all their songs are sad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of the White Horse\222 \(1911\) bk. 2, p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Fools! For I also had my hour;)Tj
T*
( One far fierce hour and sweet:)Tj
T*
( There was a shout about my ears,)Tj
T*
( And palms before my feet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Donkey\222 \(1900\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( They died to save their country and they only saved the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221English Graves\222 \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Why do you rush through the fields in trains,)Tj
T*
( Guessing so much and so much.)Tj
T*
( Why do you flash through the flowery meads,)Tj
T*
( Fat-head poet that nobody reads;)Tj
T*
( And why do you know such a frightful lot)Tj
T*
( About people in gloves and such?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Fat White Woman Speaks\222 \(1933\) \(an answer to Frances Cornf\
ord\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( From all that terror teaches,)Tj
T*
( From lies of tongue and pen,)Tj
T*
( From all the easy speeches)Tj
T*
( That comfort cruel men,)Tj
T*
( From sale and profanation)Tj
T*
( Of honour and the sword,)Tj
T*
( From sleep and from damnation,)Tj
T*
( Deliver us, good Lord!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221A Hymn\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Strong gongs groaning as the guns boom far,)Tj
T*
( Don John of Austria is going to the war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Lepanto\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( John Grubby, who was short and stout)Tj
T*
( And troubled with religious doubt,)Tj
T*
( Refused about the age of three)Tj
T*
( To sit upon the curate\222s knee.)Tj
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(\221The New Freethinker\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Before the Roman came to Rye or out to Severn strode,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The rolling English drunkard made the rolling English road.)Tj
T*
( A reeling road, a rolling road, that rambles round the shire,)Tj
T*
( And after him the parson ran, the sexton and the squire;)Tj
T*
( A merry road, a mazy road, and such as we did tread)Tj
T*
( The night we went to Birmingham by way of Beachy Head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Rolling English Road\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( For there is good news yet to hear and fine things to be seen,)Tj
T*
( Before we go to Paradise by way of Kensal Green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Rolling English Road\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Smile at us, pay us, pass us; but do not quite forget.)Tj
T*
( For we are the people of England, that never have spoken yet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Secret People\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( We only know the last sad squires ride slowly towards the sea,)Tj
T*
( And a new people takes the land: and still it is not we.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Secret People\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( And I dream of the days when work was scrappy,)Tj
T*
( And rare in our pockets the mark of the mint,)Tj
T*
( When we were angry and poor and happy,)Tj
T*
( And proud of seeing our names in print.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221A Song of Defeat\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( They haven\222t got no noses,)Tj
T*
( The fallen sons of Eve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Song of Quoodle\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( And goodness only knowses)Tj
T*
( The Noselessness of Man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Song of Quoodle\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( And Noah he often said to his wife when he sat down to dine, \221I d\
on\222t care where the water )Tj
T*
(goes if it doesn\222t get into the wine.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Wine and Water\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. An inconve\
nience is only an )Tj
T*
(adventure wrongly considered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221All Things Considered\222 \(1908\) \221On Running after one\222s Hat\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Literature is a luxury; fiction is a necessity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221The Defendant\222 \(1901\) \221A Defence of Penny Dreadfuls\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( The rich are the scum of the earth in every country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221The Flying Inn\222 \(1914\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Bigotry may be roughly defined as the anger of men who have no opini\
ons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221Heretics\222 \(1905\) ch. 20)Tj
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( Thieves respect property. They merely wish the property to become th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(may more perfectly respect it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Man who was Thursday\222 \(1908\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The human race, to which so many of my readers belong, has been play\
ing at children\222s games )Tj
T*
(from the beginning, and will probably do it till the end, which is a nui\
sance for the few people )Tj
T*
(who grow up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Napoleon of Notting Hill\222 \(1904\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Democracy means government by the uneducated, while aristocracy mean\
s government by the )Tj
T*
(badly educated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 1 February 1931, pt. 5, p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes, our\
ancestors. It is the )Tj
T*
(democracy of the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Orthodoxy\222 \(1908\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Democrats object to men being disqualified by the accident of birth;\
tradition objects to their )Tj
T*
(being disqualified by the accident of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Orthodoxy\222 \(1908\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( All conservatism is based upon the idea that if you leave things alo\
ne you leave them as they )Tj
T*
(are. But you do not. If you leave a thing alone you leave it to a torren\
t of change.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Orthodoxy\222 \(1908\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( He could not think up to the height of his own towering style.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221The Victorian Age in Literature\222 \(1912\) ch. 3 \(on Tennyson\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has bee\
n found difficult; and left )Tj
T*
(untried.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221What\222s Wrong with the World\222 \(1910\) pt. 1 \221The Unfinished\
Temple\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( The prime truth of woman, the universal mother...that if a thing is \
worth doing, it is worth )Tj
T*
(doing badly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221What\222s Wrong with the World\222 \(1910\) pt. 4 \221Folly and Fema\
le Education\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 248.9624 Tm
( 3.88 Erskine Childers 1870-1922)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The riddle of the sands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Come closer, boys. It will be easier for you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(Addressed to the firing squad at his execution, in Burke Wilkinson \221T\
he Zeal of the Convert\222 \(1976\) ch. 26)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 142.4624 Tm
( 3.89 William Chillingworth 1602-44)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The Bible and the Bible only is the religion of Protestants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221The Religion of Protestants\222 \(1637\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( I once knew a man out of courtesy help a lame dog over a stile, and \
he for requital bit his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fingers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221The Religion of Protestants\222 \(1637\))Tj
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( 3.90 Charles Chilton 1914\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Joan Littlewood \(12.104\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.91 Rufus Choate 1799-1859)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Its constitution the glittering and sounding generalities of natural\
right which make up the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Declaration of Independence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 637.67047 Tm
(Letter to the Maine Whig State Central Committee, 9 August 1856, in S. G\
. Brown \221The Works of Rufus )Tj
T*
(Choate with a Memoir of his Life\222 \(1862\) vol. 1, p. 215.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 590.4624 Tm
( 3.92 Noam Chomsky 1928\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The notion \221grammatical\222 cannot be identified with \221meaning\
ful\222 or \221significant\222 in any )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(semantic sense. Sentences \(1\) and \(2\) are equally nonsensical, but..\
.only the former is )Tj
T*
(grammatical. \(1\) Colourless green ideas sleep furiously. \(2\) Furious\
ly sleep ideas green )Tj
T*
(colourless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(\221Syntactic Structures\222 \(1957\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( As soon as questions of will or decision or reason or choice of acti\
on arise, human science is at )Tj
T*
(a loss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.17047 Tm
(Television interview, 30 March 1978, in \221The Listener\222 6 April 197\
8)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 411.9624 Tm
( 3.93 Dame Agatha Christie \(n\350e Miller\) 1890-1976)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( War settles nothing...to win a war is as disastrous as to lose one!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.42047 Tm
(\221An Autobiography\222 \(1977\) pt. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.50456 Tm
( He tapped his forehead. \221These little grey cells. It is \223up to\
them.\224\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.67047 Tm
(\221The Mysterious Affair at Styles\222 \(1920\) ch. 10 \(Hercule Poirot\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.75456 Tm
( Trust the train, Mademoiselle, for it is le bon Dieu who drives it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.92047 Tm
(\221The Mystery of the Blue Train\222 \(1928\) ch. 36)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 268.7124 Tm
( 3.94 Chuang Tzu 4th-3rd cent. B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I do not know whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, o\
r whether I am now a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(butterfly dreaming I am a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.17047 Tm
(\221Chuang Tzu\222 \(1889, translated by H. A. Giles\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 180.9624 Tm
( 3.95 Mary, Lady Chudleigh 1656-1710)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \222Tis hard we should be by the men despised,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yet kept from knowing what would make us prized;)Tj
T*
( Debarred from knowledge, banished from the schools,)Tj
T*
( And with the utmost industry bred fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.42047 Tm
(\221The Ladies Defence\222 \(1701\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.50456 Tm
( Wife and servant are the same,)Tj
T*
( But only differ in the name.)Tj
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(\221Poems\222 \(1703\) \221To the Ladies\222)Tj
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( Then shun, oh! shun that wretched state)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all the fawning flatterers hate:)Tj
T*
( Value yourselves, and men despise)Tj
T*
( You must be proud if you\222ll be wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Poems\222 \(1703\) \221To the Ladies\222 \(on marriage\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 632.2124 Tm
( 3.96 Charles Churchill 1731-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Though by whim, envy, or resentment led,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They damn those authors whom they never read.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221The Candidate\222 \(1764\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( The only difference, after all their rout,)Tj
T*
( Is, that the one is in, the other out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221The Conference\222 \(1763\) l. 165)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( The danger chiefly lies in acting well;)Tj
T*
( No crime\222s so great as daring to excel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221An Epistle to William Hogarth\222 \(1763\) l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( Be England what she will,)Tj
T*
( With all her faults, she is my country still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221The Farewell\222 \(1764\) l. 27.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( It can\222t be Nature, for it is not sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221The Farewell\222 \(1764\) l. 200)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( England\227a happy land we know,)Tj
T*
( Where follies naturally grow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1763\) bk. 1, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( And adepts in the speaking trade)Tj
T*
( Keep a cough by them ready made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1763\) bk. 2, l. 545)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Just to the windward of the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1763\) bk. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( He for subscribers baits his hook,)Tj
T*
( And takes your cash; but where\222s the book?)Tj
T*
( No matter where; wise fear, you know,)Tj
T*
( Forbids the robbing of a foe;)Tj
T*
( But what, to serve our private ends,)Tj
T*
( Forbids the cheating of our friends?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1763\) bk. 3, l. 801 \(satirizing Samuel Johnson\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( A joke\222s a very serious thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1763\) bk. 4, l. 1386)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Happy, thrice happy now the savage race,)Tj
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( Since Europe took their gold, and gave them grace!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pastors she sends to help them in their need,)Tj
T*
( Some who can\222t write, with others who can\222t read.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Gotham\222 \(1764\) bk. 1, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Our vices, with more zeal than holy prayers,)Tj
T*
( She teaches them, and in return takes theirs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Gotham\222 \(1764\) bk. 1, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Old-age, a second child, by Nature cursed)Tj
T*
( With more and greater evils than the first,)Tj
T*
( Weak, sickly, full of pains; in ev\222ry breath)Tj
T*
( Railing at life, and yet afraid of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Gotham\222 \(1764\) bk. 1, l. 215)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Keep up appearances; there lies the test;)Tj
T*
( The world will give thee credit for the rest.)Tj
T*
( Outward be fair, however foul within;)Tj
T*
( Sin if thou wilt, but then in secret sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Night\222 \(1761\) l. 311)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Stay out all night, but take especial care)Tj
T*
( That Prudence bring thee back to early prayer)Tj
T*
( As one with watching and with study faint,)Tj
T*
( Reel in a drunkard, and reel out a saint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Night\222 \(1761\) l. 321)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Grave without thought, and without feeling gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Prophecy of Famine\222 \(1763\) l. 60 \(on pretentious poets\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Me,...no Muse of heav\222nly birth inspires,)Tj
T*
( No judgement tempers when rash genius fires,)Tj
T*
( Who boast no merit but mere knack of rhyme,)Tj
T*
( Short gleams of sense, and satire out of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221The Prophecy of Famine\222 \(1763\) l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Apt Alliteration\222s artful aid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Prophecy of Famine\222 \(1763\) l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( He sickened at all triumphs but his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 64 \(of Thomas Franklin, Professor of Gr\
eek at Cambridge University\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( To mischief trained, e\222en from his mother\222s womb,)Tj
T*
( Grown old in fraud, tho\222 yet in manhood\222s bloom.)Tj
T*
( Adopting arts, by which gay villains rise,)Tj
T*
( And reach the heights, which honest men despise;)Tj
T*
( Mute at the bar, and in the senate loud,)Tj
T*
( Dull \222mongst the dullest, proudest of the proud;)Tj
T*
( A pert, prim prater of the northern race,)Tj
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( Guilt in his heart, and famine in his face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 69 \(referring to Alexander Wedderburn, \
later Lord Loughborough\))Tj
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( Ne\222er blushed unless, in spreading Vice\222s snares,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She blundered on some virtue unawares.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 137)Tj
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( So much they talked, so very little said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 550)Tj
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( Learned without sense, and venerably dull.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 592)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Not without Art, but yet to Nature true,)Tj
T*
( She charms the town with humour just, yet new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 699)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( But, spite of all the criticizing elves,)Tj
T*
( Those who would make us feel, must feel themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 961)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The two extremes appear like man and wife,)Tj
T*
( Coupled together for the sake of strife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 1005)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Where he falls short, \222tis Nature\222s fault alone;)Tj
T*
( Where he succeeds, the merit\222s all his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221The Rosciad\222 \(1761\) l. 1025)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( With the persuasive language of a tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221The Times\222 \(1764\) l. 308)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 320.9624 Tm
( 3.97 Frank E. Churchill 1901-42)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who\222s afraid of the big bad wolf?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(Title of song from the 1933 cartoon film \221The Three Little Pigs\222; \
probably written in collaboration with Ann )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Ronell)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.2124 Tm
( 3.98 Lord Randolph Churchill 1849-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For the purposes of recreation he [Gladstone] has selected the felli\
ng of trees, and we may )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(usefully remark that his amusements, like his politics, are essentially \
destructive...The forest )Tj
T*
(laments in order that Mr Gladstone may perspire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(Speech on Financial Reform, delivered in Blackpool, 24 January 1884, in \
F. Banfield \(ed.\) \221The Life and )Tj
T*
(Speeches of Lord Randolph Churchill\222 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( He [Gladstone] told them that he would give them and all other subje\
cts of the Queen much )Tj
T*
(legislation, great prosperity, and universal peace, and he has given the\
m nothing but chips. Chips )Tj
T*
(to the faithful allies in Afghanistan, chips to the trusting native race\
s of South Africa, chips to the )Tj
T*
(Egyptian fellah, chips to the British farmer, chips to the manufacturer \
and the artisan, chips to the )Tj
T*
(agricultural labourer, chips to the House of Commons itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.92047 Tm
(Speech on Financial Reform, delivered in Blackpool, 24 January 1884, in \
F. Banfield \(ed.\) \221The Life and )Tj
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(Speeches of Lord Randolph Churchill\222 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( Ulster will fight; Ulster will be right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(Public letter, 7 May 1886, in R. F. Foster \221Lord Randolph Churchill\222\
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( An old man in a hurry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(Referring to Gladstone, in election Address to the Electors of South Pad\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Churchill \221Lord Randolph Churchill\222 \(1906\) vol. 2, p. 491)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.50456 Tm
( All great men make mistakes. Napoleon forgot Bl\374cher, I forgot Go\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.67047 Tm
(In \221Leaves from the Notebooks of Lady Dorothy Nevill\222 \(1907\) p. \
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.4624 Tm
( 3.99 Sir Winston Churchill 1874-1965)Tj
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( A labour contract into which men enter voluntarily for a limited and\
for a brief period, under )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which they are paid wages which they consider adequate, under which they\
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T*
(and from which they can obtain relief...on payment of \24317.10s, the co\
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T*
(be a healthy or proper contract, but it cannot in the opinion of His Maj\
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T*
(classified as slavery in the extreme acceptance of the word without some\
risk of terminological )Tj
T*
(inexactitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 22 February 1906, col. 555)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.00456 Tm
( He is one of those orators of whom it was well said, \221Before they\
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T*
(what they are going to say; when they are speaking, they do not know wha\
t they are saying; and )Tj
T*
(when they have sat down, they do not know what they have said.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.17047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 20 December 1912, col. 1893 \(referring to Lord \
Charles Beresford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.25456 Tm
( Business carried on as usual during alterations on the map of Europe\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.42047 Tm
(The motto of the British people, in speech at Guildhall, 9 November 1914\
: \221Complete Speeches\222 \(1974\) vol. )Tj
T*
(3, p. 2341)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.50456 Tm
( The whole map of Europe has been changed...but as the deluge subside\
s and the waters fall )Tj
T*
(short we see the dreary steeples of Fermanagh and Tyrone emerging once a\
gain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.67047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 16 February 1922, col. 1270)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.75456 Tm
( I remember, when I was a child, being taken to the celebrated Barnum\
\222s circus, which )Tj
T*
(contained an exhibition of freaks and monstrosities, but the exhibit on \
the programme which I )Tj
T*
(most desired to see was the one described as \221The Boneless Wonder\222\
. My parents judged that that )Tj
T*
(spectacle would be too revolting and demoralizing for my youthful eyes, \
and I have waited 50 )Tj
T*
(years to see the boneless wonder sitting on the Treasury Bench.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 28 January 1931, col. 1021 \(referring to Ramsay\
Macdonald\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.00456 Tm
( So they [the Government] go on in strange paradox, decided only to b\
e undecided, resolved to )Tj
T*
(be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all-powerful to be\
impotent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.17047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 12 November 1936, col. 1107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.25456 Tm
( Dictators ride to and fro upon tigers which they dare not dismount. \
And the tigers are getting )Tj
T*
(hungry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.42047 Tm
(Letter, 11 November 1937, in \221Step by Step\222 \(1939\) p. 186. \221C\
oncise Oxford Dictionary of Proverbs\222 under )Tj
T*
(rides)Tj
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( The utmost he has been able to gain for Czechoslovakia and in the ma\
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0 -1.2 TD
(dispute has been that the German dictator, instead of snatching his vict\
uals from the table, has )Tj
T*
(been content to have them served to him course by course.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 5 October 1938, col. 361 \(referring to Neville \
Chamberlain\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrappe\
d in a mystery inside an )Tj
T*
(enigma.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 1 October 1939, in \221Into Battle\222 \(1941\) p. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I would say to the House, as I said to those who have joined this Go\
vernment: \221I have nothing )Tj
T*
(to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 13 May 1940, col. 1502)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( What is our policy?...to wage war against a monstrous tyranny, never\
surpassed in the dark, )Tj
T*
(lamentable catalogue of human crime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 13 May 1940, col. 1502)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( What is our aim?...Victory, victory at all costs, victory in spite o\
f all terror; victory, however )Tj
T*
(long and hard the road may be; for without victory, there is no survival\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 13 May 1940, col. 1502)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall fight\
in France, we shall fight on )Tj
T*
(the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing \
strength in the air, we )Tj
T*
(shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be. We shall fight on the\
beaches, we shall fight )Tj
T*
(on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets,\
we shall fight in the hills; )Tj
T*
(we shall never surrender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 4 June 1940, col. 796)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duty, and so bear ourselves \
that, if the British )Tj
T*
(Commonwealth and its Empire lasts for a thousand years, men will still s\
ay, \221This was their finest )Tj
T*
(hour.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 18 June 1940, col. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to \
so few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 20 August 1940, col. 1166 \(on the skill and cou\
rage of British airmen\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( No one can guarantee success in war, but only deserve it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Wavell, 26 November 1940, in \221The Second World War\222\
vol. 2 \(1949\) ch. 27.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Here is the answer which I will give to President Roosevelt...Give u\
s the tools and we will )Tj
T*
(finish the job.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 9 February 1941, in \221Complete Speeches\222 \(1974\) \
vol. 6, p. 6350)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( When I warned them [the French Government] that Britain would fight \
on alone whatever they )Tj
T*
(did, their generals told their Prime Minister and his divided Cabinet, \221\
In three weeks England will )Tj
T*
(have her neck wrung like a chicken.\222 Some chicken! Some neck!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(Speech to Canadian Parliament, 30 December 1941, in \221Complete Speeche\
s\222 \(1974\) vol. 6, p. 6544)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. Bu\
t it is, perhaps, the end of the )Tj
T*
(beginning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(Speech at the Mansion House, London, 10 November 1942, in \221The End of\
the Beginning\222 \(1943\) p. 214 \(on )Tj
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(the Battle of Egypt\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( We make this wide encircling movement in the Mediterranean, having f\
or its primary object )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the recovery of the command of that vital sea, but also having for its o\
bject the exposure of the )Tj
T*
(under-belly of the Axis, especially Italy, to heavy attack.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 11 November 1942, col. 28 \(often misquoted as \221\
the soft under-belly of the Axis\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( There is no finer investment for any community than putting milk int\
o babies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 21 March 1943, in \221Complete Speeches\222 \(1974\) vo\
l. 7, p. 6761)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( National compulsory insurance for all classes for all purposes from \
the cradle to the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 21 March 1943, in \221Complete Speeches\222 \(1974\) vo\
l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( The empires of the future are the empires of the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(Speech at Harvard, 6 September 1943, in \221Onwards to Victory\222 \(194\
4\) p. 238)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtai\
n has descended across the )Tj
T*
(Continent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(Speech at Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri, 5 March 1946, in \221Co\
mplete Speeches\222 \(1974\) vol. 7, p. )Tj
T*
(7290. The expression \221iron curtain\222 had been previously applied by\
others to the Soviet Union or her sphere of )Tj
T*
(influence, e.g. Ethel Snowden \221Through Bolshevik Russia\222 \(1920\),\
Dr Goebbels \221Das Reich\222 \(25 February )Tj
T*
(1945\), and by Churchill himself in a cable to President Truman \(4 June\
1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 451.50456 Tm
( No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it ha\
s been said that democracy )Tj
T*
(is the worst form of Government except all those other forms that have b\
een tried from time to )Tj
T*
(time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 11 November 1947, col. 206)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.75456 Tm
( To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(Speech at White House, 26 June 1954, in \221New York Times\222 27 June 1\
954, p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.00456 Tm
( Mr Gladstone read Homer for fun, which I thought served him right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.17047 Tm
(\221My Early Life\222 \(1930\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.25456 Tm
( In war: resolution. In defeat: defiance. In victory: magnanimity. In\
peace: goodwill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221The Second World War\222 vol. 1 \(1948\) epigraph, which according t\
o Sir Edward Marsh in \221A Number of )Tj
T*
(People\222 \(1939\) p. 152, occurred to Churchill shortly after the Firs\
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15 0 0 15 10 253.50456 Tm
( The loyalties which centre upon number one are enormous. If he trips\
he must be sustained. If )Tj
T*
(he makes mistakes they must be covered. If he sleeps he must not be want\
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T*
(no good he must be pole-axed. But this last extreme process cannot be ca\
rried out every day; and )Tj
T*
(certainly not in the days just after he has been chosen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(\221The Second World War\222 vol. 2 \(1949\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.75456 Tm
( I did not suffer from any desire to be relieved of my responsibiliti\
es. All I wanted was )Tj
T*
(compliance with my wishes after reasonable discussion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.92047 Tm
(\221The Second World War\222 vol. 4 \(1951\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.00456 Tm
( Jellicoe was the only man on either side who could lose the war in a\
n afternoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221The World Crisis\222 \(1927\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( The ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next week,\
next month, and next )Tj
T*
(year. And to have the ability afterwards to explain why it didn\222t hap\
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(Describing the qualifications desirable in a prospective politician, in \
B. Adler \221Churchill Wit\222 \(1965\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( This is the sort of English up with which I will not put.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(In Ernest Gowers \221Plain Words\222 \(1948\) \221Troubles with Preposit\
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15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Don\222t talk to me about naval tradition. It\222s nothing but rum, \
sodomy and the lash.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(In Sir Peter Gretton \221Former Naval Person\222 \(1968\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( A sheep in sheep\222s clothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(Describing Clement Attlee, in Lord Home \221The Way the Wind Blows\222 \(\
1976\) ch. 6.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( Take away that pudding\227it has no theme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(In Lord Home \221The Way the Wind Blows\222 \(1976\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( As far as I can see you have used every clich\350 except \223God is \
Love\224 and \223Please adjust your )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(dress before leaving\224.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(Note to Sir Anthony Eden, in reply to a long-winded report on the latter\
\222s tour of the Near East, in \221Life\222 9 )Tj
T*
(December 1940 \(later disclaimed by Churchill\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( In defeat unbeatable: in victory unbearable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(Describing Viscount Montgomery, in Edward Marsh \221Ambrosia and Small B\
eer\222 \(1964\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( The candle in that great turnip has gone out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(Describing Stanley Baldwin, in Harold Nicolson \(ed.\) \221Nigel Nicols\
on: Diaries and Letters 1945-62\222 \(1968\) )Tj
T*
(diary 17 August 1950)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(In Quentin Reynolds \221By Quentin Reynolds\222 \(1964\) ch. 11)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 380.9624 Tm
( 3.100 Count Galeazzo Ciano 1903-44)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La vittoria trova cento padri, e nessuno vuole riconoscere l\222insu\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Victory has a hundred fathers, but defeat is an orphan.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Diary\222 \(1946\) vol. 2, 9 September 1942)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 289.4624 Tm
( 3.101 Colley Cibber 1671-1757)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whilst thus I sing, I am a King,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Altho\222 a poor blind boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(\221The Blind Boy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.00456 Tm
( Oh! how many torments lie in the small circle of a wedding-ring!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221The Double Gallant\222 \(1707\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( One had as good be out of the world, as out of the fashion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Last Shift\222 \(1696\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( Off with his head\227so much for Buckingham.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1700\) act 4, adapted from Shakespeare.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( Perish the thought!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1700\) act 5, adapted from Shakespeare)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.00456 Tm
( Hark! the shrill trumpet sounds, to horse, away, My soul\222s in arm\
s, and eager for the fray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1700\) act 5, adapted from Shakespeare)Tj
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( Stolen sweets are best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Rival Fools\222 \(1709\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 3.102 Cicero \(Marcus Tullius Cicero\) 106-43 B.C.)Tj
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(\221Ad Atticum\222 bk. 2, letter 1, sect. 8 \(of M. Porcius Cato, the Yo\
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( Sed nescio quo modo nihil tam absurde dici potest quod non dicatur a\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( There is nothing so absurd but some philosopher has said it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.17047 Tm
(\221De Divinatione\222 bk. 2, ch. 119)Tj
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( Vulgo enim dicitur: Iucundi acti labores.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( For it is commonly said: completed labours are pleasant.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 510.67047 Tm
(\221De Finibus\222 bk. 2, ch. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 489.75456 Tm
( Salus populi suprema est lex.)Tj
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T*
( The good of the people is the chief law.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221De Legibus\222 bk. 3, ch. 8)Tj
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( \221Ipse dixit.\222 \221Ipse\222 autem erat Pythagoras.)Tj
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( \221He himself said\222, and this \221himself\222 was Pythagoras.)Tj
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(\221De Natura Deorum\222 bk. 1, ch. 10)Tj
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( Summum bonum.)Tj
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T*
( The highest good.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221De Officiis\222 bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
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( Cedant arma togae, concedant laurea laudi.)Tj
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T*
( Let war yield to peace, laurels to paeans.)Tj
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(\221De Officiis\222 bk. 1, ch. 77)Tj
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( Numquam se minus otiosum esse quam cum otiosus, nec minus solum quam\
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( Never less idle than when wholly idle, nor less alone than when whol\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221De Officiis\222 bk. 3, ch. 1)Tj
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( Mens cuiusque is est quisque.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The spirit is the true self.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221De Republica\222 bk. 6, ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Quousque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( How long will you abuse our patience, Catiline?)Tj
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(\221In Catilinam\222 speech 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( O tempora, O mores!)Tj
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T*
( Oh, the times! Oh, the manners!)Tj
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( He departed, he withdrew, he strode off, he broke forth.)Tj
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(\221In Catilinam\222 speech 2, ch. 1)Tj
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( Civis Romanus sum.)Tj
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T*
( I am a Roman citizen.)Tj
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(\221In Verrem\222 speech 5, ch. 147)Tj
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( Quod di omen avertant.)Tj
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T*
( May the gods avert this omen.)Tj
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(\221Third Phillippic\222 ch. 35)Tj
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( Nervos belli, pecuniam infinitam.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The sinews of war, unlimited money.)Tj
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(\221Fifth Phillippic\222 ch. 5)Tj
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( Silent enim leges inter arma.)Tj
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T*
( Laws are silent in time of war.)Tj
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(\221Pro Milone\222 ch. 11)Tj
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( Id quod est praestantissimum maximeque optabile omnibus sanis et bon\
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0 -1.2 TD
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( The thing which is the most outstanding and chiefly to be desired by\
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(well-off persons, is leisure with honour.)Tj
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(\221Pro Sestio\222 ch. 98)Tj
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( Errare mehercule malo cum Platone...quam cum istis vera sentire)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I would rather be wrong, by God, with Plato...than be correct with t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.17047 Tm
(\221Tusculanae disputationes\222 bk. 1, ch. 39 \(on Pythagoreans\))Tj
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( O fortunatam natam me consule Romam!)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( O happy Rome, born when I was consul!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.67047 Tm
(In Juvenal \221Satires\222 poem 10, l. 122)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.4624 Tm
( 3.103 John Clare 1793-1864)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When badgers fight then everyone\222s a foe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.92047 Tm
(\221Badger\222)Tj
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( He could not die when the trees were green,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For he loved the time too well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.17047 Tm
(\221The Dying Child\222)Tj
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( My life hath been one chain of contradictions,)Tj
T*
( Madhouses, prisons, whore-shops.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.42047 Tm
(\221The Exile\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.50456 Tm
( They took me from my wife, and to save trouble)Tj
T*
( I wed again, and made the error double.)Tj
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(\221The Exile\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Here let the Muse Oblivion\222s curtain draw,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And let man think\227for God hath often saw)Tj
T*
( Things here too dirty for the light of day;)Tj
T*
( For in a madhouse there exists no law)Tj
T*
( Now stagnant grows my too refin\351d clay;)Tj
T*
( I envy birds their wings to fly away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Exile\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Pale death, the grand physician, cures all pain;)Tj
T*
( The dead rest well who lived for joys in vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Exile\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Hopeless hope hopes on and meets no end,)Tj
T*
( Wastes without springs and homes without a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Exile\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( When words refuse before the crowd)Tj
T*
( My Mary\222s name to give,)Tj
T*
( The muse in silence sings aloud:)Tj
T*
( And there my love will live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221First Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( A quiet, pilfering, unprotected race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Gypsy Camp\222 \(1841\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( I am\227yet what I am, none cares or knows;)Tj
T*
( My friends forsake me like a memory lost:)Tj
T*
( I am the self-consumer of my woes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221I Am\222 \(1848\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( I long for scenes where man hath never trod)Tj
T*
( A place where woman never smiled or wept)Tj
T*
( There to abide with my Creator God)Tj
T*
( And sleep as I in childhood sweetly slept,)Tj
T*
( Untroubling and untroubled where I lie)Tj
T*
( The grass below, above, the vaulted sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221I Am\222 \(1848\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( The present is the funeral of the past,)Tj
T*
( And man the living sepulchre of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221The Past\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Summers pleasures they are gone like to visions every one)Tj
T*
( And the cloudy days of autumn and of winter cometh on)Tj
T*
( I tried to call them back but unbidden they are gone)Tj
T*
( Far away from heart and eye and for ever far away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Remembrances\222)Tj
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( 3.104 Earl of Clarendon 1609-74)Tj
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( Without question, when he first drew the sword, he threw away the sc\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 706.67047 Tm
(\221The History of the Rebellion\222 \(1703\) ed. W. D. Macray \(1888\) \
vol. 3, bk. 7, sect. 84 \(of Hampden\))Tj
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( He had a head to contrive, a tongue to persuade, and a hand to execu\
te any mischief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 669.92047 Tm
(\221The History of the Rebellion\222 \(1703\) ed. W. D. Macray \(1888\) \
vol. 3, bk. 7, sect. 84 \(of Hampden\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 649.00456 Tm
( He...would, with a shrill and sad accent, ingeminate the word Peace,\
Peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 633.17047 Tm
(\221The History of the Rebellion\222 \(1703\) ed. W. D. Macray \(1888\) \
vol. 3, bk. 7, sect. 233 \(of Falkland\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 612.25456 Tm
( So enamoured on peace that he would have been glad the King should h\
ave bought it at any )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(price.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.42047 Tm
(\221The History of the Rebellion\222 \(1703\) ed. W. D. Macray \(1888\) \
vol. 3, bk. 7, sect. 233 \(of Falkland\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 557.50456 Tm
( He will be looked upon by posterity as a brave bad man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.67047 Tm
(\221The History of the Rebellion\222 \(1703\) ed. W. D. Macray \(1888\) \
vol. 6, bk. 15, last line \(of Cromwell\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 509.4624 Tm
( 3.105 Claribel \(Mrs C. A. Barnard\) 1840-69)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I cannot sing the old songs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I sang long years ago,)Tj
T*
( For heart and voice would fail me,)Tj
T*
( And foolish tears would flow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Songs\222 \(1865\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 385.7124 Tm
( 3.106 Brian Clark 1932\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whose life is it anyway?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.17047 Tm
(Title of play \(1977\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 315.9624 Tm
( 3.107 Kenneth Clark \(Baron Clark\) 1903-83)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Medieval marriages were entirely a matter of property, and, as every\
one knows, marriage )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(without love means love without marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221Civilisation\222 \(1969\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.50456 Tm
( It\222s a curious fact that the all-male religions have produced no \
religious imagery\227in most )Tj
T*
(cases have positively forbidden it. The great religious art of the world\
is deeply involved with the )Tj
T*
(female principle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.67047 Tm
(\221Civilisation\222 \(1969\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.75456 Tm
( Perrault\222s fa\347ade [of the Louvre] reflects the triumph of an a\
uthoritarian state...It was the work )Tj
T*
(not of craftsmen, but of wonderfully gifted civil servants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.92047 Tm
(\221Civilisation\222 \(1969\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 100.7124 Tm
( 3.108 Arthur C. Clarke 1917\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( If an elderly but distinguished scientist says that something is pos\
sible he is almost certainly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(right, but if he says that it is impossible he is very probably wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.17047 Tm
(In \221New Yorker\222 9 August 1969)Tj
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( 3.109 Grant Clarke 1891-1931 and Edgar Leslie 1885-1976)Tj
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( He\222d have to get under, get out and get under)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And fix up his automobile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 687.42047 Tm
(\221He\222d Have to Get Under\227Get Out and Get Under\222 \(1913 song\)\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 655.2124 Tm
( 3.110 James Stanier Clarke c.1765-1834)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Perhaps when you again appear in print you may choose to dedicate yo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Leopold: any historical romance, illustrative of the history of the aug\
ust House of Coburg, would )Tj
T*
(just now be very interesting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.67047 Tm
(Letter to Jane Austen, 27 March 1816, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221Jane\
Austen\222s Letters\222 \(1952\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 549.4624 Tm
( 3.111 John Clarke d. 1658)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He that would thrive)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Must rise at five;)Tj
T*
( He that hath thriven)Tj
T*
( May lie till seven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.92047 Tm
(\221Paraemiologia Anglo-Latina\222 \(1639\) \221Diligentia\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 437.00456 Tm
( Home is home, though it be never so homely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.17047 Tm
(\221Paraemiologia Anglo-Latina\222 \(1639\) \221Domi vivere\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 388.9624 Tm
( 3.112 Claudius Caecus, Appius fl. 312-279 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Faber est suae quisque fortunae.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Each man is the smith of his own fortune.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.67047 Tm
(In Sallust \221Ad Caesarem Senem de Re Publica Oratio\222 ch. 1, sect. 2\
)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 297.4624 Tm
( 3.113 Karl von Clausewitz 1780-1831)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Der Krieg ist nichts als eine Fortsetzung des politischen Verkehrs m\
it)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Einmischung anderer Mittel.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( War is nothing but a continuation of politics with the admixture of \
other means.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.17047 Tm
(\221Vom Kriege\222 \(1832-4\) bk. 8, ch. 6, sect. B, commonly rendered i\
n the form \221War is the continuation of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(politics by other means\222.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 172.9624 Tm
( 3.114 Henry Clay 1777-1852)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How often are we forced to charge fortune with partiality towards th\
e unjust!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.42047 Tm
(Letter, 4 December 1801)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.50456 Tm
( If you wish to avoid foreign collision, you had better abandon the o\
cean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.67047 Tm
(Speech in the House of Representatives, 22 January 1812)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.75456 Tm
( The gentleman [Josiah Quincy] can not have forgotten his own sentime\
nts, uttered even on the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(floor of this House, \221peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.92047 Tm
(Speech, 8 January 1813, in C. Colton \(ed.\) \221The Works of Henry Cla\
y\222 \(1904\) vol. 1, p. 197.)Tj
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( The arts of power and its minions are the same in all countries and \
in all ages. It marks its )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(victim; denounces it; and excites the public odium and the public hatred\
, to conceal its own )Tj
T*
(abuses and encroachments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Speech in the Senate, 14 March 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I had rather be right than be President.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(To Senator Preston of South Carolina, 1839)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I have heard something said about allegiance to the South. I know no\
)Tj
T*
( South, no North, no East, no West, to which I owe any allegiance...T\
he)Tj
T*
( Union, sir, is my country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Speech in the Senate \(1848\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 559.4624 Tm
( 3.115 Eldridge Cleaver 1935\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What we\222re saying today is that you\222re either part of the solu\
tion or you\222re part of the problem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(Speech in San Francisco, 1968, in R. Scheer \221Eldridge Cleaver, Post P\
rison Writings and Speeches\222 \(1969\) p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(32)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 3.116 John Cleese 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Graham Chapman et al. \(3.74\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.117 John Cleese 1939\227and Connie Booth)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They\222re Germans. Don\222t mention the war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.42047 Tm
(\221Fawlty Towers\222 \(BBC TV comedy series\) \221The Germans\222 \(197\
5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 361.50456 Tm
( Pretentious? Moi?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 345.67047 Tm
(\221Fawlty Towers\222 \(BBC TV comedy series\) \221The Psychiatrist\222 \
\(1979\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 313.4624 Tm
( 3.118 John Cleland 1710-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Truth! stark naked truth, is the word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure\222 a.k.a. \221Fanny Hill\222 \(1749\)\
vol. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 243.7124 Tm
( 3.119 Georges Clemenceau 1841-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( La guerre, c\222est une chose trop grave pour la confier \341 des mi\
litaires.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( War is too serious a matter to entrust to military men.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(Attributed to Clemenceau, e.g. in Hampden Jackson \221Clemenceau and the\
Third Republic\222 \(1946\) p. 228, but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(also to Briand and Talleyrand)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( Politique int\350rieure, je fais la guerre; politique ext\350rieure,\
je fais toujours la guerre. Je fais )Tj
T*
(toujours la guerre.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( My home policy: I wage war; my foreign policy: I wage war. All the t\
ime I wage war.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(Speech to French Chamber of Deputies, 8 March 1918, in \221Discours de G\
uerre\222 \(1968\) p. 172)Tj
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( Il est plus facile de faire la guerre que la paix.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( It is easier to make war than to make peace.)Tj
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(Speech at Verdun, 20 July 1919, in \221Discours de Paix\222 \(1938\) p. \
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 3.120 Pope Clement XIII 1693-1769)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sint ut sunt aut non sint.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let them be as they are or not be at all.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
( Reply to request for changes in the constitutions of the Society of \
Jesus, in J. A. M. Cr\350tineau-Joly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221Cl\350ment XIV et les J\350suites\222 \(1847\) p. 370 n.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.4624 Tm
( 3.121 Grover Cleveland 1837-1908)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have considered the pension list of the republic a roll of honour.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.92047 Tm
(Veto of Dependent Pension Bill, 5 July 1888)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.00456 Tm
( The lessons of paternalism ought to be unlearned and the better less\
on taught that while the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(people should patriotically and cheerfully support their government, its\
functions do not include )Tj
T*
(the support of the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(Inaugural Address, 4 March 1893)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.9624 Tm
( 3.122 Harlan Cleveland 1918\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The revolution of rising expectations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.42047 Tm
(Phrase coined, 1950, in Arthur Schlesinger \221A Thousand Days\222 \(196\
5\) ch. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 404.2124 Tm
( 3.123 John Cleveland 1613-58 English Cavalier poet)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Here lies wise and valiant dust,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Huddled up, \222twixt fit and just:)Tj
T*
( Strafford, who was hurried hence)Tj
T*
( \222Twixt treason and convenience.)Tj
T*
( He spent his time here in a mist,)Tj
T*
( A Papist, yet a Calvinist...)Tj
T*
( Riddles lie here, or in a word,)Tj
T*
( Here lies blood; and let it lie)Tj
T*
( Speechless still, and never cry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on the Earl of Strafford\222 \(1647\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.75456 Tm
( Had Cain been Scot, God would have changed his doom)Tj
T*
( Nor forced him wander, but confined him home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221The Rebel Scot\222 \(1647\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 135.7124 Tm
( 3.124 Lord Clive \(Robert, Baron Clive of Plassey\) 1725-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( By God, Mr Chairman, at this moment I stand astonished at my own mod\
eration!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(Reply during Parliamentary cross-examination, 1773, in G. R. Gleig \221T\
he Life of Robert, First Lord )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Clive\222 \(1848\) p. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( I feel that I am reserved for some end or other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(When his pistol failed to go off twice, while attempting to commit suici\
de, in G. R. Gleig \221The Life of Robert, )Tj
ET
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(First Lord Clive\222 \(1848\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 3.125 Arthur Hugh Clough 1819-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rome, believe me, my friend, is like its own Monte Testaceo,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Merely a marvellous mass of broken and castaway wine-pots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 1, pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( The horrible pleasure of pleasing inferior people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 1, pt. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( Am I prepared to lay down my life for the British female?)Tj
T*
( Really, who knows? ...)Tj
T*
( Ah, for a child in the street I could strike; for the full-blown lad\
y\227)Tj
T*
( Somehow, Eustace, alas! I have not felt the vocation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 2, pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( I do not like being moved: for the will is excited; and action)Tj
T*
( Is a most dangerous thing: I tremble for something factitious,)Tj
T*
( Some malpractice of heart and illegitimate process;)Tj
T*
( We are so prone to these things with our terrible notions of duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 2, pt. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( But for his funeral train which the bridegroom sees in the distance,\
)Tj
T*
( Would he so joyfully, think you, fall in with the marriage-processio\
n?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 3, pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( Allah is great, no doubt, and Juxtaposition his prophet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 3, pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Mild monastic faces in quiet collegiate cloisters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 3, pt. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Whither depart the souls of the brave that die in the battle,)Tj
T*
( Die in the lost, lost fight, for the cause that perishes with them?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Amours de Voyage\222 \(1858\) canto 5, pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Sesquipedalian blackguard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich\222 \(1848\) pt. 2, l. 223)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Good, too, Logic, of course; in itself, but not in fine weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich\222 \(1848\) pt. 2, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Grace is given of God, but knowledge is bought in the market.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich\222 \(1848\) pt. 4, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Afloat. We move: Delicious! Ah,)Tj
T*
( What else is like the gondola?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( This world is bad enough may-be;)Tj
T*
( We do not comprehend it;)Tj
T*
( But in one fact can all agree)Tj
ET
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( God won\222t, and we can\222t mend it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I drive through the street, and I care not a d-mn;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The people they stare, and they ask who I am;)Tj
T*
( And if I should chance to run over a cad,)Tj
T*
( I can pay for the damage if ever so bad.)Tj
T*
( So pleasant it is to have money, heigho!)Tj
T*
( So pleasant it is to have money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( They may talk as they please about what they call pelf,)Tj
T*
( And how one ought never to think of one\222s self,)Tj
T*
( And how pleasures of thought surpass eating and drinking\227)Tj
T*
( My pleasure of thought is the pleasure of thinking)Tj
T*
( How pleasant it is to have money, heigh ho!)Tj
T*
( How pleasant it is to have money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( \221There is no God,\222 the wicked saith,)Tj
T*
( \221And truly it\222s a blessing,)Tj
T*
( For what he might have done with us)Tj
T*
( It\222s better only guessing.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( And almost every one when age,)Tj
T*
( Disease, or sorrows strike him,)Tj
T*
( Inclines to think there is a God,)Tj
T*
( Or something very like Him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Dipsychus\222 \(1865\) sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Thou shalt have one God only; who)Tj
T*
( Would be at the expense of two?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Latest Decalogue\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Thou shalt not kill; but need\222st not strive)Tj
T*
( Officiously to keep alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221The Latest Decalogue\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Do not adultery commit;)Tj
T*
( Advantage rarely comes of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221The Latest Decalogue\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Thou shalt not steal; an empty feat,)Tj
T*
( When it\222s so lucrative to cheat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Latest Decalogue\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Thou shalt not covet; but tradition)Tj
T*
( Approves all forms of competition.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Latest Decalogue\222 \(1862\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \222Tis better to have fought and lost,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Than never to have fought at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Peschiera\222 \(1854\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( As ships, becalmed at eve, that lay)Tj
T*
( With canvas drooping, side by side,)Tj
T*
( Two towers of sail at dawn of day)Tj
T*
( Are scarce long leagues apart descried.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Qua Curam Ventus\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Say not the struggle naught availeth,)Tj
T*
( The labour and the wounds are vain,)Tj
T*
( The enemy faints not, nor faileth,)Tj
T*
( And as things have been, things remain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Say not the struggle naught availeth\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( If hopes were dupes, fears may be liars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Say not the struggle naught availeth\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly,)Tj
T*
( But westward, look, the land is bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Say not the struggle naught availeth\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( What shall we do without you? Think where we are. Carlyle has led us\
all out into the desert, )Tj
T*
(and he has left us there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(Parting words to Ralph Waldo Emerson, 15 July 1848, in David Williams \221\
Too Quick Despairer\222 \(1969\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 340.4624 Tm
( 3.126 William Cobbett 1762-1835)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Resolve to free yourselves from the slavery of the tea and coffee an\
d other slop-kettle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Advice to Young Men\222 \(1829\) letter 1, sect. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( Nouns of number, or multitude, such as Mob, Parliament, Rabble, Hous\
e of Commons, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Regiment, Court of King\222s Bench, Den of Thieves, and the like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221English Grammar\222 \(1817\) letter 17 \221Syntax as Relating to Pro\
nouns\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( From a very early age, I had imbibed the opinion, that it was every \
man\222s duty to do all that lay )Tj
T*
(in his power to leave his country as good as he had found it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221Political Register\222 22 December 1832)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( But what is to be the fate of the great wen of all? The monster, cal\
led...\222the metropolis of the )Tj
T*
(empire\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Rural Rides\222 \(1830\) referring to London)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 106.4624 Tm
( 3.127 Alison Cockburn \(n\350e Rutherford\) 1713-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222ve seen the smiling of Fortune beguiling,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I\222ve felt all its favours and found its decay;)Tj
T*
( Sweet was its blessing, kind its caressing,)Tj
ET
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( But now it is fled, fled far, far away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Flowers of the Forest\222 \(1765\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O fickle Fortune, why this cruel sporting?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Why thus torment us poor sons of day?)Tj
T*
( Nae mair your smiles can cheer me, nae mair your frowns can fear me,\
)Tj
T*
( For the flowers of the forest are a\222 wade away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Flowers of the Forest\222 \(1765\); wade weeded \(often quoted \221\
For the flowers of the forest are withered )Tj
T*
(away\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 3.128 Claud Cockburn 1904\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Small earthquake in Chile. Not many dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(Winning entry in a \221dullest headline\222 competition at The Times, in\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.4624 Tm
( 3.129 Jean Cocteau 1889-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Le tact dans l\222audace c\222est de savoir jusqu\222o\373 on peut a\
ller trop loin.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Being tactful in audacity is knowing how far one can go too far.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(\221Le Rappel \341 l\222ordre\222 \(1926\) \221Le Coq et l\222Arlequin\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 449.25456 Tm
( Le pire drame pour un po\351te, c\222est d\222\352tre admir\350 par \
malentendu.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The worst tragedy for a poet is to be admired through being misunder\
stood.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Le Rappel \341 l\222ordre\222 \(1926\) \221Le Coq et l\222Arlequin\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( S\222il faut choisir un crucifi\350, la foule sauve toujours Barabba\
s.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( If it has to choose who is to be crucified, the crowd will always sa\
ve Barabbas.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Le Rappel \341 l\222ordre\222 \(1926\) \221Le Coq et l\222Arlequin\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( L\222Histoire est un alliage de r\350el et de mensonge. Le r\350el d\
e l\222Histoire devient un mensonge. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(L\222irr\350el de la fable devient v\350rit\350 .)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( History is a combination of reality and lies. The reality of History\
becomes a lie. The unreality )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the fable becomes the truth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.67047 Tm
(\221Journal d\222un inconnu\222 \(1953\) p. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.75456 Tm
( Vivre est une chute horizontale.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Life is a horizontal fall.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(\221Opium\222 \(1930\) p. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( Victor Hugo \350tait un fou qui se croyait Victor Hugo.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Victor Hugo was a madman who thought he was Victor Hugo.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Opium\222 \(1930\) p. 77)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 109.4624 Tm
( 3.130 George M. Cohan 1878-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Give my regards to Broadway,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Remember me to Herald Square,)Tj
T*
( Tell all the gang at Forty-Second Street)Tj
ET
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( That I will soon be there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Give My Regards to Broadway\222 \(1904 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I\222m a Yankee Doodle Dandy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A Yankee Doodle, do or die;)Tj
T*
( A real live nephew of my Uncle Sam\222s,)Tj
T*
( Born on the fourth of July.)Tj
T*
( I\222ve got a Yankee Doodle sweetheart,)Tj
T*
( She\222s my Yankee Doodle joy.)Tj
T*
( Yankee Doodle came to London,)Tj
T*
( Just to ride the ponies;)Tj
T*
( I am the Yankee Doodle Boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Yankee Doodle Boy\222 \(1904 song\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.2124 Tm
( 3.131 Sir Aston Cokayne 1608-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sydney, whom we yet admire)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lighting our little torches at his fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.67047 Tm
(Funeral Elegies, no. 1 \221On the Death of my very good Friend Mr Michae\
l Drayton\222 \(1658\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 436.4624 Tm
( 3.132 Desmond Coke 1879-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( His blade struck the water a full second before any other: the lad h\
ad started well. Nor did he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(flag as the race wore on...as the boats began to near the winning-post, \
his oar was dipping into the )Tj
T*
(water nearly twice as often as any other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(\221Sandford of Merton\222 \(1903\) ch. 12 \(often quoted \221All rowed \
fast, but none so fast as stroke\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 330.7124 Tm
( 3.133 Sir Edward Coke 1552-1634)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How long soever it hath continued, if it be against reason, it is of\
no force in law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.17047 Tm
(\221The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England\222 \(1628\)\
bk. 1, ch. 10, sect. 80, p. 62 recto)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.25456 Tm
( Reason is the life of the law, nay the common law itself is nothing \
else but reason...The law, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which is the perfection of reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.42047 Tm
(\221The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England\222 \(1628\)\
bk. 2, ch. 6, sect. 138, p. 97 verso)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.50456 Tm
( The gladsome light of Jurisprudence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.67047 Tm
(\221The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England\222 \(1628\)\
\221Epilogus\222 last line)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.75456 Tm
( For a man\222s house is his castle, et domus sua cuique est tutissim\
um refugium [and each man\222s )Tj
T*
(home is his safest refuge].)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.92047 Tm
(\221The Third Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England\222 \(1628\)\
ch. 73, p. 162)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.00456 Tm
( Six hours in sleep, in law\222s grave study six,)Tj
T*
( Four spend in prayer, the rest on Nature fix.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(Translation of a quotation taken by Coke from Justinian \221The Pandects\
\222 \(or \221Digest\222\) bk. 2, ch. 4 \221De in Jus )Tj
T*
(Vocando\222.)Tj
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( They [corporations] cannot commit treason, nor be outlawed, nor exco\
mmunicate, for they )Tj
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(have no souls.)Tj
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(\221The Reports of Sir Edward Coke\222 \(1658\) vol. 5, pt. 10 \221The c\
ase of Sutton\222s Hospital\222 p. 32 verso)Tj
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( Magna Charta is such a fellow, that he will have no sovereign.)Tj
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(On the Lords\222 Amendment to the Petition of Right, 17 May 1628 in J. R\
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(Collections\222 \(1659\) vol. 1, p. 562)Tj
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( 3.134 Hartley Coleridge 1796-1849)Tj
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( But what is Freedom? Rightly understood,)Tj
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( A universal licence to be good.)Tj
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(\221Liberty\222 \(1833\))Tj
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( She is not fair to outward view)Tj
T*
( As many maidens be;)Tj
T*
( Her loveliness I never knew)Tj
T*
( Until she smiled on me.)Tj
T*
( Oh! then I saw her eye was bright,)Tj
T*
( A well of love, a spring of light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.17047 Tm
(\221She is not fair\222 \(1833\))Tj
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( 3.135 Lord Coleridge 1820-94)Tj
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( I speak not of this college or of that, but of the University as a w\
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(whole Oxford is!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.42047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 2\
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( 3.136 Mary Coleridge 1861-1907)Tj
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( Egypt\222s might is tumbled down)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Down a-down the deeps of thought;)Tj
T*
( Greece is fallen and Troy town,)Tj
T*
( Glorious Rome hath lost her crown,)Tj
T*
( Venice\222 pride is nought.)Tj
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T*
( Shadowy as the shadows seemed)Tj
T*
( Airy nothing, as they deemed,)Tj
T*
( These remain.)Tj
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(\221Egypt\222s might is tumbled down\222 \(1908\))Tj
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( 3.137 Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772-1834)Tj
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( It is an ancient Mariner,)Tj
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( And he stoppeth one of three.)Tj
T*
( \221By thy long grey beard and glittering eye,)Tj
T*
( Now wherefore stopp\222st thou me?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 1)Tj
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( He holds him with his glittering eye\227)Tj
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( The Wedding-Guest stood still,)Tj
T*
( And listens like a three years\222 child:)Tj
T*
( The Mariner hath his will.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( The Wedding-Guest sat on a stone:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He cannot choose but hear;)Tj
T*
( And thus spake on that ancient man,)Tj
T*
( The bright-eyed Mariner.)Tj
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(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 1)Tj
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( The Wedding-Guest here beat his breast,)Tj
T*
( For he heard the loud bassoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 547.92047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.00456 Tm
( And ice, mast-high, came floating by,)Tj
T*
( As green as emerald.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 493.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 472.25456 Tm
( \221God save thee, ancient Mariner!)Tj
T*
( From the fiends that plague thee thus!\227)Tj
T*
( Why look\222st thou so?\222\227With my cross-bow)Tj
T*
( I shot the Albatross.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 402.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 381.50456 Tm
( Nor dim nor red, like God\222s own head,)Tj
T*
( The glorious Sun uprist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 326.75456 Tm
( We were the first that ever burst)Tj
T*
( Into that silent sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.92047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.00456 Tm
( As idle as a painted ship)Tj
T*
( Upon a painted ocean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.25456 Tm
( Water, water, everywhere,)Tj
T*
( And all the boards did shrink;)Tj
T*
( Water, water, everywhere,)Tj
T*
( Nor any drop to drink.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( The very deep did rot: O Christ!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That ever this should be!)Tj
T*
( Yes, slimy things did crawl with legs)Tj
T*
( Upon the slimy sea.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.75456 Tm
( Her lips were red, save her looks were free,)Tj
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( Her locks were yellow as gold:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her skin was white as leprosy,)Tj
T*
( The Night-mare life-in-death was she,)Tj
T*
( Who thicks man\222s blood with cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( The Sun\222s rim dips; the stars rush out;)Tj
T*
( At one stride comes the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( We listened and looked sideways up!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The horn\351d Moon, with one bright star)Tj
T*
( Within the nether tip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( \221I fear thee, ancient Mariner!)Tj
T*
( I fear thy skinny hand!)Tj
T*
( And thou art long, and lank, and brown,)Tj
T*
( As is the ribbed sea-sand.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Alone, alone, all, all alone,)Tj
T*
( Alone on a wide wide sea!)Tj
T*
( And never a saint took pity on)Tj
T*
( My soul in agony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( And a thousand thousand slimy things)Tj
T*
( Lived on; and so did I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( A spring of love gushed from my heart,)Tj
T*
( And I blessed them unaware.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Oh Sleep! it is a gentle thing,)Tj
T*
( Beloved from pole to pole,)Tj
T*
( To Mary Queen the praise be given!)Tj
T*
( She sent the gentle sleep from Heaven,)Tj
T*
( That slid into my soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Sure I had drunken in my dreams,)Tj
T*
( And still my body drank.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( We were a ghastly crew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 5)Tj
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( It ceased; yet still the sails made on)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A pleasant noise till noon,)Tj
T*
( A noise like of a hidden brook)Tj
T*
( In the leafy month of June,)Tj
T*
( That to the sleeping woods all night)Tj
T*
( Singeth a quiet tune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Like one, that on a lonesome road)Tj
T*
( Doth walk in fear and dread,)Tj
T*
( And having once turned round walks on,)Tj
T*
( And turns no more his head;)Tj
T*
( Because he knows, a frightful fiend)Tj
T*
( Doth close behind him tread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( No voice; but oh! the silence sank)Tj
T*
( Like music on my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( I pass, like night, from land to land;)Tj
T*
( I have strange power of speech.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( He prayeth well, who loveth well)Tj
T*
( Both man and bird and beast.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He prayeth best, who loveth best)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All things both great and small.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( He went like one that hath been stunned,)Tj
T*
( And is of sense forlorn:)Tj
T*
( A sadder and a wiser man,)Tj
T*
( He rose the morrow morn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221The Rime of the Ancient Mariner\222 \(1798\) pt. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Behold! her bosom and half her side\227)Tj
T*
( A sight to dream of, not to tell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Christabel\222 pt. 1 \(1797\) \(l. 252\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Alas! they had been friends in youth;)Tj
T*
( But whispering tongues can poison truth;)Tj
T*
( And constancy lives in realms above;)Tj
T*
( And life is thorny; and youth is vain;)Tj
T*
( And to be wroth with one we love)Tj
T*
( Doth work like madness in the brain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221Christabel\222 pt. 2 \(1800\) \(l. 408\))Tj
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( A little child, a limber elf,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Singing, dancing to itself,)Tj
T*
( A fairy thing with red round cheeks,)Tj
T*
( That always finds, and never seeks,)Tj
T*
( Makes such a vision to the sight)Tj
T*
( As fills a father\222s eyes with light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Christabel\222 pt. 2, conclusion \(1801\) \(l. 656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( I see them all so excellently fair,)Tj
T*
( I see, not feel, how beautiful they are!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( I may not hope from outward forms to win)Tj
T*
( The passion and the life, whose fountains are within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( O Lady! we receive but what we give,)Tj
T*
( And in our life alone does Nature live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Ah! from the soul itself must issue forth)Tj
T*
( A light, a glory, a fair luminous cloud)Tj
T*
( Enveloping the Earth\227)Tj
T*
( And from the soul itself must there be sent)Tj
T*
( A sweet and potent voice, of its own birth,)Tj
T*
( Of all sweet sounds the life and element!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( For hope grew round me, like the twining vine,)Tj
T*
( And fruits, and foliage, not my own, seemed mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( But oh! each visitation)Tj
T*
( Suspends what nature gave me at my birth,)Tj
T*
( My shaping spirit of imagination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Dejection: an Ode\222 \(1802\) st. 6.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( And the Devil did grin, for his darling sin)Tj
T*
( Is pride that apes humility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Thoughts\222 \(1799\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Oh! the one life within us and abroad,)Tj
T*
( Which meets all motion and becomes its soul,)Tj
T*
( A light in sound, a sound-like power in light,)Tj
T*
( Rhythm in all thought, and joyance everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Eolian Harp\222 \(1796\) l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( And what if all animated nature)Tj
T*
( Be but organic harps diversely framed,)Tj
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( That tremble into thought, as o\222er them sweeps,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Plastic and vast, one intellectual breeze,)Tj
T*
( At once the soul of each, and god of all?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Eolian Harp\222 \(1796\) l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( What is an Epigram? a dwarfish whole,)Tj
T*
( Its body brevity, and wit its soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Epigram\222 \(1802\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( O, life one thought in prayer for S. T. C.;)Tj
T*
( That he who many a year with toil of breath)Tj
T*
( Found death in life, may here find life in death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph for Himself\222 \(1834\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Ere sin could blight or sorrow fade,)Tj
T*
( Death came with friendly care:)Tj
T*
( The opening bud to Heaven conveyed)Tj
T*
( And bade it blossom there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on an Infant\222 \(1794\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Forth from his dark and lonely hiding-place)Tj
T*
( \(Portentous sight!\) the owlet Atheism,)Tj
T*
( Sailing on obscene wings athwart the noon,)Tj
T*
( Drops his blue-fring\351d lids, and holds them close,)Tj
T*
( And hooting at the glorious sun in Heaven,)Tj
T*
( Cries out, \221Where is it?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Fears in Solitude\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( The frost performs its secret ministry,)Tj
T*
( Unhelped by any wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Frost at Midnight\222 \(1798\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Sea, and hill, and wood,)Tj
T*
( With all the numberless goings-on of life,)Tj
T*
( Inaudible as dreams!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Frost at Midnight\222 \(1798\) l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Only that film, which fluttered on the grate,)Tj
T*
( Still flutters there, the sole unquiet thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Frost at Midnight\222 \(1798\) l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Whether the eave-drops fall)Tj
T*
( Heard only in the trances of the blast,)Tj
T*
( Or if the secret ministry of frost)Tj
T*
( Shall hang them up in silent icicles,)Tj
T*
( Quietly shining to the quiet moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Frost at Midnight\222 \(1798\) l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( O struggling with the darkness all the night,)Tj
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( And visited all night by troops of stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hymn before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni\222 \(1809\) l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( On awaking he...instantly and eagerly wrote down the lines that are \
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(moment he was unfortunately called out by a person on business from Porl\
ock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(written 1798, published 1816\) preliminary note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( In Xanadu did Kubla Khan)Tj
T*
( A stately pleasure-dome decree:)Tj
T*
( Where Alph, the sacred river, ran)Tj
T*
( Through caverns measureless to man)Tj
T*
( Down to a sunless sea.)Tj
T*
( So twice five miles of fertile ground)Tj
T*
( With walls and towers were girdled round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( A savage place! as holy and enchanted)Tj
T*
( As e\222er beneath a waning moon was haunted)Tj
T*
( By woman wailing for her demon-lover!)Tj
T*
( And from this chasm, with ceaseless turmoil seething,)Tj
T*
( As if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing,)Tj
T*
( A mighty fountain momently was forced.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( It was a miracle of rare device,)Tj
T*
( A sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( And \222mid this tumult Kubla heard from far)Tj
T*
( Ancestral voices prophesying war!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( A damsel with a dulcimer)Tj
T*
( In a vision once I saw:)Tj
T*
( It was an Abyssinian maid,)Tj
T*
( And on her dulcimer she played,)Tj
T*
( Singing of Mount Abora.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( And all who heard should see them there,)Tj
T*
( And all should cry, Beware! Beware!)Tj
T*
( His flashing eyes, his floating hair!)Tj
T*
( Weave a circle round him thrice,)Tj
T*
( And close your eyes with holy dread,)Tj
T*
( For he on honey-dew hath fed,)Tj
T*
( And drunk the milk of Paradise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Kubla Khan\222 \(1798\))Tj
ET
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( All thoughts, all passions, all delights,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whatever stirs this mortal frame,)Tj
T*
( All are but ministers of Love,)Tj
T*
( And feed his sacred flame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( With Donne, whose muse on dromedary trots,)Tj
T*
( Wreathe iron pokers into true-love knots.)Tj
T*
( Rhyme\222s sturdy cripple, fancy\222s maze and clue,)Tj
T*
( Wit\222s forge and fire-blast, meaning\222s press and screw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221On Donne\222s Poetry\222 \(1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( But still the heart doth need a language, still)Tj
T*
( Doth the old instinct bring back the old names.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Piccolomini\222 \(1800\) act 2, sc. 4 \(translated from the Germ\
an of Friedrich von Schiller\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( So for the mother\222s sake the child was dear,)Tj
T*
( And dearer was the mother for the child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnet to a Friend Who Asked How I Felt When the Nurse First Present\
ed My Infant to Me\222 \(1797\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Well, they are gone, and here must I remain,)Tj
T*
( This lime-tree bower my prison!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison\222 \(1797\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( When the last rook)Tj
T*
( Beat its straight path along the dusky air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison\222 \(1797\) l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( \221Alas!\222 said she, \221we ne\222er can be)Tj
T*
( Made happy by compulsion!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Three Graves\222 \(1798\) pt. 4, st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Lingering he raised his latch at eve,)Tj
T*
( Though tired in heart and limb:)Tj
T*
( He loved no other place, and yet)Tj
T*
( Home was no home to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Three Graves\222 \(1798\) pt. 4, st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Work without hope draws nectar in a sieve,)Tj
T*
( And hope without an object cannot live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Work Without Hope\222 \(1825\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( Like some poor nigh-related guest,)Tj
T*
( That may not rudely be dismist;)Tj
T*
( Yet hath outstayed his welcome while,)Tj
T*
( And tells the jest without the smile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Youth and Age\222 \(1832\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( He who begins by loving Christianity better than Truth will proceed \
by loving his own sect or )Tj
T*
(church better than Christianity, and end by loving himself better than a\
ll.)Tj
ET
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(\221Aids to Reflection\222 \(1825\) \221Moral and Religious Aphorisms\222\
no. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Until you understand a writer\222s ignorance, presume yourself ignor\
ant of his understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Biographia Literaria\222 \(1817\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The primary imagination I hold to be the living Power and prime Agen\
t of all human )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Perception, and as a repetition in the finite mind of the eternal act of\
creation in the infinite I am.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Biographia Literaria\222 \(1817\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( That willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitut\
es poetic faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Biographia Literaria\222 \(1817\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Our myriad-minded Shakespeare. Footnote. a phrase which I have borro\
wed from a Greek )Tj
T*
(monk, who applies it to a Patriarch of Constantinople.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Biographia Literaria\222 \(1817\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( The dwarf sees farther than the giant, when he has the giant\222s sh\
oulder to mount on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221The Friend\222 \(1818\) vol. 2 \221On the Principles of Political Kn\
owledge\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( Iago\222s soliloquy\227the motive-hunting of motiveless malignity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge\222 \(1836\) bk. 2 \221\
Notes on the Tragedies of Shakespeare: )Tj
T*
(Othello\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Reviewers are usually people who would have been poets, historians, \
biographers, &c., if they )Tj
T*
(could; they have tried their talents at one or at the other, and have fa\
iled; therefore they turn )Tj
T*
(critics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton\222 \(delivered 1811-12, pu\
blished 1856\) lecture 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( You abuse snuff! Perhaps it is the final cause of the human nose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 4 January 1823)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( To see him act, is like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 27 April 1823 \(on Edmund Kean\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Prose = words in their best order;\227poetry = the best words in the\
best order.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 12 July 1827)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( The man\222s desire is for the woman; but the woman\222s desire is r\
arely other than for the desire of )Tj
T*
(the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 23 July 1827)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Poetry is certainly something more than good sense, but it must be g\
ood sense at all events; )Tj
T*
(just as a palace is more than a house, but it must be a house, at least.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 9 May 1830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Swift was anima Rabelaisii habitans in sicco\227the soul of Rabelais\
dwelling in a dry place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 15 June 1830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( In politics, what begins in fear usually ends in folly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 5 October 1830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( That passage is what I call the sublime dashed to pieces by cutting \
too close with the fiery four-)Tj
T*
(in-hand round the corner of nonsense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 20 January 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( Shakespeare...is of no age\227nor of any religion, or party or profe\
ssion. The body and substance )Tj
ET
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(of his works came out of the unfathomable depths of his own oceanic mind\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 15 March 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Bygone images and scenes of early life have stolen into my mind, lik\
e breezes from the spice-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(islands of Youth and Hope\227those twin realities of this phantom world!\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1835\) 10 July 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But\
passion and party blind )Tj
T*
(our eyes, and the light which experience gives is a lantern on the stern\
, which shines only on the )Tj
T*
(waves behind us!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(In Thomas Allsop \221Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of S. T. \
Coleridge\222 \(18 December 1831\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Summer has set in with its usual severity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Quoted in a letter from Charles Lamb to V. Novello, 9 May 1826)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.7124 Tm
( 3.138 Colette \(Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette\) 1873-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Le monde des \350motions qu\222on nomme, \341 la l\350g\351re, physi\
ques.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The world of the emotions that are so lightly called physical.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Le Bl\350 en herbe\222 \(1923\) p. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Life as a child and then as a girl had taught her patience, hope, si\
lence; and given her a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(prisoner\222s proficiency in handling these virtues as weapons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Ch\350ri\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Let\222s go out and buy playing-cards, good wine, bridge-scorers, kn\
itting needles\227all the )Tj
T*
(paraphernalia to fill a gaping void, all that\222s required to disguise \
that monster, an old woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Ch\350ri\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( If one wished to be perfectly sincere, one would have to admit there\
are two kinds of love\227)Tj
T*
(well-fed and ill-fed. The rest is pure fiction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221La Fin de Ch\350ri\222 \(1926\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.9624 Tm
( 3.139 Mary Collier c.1690-c.1762)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( So the industrious bees do hourly strive)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To bring their loads of honey to the hive;)Tj
T*
( Their sordid owners always reap the gains,)Tj
T*
( And poorly recompense their toils and pains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221The Woman\222s Labour\222 \(1739\) p. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( Though we all day with care our work attend,)Tj
T*
( Such is our fate, we know when \222twill end.)Tj
T*
( When evening\222s come, you homeward take your way.)Tj
T*
( We, till our work is done, are forced to stay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Woman\222s Labour\222 \(1739\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( The greatest heroes that the world can know,)Tj
T*
( To women their original must owe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221The Three Wise Sentences, from the First Book of Esdras\222 \(1740\)\
l. 132)Tj
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( 3.140 William Collingbourne d. 1484)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Cat, the Rat, and Lovell our dog)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Rule all England under a hog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 690.17047 Tm
(Referring to Sir William Catesby \(d. 1485\), Sir Richard Ratcliffe \(d.\
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T*
(whose crest was a dog, and King Richard III, whose emblem was a wild boa\
r. Collingbourne was executed on )Tj
T*
(Tower Hill. Robert Fabyan \221The Concordance of Chronicles\222 \(ed. H.\
Ellis, 1811\) p. 672)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 627.9624 Tm
( 3.141 Admiral Collingwood \(Cubert, Baron Collingwood\) 1748-1810)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now, gentlemen, let us do something today which the world may talk o\
f hereafter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(Said before the Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805, in G. L. Newnham C\
ollingwood \(ed.\) \221A Selection )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(from the Correspondence of Lord Collingwood\222 \(1828\) vol. 1, p. 168)Tj
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( 3.142 R. G. Collingwood 1889-1943)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Perfect freedom is reserved for the man who lives by his own work an\
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0 -1.2 TD
(he wants to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.67047 Tm
(\221Speculum Mentis\222 \(1924\) p. 25.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 455.4624 Tm
( 3.143 Charles Collins and Fred W. Leigh)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My old man said, \221Follow the van,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Don\222t dilly-dally on the way!\222)Tj
T*
( Off went the cart with the home packed in it,)Tj
T*
( I walked behind with my old cock linnet.)Tj
T*
( But I dillied and dallied, dallied and dillied,)Tj
T*
( Lost the van and don\222t know where to roam.)Tj
T*
( You can\222t trust the \221specials\222 like the old time \221copper\
s\222)Tj
T*
( When you can\222t find your way home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.92047 Tm
(\221Don\222t Dilly-Dally on the Way\222 \(1919 song, popularized by Mari\
e Lloyd\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 259.7124 Tm
( 3.144 Charles Collins and Fred Murray)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Boiled beef and carrots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1910, popularized by Harry Champion\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 189.9624 Tm
( 3.145 Charles Collins, E. A. Sheppard, and Fred Terry)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Any old iron, any old iron,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Any any old old iron?)Tj
T*
( You look neat)Tj
T*
( Talk about a treat,)Tj
T*
( You look dapper from your napper to your feet.)Tj
T*
( Dressed in style, brand new tile,)Tj
T*
( And your father\222s old green tie on,)Tj
T*
( But I wouldn\222t give you tuppence for your old watch chain;)Tj
ET
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( Old iron, old iron?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Any Old Iron\222 \(1911 song, popularized by Harry Champion; the sec\
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0 -1.2 TD
(iron?\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 689.9624 Tm
( 3.146 Churton Collins \(John Churton Collins\) 1848-1908)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To ask advice is in nine cases out of ten to tout for flattery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 652.42047 Tm
(In L. C. Collins \221Life of John Churton Collins\222 \(1912\) p. 316)Tj
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( 3.147 Michael Collins 1890-1922)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Think\227what I have got for Ireland? Something which she has wanted\
these past seven )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hundred years. Will anyone be satisfied at the bargain? Will anyone? I \
tell you this\227early this )Tj
T*
(morning I signed my death warrant. I thought at the time how odd, how ri\
diculous\227a bullet may )Tj
T*
(just as well have done the job five years ago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 528.67047 Tm
(Letter, 6 December 1921, in T. R. Dwyer \221Michael Collins and the Trea\
ty\222 \(1981\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 496.4624 Tm
( 3.148 William Collins 1721-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To fair Fidele\222s grassy tomb)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Soft maids and village hinds shall bring)Tj
T*
( Each opening sweet of earliest bloom,)Tj
T*
( And rifle all the breathing spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.92047 Tm
(\221Dirge\222 \(1744\) from Shakespeare\222s \221Cymbeline\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.00456 Tm
( Now air is hushed, save where the weak-eyed bat,)Tj
T*
( With short shrill shriek flits by on leathern wing,)Tj
T*
( Or where the beetle winds)Tj
T*
( His small but sullen horn,)Tj
T*
( As oft he rises \222midst the twilight path,)Tj
T*
( Against the pilgrim borne in heedless hum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to Evening\222 \(1747\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.25456 Tm
( How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,)Tj
T*
( By all their country\222s wishes blest!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.42047 Tm
(\221Ode Written in the Year 1746\222 \(1748\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.50456 Tm
( By fairy hands their knell is rung,)Tj
T*
( By forms unseen their dirge is sung.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(\221Ode Written in the Year 1746\222 \(1748\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( With eyes up-raised, as one inspired,)Tj
T*
( Pale Melancholy sate retired,)Tj
T*
( And from her wild sequestered seat,)Tj
T*
( In notes by distance made more sweet,)Tj
T*
( Poured thro\222 the mellow horn her pensive soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221The Passions, an Ode for Music\222 \(1747\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( Love of peace, and lonely musing,)Tj
ET
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( In hollow murmurs died away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221The Passions, an Ode for Music\222 \(1747\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( Too nicely Jonson knew the critic\222s part,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nature in him was almost lost in Art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221Verses addressed to Sir Thomas Hanmer\222 \(1743\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 648.2124 Tm
( 3.149 George Colman the Elder 1732-94, and David Garrick 1717-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love and a cottage! Eh, Fanny! Ah, give me indifference and a coach \
and six!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.67047 Tm
(\221The Clandestine Marriage\222 \(1766\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 578.4624 Tm
( 3.150 George Colman the Younger 1762-1836)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Oh, London is a fine town,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A very famous city,)Tj
T*
( Where all the streets are paved with gold,)Tj
T*
( And all the maidens pretty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.92047 Tm
(\221The Heir at Law\222 \(performed 1797, published 1808\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.00456 Tm
( Says he, \221I am a handsome man, but I\222m a gay deceiver.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.17047 Tm
(\221Love Laughs at Locksmiths\222 \(1808\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.25456 Tm
( Johnson\222s style was grand and Gibbon\222s elegant; the statelines\
s of the former was sometimes )Tj
T*
(pedantic, and the polish of the latter was occasionally finical. Johnson\
marched to kettle-drums )Tj
T*
(and trumpets; Gibbon moved to flute and hautboys: Johnson hewed passages\
through the Alps, )Tj
T*
(while Gibbon levelled walks through parks and gardens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.42047 Tm
(\221Random Records\222 \(1830\) vol. 1, p. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.50456 Tm
( My father was an eminent button maker\227but I had a soul above butt\
ons\227I panted for a liberal )Tj
T*
(profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.67047 Tm
(\221Sylvester Daggerwood\222 \(1795\) act 1, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.75456 Tm
( As the lone Angler, patient man,)Tj
T*
( At Mewry-Water, or the Banne,)Tj
T*
( Leaves off, against his placid wish,)Tj
T*
( Impaling worms to torture fish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.92047 Tm
(\221The Lady of the Wreck\222 \(1813\) canto 2, st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.00456 Tm
( And, on the label of the stuff,)Tj
T*
( He wrote this verse;)Tj
T*
( Which one would think was clear enough,)Tj
T*
( And terse:\227)Tj
T*
( When taken,)Tj
T*
( To be well shaken.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.17047 Tm
(\221The Newcastle Apothecary\222 \(1797\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 54.9624 Tm
( 3.151 Charles Caleb Colton c.1780-1832)Tj
ET
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( When you have nothing to say, say nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Lacon\222 \(1820\) vol. 1, no. 183)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Examinations are formidable even to the best prepared, for the great\
est fool may ask more than )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the wisest man can answer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Lacon\222 \(1820\) vol. 1, no. 322)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( If you would be known, and not know, vegetate in a village; if you w\
ould know, and not be )Tj
T*
(known, live in a city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Lacon\222 \(1820\) vol. 1, no. 334)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Man is an embodied paradox, a bundle of contradictions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Lacon\222 \(1820\) vol. 1, no. 408)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 3.152 Betty Comden 1919-and Adolph Green 1915\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( New York, New York,\227a helluva town,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Bronx is up but the Battery\222s down,)Tj
T*
( And people ride in a hole in the ground:)Tj
T*
( New York, New York,\227It\222s a helluva town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221New York, New York\222 \(1945 song; music by Leonard Bernstein\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( The party\222s over.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1956; music by Jule Styne\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.2124 Tm
( 3.153 Dame Ivy Compton-Burnett 1884-1969)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Time has too much credit...It is not a great healer. It is an indiff\
erent and perfunctory one. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Sometimes it does not heal at all. And somtimes when it seems to, no hea\
ling has been necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(\221Darkness and Day\222 \(1951\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( \221Well, of course, people are only human...But it really does not \
seem much for them to be.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221A Family and a Fortune\222 \(1939\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( People don\222t resent having nothing nearly as much as too little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221A Family and a Fortune\222 \(1939\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( \221The more we ask, the more we have. And, it is fair enough: askin\
g is not always easy.\222 \221And it )Tj
T*
(is said to be hard to accept...So no wonder we have so little.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221The Mighty and their Fall\222 \(1961\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( There are different kinds of wrong. The people sinned against are no\
t always the best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 177.67047 Tm
(\221The Mighty and their Fall\222 \(1961\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( We must use words as they are used or stand aside from life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221Mother and Son\222 \(1955\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 108.7124 Tm
( 3.154 Auguste Comte 1798-1857)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( M. Comte used to reproach his early English admirers with maintainin\
g the)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221conspiracy of silence\222 concerning his later performances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(In J. S. Mill \221Auguste Comte and Positivism\222 \(1865\) p. 199)Tj
ET
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( 3.155 Prince de Cond\350 1621-86)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Silence! Voil\341 l\222ennemi!)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hush! Here comes the enemy!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 691.67047 Tm
(As Bourdaloue mounted the pulpit at St Sulpice, in P. M. Lauras \221Bour\
dalou: sa vie et ses oeuvres\222 \(1881\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vol. 2, p. 72)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 644.4624 Tm
( 3.156 William Congreve 1670-1729)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is the business of a comic poet to paint the vices and follies of\
human kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.92047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) epistle dedicatory)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.00456 Tm
( Retired to their tea and scandal, according to their ancient custom.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( There is nothing more unbecoming a man of quality than to laugh; Jes\
u,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \222tis such a vulgar expression of the passion!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.42047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 1, sc. 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.50456 Tm
( Tho\222 marriage makes man and wife one flesh, it leaves \222em stil\
l two fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.67047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.75456 Tm
( She lays it on with a trowel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.92047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 3, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 421.00456 Tm
( See how love and murder will out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.17047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 4, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.25456 Tm
( No mask like open truth to cover lies, As to go naked is the best di\
sguise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(\221The Double Dealer\222 \(1694\) act 5, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.50456 Tm
( I am always of the opinion with the learned, if they speak first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(\221Incognita\222 \(1692\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.75456 Tm
( Has he not a rogue\222s face?...a hanging-look to me...has a damned)Tj
T*
( Tyburn-face, without the benefit o\222 the Clergy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.92047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 2, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.00456 Tm
( I came upstairs into the world; for I was born in a cellar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 2, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.25456 Tm
( I know that\222s a secret, for it\222s whispered every where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.42047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.50456 Tm
( He that first cries out stop thief, is often he that has stolen the \
treasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.67047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 3, sc. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.75456 Tm
( Women are like tricks by slight of hand, Which, to admire, we should\
not understand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.92047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 4, sc. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.00456 Tm
( A branch of one of your antediluvian families, fellows that the floo\
d could not wash away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.17047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.25456 Tm
( To find a young fellow that is neither a wit in his own eye, nor a f\
ool in the eye of the world, is )Tj
T*
(a very hard task.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.42047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
ET
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( Aye, \222tis well enough for a servant to be bred at an University. \
But the education is a little too )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pedantic for a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 713.67047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 692.75456 Tm
( Nay, for my part I always despised Mr Tattle of all things; nothing \
but his being my husband )Tj
T*
(could have made me like him less.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 658.92047 Tm
(\221Love for Love\222 \(1695\) act 5, sc. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 638.00456 Tm
( In my conscience I believe the baggage loves me, for she never speak\
s well of me herself, nor )Tj
T*
(suffers any body else to rail at me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 604.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 583.25456 Tm
( Man was by Nature Woman\222s cully made: We never are, but by ourse\
lves, betrayed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 567.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 546.50456 Tm
( Bilbo\222s the word, and slaughter will ensue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 3, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 509.75456 Tm
( If this be not love, it is madness, and then it is pardonable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 493.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 3, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 473.00456 Tm
( Eternity was in that moment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 4, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 436.25456 Tm
( Now am I slap-dash down in the mouth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 4, sc. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 399.50456 Tm
( Sharper: Thus grief still treads upon the heels of pleasure: )Tj
T*
( Married in haste, we may repent at leisure.)Tj
T*
( Setter: Some by experience find those words mis-placed: )Tj
T*
( At leisure married, they repent in haste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 5, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 308.75456 Tm
( I could find it in my heart to marry thee, purely to be rid of thee.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 5, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.00456 Tm
( Courtship to marriage, as a very witty prologue to a very dull play.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Bachelor\222 \(1693\) act 5, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.25456 Tm
( They come together like the Coroner\222s Inquest, to sit upon the mu\
rdered reputations of the )Tj
T*
(week.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.42047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.50456 Tm
( Ay, ay, I have experience: I have a wife, and so forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.67047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 143.75456 Tm
( I always take blushing either for a sign of guilt, or of ill breedin\
g.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.92047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 1, sc. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 107.00456 Tm
( Say what you will, \222tis better to be left than never to have been\
loved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 91.17047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 2, sc. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 70.25456 Tm
( Here she comes i\222 faith full sail, with her fan spread and stream\
ers out, and a shoal of fools for )Tj
T*
(tenders.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Witwoud: Madam, do you pin up your hair with all your letters? )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Millamant: Only with those in verse, Mr Witwoud. I never pin up my \
hair with prose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Beauty is the lover\222s gift.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( A little disdain is not amiss; a little scorn is alluring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 3, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( O, nothing is more alluring than a levee from a couch in some confus\
ion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Don\222t let us be familiar or fond, nor kiss before folks, like my \
Lady Fadler and Sir Francis: nor )Tj
T*
(go to Hyde-Park together the first Sunday in a new chariot, to provoke e\
yes and whispers, and )Tj
T*
(then never be seen there together again; as if we were proud of one anot\
her the first week, and )Tj
T*
(ashamed of one another ever after...Let us be very strange and well-bred\
: Let us be as strange as )Tj
T*
(if we had been married a great while, and as well-bred as if we were not\
married at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 4, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( These articles subscribed, if I continue to endure you a little long\
er, I may by degrees dwindle )Tj
T*
(into a wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 4, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( I hope you do not think me prone to any iteration of nuptials.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221The Way of the World\222 \(1700\) act 4, sc. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Careless she is with artful care,)Tj
T*
( Affecting to seem unaffected.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Amoret\222 \(1704\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Music alone with sudden charms can bind)Tj
T*
( The wand\222ring sense, and calm the troubled mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Harmony\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Music has charms to sooth a savage breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221The Mourning Bride\222 \(1697\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Heaven has no rage, like love to hatred turned, Nor Hell a fury, lik\
e a woman scorned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221The Mourning Bride\222 \(1697\) act 3, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( Is he then dead?)Tj
T*
( What, dead at last, quite, quite for ever dead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221The Mourning Bride\222 \(1697\) act 5, sc. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Would I were free from this restraint,)Tj
T*
( Or else had hopes to win her;)Tj
T*
( Would she could make of me a saint,)Tj
T*
( Or I of her a sinner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Pious Selinda Goes to Prayers\222 \(song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( For \222tis some virtue, virtue to commend.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 754.67047 Tm
(\221To Sir Godfrey Kneller\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.4624 Tm
( 3.157 James M. Connell 1852-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The people\222s flag is deepest red;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It shrouded oft our martyred dead,)Tj
T*
( And ere their limbs grew stiff and cold,)Tj
T*
( Their heart\222s blood dyed its every fold.)Tj
T*
( Then raise the scarlet standard high!)Tj
T*
( Within its shade we\222ll live or die.)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 cowards flinch and traitors sneer,)Tj
T*
( We\222ll keep the red flag flying here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.92047 Tm
(\221The Red Flag\222 \(1889\) in H. E. Piggot \221Songs that made Histor\
y\222 ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 526.7124 Tm
( 3.158 Billy Connolly 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Marriage is a wonderful invention; but, then again, so is a bicycle \
repair kit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.17047 Tm
(In Duncan Campbell \221Billy Connolly\222 \(1976\) p. 92)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 456.9624 Tm
( 3.159 Cyril Connolly 1903-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( \221I ask very little. Some fragments of Pamphilides, a Choctaw bloo\
d-mask, the prose of Scaliger )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the Elder, a painting by Fuseli, an occasional visit to the all-in wrest\
ling, or to my meretrix; a )Tj
T*
(cook who can produce a passable \221poulet \341 la Khmer\222, a Pong vas\
e. Simple tastes, you will agree, )Tj
T*
(and it is my simple habit to indulge them.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.42047 Tm
(\221The Condemned Playground\222 \221Told in Gath\222, a parody of Aldou\
s Huxley)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.50456 Tm
( Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.67047 Tm
(\221Enemies of Promise\222 \(1938\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 307.75456 Tm
( There is no more sombre enemy of good art than the pram in the hall.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.92047 Tm
(\221Enemies of Promise\222 \(1938\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.00456 Tm
( The Mandarin style...is beloved by literary pundits, by those who wo\
uld make the written word )Tj
T*
(as unlike as possible to the spoken one. It is the style of those writer\
s whose tendency is to make )Tj
T*
(their language convey more than they mean or more than they feel, it is \
the style of most artists )Tj
T*
(and all humbugs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.17047 Tm
(\221Enemies of Promise\222 \(1938\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.25456 Tm
( It is closing time in the gardens of the West and from now on an art\
ist will be judged only by )Tj
T*
(the resonance of his solitude or the quality of his despair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.42047 Tm
(\221Horizon\222 December 1949\227January 1950, p. 362)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.50456 Tm
( Life is a maze in which we take the wrong turning before we have lea\
rnt to walk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.67047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.75456 Tm
( Civilization is an active deposit which is formed by the combustion \
of the)Tj
T*
( Present with the Past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.92047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 2)Tj
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( Imprisoned in every fat man a thin one is wildly signalling to be le\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The true index of a man\222s character is the health of his wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( We are all serving a life-sentence in the dungeon of self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Peeling off the kilometres to the tune of \221Blue Skies\222, sizzli\
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0 -1.2 TD
(reaches of Nationale Sept, the plane trees going sha-sha-sha through the\
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T*
(windscreen yellowing with crushed midges, she with the Michelin beside m\
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T*
(binding her hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Our memories are card-indexes consulted, and then put back in disord\
er by authorities whom )Tj
T*
(we do not control.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Destroy him as you will, the bourgeois always bounces up\227execute \
him, expropriate him, )Tj
T*
(starve him out en masse, and he reappears in your children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 7 March 1937)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Perfect fear casteth out love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 1 December 1974, obituary notice by Philip Toynbee, \
to whom Connolly addressed the remark )Tj
T*
(during the Blitz)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 379.4624 Tm
( 3.160 James Connolly 1868-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The worker is the slave of capitalist society, the female worker is \
the slave of that slave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(\221The Re-conquest of Ireland\222 \(1915\) p. 38)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 309.7124 Tm
( 3.161 Joseph Conrad \(Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski\) 1857-1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( In plucking the fruit of memory one runs the risk of spoiling its bl\
oom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(\221The Arrow of Gold\222 \(author\222s note, 1920, to 1924 Uniform Edit\
ion\) p. viii)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.25456 Tm
( The conquest of the earth, which mostly means the taking it away fro\
m those who have a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(different complexion or slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a \
pretty thing when you look )Tj
T*
(into it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Heart of Darkness\222 \(1902\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( We live, as we dream\227alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221Heart of Darkness\222 \(1902\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.75456 Tm
( Exterminate all the brutes!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221Heart of Darkness\222 \(1902\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( The horror! The horror!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Heart of Darkness\222 \(1902\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( Mistah Kurtz\227he dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(\221Heart of Darkness\222 \(1902\) ch. 3)Tj
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( A man that is born falls into a dream like a man who falls into the \
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(submit yourself, and with the exertions of your hands and feet in the wa\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Lord Jim\222 \(1900\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( You shall judge of a man by his foes as well as by his friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Lord Jim\222 \(1900\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( My task which I am trying to achieve is by the power of the written \
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T*
(make you feel\227it is, before all, to make you see. That\227and no more\
, and it is everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Nigger of the Narcissus\222 \(1897\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Action is consolatory. It is the enemy of thought and the friend of \
flattering illusions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Nostromo\222 \(1904\) pt. 1, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( It\222s only those who do nothing that make no mistakes, I suppose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Outcast of the Islands\222 \(1896\) pt. 3, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( The terrorist and the policeman both come from the same basket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Secret Agent\222 \(1907\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( All ambitions are lawful except those which climb upwards on the mis\
eries or credulities of )Tj
T*
(mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Some Reminiscences\222 \(1912; in USA \221A Personal Record\222\) pr\
eface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Only in men\222s imagination does every truth find an effective and \
undeniable existence. )Tj
T*
(Imagination, not invention, is the supreme master of art, as of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Some Reminiscences\222 \(1912\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( The scrupulous and the just, the noble, humane, and devoted natures;\
the unselfish and the )Tj
T*
(intelligent may begin a movement\227but it passes away from them. They a\
re not the leaders of a )Tj
T*
(revolution. They are its victims.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221Under Western Eyes\222 \(1911\) pt. 2, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( A belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alon\
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T*
(wickedness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Under Western Eyes\222 \(1911\) pt. 2, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( I remember my youth and the feeling that will never come back any mo\
re\227the feeling that I )Tj
T*
(could last for ever, outlast the sea, the earth, and all men; the deceit\
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T*
(joys, to perils, to love, to vain effort\227to death; the triumphant con\
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T*
(life in the handful of dust, the glow in the heart that with every year \
grows dim, grows cold, )Tj
T*
(grows small, and expires\227and expires, too soon, too soon\227before li\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Youth\222 \(1902\) p. 41)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 103.4624 Tm
( 3.162 Shirley Conran 1932\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life is too short to stuff a mushroom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Superwoman\222 \(1975\) p. 15)Tj
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( 3.163 Henry Constable 1562-1613)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Diaphenia, like the daffadowndilly,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( White as the sun, fair as the lily.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Diaphenia\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 3.164 John Constable 1776-1837)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The sound of water escaping from mill-dams, etc., willows, old rotte\
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(Letter to John Fisher, 23 October 1821, in C. R. Leslie \221Memoirs of t\
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( There is nothing ugly; I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let\
the form of an object be )Tj
T*
(what it may,\227light, shade, and perspective will always make it beauti\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(In C. R. Leslie \221Memoirs of the Life of John Constable\222 \(1843\) c\
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15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( In Claude\222s landscape all is lovely\227all amiable\227all is amen\
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T*
(sunshine of the heart.)Tj
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(Lecture 2, 2 June 1836, of a course of lectures to the Royal Institution\
, in C. R. Leslie \221Memoirs of the Life of )Tj
T*
(John Constable\222 \(1843\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.9624 Tm
( 3.165 Benjamin Constant \(Henri Benjamin Constant de Rebecque\) 1767-18\
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/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222art pour l\222art, sans but, car tout but d\350nature l\222art.\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Art for art\222s sake, with no purpose, for any purpose perverts art\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Journal intime\222 11 February 1804, in \221Revue Internationale\222\
10 January 1887 p. 96 \(describing a )Tj
T*
(conversation with Crabb Robinson about the latter\222s work on Kant\222s\
aesthetics\).)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 328.4624 Tm
( 3.166 Constantine I, the Great \(Flavius Valerius Constantinus Augustus\
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( In hoc signo vinces.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( In this sign shalt thou conquer.)Tj
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(Traditional form of words of Constantine\222s vision \(312\), reported i\
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(bk. 1, ch. 28)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.9624 Tm
( 3.167 A. J. Cook 1885-1931)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Not a penny off the pay, not a second on the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(Referring to the miners\222 slogan in speech at York, 3 April 1926: \221\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 3.168 Dan Cook)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( The opera ain\222t over \222til the fat lady sings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(In \221Washington Post\222 3 June 1978. \221Concise Oxford Dictionary of\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 3.169 Eliza Cook 1818-89)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221A Song for the Ragged Schools\222)Tj
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( 3.170 Calvin Coolidge 1872-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Civilization and profits go hand in hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Speech in New York, 27 November 1920, in \221New York Times\222 28 Novem\
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15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( The chief business of the American people is business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Speech in Washington, 17 January 1925, in \221New York Times\222 18 Janu\
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15 0 0 15 10 627.75456 Tm
( They hired the money, didn\222t they?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.92047 Tm
(On the subject of war debts incurred by England and others \(1925\) in J\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Wisdom\222 \(1933\) p. 118)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 564.7124 Tm
( 3.171 Duff Cooper \(Viscount Norwich\) 1890-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Small, but perfectly formed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 527.17047 Tm
(Describing himself \(October 1914\) in a letter to Lady Diana Manners \(\
later his wife\): Artemis Cooper )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221Durable Fire\222 \(1983\) p. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 479.9624 Tm
( 3.172 Wendy Cope 1945\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s nice to meet serious people)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Your concern for the rights of women)Tj
T*
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( I\222m sure you\222d never exploit one;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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( I\222m thoroughly convinced of it\227)Tj
T*
( Now can we go to bed?)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221From June to December\222 \(1986\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 280.4624 Tm
( 3.173 Richard Corbet 1582-1635)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Farewell, rewards and Fairies,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Good housewives now may say,)Tj
T*
( For now foul sluts in dairies)Tj
T*
( Do fare as well as they.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Fairies\222 Farewell\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Who of late for cleanliness,)Tj
T*
( Finds sixpence in her shoe?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The Fairies\222 Farewell\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( By which we note the Fairies)Tj
T*
( Were of the old profession;)Tj
T*
( Their songs were Ave Marys,)Tj
T*
( Their dances were procession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221The Fairies\222 Farewell\222)Tj
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( I wish thee all thy mother\222s graces,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy father\222s fortunes, and his places.)Tj
T*
( I wish thee friends, and one at Court,)Tj
T*
( Not to build on, but support;)Tj
T*
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T*
( Oppressions, but from suffering any.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.67047 Tm
(\221To his Son, Vincent Corbet\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.174 Pierre Corneille 1606-84)Tj
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( A vaincre sans p\350ril, on triomphe sans gloire.)Tj
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( When there is no peril in the fight, there is no glory in the triump\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.17047 Tm
(\221Le Cid\222 \(1637\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( Faites votre devoir et laissez faire aux dieux.)Tj
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( Do your duty, and leave the outcome to the Gods.)Tj
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(\221Horace\222 \(1640\) act 2, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 475.75456 Tm
( Un premier mouvement ne fut jamais un crime.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( A first impulse was never a crime.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 438.17047 Tm
(\221Horace\222 \(1640\) act 5, sc. 3.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 405.9624 Tm
( 3.175 Bernard Cornfeld 1927\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Do you sincerely want to be rich?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(Cornfeld\222s stock question to salesmen, in Charles Raw et al. \221Do Y\
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0 -1.2 TD
(67)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 321.2124 Tm
( 3.176 Frances Cornford 1886-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whoso maintains that I am humbled now)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(Who wait the Awful Day\) is still a liar;)Tj
T*
( I hope to meet my Maker brow to brow)Tj
T*
( And find my own the higher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph for a Reviewer\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.75456 Tm
( How long ago Hector took off his plume,)Tj
T*
( Not wanting that his little son should cry,)Tj
T*
( Then kissed his sad Andromache goodbye\227)Tj
T*
( And now we three in Euston waiting-room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.92047 Tm
(\221Parting in Wartime\222 \(1948\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.00456 Tm
( O why do you walk through the fields in gloves,)Tj
T*
( Missing so much and so much?)Tj
T*
( O fat white woman whom nobody loves,)Tj
T*
( Why do you walk through the fields in gloves,)Tj
T*
( When the grass is soft as the breast of doves)Tj
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( And shivering-sweet to the touch?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O why do you walk through the fields in gloves,)Tj
T*
( Missing so much and so much?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221To a Fat Lady seen from the Train\222 \(1910\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( A young Apollo, golden-haired,)Tj
T*
( Stands dreaming on the verge of strife,)Tj
T*
( Magnificently unprepared)Tj
T*
( For the long littleness of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Youth\222 \(1910\) \(on Rupert Brooke\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 578.2124 Tm
( 3.177 Francis Macdonald Cornford 1874-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every public action, which is not customary, either is wrong, or, if\
it is right, is a dangerous )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(precedent. It follows that nothing should ever be done for the first tim\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.67047 Tm
(\221Microcosmographia Academica\222 \(1908\) p. 28)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 490.4624 Tm
( 3.178 Mme Cornuel 1605-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il n\222y a point de h\350ros pour son valet de chambre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( No man is a hero to his valet.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(In \221Lettres de Mlle A\357ss\350 \341 Madame C\222 \(1787\) letter 13 \
\221De Paris, 1728\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.9624 Tm
( 3.179 Coronation Service)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We present you with this Book, the most valuable thing that this wor\
ld affords. Here is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wisdom; this is the royal Law; these are the lively Oracles of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(The Presenting of the Holy Bible. L. G. Wickham Legge \221English Corona\
tion Records\222 \(1901\) p. 334)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.2124 Tm
( 3.180 Correggio \(Antonio Allegri Correggio\) c.1489-1534)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Anch\222io sono pittore!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I, too, am a painter!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.92047 Tm
(On seeing Raphael\222s \221St Cecilia\222 at Bologna, c.1525)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 219.7124 Tm
( 3.181 William Cory \(William Johnson, later Cory\) 1823-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Jolly boating weather,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And a hay harvest breeze,)Tj
T*
( Blade on the feather,)Tj
T*
( Shade off the trees)Tj
T*
( Swing, swing together)Tj
T*
( With your body between your knees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221Eton Boating Song\222 in \221Eton Scrap Book\222 \(1865\). E. Parker\
\221Floreat\222 \(1923\) p. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( Nothing in life shall sever)Tj
T*
( The chain that is round us now.)Tj
ET
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(\221Eton Boating Song\222 in \221Eton Scrap Book\222 \(1865\). E. Parker\
\221Floreat\222 \(1923\) p. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( They told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed.)Tj
T*
( I wept as I remembered how often you and I)Tj
T*
( Had tired the sun with talking and sent him down the sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Heraclitus\222; translation of Callimachus \221Epigram 2\222 in R. P\
feiffer \(ed.\) \221Callimachus\222 \(1949-53\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( You promise heavens free from strife,)Tj
T*
( Pure truth, and perfect change of will;)Tj
T*
( But sweet, sweet is this human life,)Tj
T*
( So sweet, I fain would breathe it still;)Tj
T*
( Your chilly stars I can forgo,)Tj
T*
( This warm kind world is all I know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Mimnermus in Church\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( All beauteous things for which we live)Tj
T*
( By laws of space and time decay.)Tj
T*
( But Oh, the very reason why)Tj
T*
( I clasp them, is because they die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Mimnermus in Church\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 414.7124 Tm
( 3.182 Charles Cotton 1630-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The shadows now so long do grow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That brambles like tall cedars show,)Tj
T*
( Molehills seem mountains, and the ant)Tj
T*
( Appears a monstrous elephant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221Evening Quatrains\222 \(1689\) st. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 290.9624 Tm
( 3.183 Baron Pierre de Coubertin 1863-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222important dans la vie ce n\222est point le triomphe mais le com\
bat; l\222essentiel ce n\222est pas )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(d\222avoir vaincu mais de s\222\352tre bien battu.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The important thing in life is not the victory but the contest; the \
essential thing is not to have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(won but to be well beaten.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Speech at government banquet in London, 24 July 1908, in T. A. Cook \221\
Fourth Olympiad\222 \(1909\) p. 793)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 163.4624 Tm
( 3.184 \310mile Cou\350 1857-1926)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tous les jours, \341 tous points de vue, je vais de mieux en mieux.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Every day, in every way, I am getting better and better.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(To be repeated 15 to 20 times, morning and evening, in \221De la suggest\
ion et de ses applications\222 \(1915\) p. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 71.9624 Tm
( 3.185 Victor Cousin 1792-1867)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il faut de la religion pour la religion, de la morale pour la morale\
, comme de l\222art pour l\222art...le )Tj
ET
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(beau ne peut \352tre la voie ni de l\222utile, ni du bien, ni du saint; \
il ne conduit qu\222\341 lui-m\352me.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We must have religion for religion\222s sake, morality for morality\222\
s sake, as with art for art\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sake...the beautiful cannot be the way to what is useful, or to what is \
good, or to what is holy; it )Tj
T*
(leads only to itself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Du vrai, du beau, et du bien\222 \(Sorbonne lecture, 1818\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 647.2124 Tm
( 3.186 Thomas Coventry \(first Baron Coventry\) 1578-1640)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The dominion of the sea, as it is an ancient and undoubted right of \
the crown of England, so it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is the best security of the land. The wooden walls are the best walls of\
this kingdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Speech to the Judges, 17 June 1635, in J. Rushworth \221Historical Colle\
ctions\222 \(1680\) vol. 2, p. 297. Wooden )Tj
T*
(walls refers to ships; see Herodotus \221Histories\222 bk. 7, ch. 141-3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 3.187 No\353l Coward 1899-1973)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dance, dance, dance, little lady!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Leave tomorrow behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221Dance, Little Lady\222 \(1928 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.00456 Tm
( Don\222t let\222s be beastly to the Germans)Tj
T*
( When our Victory is ultimately won.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Don\222t Let\222s Be Beastly to the Germans\222 \(1943 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( There\222s sand in the porridge and sand in the bed,)Tj
T*
( And if this is pleasure we\222d rather be dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221The English Lido\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( I believe that since my life began)Tj
T*
( The most I\222ve had is just)Tj
T*
( A talent to amuse.)Tj
T*
( Heigho, if love were all!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 288.67047 Tm
(\221If Love Were All\222 \(1929 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.75456 Tm
( I\222ll see you again,)Tj
T*
( Whenever Spring breaks through again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(\221I\222ll See You Again\222 \(1929 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.00456 Tm
( Mad about the boy,)Tj
T*
( It\222s pretty funny but I\222m mad about the boy.)Tj
T*
( He has a gay appeal)Tj
T*
( That makes me feel)Tj
T*
( There may be something sad about the boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Mad about the Boy\222 \(1932 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Mad dogs and Englishmen)Tj
T*
( Go out in the midday sun.)Tj
T*
( The Japanese don\222t care to,)Tj
T*
( The Chinese wouldn\222t dare to,)Tj
ET
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( The Hindus and Argentines sleep firmly from twelve to one,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But Englishmen detest a siesta.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( In the Philippines, there are lovely screens)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To protect you from the glare;)Tj
T*
( In the Malay states, they have hats like plates)Tj
T*
( Which the Britishers won\222t wear.)Tj
T*
( At twelve noon, the natives swoon,)Tj
T*
( And no further work is done;)Tj
T*
( But mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the midday sun.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.42047 Tm
(\221Mad Dogs and Englishmen\222 \(1931 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.50456 Tm
( Don\222t put your daughter on the stage, Mrs Worthington,)Tj
T*
( Don\222t put your daughter on the stage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221Mrs Worthington\222 \(1935 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( Poor little rich girl)Tj
T*
( You\222re a bewitched girl,)Tj
T*
( Better beware!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Poor Little Rich Girl\222 \(1925 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( Someday I\222ll find you,)Tj
T*
( Moonlight behind you,)Tj
T*
( True to the dream I am dreaming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Someday I\222ll Find You\222 \(1930 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( The Stately Homes of England,)Tj
T*
( How beautiful they stand,)Tj
T*
( To prove the upper classes)Tj
T*
( Have still the upper hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221The Stately Homes of England\222 \(1938 song\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Never mind, dear, we\222re all made the same, though some more than \
others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221The Caf\350 de la Paix\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Very flat, Norfolk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221Private Lives\222 \(1930\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Extraordinary how potent cheap music is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Private Lives\222 \(1930\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( Certain women should be struck regularly, like gongs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(\221Private Lives\222 \(1930\) act 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 119.2124 Tm
( 3.188 Abraham Cowley 1618-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The thirsty earth soaks up the rain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And drinks, and gapes for drink again.)Tj
T*
( The plants suck in the earth, and are)Tj
T*
( With constant drinking fresh and fair.)Tj
ET
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(\221Drinking\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Fill all the glasses there, for why)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Should every creature drink but I,)Tj
T*
( Why, man of morals, tell me why?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Drinking\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( God the first garden made, and the first city Cain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Essays, in Verse and Prose\222 \(1668\) \221The Garden\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Hence, ye profane; I hate ye all;)Tj
T*
( Both the great vulgar, and the small.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Essays, in Verse and Prose\222 \221Of Greatness\222; translation of \
Horace \221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( This only grant me, that my means may lie)Tj
T*
( Too low for envy, for contempt too high.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Essays, in Verse and Prose\222 \(1668\) \221Of Myself\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Acquaintance I would have, but when\222t depends)Tj
T*
( Not on the number, but the choice of friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Essays, in Verse and Prose\222 \(1668\) \221Of Myself\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Love in her sunny eyes does basking play;)Tj
T*
( Love walks the pleasant mazes of her hair;)Tj
T*
( Love does on both her lips for ever stray;)Tj
T*
( And sows and reaps a thousand kisses there.)Tj
T*
( In all her outward parts Love\222s always seen;)Tj
T*
( But, oh, he never went within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: or...Love Verses\222 \(1647\) \221The Change\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The world\222s a scene of changes, and to be)Tj
T*
( Constant, in Nature were inconstancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: or...Love Verses\222 \(1647\) \221Inconstancy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Lukewarmness I account a sin)Tj
T*
( As great in love as in religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: or...Love Verses\222 \221The Request\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Well then; I now do plainly see)Tj
T*
( This busy world and I shall ne\222er agree;)Tj
T*
( The very honey of all earthly joy)Tj
T*
( Does of all meats the soonest cloy,)Tj
T*
( And they \(methinks\) deserve my pity,)Tj
T*
( Who for it can endure the stings,)Tj
T*
( The crowd, and buz, and murmurings)Tj
T*
( Of this great hive, the city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: or...Love Verses\222 \(1647\) \221The Wish\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Nothing so soon the drooping spirits can raise)Tj
T*
( As praises from the men, whom all men praise.)Tj
ET
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(\221Ode upon a Copy of Verses of My Lord Broghill\222s\222 \(1663\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Poet and Saint! to thee alone are given)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The two most sacred names of earth and Heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221On the Death of Mr Crashaw\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Hail, Bard triumphant! and some care bestow)Tj
T*
( On us, the Poets Militant below!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221On the Death of Mr Crashaw\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Ye fields of Cambridge, our dear Cambridge, say,)Tj
T*
( Have ye not seen us walking every day?)Tj
T*
( Was there a tree about which did not know)Tj
T*
( The love betwixt us two?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221On the Death of Mr William Hervey\222 \(1656\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Life is an incurable disease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221To Dr Scarborough\222 \(1656\) st. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 485.9624 Tm
( 3.189 Hannah Cowley \(n\350e Parkhouse\) 1743-1809)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Five minutes! Zounds! I have been five minutes too late all my life-\
time!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Belle\222s Stratagem\222 \(1780\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Vanity, like murder, will out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221The Belle\222s Stratagem\222 \(1780\) act 1, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( But what is woman?\227only one of Nature\222s agreeable blunders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Who\222s the Dupe?\222 \(1779\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 342.7124 Tm
( 3.190 William Cowper 1731-1800)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( No voice divine the storm allayed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No light propitious shone;)Tj
T*
( When snatched from all effectual aid,)Tj
T*
( We perished, each alone:)Tj
T*
( But I beneath a rougher sea,)Tj
T*
( And whelmed in deeper gulfs than he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(\221The Castaway\222 \(written 1799\) l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 194.25456 Tm
( Grief is itself a med\222cine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221Charity\222 \(1782\) l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( He found it inconvenient to be poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Charity\222 \(1782\) l. 189 \(of a burglar\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( Spare the poet for his subject sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Charity\222 \(1782\) l. 636)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( \222Tis hard if all is false that I advance)Tj
T*
( A fool must now and then be right, by chance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221Conversation\222 \(1782\) l. 95)Tj
ET
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( A tale should be judicious, clear, succinct;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The language plain, and incidents well linked;)Tj
T*
( Tell not as new what ev\222ry body knows,)Tj
T*
( And new or old, still hasten to a close.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Conversation\222 \(1782\) l. 235)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( The pipe with solemn interposing puff,)Tj
T*
( Makes half a sentence at a time enough;)Tj
T*
( The dozing sages drop the drowsy strain,)Tj
T*
( Then pause, and puff\227and speak, and pause again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Conversation\222 \(1781\) l. 245)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Pernicious weed! whose scent the fair annoys,)Tj
T*
( Unfriendly to society\222s chief joys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Conversation\222 \(1782\) l. 251 \(on tobacco\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( His wit invites you by his looks to come,)Tj
T*
( But when you knock it never is at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Conversation\222 \(1782\) l. 303)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Thousands, careless of the damning sin,)Tj
T*
( Kiss the book\222s outside who ne\222er look within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Expostulation\222 \(1782\) l. 388 \(on oath-taking\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( The man that hails you Tom or Jack,)Tj
T*
( And proves by thumps upon your back)Tj
T*
( How he esteems your merit,)Tj
T*
( Is such a friend, that one had need)Tj
T*
( Be very much his friend indeed)Tj
T*
( To pardon or to bear it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Friendship\222 \(1782\) l. 169)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Damned below Judas; more abhorred than he was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Hatred and vengeance, my eternal portion\222 \(written c.1774\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Man disavows, and Deity disowns me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Hatred and vengeance, my eternal portion\222 \(written c.1774\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Men deal with life, as children with their play,)Tj
T*
( Who first misuse, then cast their toys away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Hope\222 \(1782\) l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( Could he with reason murmur at his case,)Tj
T*
( Himself sole author of his own disgrace?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Hope\222 \(1782\) l. 316)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( And differing judgements serve but to declare)Tj
T*
( That truth lies somewhere, if we knew but where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Hope\222 \(1782\) l. 423)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( John Gilpin was a citizen)Tj
ET
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( Of credit and renown,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A train-band captain eke was he)Tj
T*
( Of famous London town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221John Gilpin\222 \(1785\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( My sister and my sister\222s child,)Tj
T*
( Myself and children three,)Tj
T*
( Will fill the chaise; so you must ride)Tj
T*
( On horseback after we.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221John Gilpin\222 \(1785\) l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( O\222erjoy\222d was he to find)Tj
T*
( That, though on pleasure she was bent,)Tj
T*
( She had a frugal mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221John Gilpin\222 \(1785\) l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Beware of desperate steps. The darkest day)Tj
T*
( \(Live till tomorrow\) will have passed away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Needless Alarm\222 \(written c.1790\) l. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( No dancing bear was so genteel,)Tj
T*
( Or half so d\350gag\350.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Of Himself\222 \(written 1752\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( God moves in a mysterious way)Tj
T*
( His wonders to perform;)Tj
T*
( He plants his footsteps in the sea,)Tj
T*
( And rides upon the storm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Light Shining out of Darkness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Ye fearful saints fresh courage take,)Tj
T*
( The clouds ye so much dread)Tj
T*
( Are big with mercy, and shall break)Tj
T*
( In blessings on your head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Light Shining out of Darkness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Behind a frowning providence)Tj
T*
( He hides a smiling face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Light Shining out of Darkness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Blind unbelief is sure to err,)Tj
T*
( And scan his work in vain;)Tj
T*
( God is his own interpreter,)Tj
T*
( And he will make it plain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Light Shining out of Darkness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Hark, my soul! it is the Lord;)Tj
T*
( \222Tis thy Saviour, hear his word;)Tj
T*
( Jesus speaks, and speaks to thee;)Tj
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( \221Say, poor sinner, lov\222st thou me?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Lovest Thou Me?\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( There is a fountain filled with blood)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drawn from Emmanuel\222s veins,)Tj
T*
( And sinners, plunged beneath that flood,)Tj
T*
( Lose all their guilty stains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Praise for the Fountain Opened\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Oh! for a closer walk with God,)Tj
T*
( A calm and heav\222nly frame;)Tj
T*
( A light to shine upon the road)Tj
T*
( That leads me to the Lamb!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Olney Hymns\222 \(1779\) \221Walking with God\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( My dog! what remedy remains,)Tj
T*
( Since, teach you all I can,)Tj
T*
( I see you, after all my pains,)Tj
T*
( So much resemble man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221On a Spaniel called Beau, killing a young bird\222 \(written 1793\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Toll for the brave\227)Tj
T*
( The brave! that are no more:)Tj
T*
( All sunk beneath the wave,)Tj
T*
( Fast by their native shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221On the Loss of the Royal George\222 \(written 1782\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Oh, fond attempt to give a deathless lot)Tj
T*
( To names ignoble, born to be forgot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221On Observing Some Names of Little Note Recorded in the Biographia Br\
itannica\222 \(1782\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Thy morning bounties ere I left my home,)Tj
T*
( The biscuit, or confectionary plum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221On the Receipt of My Mother\222s Picture out of Norfolk\222 \(writte\
n 1790, published 1798\) l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Me howling winds drive devious, tempest-tossed,)Tj
T*
( Sails ripped, seams op\222ning wide, and compass lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221On the Receipt of My Mother\222s Picture out of Norfolk\222 \(writte\
n 1790, published 1798\) l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( I shall not ask Jean Jacques Rousseau,)Tj
T*
( If birds confabulate or no.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Pairing Time Anticipated\222 \(written c.1788, published 1795\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( The poplars are felled, farewell to the shade)Tj
T*
( And the whispering sound of the cool colonnade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Poplar-Field\222 \(written 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Oh, laugh or mourn with me the rueful jest,)Tj
T*
( A cassocked huntsman and a fiddling priest!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 110)Tj
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( Himself a wand\222rer from the narrow way,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His silly sheep, what wonder if they stray?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Remorse, the fatal egg by pleasure laid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 239)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( As creeping ivy clings to wood or stone,)Tj
T*
( And hides the ruin that it feeds upon,)Tj
T*
( So sophistry, cleaves close to, and protects)Tj
T*
( Sin\222s rotten trunk, concealing its defects.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( How much a dunce that has been sent to roam)Tj
T*
( Excels a dunce that has been kept at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 415)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Thou god of our idolatry, the press...)Tj
T*
( Thou fountain, at which drink the good and wise;)Tj
T*
( Thou ever-bubbling spring of endless lies;)Tj
T*
( Like Eden\222s dread probationary tree,)Tj
T*
( Knowledge of good and evil is from thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 461)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Laugh at all you trembled at before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Error\222 \(1782\) l. 592)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( The disencumbered Atlas of the state.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Retirement\222 \(1781\) l. 394 \(the statesman\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( He likes the country, but in truth must own,)Tj
T*
( Most likes it, when he studies it in town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Retirement\222 \(1782\) l. 573)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Philologists, who chase)Tj
T*
( A panting syllable through time and space,)Tj
T*
( Start it at home, and hunt it in the dark,)Tj
T*
( To Gaul, to Greece, and into Noah\222s ark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Retirement\222 \(1782\) l. 691)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( \221Till authors hear at length, one gen\222ral cry,)Tj
T*
( Tickle and entertain us, or we die.)Tj
T*
( The loud demand from year to year the same,)Tj
T*
( Beggars invention and makes fancy lame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Retirement\222 \(1782\) l. 707)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Admirals extolled for standing still,)Tj
T*
( Or doing nothing with a deal of skill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1782\) l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Freedom has a thousand charms to show,)Tj
ET
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( That slaves, howe\222er contented, never know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1782\) l. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Stamps God\222s own name upon a lie just made,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To turn a penny in the way of trade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1782\) l. 420 \(Perjury\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( But he \(his musical finesse was such,)Tj
T*
( So nice his ear, so delicate his touch\))Tj
T*
( Made poetry a mere mechanic art,)Tj
T*
( And ev\222ry warbler has his tune by heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1782\) l. 654 \(on Pope\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Thus first necessity invented stools,)Tj
T*
( Convenience next suggested elbow-chairs,)Tj
T*
( And luxury the accomplished sofa last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 1 \221The Sofa\222 l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The nurse sleeps sweetly, hired to watch the sick,)Tj
T*
( Whom, snoring, she disturbs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 1 \221The Sofa\222 l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( God made the country, and man made the town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 1 \221The Sofa\222 l. 749.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Slaves cannot breathe in England, if their lungs)Tj
T*
( Receive our air, that moment they are free;)Tj
T*
( They touch our country, and their shackles fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 2 \221The Timepiece\222 l. 40.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( England, with all thy faults, I love thee still\227)Tj
T*
( My country!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 2 \221The Timepiece\222 l. 206.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( There is a pleasure in poetic pains)Tj
T*
( Which only poets know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 2 \221The Timepiece\222 l. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Variety\222s the very spice of life,)Tj
T*
( That gives it all its flavour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 2 \221The Timepiece\222 l. 606)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( I was a stricken deer, that left the herd)Tj
T*
( Long since.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 108.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( Charge)Tj
T*
( His mind with meanings that he never had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Great contest follows, and much learned dust)Tj
T*
( Involves the combatants.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Defend me, therefore, common sense, say I,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From reveries so airy, from the toil)Tj
T*
( Of dropping buckets into empty wells,)Tj
T*
( And growing old in drawing nothing up!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Newton, childlike sage!)Tj
T*
( Sagacious reader of the works of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 252)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Detested sport,)Tj
T*
( That owes its pleasures to another\222s pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 326 \(on hunting\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Studious of laborious ease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 361)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( To combat may be glorious, and success)Tj
T*
( Perhaps may crown us; but to fly is safe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 3 \221The Garden\222 l. 686)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Now stir the fire, and close the shutters fast,)Tj
T*
( Let fall the curtains, wheel the sofa round,)Tj
T*
( And, while the bubbling and loud-hissing urn)Tj
T*
( Throws up a steamy column, and the cups,)Tj
T*
( That cheer but not inebriate, wait on each,)Tj
T*
( So let us welcome peaceful evening in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 4 \221The Winter Evening\222 l. 34.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( \222Tis pleasant through the loopholes of retreat)Tj
T*
( To peep at such a world; to see the stir)Tj
T*
( Of the great Babel, and not feel the crowd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 4 \221The Winter Evening\222 l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( I crown thee king of intimate delights,)Tj
T*
( Fire-side enjoyments, home-born happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 4 \221The Winter Evening\222 l. 139)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( A Roman meal...)Tj
T*
( ...a radish and an egg.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 4 \221The Winter Evening\222 l. 168)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( The slope of faces, from the floor to th\222 roof,)Tj
T*
( \(As if one master-spring controlled them all\),)Tj
T*
( Relaxed into a universal grin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 4 \221The Winter Evening\222 l. 202 \(on t\
he theatre\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Shaggy, and lean, and shrewd, with pointed ears)Tj
T*
( And tail cropped short, half lurcher and half cur.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 5 \221The Winter Morning Walk\222 l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( But war\222s a game, which, were their subjects wise,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kings would not play at.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 5 \221The Winter Morning Walk\222 l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Knowledge dwells)Tj
T*
( In heads replete with thoughts of other men;)Tj
T*
( Wisdom in minds attentive to their own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 6 \221The Winter Walk at Noon\222 l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much;)Tj
T*
( Wisdom is humble that he knows no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 6 \221The Winter Walk at Noon\222 l. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Nature is but a name for an effect,)Tj
T*
( Whose cause is God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 6 \221The Winter Walk at Noon\222 l. 223)Tj
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( A cheap but wholesome salad from the brook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 6 \221The Winter Walk at Noon\222 l. 304)Tj
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( I would not enter on my list of friends)Tj
T*
( \(Tho\222 graced with polished manners and fine sense,)Tj
T*
( Yet wanting sensibility\) the man)Tj
T*
( Who needlessly sets foot upon a worm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221The Task\222 \(1785\) bk. 6 \221The Winter Walk at Noon\222 l. 560)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Public schools \222tis public folly feeds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Tirocinium\222 \(1785\) l. 250)Tj
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( The parson knows enough who knows a duke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Tirocinium\222 \(1785\) l. 403)Tj
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( As a priest,)Tj
T*
( A piece of mere church furniture at best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Tirocinium\222 \(1785\) l. 425)Tj
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( Tenants of life\222s middle state,)Tj
T*
( Securely placed between the small and great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Tirocinium\222 \(1785\) l. 807)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( He has no hope that never had a fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Truth\222 \(1782\) l. 298)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( But what is man in his own proud esteem?)Tj
T*
( Hear him, himself the poet and the theme;)Tj
T*
( A monarch clothed with majesty and awe,)Tj
T*
( His mind his kingdom and his will his law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Truth\222 \(1782\) l. 403)Tj
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( Oh! I could thresh his old jacket till I made his pension jingle in \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(On Johnson\222s inadequate treatment of \221Paradise Lost\222, in a lett\
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ET
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(308)Tj
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( Our severest winter, commonly called the spring.)Tj
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(Letter to the Revd William Unwin, 8 June 1783, in J. King and C. Ryskamp\
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T*
(Writings of William Cowper\222 vol. 2 \(1981\) p. 139)Tj
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( Mr Grenville squeezed me by the hand again, kissed the ladies, and w\
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T*
(likewise the maid in the kitchen, and seemed upon the whole a most lovin\
g, kissing, kind-hearted )Tj
T*
(gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(Letter to the Revd John Newton, 29 March 1784, in J. King and C. Ryskamp\
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T*
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( \221\222Tis a tall building, with a tower and bells.\222)Tj
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(\221The Borough\222 \(1810\) Letter 2 \221The Church\222 l. 11)Tj
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( Virtues neglected then, adored become,)Tj
T*
( And graces slighted, blossom on the tomb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.17047 Tm
(\221The Borough\222 \(1810\) Letter 2 \221The Church\222 l. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 437.25456 Tm
( Ye Lilies male! think \(as your tea you sip,)Tj
T*
( While the Town small-talk flows from lip to lip;)Tj
T*
( Intrigues half-gathered, conversation-scraps,)Tj
T*
( Kitchen-cabals, and nursery-mishaps,\))Tj
T*
( If the vast World may not some scene produce,)Tj
T*
( Some state where your small talents might have use.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.42047 Tm
(\221The Borough\222 \(1810\) Letter 3 \221The Vicar\222 l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.50456 Tm
( Habit with him was all the test of truth,)Tj
T*
( \221It must be right: I\222ve done it from my youth.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.67047 Tm
(\221The Borough\222 \(1810\) Letter 3 \221The Vicar\222 l. 138)Tj
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( There anchoring, Peter chose from man to hide,)Tj
T*
( There hang his head, and view the lazy tide)Tj
T*
( In its hot slimy channel slowly glide;)Tj
T*
( Where the small eels that left the deeper way)Tj
T*
( For the warm shore, within the shallows play;)Tj
T*
( Where gaping mussels, left upon the mud,)Tj
T*
( Slope their slow passage to the fallen flood;\227)Tj
T*
( Here dull and hopeless he\222d lie down and trace)Tj
T*
( How sidelong crabs had scrawled their crooked race...)Tj
T*
( He nursed the feelings these dull scenes produce,)Tj
T*
( And loved to stop beside the opening sluice;)Tj
T*
( Where the small stream, confined in narrow bound,)Tj
T*
( Ran with a dull, unvaried, sad\222ning sound;)Tj
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(\221The Borough\222 \(1810\) Letter 22 \221Peter Grimes\222 l. 185)Tj
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( Lo! the poor toper whose untutored sense,)Tj
T*
( Sees bliss in ale, and can with wine dispense;)Tj
T*
( Whose head proud fancy never taught to steer,)Tj
T*
( Beyond the muddy ecstasies of beer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Inebriety\222 \(in imitation of Pope, 1775\) pt. 1, l. 132.)Tj
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( With awe, around these silent walks I tread;)Tj
T*
( These are the lasting mansions of the dead.)Tj
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(\221The Library\222 \(1808\) l. 105)Tj
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( Lo! all in silence, all in order stand,)Tj
T*
( And mighty folios first, a lordly band;)Tj
T*
( Then quartos their well-ordered ranks maintain,)Tj
T*
( And light octavos fill a spacious plain;)Tj
T*
( See yonder, ranged in more frequented rows,)Tj
T*
( A humbler band of duodecimos.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(\221The Library\222 \(1808\) l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( Fashion, though Folly\222s child, and guide of fools,)Tj
T*
( Rules e\222en the wisest, and in learning rules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.92047 Tm
(\221The Library\222 \(1808\) l. 167)Tj
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( Coldly profane and impiously gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(\221The Library\222 \(1808\) l. 265)Tj
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( The murmuring poor, who will not fast in peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221The Newspaper\222 \(1785\) l. 158)Tj
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( A master passion is the love of news.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.67047 Tm
(\221The Newspaper\222 \(1785\) l. 279)Tj
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( Our farmers round, well pleased with constant gain,)Tj
T*
( Like other farmers, flourish and complain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.92047 Tm
(\221The Parish Register\222 \(1807 pt. 1, l. 273)Tj
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( That all was wrong because not all was right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.17047 Tm
(\221Tales\222 \(1812\) \221The Convert\222 l. 313)Tj
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( He tried the luxury of doing good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.42047 Tm
(\221Tales of the Hall\222 \(1819\) \221Boys at School\222 l. 139)Tj
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( \221The game\222, said he, \221is never lost till won.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.67047 Tm
(\221Tales of the Hall\222 \(1819\) \221Gretna Green\222 l. 334)Tj
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( The face the index of a feeling mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.92047 Tm
(\221Tales of the Hall\222 \(1819\) \221Lady Barbara\222 l. 124)Tj
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( Secrets with girls, like loaded guns with boys,)Tj
T*
( Are never valued till they make a noise.)Tj
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(\221Tales of the Hall\222 \(1819\) \221The Maid\222s Story\222 l. 84)Tj
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( Yes, thus the Muses sing of happy swains,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Because the Muses never knew their pains:)Tj
T*
( They boast their peasants\222 pipes, but peasants now)Tj
T*
( Resign their pipes and plod behind the plough.)Tj
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(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 21)Tj
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( I grant indeed that fields and flocks have charms,)Tj
T*
( For him that gazes or for him that farms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.67047 Tm
(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 39)Tj
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( I paint the cot,)Tj
T*
( As truth will paint it, and as bards will not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.92047 Tm
(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 53)Tj
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( Where Plenty smiles\227alas! she smiles for few,)Tj
T*
( And those who taste not, yet behold her store,)Tj
T*
( Are as the slaves that dig the golden ore,)Tj
T*
( The wealth around them makes them doubly poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.17047 Tm
(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 136)Tj
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( The cold charities of man to man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.42047 Tm
(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 245)Tj
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( A potent quack, long versed in human ills,)Tj
T*
( Who first insults the victim whom he kills;)Tj
T*
( Whose murd\222rous hand a drowsy bench protect,)Tj
T*
( And whose most tender mercy is neglect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.67047 Tm
(\221The Village\222 \(1783\) bk. 1, l. 282)Tj
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( 3.192 Hart Crane 1899-1932)Tj
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( Cowslip and shad-blow, flaked like tethered foam)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Around bared teeth of stallions, bloomed that spring)Tj
T*
( When first I read thy lines, rife as the loam)Tj
T*
( Of prairies, yet like breakers cliffward leaping!)Tj
T*
( ...My hand)Tj
T*
( in yours,)Tj
T*
( Walt Whitman\227)Tj
T*
( so\227)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.92047 Tm
(\221The Bridge\222 \(1930\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.00456 Tm
( O Sleepless as the river under thee,)Tj
T*
( Vaulting the sea, the prairies\222 dreaming sod,)Tj
T*
( Unto us lowliest sometime sweep, descend)Tj
T*
( And of the curveship lend a myth to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.17047 Tm
(\221To Brooklyn Bridge\222 \(1927\))Tj
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( You who desired so much\227in vain to ask\227)Tj
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( Yet fed your hunger like an endless task,)Tj
T*
( Dared dignify the labor, bless the quest\227)Tj
T*
( Achieved that stillness ultimately best,)Tj
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( Being, of all, least sought for: Emily, hear!)Tj
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(\221To Emily Dickinson\222 \(1927\))Tj
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( 3.193 Stephen Crane 1871-1900)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The red badge of courage.)Tj
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(Title of novel \(1895\))Tj
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( 3.194 Thomas Cranmer 1489-1556)Tj
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T*
( This was the hand that wrote it, therefore it shall suffer first pun\
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(At the stake, 21 March 1556, in John Richard Green \221A Short History o\
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(sect. 2)Tj
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( 3.195 Richard Crashaw c.1612-49)Tj
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( Nympha pudica Deum vidit, et erubuit.)Tj
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( The conscious water saw its God, and blushed.)Tj
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(\221Epigrammata Sacra\222 \(1634\) \221Aquae in Vinum Versae\222 \(Crash\
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( Love\222s passives are his activ\222st part.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The wounded is the wounding heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221The Flaming Heart upon the Book of Saint Teresa\222 \(1652\) l. 73)Tj
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( By all the eagle in thee, all the dove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(\221The Flaming Heart upon the Book of Saint Teresa\222 \(1652\) l. 95)Tj
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( Love, thou art absolute sole Lord)Tj
T*
( Of life and death.)Tj
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(\221Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa\222 \(1652\
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( Gloomy night embraced the place)Tj
T*
( Where the noble Infant lay.)Tj
T*
( The Babe looked up and showed his face;)Tj
T*
( In spite of darkness, it was day.)Tj
T*
( It was Thy day, sweet! and did rise)Tj
T*
( Not from the East, but from thine eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221Hymn of the Nativity\222 \(1652\))Tj
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( Poor World \(said I\) what wilt thou do)Tj
T*
( To entertain this starry stranger?)Tj
T*
( Is this the best thou canst bestow?)Tj
T*
( A cold, and not too cleanly, manger?)Tj
T*
( Contend, ye powers of heav\222n and earth)Tj
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( To fit a bed for this huge birth.)Tj
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(\221Hymn of the Nativity\222 \(1652\))Tj
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( Welcome, all wonders in one sight!)Tj
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( Eternity shut in a span.)Tj
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(\221Hymn of the Nativity\222 \(1652\))Tj
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( I would be married, but I\222d have no wife,)Tj
T*
( I would be married to a single life.)Tj
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(\221On Marriage\222 \(1646\))Tj
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( Lo here a little volume, but large book.)Tj
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(\221Prayer...prefixed to a little Prayer-book\222)Tj
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( It is love\222s great artillery)Tj
T*
( Which here contracts itself and comes to lie)Tj
T*
( Close couched in your white bosom.)Tj
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(\221Prayer...prefixed to a little Prayer-book\222)Tj
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( Two walking baths; two weeping motions;)Tj
T*
( Portable, and compendious oceans.)Tj
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(\221Saint Mary Magdalene, or The Weeper\222 \(1652\) st. 19)Tj
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( All is Caesar\222s; and what odds)Tj
T*
( So long as Caesar\222s self is God\222s?)Tj
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(\221Steps to the Temple\222 \(1646\) \221Mark 12\222)Tj
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( And when life\222s sweet fable ends,)Tj
T*
( Soul and body part like friends;)Tj
T*
( No quarrels, murmurs, no delay;)Tj
T*
( A kiss, a sigh, and so away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Temperance\222 \(1652\))Tj
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( Whoe\222er she be,)Tj
T*
( That not impossible she)Tj
T*
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( Where\222er she lie,)Tj
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( Kathleen Mavourneen! the grey dawn is breaking,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The horn of the hunter is heard on the hill;)Tj
T*
( The lark from her light wing the bright dew is shaking;)Tj
T*
( Kathleen Mavourneen! what, slumbering still?)Tj
T*
( Oh! hast thou forgotten how soon we must sever?)Tj
T*
( Oh! hast thou forgotten this day we must part?)Tj
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( Oh! why art thou silent, thou voice of my heart?)Tj
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( No people do so much harm as those who go about doing good.)Tj
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T*
( And yet time hath his revolution; there must be a period and an end \
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0 -1.2 TD
(rerum, an end of names and dignities and whatsoever is terrene; and why \
not of De Vere? Where )Tj
T*
(is Bohun, where\222s Mowbray, where\222s Mortimer? Nay, which is more a\
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T*
(Plantagenet? They are entombed in the urns and sepulchres of mortality. \
And yet let the name )Tj
T*
(and dignity of De Vere stand so long as it pleaseth God.)Tj
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( Some roughs are queer, and some queers are rough.)Tj
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(\221The Naked Civil Servant\222 \(1968\))Tj
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( An autobiography is an obituary in serial form with the last instalm\
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(\221Listener\222 10 June 1982)Tj
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(\221Still\227William\222 \(1925\) ch. 8)Tj
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T*
( A few honest men are better than numbers.)Tj
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T*
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T*
(Speeches\222 \(2nd ed., 1846\))Tj
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( I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be\
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(Letter to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, 3 August 1650, i\
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T*
(Cromwell\222s Letters and Speeches\222 \(1845\))Tj
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( The dimensions of this mercy are above my thoughts. It is, for aught\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.92047 Tm
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T*
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(At the dismissal of the Rump Parliament, 20 April 1653, in Bulstrode Whi\
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T*
(Affairs\222 \(1732 ed.\) p. 529 \(often quoted as \221Take away these ba\
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T*
(done with you. In the name of God, go!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.42047 Tm
(Addressing the Rump Parliament, 20 April 1653, in Bulstrode Whitelock \221\
Memorials\222 \(1682\) p. 554 \(quoted )Tj
T*
(by Leo Amery \(q.v.\), \221Hansard\222 7 May 1940, col. 1150\))Tj
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( It\222s a maxim not to be despised, \221Though peace be made, yet it\
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( Necessity hath no law. Feigned necessities, imaginary necessities...\
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T*
(that men can put upon the Providence of God, and make pretences to break\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(Speech to Parliament, 12 September 1654, in Thomas Carlyle \221Oliver Cr\
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T*
(Speeches\222 \(1845\))Tj
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( Your poor army, those poor contemptible men, came up hither.)Tj
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(Speech to Parliament, 21 April 1657, in Thomas Carlyle \221Oliver Cromwe\
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( You have accounted yourselves happy on being environed with a great \
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T*
(besides.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(Speech to Parliament, 25 January 1658, in Thomas Carlyle \221Oliver Crom\
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( Mr Lely, I desire you would use all your skill to paint my picture t\
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T*
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T*
(otherwise I will never pay a farthing for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(In Horace Walpole \221Anecdotes of Painting in England\222 vol. 3 \(1763\
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T*
(all\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( My design is to make what haste I can to be gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(Last words, in John Morley \221Oliver Cromwell\222 \(1900\) bk. 5, ch. 1\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 90.7124 Tm
( 3.204 Bing Crosby \(Harry Lillis Crosby\) 1903-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( An average guy who could carry a tune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(Suggestion for his own epitaph, in \221Newsweek\222 24 October 1977 p. 1\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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(\221Where the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the Day\222 \(1931 son\
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0 -1.44719 TD
( I hear a smile.)Tj
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( 3.207 Richard Crossman 1907-74)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
( If you wish it, Minister!\222)Tj
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(\221Diaries of a Cabinet Minister\222 vol. 1 \(1975\) 22 October 1964)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Love to the loveless shown,)Tj
T*
( That they might lovely be.)Tj
T*
( O, who am I,)Tj
T*
( That for my sake)Tj
T*
( My Lord should take)Tj
T*
( Frail flesh and die?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.17047 Tm
(\221My song is love unknown\222 \(1664; set to music as a hymn, from 186\
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(\221Book of the Law\222 \(1909\) l. 40.)Tj
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T*
( Keep on truckin\222.)Tj
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( It is better to wear out than to rust out.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( See W. N. P. Barbellion \(2.25\))Tj
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(\22150 Poems\222 \(1949\) no. 29)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( in every language even deafanddumb)Tj
T*
( thy sons acclaim your glorious name by gorry)Tj
T*
( by jingo by gee by gosh by gum)Tj
T*
( why talk of beauty what could be more beaut\227)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( then shall the voices of liberty be mute?)Tj
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T*
( intelligence to buy a drink.)Tj
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(\221La Guerre\222 no. 2 \(1925\))Tj
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T*
( it\) lao)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
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T*
( him, and general)Tj
T*
( \(yes)Tj
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( pity this busy monster, manunkind,)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( defunct)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
( stallion)Tj
T*
( and break onetwothreefourfive pigeons\227)Tj
T*
( justlikethat)Tj
T*
( Jesus)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221Portraits\222 no. 8 \(1923\))Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221somewhere I have never travelled\222 \(1931\))Tj
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T*
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T*
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(\221Sonnets-Realities\222 no. 1 \(1923\))Tj
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( There are no atheists in the foxholes.)Tj
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T*
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(\221A Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea\222)Tj
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( It\222s hame and it\222s hame, hame fain wad I be,)Tj
T*
( O, hame, hame, hame to my ain countree!)Tj
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(\221It\222s hame and It\222s hame\222, in James Hogg \221Jacobite Relics\
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T*
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T*
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/TT1 1 Tf
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(Speech on the Right of Election of the Lord Mayor of Dublin, 10 July 179\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Bring on the empty horses!)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
(Horses\222 \(1975\) ch. 6)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Gentlemen do not take soup at luncheon.)Tj
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(In E. L. Woodward \221Short Journey\222 \(1942\) ch. 7)Tj
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(\221A Defence of Rhyme\222)Tj
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T*
( This gain of our best glory shall be sent,)Tj
T*
( T\222enrich unknowing nations with our stores?)Tj
T*
( What worlds in th\222yet unformed Occident)Tj
T*
( May come refined with th\222 accents that are ours?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.42047 Tm
(\221Musophilus\222 \(1599\) l. 957)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 452.50456 Tm
( But years hath done this wrong,)Tj
T*
( To make me write too much, and live too long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.67047 Tm
(\221Philotas\222 \(1605\) \221To the Prince\222 \(dedication\) l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.75456 Tm
( Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night,)Tj
T*
( Brother to Death, in silent darkness born:)Tj
T*
( Relieve my languish, and restore the light,)Tj
T*
( With dark forgetting of my care return,)Tj
T*
( And let the day be time enough to mourn)Tj
T*
( The shipwreck of my ill adventured youth:)Tj
T*
( Let waking eyes suffice to wail their scorn,)Tj
T*
( Without the torment of the night\222s untruth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnets to Delia\222 \(1592\) no. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.00456 Tm
( Unless above himself he can)Tj
T*
( Erect himself, how poor a thing is man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.17047 Tm
(\221To the Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland\222 st. 12)Tj
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( 4.2 Dante Alighieri 1265-1321)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( In the middle of the road of our life.)Tj
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(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 1, l. 1)Tj
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( Per me si va nella citt dolente,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Per me si va nell\222 etorno dolore,)Tj
T*
( Per me si va tra la perduta gente...)Tj
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( This way for the sorrowful city. This way for eternal suffering. Thi\
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(Inscription at the entrance to Hell, \221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\
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( Non ragioniam di lor, ma guarda, e passa.)Tj
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( Let us not speak of them, but look, and pass on.)Tj
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(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 3, l. 51)Tj
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( Il gran rifiuto.)Tj
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T*
( The great refusal.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 580.42047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 3, l. 60)Tj
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( Onorate l\222altissimo poeta.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Honour to the greatest poet.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 4, l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Il maestro di color che sanno.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The master of them that know.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 4, l. 131 \(of Aristotle\)\
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15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Nessun maggior dolore,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Che ricordarsi del tempo felice)Tj
T*
( Nella miseria.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( There is no greater sorrow than to recall a time of happiness in mis\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 5, l. 121.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.00456 Tm
( Noi leggiavamo un giorno per diletto)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Di Lancialotto, come amor lo strinse:)Tj
T*
( Soli eravamo, e sanza alcun sospetto.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( We were reading one day for recreation of Lancelot, how love constra\
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(and completely unsuspecting.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.42047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 5, l. 127)Tj
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( Galeotto fu il libro e chi lo scrisse:)Tj
T*
( Quel giorno pi\371 non vi leggemmo avante.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( A Galeotto [a pander] was the book and writer too: that day therein \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 5, l. 137)Tj
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( Siete voi qui, ser Brunetto?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Are you here, Advocate Brunetto?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 15, l. 30 \(referring to B\
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0 -1.2 TD
(encountered in hell with other \221Sodomites\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.50456 Tm
( La cara e buona imagine paterna.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The dear and kindly paternal image.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 15, l. 83)Tj
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( Considerate la vostra semenza:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fatti non foste a viver come bruti,)Tj
T*
( Ma per seguir virtute e conoscenza.)Tj
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( Consider your origins: you were not made that you might live as brut\
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(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 26, l. 118)Tj
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( E quindi uscimmo a riveder le stelle.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Thence we came forth to see the stars again.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Inferno\222 canto 34, l. 139)Tj
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( Puro e disposto a salire alle stelle.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Pure and ready to mount to the stars.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 544.42047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Purgatorio\222 canto 33, l. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 523.50456 Tm
( E \222n la sua volontade \350 nostra pace.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( In His will is our peace.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Paradiso\222 canto 3, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( Tu proverai s\355 come sa di sale)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lo pane altrui, e com\222\350 duro calle)Tj
T*
( Lo scendere e\222l salir per l\222altrui scale.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( You shall find out how salt is the taste of another man\222s bread, \
and how hard is the way up and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(down another man\222s stairs.)Tj
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(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Paradiso\222 canto 17, l. 58)Tj
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( L\222amor che muove il sole e l\222altre stelle.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The love that moves the sun and the other stars.)Tj
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(\221Divina Commedia\222 \221Paradiso\222 canto 33, l. 145)Tj
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( 4.3 Georges Jaques Danton 1759-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( De l\222audace, et encore de l\222audace, et toujours de l\222audace\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Boldness, and again boldness, and always boldness!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.42047 Tm
(Speech to the Legislative Committee of General Defence, 2 September 1792\
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0 -1.2 TD
(1792.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Thou wilt show my head to the people: it is worth showing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(Last words to the executioner, 5 April 1794, in Thomas Carlyle \221Histo\
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T*
(3, bk. 6, ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 124.4624 Tm
( 4.4 Joe Darion 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To dream the impossible dream,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To fight the unbeatable foe,)Tj
T*
( To bear with unbearable sorrow,)Tj
T*
( To run where the brave dare not go.)Tj
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( 4.5 George Darley 1795-1846)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( O blest unfabled Incense Tree,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That burns in glorious Araby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Nepenthe\222 l. 147)Tj
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( 4.6 Clarence Darrow 1857-1938)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I do not pretend to know where many ignorant men are sure\227that is\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(Speech at the trial of John Thomas Scopes, 15 July 1925, in \221The Worl\
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T*
(ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.7 Charles Darwin 1809-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The highest possible stage in moral culture is when we recognize tha\
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0 -1.2 TD
(thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.92047 Tm
(\221The Descent of Man\222 \(1871\) ch. 4)Tj
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( A hairy quadruped, furnished with a tail and pointed ears, probably \
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(\221The Descent of Man\222 \(1871\) ch. 21 \(on man\222s probable ancest\
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( Man with all his noble qualities...still bears in his bodily frame t\
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T*
(origin.)Tj
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(\221The Descent of Man\222 \(1871\) closing words)Tj
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( I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if use\
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T*
(of Natural Selection.)Tj
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(\221On the Origin of Species\222 \(1859\) ch. 3)Tj
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( We will now discuss in a little more detail the Struggle for Existen\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.92047 Tm
(\221On the Origin of Species\222 \(1859\) ch. 3)Tj
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( The expression often used by Mr Herbert Spencer of the Survival of t\
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T*
(accurate, and is sometimes equally convenient.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.17047 Tm
(\221On the Origin of Species\222 \(1859\) ch. 3.)Tj
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( From the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted obje\
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T*
(of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly fo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(\221On the Origin of Species\222 \(1859\) ch. 3)Tj
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( What a book a devil\222s chaplain might write on the clumsy, wastefu\
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T*
(horribly cruel works of nature!)Tj
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(Letter to J. D. Hooker, 13 July 1856)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.4624 Tm
( 4.8 Erasmus Darwin 1731-1802)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A fool...is a man who never tried an experiment in his life.)Tj
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(In a letter from Maria Edgeworth to Sophy Ruxton, 9 March 1792: F. V. B\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Chosen Letters\222 \(1931\))Tj
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( No, Sir, because I have time to think before I speak, and don\222t a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(When asked if he found his stammering very inconvenient, in \221Reminisc\
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(an appendix by Francis Darwin to his edition of Charles Darwin \221Autob\
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( 4.9 Sir Francis Darwin 1848-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( In science the credit goes to the man who convinces the world, not t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(idea first occurs.)Tj
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(\221Eugenics Review\222 April 1914, \221Francis Galton\222)Tj
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( 4.10 Jules Dassin 1911\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never on Sunday.)Tj
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(Title of film \(1959\))Tj
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( 4.11 Charles D\222Avenant 1656-1714)Tj
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T*
( Custom, that unwritten law,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By which the people keep even kings in awe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.92047 Tm
(\221Circe\222 \(1677\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.12 Sir William D\222Avenant 1606-68)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Had laws not been, we never had been blamed;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For not to know we sinned is innocence.)Tj
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(\221Dryden Miscellany\222 vi, l. 226)Tj
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( In every grave make room, make room!)Tj
T*
( The world\222s at an end, and we come, we come.)Tj
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(\221The Law against Lovers\222 \(1673\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
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( For I must go where lazy Peace)Tj
T*
( Will hide her drowsy head;)Tj
T*
( And, for the sport of kings, increase)Tj
T*
( The number of the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221The Soldier Going to the Field\222)Tj
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( The lark now leaves his wat\222ry nest)Tj
T*
( And, climbing, shakes his dewy wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Song\222 \(1638\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.13 John Davidson 1857-1909)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( A runnable stag, a kingly crop.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221A Runnable Stag\222)Tj
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( In anguish we uplift)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A new unhallowed song:)Tj
T*
( The race is to the swift,)Tj
T*
( The battle to the strong.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( For war breeds war again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221War Song\222 st. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.14 Sir John Davies 1569-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Wedlock, indeed, hath oft compared been)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Where they that are without would fain go in)Tj
T*
( And they that are within would fain go out.)Tj
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(\221A Contention Betwixt a Wife, a Widow, and a Maid for Precedence\222 \
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( Skill comes so slow, and life so fast doth fly,)Tj
T*
( We learn so little and forget so much.)Tj
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(\221Nosce Teipsum\222 st. 19)Tj
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( For this, the wisest of all moral men)Tj
T*
( Said he knew nought, but that he nought did know;)Tj
T*
( And the great mocking master mocked not then,)Tj
T*
( When he said, Truth was buried deep below.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221Nosce Teipsum\222 st. 20.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( I know my life\222s a pain and but a span,)Tj
T*
( I know my sense is mocked in every thing;)Tj
T*
( And to conclude, I know myself a man,)Tj
T*
( Which is a proud and yet a wretched thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 322.42047 Tm
(\221Nosce Teipsum\222 st. 45)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 290.2124 Tm
( 4.15 Scrope Davies c.1783-1852)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Babylon in all its desolation is a sight not so awful as that of the\
human mind in ruins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Raikes, May 1835, in \221A Portion of the Journal kept \
by Thomas Raikes\222 \(1856\) vol. 2, p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(113. Addison, in \221The Spectator\222 no. 421 \(3 July 1712\) also rema\
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T*
(ruins is not so melancholy a spectacle\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 190.4624 Tm
( 4.16 W. H. Davies \(William Henry Davis\) 1871-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And hear the pleasant cuckoo, loud and long\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The simple bird that thinks two notes a song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221April\222s Charms\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( A rainbow and a cuckoo\222s song)Tj
T*
( May never come together again;)Tj
T*
( May never come)Tj
T*
( This side the tomb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221A Great Time\222 \(1914\))Tj
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( It was the Rainbow gave thee birth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And left thee all her lovely hues.)Tj
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(\221Kingfisher\222 \(1910\))Tj
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( What is this life if, full of care,)Tj
T*
( We have no time to stand and stare.)Tj
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(\221Leisure\222 \(1911\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Sweet Stay-at-Home, sweet Well-content,)Tj
T*
( Thou knowest of no strange continent:)Tj
T*
( Thou hast not felt thy bosom keep)Tj
T*
( A gentle motion with the deep;)Tj
T*
( Thou hast not sailed in Indian seas,)Tj
T*
( Where scent comes forth in every breeze.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Sweet Stay-At-Home\222 \(1913\))Tj
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( 4.17 Elmer Davis 1890-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The first and great commandment is, Don\222t let them scare you.)Tj
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(\221But We Were Born Free\222 \(1954\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.18 Sammy Davis Jnr. 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Being a star has made it possible for me to get insulted in places w\
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0 -1.2 TD
(could never hope to go and get insulted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(In Sammy Davis Jnr., J., and B. Boyar \221Yes I Can\222 \(1965\) pt. 3, \
ch. 23)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.19 Thomas Davis 1814-45)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Come in the evening, or come in the morning,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come when you\222re looked for, or come without warning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.42047 Tm
(\221The Welcome\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 260.2124 Tm
( 4.20 Lord Dawson of Penn \(Bertrand Edward Dawson, Viscount Dawson of P\
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The King\222s life is moving peacefully towards its close.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(Bulletin, drafted on a menu card at Buckingham Palace, on the eve of the\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Kenneth Rose \221King George V\222 \(1983\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 175.4624 Tm
( 4.21 C. Day-Lewis 1904-72)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hurry! We burn)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Rome so near us, for the phoenix moment)Tj
T*
( When we have thrown off this traveller\222s trance,)Tj
T*
( And mother-naked and ageless-ancient)Tj
T*
( Wake in her warm nest of renaissance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Flight to Italy\222 \(1953\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Do not expect again a phoenix hour,)Tj
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( The triple-towered sky, the dove complaining,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sudden the rain of gold and heart\222s first ease)Tj
T*
( Traced under trees by the eldritch light of sundown.)Tj
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(\221From Feathers to Iron\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Tempt me no more; for I)Tj
T*
( Have known the lightning\222s hour,)Tj
T*
( The poet\222s inward pride,)Tj
T*
( The certainty of power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Magnetic Mountain\222 \(1933\) pt. 3, no. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( You that love England, who have an ear for her music,)Tj
T*
( The slow movement of clouds in benediction,)Tj
T*
( Clear arias of light thrilling over her uplands,)Tj
T*
( Over the chords of summer sustained peacefully.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Magnetic Mountain\222 \(1933\) pt. 4, no. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( It is the logic of our times,)Tj
T*
( No subject for immortal verse\227)Tj
T*
( That we who lived by honest dreams)Tj
T*
( Defend the bad against the worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Where are the War Poets?\222 \(1943\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 396.7124 Tm
( 4.22 Simone de Beauvoir 1908-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( On ne na\356t pas femme: on le devient.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One is not born a woman: one becomes one.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Le deuxi\351me sexe\222 \(1949\) vol. 2, pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( It is not in giving life but in risking life that man is raised abov\
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0 -1.2 TD
(superiority has been accorded in humanity not to the sex that brings for\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Le deuxi\351me sexe\222 \(1949\) pt. 2, ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 250.4624 Tm
( 4.23 Edward de Bono 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some people are aware of another sort of thinking which...leads to t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(obvious only after they have been thought of...the term \221lateral thin\
king\222 has been coined to )Tj
T*
(describe this other sort of thinking; \221vertical thinking\222 is used \
to denote the conventional logical )Tj
T*
(process.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221The Use of Lateral Thinking\222 \(1967\) preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 126.7124 Tm
( 4.24 Eugene Victor Debs 1855-1926)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When great changes occur in history, when great principles are invol\
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0 -1.2 TD
(are wrong. The minority are right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.17047 Tm
(Speech at his trial for sedition in Cleveland, Ohio, 11 September 1918, \
in \221Speeches\222 \(1928\) p. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.25456 Tm
( While there is a lower class, I am in it; while there is a criminal \
element, I am of it; while there )Tj
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(is a soul in prison, I am not free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech at his trial for sedition in Cleveland, Ohio, 14 September 1918: \
\221Liberator\222 November 1918, p. 12)Tj
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( 4.25 Stephen Decatur 1779-1820)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations, may she always\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(Decatur\222s toast at Norfolk, Virginia, April 1816, in A. S. Mackenzie \
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 4.26 Daniel Defoe 1660-1731)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We must distinguish between a man of polite learning and a mere scho\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(head stuffed with the jargon of languages, a man that understands every \
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T*
(by no body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221The Complete English Gentleman\222 \(written 1728-9\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.75456 Tm
( Pleasure is a thief to business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221The Complete English Tradesman\222 \(1725\) vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.00456 Tm
( The soul is placed in the body like a rough diamond, and must be pol\
ished, or the lustre of it )Tj
T*
(will never appear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay Upon Projects\222 \(1697\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( Why then should women be denied the benefits of instruction? If know\
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T*
(understanding had been useless additions to the sex, God almighty would \
never have given them )Tj
T*
(capacities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay Upon Projects\222 \(1697\) \221Proposal for an Academy for \
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15 0 0 15 10 340.50456 Tm
( Vice came in always at the door of necessity, not at the door of inc\
lination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Moll Flanders\222 \(1721\))Tj
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( As covetousness is the root of all evil, so poverty is the worst of \
all snares.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Moll Flanders\222 \(1721\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( Give me not poverty lest I steal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221Moll Flanders\222 \(1721\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( He told me...that mine was the middle state, or what might be called\
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T*
(life, which he had found by long experience was the best state in the wo\
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T*
(human happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( I never saw them afterwards, or any sign of them, except three of th\
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T*
(shoes that were not fellows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\) on his shipmates)Tj
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( I smiled to myself at the sight of this money. \221O drug!\222 said \
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T*
(Thou art not worth to me, no, not the taking off of the ground; one of t\
hose knives is worth all )Tj
T*
(this heap; I have no manner of use for thee, e\222en remain where thou a\
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T*
(creature whose life is not worth saving.\222 However, upon second though\
ts I took it away.)Tj
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( My island was now peopled, and I thought my self very rich in subjec\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\))Tj
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T*
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T*
(one thunderstruck, or as if I had seen an apparition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( My man Friday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\))Tj
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( In trouble to be troubled)Tj
T*
( Is to have your trouble doubled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1719\))Tj
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( Necessity makes an honest man a knave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Serious Reflections of Robinson Crusoe\222 \(1720\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The best of men cannot suspend their fate:)Tj
T*
( The good die early, and the bad die late.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Character of the late Dr S. Annesley\222 \(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( We loved the doctrine for the teacher\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Character of the late Dr S. Annesley\222 \(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Actions receive their tincture from the times,)Tj
T*
( And as they change are virtues made or crimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221A Hymn to the Pillory\222 \(1703\) l. 29)Tj
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( Nature has left this tincture in the blood,)Tj
T*
( That all men would be tyrants if they could.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221The Kentish Petition\222 \(1712-13\) addenda l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Fools out of favour grudge at knaves in place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) introduction, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Wherever God erects a house of prayer,)Tj
T*
( The Devil always builds a chapel there;)Tj
T*
( And \222twill be found, upon examination,)Tj
T*
( The latter has the largest congregation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 1, l. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( In their religion they are so uneven,)Tj
T*
( That each one goes his own by-way to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 1, l. 104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( From this amphibious ill-born mob began)Tj
T*
( That vain, ill-natured thing, an Englishman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 1, l. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Your Roman-Saxon-Danish-Norman English.)Tj
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( His lazy, long, lascivious reign.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 1, l. 236 \(of Charles II\)\
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( Great families of yesterday we show,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And lords whose parents were the Lord knows who.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 1, l. 374)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( And of all plagues with which mankind are curst,)Tj
T*
( Ecclesiastic tyranny\222s the worst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 2, l. 299)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( When kings the sword of justice first lay down,)Tj
T*
( They are no kings, though they possess the crown.)Tj
T*
( Titles are shadows, crowns are empty things,)Tj
T*
( The good of subjects is the end of kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221The True-Born Englishman\222 \(1701\) pt. 2, l. 313)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.27 Edgar Degas 1834-1917)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222art, c\222est le vice. On ne l\222\350pouse pas l\350gitimement\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Art is vice. You don\222t marry it legitimately, you rape it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(In Paul Lafond \221Degas\222 \(1918\) p. 140)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 393.9624 Tm
( 4.28 Charles De Gaulle 1890-1970)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La France a perdu une bataille! Mais la France n\222a pas perdu la g\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( France has lost a battle. But France has not lost the war!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(Proclamation, 18 June 1940, in \221Discours, messages et d\350clarations\
du G\350n\350ral de Gaulle\222 \(1941\) p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( Les trait\350s, voyez-vous, sont comme les jeunes filles et comme le\
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0 -1.2 TD
( \347a dure ce que \347a dure.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Treaties, you see, are like girls and roses: they last while they la\
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.17047 Tm
(Speech at Elys\350e Palace, 2 July 1963, in Andr\350 Passeron \221De Gau\
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15 0 0 15 10 237.25456 Tm
( Vive Le Qu\350bec Libre.)Tj
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( Long Live Free Quebec.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.67047 Tm
(Speech in Montreal, 24 July 1967, in \221Discours et messages\222 \(1970\
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15 0 0 15 10 178.75456 Tm
( Politics are too serious a matter to be left to the politicians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.92047 Tm
(Replying to Clement Attlee\222s remark that \221De Gaulle is a very good\
soldier and a very bad politician\222, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Attlee \221A Prime Minister Remembers\222 \(1961\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 127.00456 Tm
( Comment voulez-vous gouverner un pays qui a deux cent quarante-six v\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( How can you govern a country which has 246 varieties of cheese?)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.42047 Tm
(In Ernest Mignon \221Les Mots du G\350n\350ral\222 \(1962\) p. 57)Tj
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( Comme un homme politique ne croit jamais ce qu\222il dit, il est tou\
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0 -1.2 TD
(parole.)Tj
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( Since a politician never believes what he says, he is quite surprise\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In Ernest Mignon \221Les Mots du G\350n\350ral\222 \(1962\) p. 67)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 4.29 Thomas Dekker 1570-1641)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( That great fishpond \(the sea\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221The Honest Whore\222 \(1604\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( The best of men)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That e\222er wore earth about him, was a sufferer,)Tj
T*
( A soft, meek, patient, humble, tranquil spirit,)Tj
T*
( The first true gentleman that ever breathed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221The Honest Whore\222 \(1604\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers?)Tj
T*
( O sweet content!)Tj
T*
( Art thou rich, yet is thy mind perplexed?)Tj
T*
( O, punishment!)Tj
T*
( Dost thou laugh to see how fools are vexed)Tj
T*
( To add to golden numbers, golden numbers?)Tj
T*
( O, sweet content, O, sweet, O, sweet content!)Tj
T*
( Work apace, apace, apace, apace;)Tj
T*
( Honest labour bears a lovely face;)Tj
T*
( Then hey nonny, nonny; hey nonny, nonny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(\221Patient Grissil\222 \(1603\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.00456 Tm
( Canst drink the waters of the crisped spring?)Tj
T*
( O sweet content!)Tj
T*
( Swim\222st thou in wealth, yet sink\222st in thine own tears?)Tj
T*
( O punishment!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Patient Grissil\222 \(1603\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( Golden slumbers kiss your eyes,)Tj
T*
( Smiles awake you when you rise:)Tj
T*
( Sleep, pretty wantons, do not cry,)Tj
T*
( And I will sing a lullaby:)Tj
T*
( Rock them, rock them, lullaby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221Patient Grissil\222 \(1603\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( Prince I am not, yet I am nobly born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221The Shoemaker\222s Holiday\222 \(1600\) sc. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 109.4624 Tm
( 4.30 J. de Knight \(James E. Myers\) 1919\227and M. Freedman 1893-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \(We\222re gonna\) rock around the clock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1953\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 39.7124 Tm
( 4.31 Walter de la Mare 1873-1956)Tj
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( Ann, Ann!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come! quick as you can!)Tj
T*
( There\222s a fish that talks)Tj
T*
( In the frying-pan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.17047 Tm
(\221Alas, Alack\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.25456 Tm
( Oh, no man knows)Tj
T*
( Through what wild centuries)Tj
T*
( Roves back the rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.42047 Tm
(\221All That\222s Past\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 584.50456 Tm
( He is crazed with the spell of far Arabia,)Tj
T*
( They have stolen his wits away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 550.67047 Tm
(\221Arabia\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 529.75456 Tm
( Here lies a most beautiful lady,)Tj
T*
( Light of step and heart was she;)Tj
T*
( I think she was the most beautiful lady)Tj
T*
( That ever was in the West Country.)Tj
T*
( But beauty vanishes; beauty passes;)Tj
T*
( However rare\227rare it be;)Tj
T*
( And when I crumble, who will remember)Tj
T*
( This lady of the West Country?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(\221Epitaph\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.00456 Tm
( Look thy last on all things lovely,)Tj
T*
( Every hour. Let no night)Tj
T*
( Seal thy sense in deathly slumber)Tj
T*
( Till to delight)Tj
T*
( Thou have paid thy utmost blessing;)Tj
T*
( Since that all things thou wouldst praise)Tj
T*
( Beauty took from those who loved them)Tj
T*
( In other days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.17047 Tm
(\221Fare Well\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.25456 Tm
( A face peered. All the grey night)Tj
T*
( In chaos of vacancy shone;)Tj
T*
( Nought but vast Sorrow was there\227)Tj
T*
( The sweet cheat gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.42047 Tm
(\221The Ghost\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.50456 Tm
( Hi! handsome hunting man)Tj
T*
( Fire your little gun.)Tj
T*
( Bang! Now the animal)Tj
T*
( Is dead and dumb and done.)Tj
T*
( Nevermore to peep again, creep again, leap again,)Tj
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( Eat or sleep or drink again, Oh, what fun!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hi!\222 \(1930\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Three jolly gentlemen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In coats of red,)Tj
T*
( Rode their horses)Tj
T*
( Up to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Huntsmen\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( \221Is there anybody there?\222 said the Traveller,)Tj
T*
( Knocking on the moonlit door;)Tj
T*
( And his horse in the silence champed the grasses)Tj
T*
( Of the forest\222s ferny floor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Listeners\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( \221Tell them I came, and no one answered,)Tj
T*
( That I kept my word,\222 he said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Listeners\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Ay, they heard his foot upon the stirrup,)Tj
T*
( And the sound of iron on stone,)Tj
T*
( And how the silence surged softly backward,)Tj
T*
( When the plunging hoofs were gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Listeners\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( What is the world, O soldiers?)Tj
T*
( It is I:)Tj
T*
( I, this incessant snow,)Tj
T*
( This northern sky;)Tj
T*
( Soldiers, this solitude)Tj
T*
( Through which we go)Tj
T*
( Is I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Napoleon\222 \(1906\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Softly along the road of evening,)Tj
T*
( In a twilight dim with rose,)Tj
T*
( Wrinkled with age, and drenched with dew,)Tj
T*
( Old Nod, the shepherd, goes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Nod\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Slowly, silently, now the moon)Tj
T*
( Walks the night in her silver shoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Silver\222 \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 87.7124 Tm
( 4.32 Shelagh Delaney 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Women never have young minds. They are born three thousand years old\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221A Taste of Honey\222 \(1959\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
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( 4.33 Jack Dempsey 1895-1983)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Honey, I just forgot to duck.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 710.42047 Tm
(To his wife, on losing the World Heavyweight title, 23 September 1926, i\
n J. and B. P. Dempsey )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221Dempsey\222 \(1977\) p. 202. After a failed attempt on his life in 1\
981, Ronald Reagan quipped: \221Honey, I forgot )Tj
T*
(to duck\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 648.2124 Tm
( 4.34 Sir John Denham 1615-69)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Thames, the most loved of all the Ocean\222s sons,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By his old sire, to his embraces runs,)Tj
T*
( Hasting to pay his tribute to the Sea,)Tj
T*
( Like mortal life to meet eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.67047 Tm
(\221Cooper\222s Hill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.75456 Tm
( O could I flow like thee, and make thy stream)Tj
T*
( My great example, as it is my theme!)Tj
T*
( Though deep, yet clear, though gentle, yet not dull,)Tj
T*
( Strong without rage, without o\222erflowing full.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.92047 Tm
(\221Cooper\222s Hill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.00456 Tm
( Youth, what man\222s age is like to be doth show;)Tj
T*
( We may our ends by our beginnings know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.17047 Tm
(\221Of Prudence\222 l. 225)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.25456 Tm
( Old Mother Wit, and Nature gave)Tj
T*
( Shakespeare and Fletcher all they have;)Tj
T*
( In Spenser, and in Jonson, Art,)Tj
T*
( Of slower Nature got the start.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.42047 Tm
(\221On Mr Abraham Cowley\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.50456 Tm
( Such is our pride, our folly, or our fate,)Tj
T*
( That few, but such as cannot write, translate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.67047 Tm
(\221To Richard Fanshaw\222 \(1648\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.4624 Tm
( 4.35 Lord Denman \(Thomas, first Baron Denman\) 1779-1854)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If it is possible that such a practice as that which has taken place\
in the present instance should )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be allowed to pass without a remedy...trial by jury itself, instead of b\
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T*
(who are accused, will be a delusion, a mockery, and a snare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.92047 Tm
(House of Lords speech, 4 September 1844, in the case of O\222Connell and\
others versus The Queen in E. W. )Tj
T*
(Cox \(ed.\) \221Reports of Cases in Criminal Law\222 \(1846\) vol. 1, p\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 112.7124 Tm
( 4.36 John Dennis 1657-1734)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man who could make so vile a pun would not scruple to pick a pocke\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.17047 Tm
(The Gentleman\222s Magazine \(1781\) p. 324 \(editorial note\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.25456 Tm
( The great design of art is to restore the decays that happened to hu\
man nature by the fall, by )Tj
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(restoring order.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Grounds of Criticism in Poetry\222 \(1704\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Damn them! They will not let my play run, but they steal my thunder!\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(In William S. Walsh \221A Handy-Book of Literary Curiosities\222 \(1893\)\
p. 1052)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 4.37 Nigel Dennis 1912\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am a well-to-do, revered and powerful figure. That Establishment w\
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0 -1.2 TD
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dominate her stage, her )Tj
T*
(museums, her dances and her costumes; I have an honoured voice in her el\
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T*
(and her alone\227I bend the knee, and in return for my homage she is gen\
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T*
(failings, asking only that I indulge them privately.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221Cards of Identity\222 \(1955\) pt. 2, p. 230)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.38 Thomas De Quincey 1785-1859)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The burden of the incommunicable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an English Opium Eater\222 \(1822\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.00456 Tm
( So, then, Oxford Street, stony-hearted stepmother, thou that listene\
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0 -1.2 TD
(and drinkest the tears of children, at length I was dismissed from thee.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an English Opium Eater\222 \(1822\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( It was a Sunday afternoon, wet and cheerless: and a duller spectacle\
this earth of ours has not )Tj
T*
(to show than a rainy Sunday in London.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an English Opium Eater\222 \(1822\) pt. 2 \221The Ple\
asures of Opium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Thou hast the keys of Paradise, oh just, subtle, and mighty opium!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an English Opium Eater\222 \(1822\) pt. 2 \221The Ple\
asures of Opium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( Everlasting farewells! and again, and yet again reverberated\227ever\
lasting farewells!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an English Opium Eater\222 \(1822\) pt. 3 \221The Pai\
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15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( Murder considered as one of the fine arts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(Title of essay in \221Blackwood\222s Magazine\222 February 1827)Tj
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( If once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to thin\
k little of robbing; and )Tj
T*
(from robbing he comes next to drinking and sabbath-breaking, and from th\
at to incivility and )Tj
T*
(procrastination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts\222 Second Paper in \221\
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15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( There is first the literature of knowledge, and secondly, the litera\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Essays on the Poets\222 \221Pope\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Books, we are told, propose to instruct or to amuse. Indeed!...The t\
rue antithesis to knowledge, )Tj
T*
(in this case, is not pleasure, but power. All that is literature seeks t\
o communicate power; all that )Tj
T*
(is not literature, to communicate knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.92047 Tm
(\221Letters to a Young Man whose Education has been Neglected\222 no. 3,\
in the \221London Magazine\222 January-July )Tj
T*
(1823. De Quincey adds that he is indebted for this distinction to \221ma\
ny years\222 conversation with Mr )Tj
T*
(Wordsworth\222)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The duty of an Opposition [is] very simple...to oppose everything, a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Quoting \221Mr Tierney, a great Whig authority\222, in House of Commons,\
4 June 1841)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.50456 Tm
( Meddle and muddle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.67047 Tm
(Summarising Earl Russell\222s foreign policy: Speech on the Address, Hou\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 646.4624 Tm
( 4.40 Ren\350 Descartes 1596-1650)Tj
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( Le bon sens est la chose du monde la mieux partag\350e, car chacun p\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.17047 Tm
(\221Le Discours de la m\350thode\222 \(1637\) pt. 1, opening words)Tj
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( Cogito, ergo sum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I think, therefore I am.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 510.67047 Tm
(\221Le Discours de la m\350thode\222 \(1637\) pt. 4)Tj
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( Repugnare ut detur vacuum sive in quo nulla plane sit res.)Tj
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( It is contrary to reason to say that there is a vacuum or space in w\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Principia Philosophiae\222 \(1644\) pt. 2, sect. 6 \(translated by E\
. S. Haldane and G. R. T. Ross\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 401.9624 Tm
( 4.41 Camille Desmoulins 1760-94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My age is that of the bon Sansculotte J\350sus; an age fatal to)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Revolutionists.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(Answer given at his trial, in Thomas Carlyle \221History of the French R\
evolution\222 \(1837\) bk. 6, ch. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 4.42 Destouches \(Philippe N\350ricault\) 1680-1754)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Les absents ont toujours tort.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The absent are always in the wrong.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Obstacle impr\350vu\222 \(1717\) act 1, sc. 6)Tj
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( 4.43 Buddy De Sylva \(George Gard De Sylva\) 1895-1950 and Lew Brown 18\
93-1958)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The best things in life are free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1927\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 4.44 Edward De Vere, Earl Of Oxford)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( See Oxford \(3.43\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.45 Robert Devereux, Earl Of Essex)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Essex \(5.46\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.46 Bernard De Voto 1897-1955)Tj
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( The proper union of gin and vermouth is a great and sudden glory; it\
is one of the happiest )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(marriages on earth and one of the shortest lived.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Hour\222 \(1951\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 685.7124 Tm
( 4.47 Peter De Vries 1910\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is the final proof of God\222s omnipotence that he need not exist\
in order to save us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.17047 Tm
(\221The Mackerel Plaza\222 \(1958\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.25456 Tm
( The value of marriage is not that adults produce children but that c\
hildren produce adults.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.42047 Tm
(\221The Tunnel of Love\222 \(1954\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 579.2124 Tm
( 4.48 Lord Dewar 1864-1930)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( [There are] only two classes of pedestrians in these days of reckles\
s motor traffic\227the quick, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.67047 Tm
(In George Robey \221Looking Back on Life\222 \(1933\) ch. 28)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 491.4624 Tm
( 4.49 Sergei Diaghilev 1872-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \310tonne-moi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Astonish me.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.17047 Tm
(To Jean Cocteau, in \221Journals of Jean Cocteau\222 \(1957\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.9624 Tm
( 4.50 Charles Dibdin 1745-1814)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Did you ever hear of Captain Wattle?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He was all for love, and a little for the bottle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.42047 Tm
(\221Captain Wattle and Miss Roe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.50456 Tm
( For a soldier I listed, to grow great in fame,)Tj
T*
( And be shot at for sixpence a-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.67047 Tm
(\221Charity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.75456 Tm
( In every mess I finds a friend,)Tj
T*
( In every port a wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.92047 Tm
(\221Jack in his Element\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.00456 Tm
( What argufies sniv\222ling and piping your eye?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.17047 Tm
(\221Poor Jack\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.25456 Tm
( But the standing toast that pleased the most)Tj
T*
( Was\227The wind that blows, the ship that goes,)Tj
T*
( And the lass that loves a sailor!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.42047 Tm
(\221The Round Robin\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.50456 Tm
( Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling,)Tj
T*
( The darling of our crew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.67047 Tm
(\221Tom Bowling\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.75456 Tm
( Faithful, below, he did his duty;)Tj
ET
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( But now he\222s gone aloft.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Bowling\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 4.51 Thomas Dibdin 1771-1841)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh! what a snug little Island,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A right little, tight little Island!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221The Snug Little Island\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 4.52 Charles Dickens 1812-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( )Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 563.54173 Tm
( 4.52.1 Barnaby Rudge)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 542.25456 Tm
( Something will come of this. I hope it mayn\222t be human gore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 526.42047 Tm
(\221Barnaby Rudge\222 \(1841\) ch. 4 \(Simon Tappertit\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 505.50456 Tm
( There are strings...in the human heart that had better not be wibrat\
ed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221Barnaby Rudge\222 \(1841\) ch. 22 \(Mr Tappertit\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 458.54173 Tm
( 4.52.2 Bleak House)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 437.25456 Tm
( Jarndyce and Jarndyce still drags its dreary length before the Court\
, perennially hopeless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( This is a London particular...A fog, miss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.75456 Tm
( The wind\222s in the east...I am always conscious of an uncomfortabl\
e sensation now and then )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(when the wind is blowing in the east.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 6 \(Mr Jarndyce\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.00456 Tm
( \221Not to put too fine a point upon it\222\227a favourite apology f\
or plain-speaking with Mr Snagsby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.17047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.25456 Tm
( He wos wery good to me, he wos!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.42047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 11 \(Jo\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.50456 Tm
( He is celebrated, almost everywhere, for his Deportment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 14 \(Caddy\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.75456 Tm
( What is peace? Is it war? No. Is it strife? No.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.92047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 19 \(Mr Chadband\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.00456 Tm
( You are a human boy, my young friend. A human boy. )Tj
T*
( O glorious to be a human boy!...)Tj
T*
( O running stream of sparkling joy)Tj
T*
( To be a soaring human boy!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 19 \(Mr Chadband\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( Jobling, there are chords in the human mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.42047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 20 \(Mr Guppy\))Tj
ET
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( \221It is,\222 says Chadband, \221the ray of rays, the sun of suns, \
the moon of moons, the star of stars. It )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is the light of Terewth.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Lo, the city is barren, I have seen but an eel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 25 \(Mr Chadband\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( It\222s my old girl that advises. She has the head. But I never own \
to it before her. Discipline must )Tj
T*
(be maintained.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 27 \(Mr Bagnet\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The one great principle of the English law is, to make business for \
itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Dead, your Majesty, Dead, my lords and gentlemen. Dead, Right Revere\
nds and Wrong )Tj
T*
(Reverends of every Order. Dead, men and women, born with heavenly compas\
sion in your )Tj
T*
(hearts. And dying thus around us, every day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 47 \(on the death of Jo\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( I call them the Wards in Jarndyce. They are caged up with all the ot\
hers. With Hope, Joy, )Tj
T*
(Youth, Peace, Rest, Life, Dust, Ashes, Waste, Want, Ruin, Despair, Madne\
ss, Death, Cunning, )Tj
T*
(Folly, Words, Wigs, Rags, Sheepskin, Plunder, Precedent, Jargon, Gammon,\
and Spinach!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Bleak House\222 \(1853\) ch. 60 \(Miss Flite\222s birds\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 414.29173 Tm
( 4.52.3 The Chimes)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( O let us love our occupations,)Tj
T*
( Bless the squire and his relations,)Tj
T*
( Live upon our daily rations,)Tj
T*
( And always know our proper stations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221The Chimes\222 \(1844\) \221The Second Quarter\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 292.04173 Tm
( 4.52.4 A Christmas Carol)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 270.75456 Tm
( \221God bless us every one!\222 said Tiny Tim, the last of all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(\221A Christmas Carol\222 \(1843\) stave 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.00456 Tm
( It was a turkey! He could never have stood upon his legs, that bird.\
He would have snapped )Tj
T*
(\222em off short in a minute, like sticks of sealing-wax.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(\221A Christmas Carol\222 \(1843\) stave 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 169.04173 Tm
( 4.52.5 David Copperfield)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( I am a lone lorn creetur...and everythink goes contrairy with me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 3 \(Mrs Gummidge\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( I\222d better go into the house, and die and be a riddance!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 3 \(Mrs Gummidge\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 74.25456 Tm
( She\222s been thinking of the old \222un!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 3 \(Mr Peggotty of Mrs Gummidge\)\
)Tj
ET
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( Barkis is willin\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I live on broken wittles\227and I sleep on the coals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 5 \(The Waiter\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( \221When a man says he\222s willin\222...it\222s as much as to say, \
that a man\222s waitin\222 for a answer.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 8 \(Mr Barkis\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Experientia does it\227as papa used to say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 11 \(Mrs Micawber\). Tacitus \221\
The Histories\222 bk. 5, ch. 6: Experientia docuit )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(experience has taught, commonly quoted Experientia docet experience teac\
hes)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.00456 Tm
( I have known him come home to supper with a flood of tears, and a de\
claration that nothing )Tj
T*
(was now left but a jail; and go to bed making a calculation of the expen\
se of putting bow-)Tj
T*
(windows to the house, \221in case anything turned up,\222 which was his \
favourite expression.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 11 \(on Mr Micawber\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen si\
x, result happiness. )Tj
T*
(Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and \
six, result misery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 12 \(Mr Micawber\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( We live in a numble abode.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 16 \(Uriah Heep\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( We are so very \222umble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 17 \(Uriah Heep\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( \221Orses and dorgs is some men\222s fancy. They\222re wittles and d\
rink to me\227lodging, wife, and )Tj
T*
(children\227reading, writing and \222rithmetic\227snuff, tobacker, and s\
leep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 19 \(The Gentleman on the Canterb\
ury Coach\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( I only ask for information.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 20 \(Miss Rosa Dartle\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( It was as true...as taxes is. And nothing\222s truer than them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 21 \(Mr Barkis\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( What a world of gammon and spinnage it is, though, ain\222t it!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 22 \(Miss Mowcher\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Other things are all very well in their way, but give me Blood!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 25 \(Mr Waterbrook\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( I assure you she\222s the dearest girl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 27 \(Traddles\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Accidents will occur in the best-regulated families.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 28 \(Mr Micawber\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( He told me, only the other day, that it was provided for. That was M\
r)Tj
T*
( Micawber\222s expression, \221Provided for.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 28 \(Traddles\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( \221People can\222t die, along the coast,\222 said Mr Peggotty, \221\
except when the tide\222s pretty nigh out. )Tj
T*
(They can\222t be born, unless it\222s pretty nigh in\227not properly bor\
n, till flood. He\222s a going out with )Tj
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(the tide.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Mrs Crupp had indignantly assured him that there wasn\222t room to s\
wing a cat there; but, as Mr )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Dick justly observed to me, sitting down on the foot of the bed, nursing\
his leg, \221You know, )Tj
T*
(Trotwood, I don\222t want to swing a cat. I never do swing a cat. Theref\
ore, what does that signify to )Tj
T*
(me!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( It\222s only my child-wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 44 \(of Dora\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Circumstances beyond my individual control.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 49 \(Mr Micawber\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I\222m Gormed\227and I can\222t say no fairer than that!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221David Copperfield\222 \(1850\) ch. 63 \(Mr Pegotty\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 505.04173 Tm
( 4.52.6 Dombey and Son)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 483.75456 Tm
( He\222s tough, ma\222am, tough is J.B. Tough, and devilish sly!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 7 \(Major Bagstock\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.00456 Tm
( Papa! What\222s money?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 8 \(Paul Dombey\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( There was no light nonsense about Miss Blimber...she was dry and san\
dy with working in the )Tj
T*
(graves of deceased languages. None of your live languages for Miss Blimb\
er. They must be dead)Tj
T*
(\227stone dead\227and then Miss Blimber dug them up like a Ghoul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.50456 Tm
( As to Mr Feeder, B.A., Doctor Blimber\222s assistant, he was a kind \
of human barrel-organ, with )Tj
T*
(a little list of tunes at which he was continually working, over and ove\
r again, without any )Tj
T*
(variation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.75456 Tm
( If I could have known Cicero, and been his friend, and talked with h\
im in his retirement at )Tj
T*
(Tusculum \(beau-ti-ful Tusculum\), I could have died contented.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 11 \(Mrs Blimber\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( In the Proverbs of Solomon you will find the following words, \221Ma\
y we never want a friend in )Tj
T*
(need, nor a bottle to give him!\222 When found, make a note of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 15 \(Captain Cuttle\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( What the waves were always saying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) title of ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( Cows are my passion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 21 \(Mrs Skewton\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( It\222s of no consequence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 22 \(Mr Toots\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( The bearings of this observation lays in the application of it.)Tj
ET
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(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 23 \(Bunsby\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Say, like those wicked Turks, there is no What\222s-his-name but Thi\
ngummy, and What-you-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(may-call-it is his prophet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 27 \(Mrs Skewton\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I positively adore Miss Dombey;\227I\227I am perfectly sore with lov\
ing her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 30 \(Mr Toots\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( If you could see my legs when I take my boots off, you\222d form som\
e idea of what unrequited )Tj
T*
(affection is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Dombey and Son\222 \(1848\) ch. 48 \(Mr Toots\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 577.79173 Tm
( 4.52.7 The Mystery of Edwin Drood)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 556.50456 Tm
( Stranger, pause and ask thyself the question, Canst thou do likewise\
? If not, with a blush retire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221The Mystery of Edwin Drood\222 \(1870\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( \221Dear me,\222 said Mr Grewgious, peeping in, \221it\222s like loo\
king down the throat of Old Time.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Mystery of Edwin Drood\222 \(1870\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 472.79173 Tm
( 4.52.8 Great Expectations)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 451.50456 Tm
( Your sister is given to government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.67047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 7 \(Joe Gargery\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.75456 Tm
( \221He calls the knaves, Jacks, this boy,\222 said Estella with disd\
ain, before our first game was out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.00456 Tm
( In the little world in which children have their existence, whosoeve\
r brings them up, there is )Tj
T*
(nothing so finely perceived and so finely felt, as injustice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( I had cherished a profound conviction that her bringing me up by han\
d, gave her no right to )Tj
T*
(bring me up by jerks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( It is a most miserable thing to feel ashamed of home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.75456 Tm
( On the Rampage, Pip, and off the Rampage, Pip; such is Life!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(\221Great Expectations\222 \(1861\) ch. 15 \(Joe Gargery\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.52.9 Hard Times)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( Now, what I want is, Facts...Facts alone are wanted in life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Hard Times\222 \(1854\) bk. 1, ch. 1 \(Mr Gradgrind\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( Ah, Rachael, aw a muddle! Fro\222 first to last, a muddle!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.92047 Tm
(\221Hard Times\222 \(1854\) bk. 3, ch. 6 \(Stephen Blackpool\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.00456 Tm
( People mutht be amuthed. They can\222t be alwayth a learning, nor ye\
t they can\222t be alwayth a )Tj
T*
(working, they an\222t made for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(\221Hard Times\222 \(1854\) bk. 3, ch. 8 \(Mr Sleary\))Tj
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( 4.52.10 Little Dorrit)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 732.75456 Tm
( Whatever was required to be done, the Circumlocution Office was befo\
rehand with all the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(public departments in the art of perceiving\227HOW NOT TO DO IT.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.92047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.00456 Tm
( Look here. Upon my soul you mustn\222t come into the place saying yo\
u want to know, you know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.17047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, ch. 10 \(Barnacle Junior\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.25456 Tm
( There\222s milestones on the Dover Road!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.42047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, ch. 23 \(Mr F.\222s Aunt\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.50456 Tm
( I revere the memory of Mr F. as an estimable man and most indulgent \
husband, only necessary )Tj
T*
(to mention Asparagus and it appeared or to hint at any little delicate t\
hing to drink and it came )Tj
T*
(like magic in a pint bottle it was not ecstasy but it was comfort.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, ch. 24 \(Flora Finching\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( As to marriage on the part of a man, my dear, Society requires that \
he should retrieve his )Tj
T*
(fortunes by marriage. Society requires that he should gain by marriage. \
Society requires that he )Tj
T*
(should found a handsome establishment by marriage. Society does not see,\
otherwise, what he )Tj
T*
(has to do with marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 1, ch. 33 \(Mrs Merdle\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( Father is rather vulgar, my dear. The word Papa, besides, gives a pr\
etty form to the lips. Papa, )Tj
T*
(potatoes, poultry, prunes, and prism, are all very good words for the li\
ps: especially prunes and )Tj
T*
(prism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 2, ch. 5 \(Mrs General\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( Once a gentleman, and always a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221Little Dorrit\222 \(1857\) bk. 2, ch. 28 \(Rigaud\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 321.29173 Tm
( 4.52.11 Martin Chuzzlewit)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Any man may be in good spirits and good temper when he\222s well dre\
ssed. There an\222t much )Tj
T*
(credit in that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 5 \(Mark Tapley\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Affection beaming in one eye, and calculation shining out of the oth\
er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 8 \(Mrs Todgers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Charity and Mercy. Not unholy names, I hope?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 9 \(Mr Pecksniff\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Let us be moral. Let us contemplate existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 9 \(Mr Pecksniff\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Here\222s the rule for bargains: \221Do other men, for they would do\
you.\222 That\222s the true business )Tj
T*
(precept.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 11 \(Jonas Chuzzlewit\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( \221Mrs Harris,\222 I says, \221leave the bottle on the chimley-piec\
e, and don\222t ask me to take none, but )Tj
T*
(let me put my lips to it when I am so dispoged.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 19 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
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( Some people...may be Rooshans, and others may be Prooshans; they are\
born so, and will )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(please themselves. Them which is of other naturs thinks different.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 19 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Therefore I do require it, which I makes confession, to be brought r\
eg\222lar and draw\222d mild.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 25 \(Mrs Gamp on her \221half a p\
int of porter\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( She\222s the sort of woman...one would almost feel disposed to bury \
for nothing: and do it neatly, )Tj
T*
(too!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 25 \(Mould\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( He\222d make a lovely corpse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 25 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( All the wickedness of the world is print to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 26 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( \221Sairey,\222 says Mrs Harris, \221sech is life. Vich likeways is \
the hend of all things!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 29 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( We never knows wot\222s hidden in each other\222s hearts; and if we \
had glass winders there, we\222d )Tj
T*
(need keep the shutters up, some on us, I do assure you!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 29 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Our fellow-countryman is a model of a man, quite fresh from Natur\222\
s mould!...Rough he may )Tj
T*
(be. So air our Barrs. Wild he may be. So air our Buffalers. But he is th\
e child of Natur\222, and a )Tj
T*
(child of Freedom; and his boastful answer to the Despot and the Tyrant i\
s, that his bright home is )Tj
T*
(in the Settin Sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 34 \(Pogram\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( \221Mind and matter,\222 said the lady in the wig, \221glide swift i\
nto the vortex of immensity. Howls )Tj
T*
(the sublime, and softly sleeps the calm Ideal, in the whispering chamber\
s of Imagination.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( \221The Ankworks package,\222...\222I wish it was in Jonadge\222s be\
lly, I do,\222 cried Mrs Gamp; appearing )Tj
T*
(to confound the prophet with the whale in this miraculous aspiration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( And what a Life Young Bailey\222s was!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 49 \(Poll Sweedlepipe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( \221Who deniges of it?\222 Mrs Gamp enquired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( His \222owls was organs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 49 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( No, Betsey! Drink fair, wotever you do!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 49 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( The words she spoke of Mrs Harris, lambs could not forgive...nor wor\
ms forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 49 \(Mrs Gamp\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( Farewell! Be the proud bride of a ducal coronet, and forget me!...Un\
alterably, never yours, )Tj
T*
(Augustus.)Tj
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(\221Martin Chuzzlewit\222 \(1844\) ch. 54 \(Augustus Moddle\))Tj
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( 4.52.12 Nicholas Nickleby)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 701.50456 Tm
( United Metropolitan Improved Hot Muffin and Crumpet Baking and Punct\
ual)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Delivery Company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.67047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.75456 Tm
( Education.\227At Mr Wackford Squeers\222s Academy, Dotheboys Hall, a\
t the delightful village of )Tj
T*
(Dotheboys, near Greta Bridge in Yorkshire, Youth are boarded, clothed, b\
ooked, furnished with )Tj
T*
(pocket-money, provided with all necessaries, instructed in all languages\
living and dead, )Tj
T*
(mathematics, orthography, geometry, astronomy, trigonometry, the use of \
the globes, algebra, )Tj
T*
(single stick \(if required\), writing, arithmetic, fortification, and ev\
ery other branch of classical )Tj
T*
(literature. Terms, twenty guineas per annum. No extras, no vacations, an\
d diet unparalleled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.92047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.00456 Tm
( He had but one eye, and the popular prejudice runs in favour of two.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.17047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 4 \(Mr Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.25456 Tm
( Serve it right for being so dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.42047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 5 \(Mr Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.50456 Tm
( Here\222s richness!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.67047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 5 \(Mr Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.75456 Tm
( Subdue your appetites my dears, and you\222ve conquered human natur.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.92047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 5 \(Mr Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.00456 Tm
( C-l-e-a-n, clean, verb active, to make bright, to scour. W-i-n, win,\
d-e-r, der, winder, a )Tj
T*
(casement. When the boy knows this out of the book, he goes and does it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.17047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 8 \(Mr Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.25456 Tm
( As she frequently remarked when she made any such mistake, it would \
be all the same a )Tj
T*
(hundred years hence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.42047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 9 \(Mrs Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.50456 Tm
( There are only two styles of portrait painting; the serious and the \
smirk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.67047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 10 \(Miss La Creevy\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.75456 Tm
( Sir, My pa requests me to write to you, the doctors considering it d\
oubtful whether he will ever )Tj
T*
(recuvver the use of his legs which prevents his holding a pen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.92047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 15 \(Fanny Squeers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.00456 Tm
( \221It\222s very easy to talk,\222 said Mrs Mantalini. \221Not so ea\
sy when one is eating a demnition egg,\222 )Tj
T*
(replied Mr Mantalini; \221for the yolk runs down the waistcoat, and yolk\
of egg does not match any )Tj
T*
(waistcoat but a yellow waistcoat, demmit.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.17047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.25456 Tm
( Language was not powerful enough to describe the infant phenomenon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.42047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.50456 Tm
( The unities, sir...are a completeness\227a kind of universal dovetai\
ledness with regard to place )Tj
T*
(and time.)Tj
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(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 24 \(Mr Curdle\))Tj
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( She\222s the only sylph I ever saw, who could stand upon one leg, an\
d play the tambourine on her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(other knee, like a sylph.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 25 \(Mr Crummles\))Tj
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( Bring in the bottled lightning, a clean tumbler, and a corkscrew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 49 \(The Gentleman in the Small-c\
lothes\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( All is gas and gaiters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 49 \(The Gentleman in the Small-c\
lothes\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( My life is one demd horrid grind!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 64 \(Mr Mantalini\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( He has gone to the demnition bow-wows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221Nicholas Nickleby\222 \(1839\) ch. 64 \(Mr Mantalini\))Tj
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13.75 0 0 13.75 10 522.29173 Tm
( 4.52.13 The Old Curiosity Shop)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( What is the odds so long as the fire of soul is kindled at the taper\
of conwiviality, and the wing )Tj
T*
(of friendship never moults a feather!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 2 \(Dick Swiveller\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( Fan the sinking flame of hilarity with the wing of friendship; and p\
ass the rosy wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 7 \(Dick Swiveller\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( Codlin\222s the friend, not Short.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 19 \(Codlin\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( If I know\222d a donkey wot wouldn\222t go)Tj
T*
( To see Mrs Jarley\222s waxwork show,)Tj
T*
( Do you think I\222d acknowledge him,)Tj
T*
( Oh no no!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 27 \(Codlin\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( I never nursed a dear Gazelle, to glad me with its soft black eye, b\
ut when it came to know me )Tj
T*
(well, and love me, it was sure to marry a market-gardener.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 56 \(Dick Swiveller\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( It was a maxim with Foxey\227our revered father, gentlemen\227\222Al\
ways suspect everybody.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Curiosity Shop\222 \(1841\) ch. 66 \(Sampson Brass\))Tj
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13.75 0 0 13.75 10 180.29173 Tm
( 4.52.14 Oliver Twist)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.00456 Tm
( Please, sir, I want some more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.17047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 2 \(Oliver\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.25456 Tm
( Known by the sobriquet of \221The artful Dodger.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.50456 Tm
( There is a passion for hunting something deeply implanted in the hum\
an breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( I only know two sorts of boys. Mealy boys, and beef-faced boys.)Tj
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(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 14 \(Mr Grimwig\))Tj
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( Oh, Mrs Corney, what a prospect this opens! What a opportunity for a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(house-keepings!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 27 \(Bumble\))Tj
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( This ain\222t the shop for justice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 43 \(The Artful Dodger\))Tj
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( \221If the law supposes that,\222 said Mr Bumble ... \221the law is \
a ass\227a idiot.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 51 \(Bumble\).)Tj
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( Strike them all dead! What right have they to butcher me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Oliver Twist\222 \(1838\) ch. 52 \(Fagin\))Tj
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13.75 0 0 13.75 10 559.04173 Tm
( 4.52.15 Our Mutual Friend)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( A literary man\227with a wooden leg.)Tj
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(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk.1, ch. 5 \(Mr Boffin, on Silas Weg\
g\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Professionally he declines and falls, and as a friend he drops into \
poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk.1, ch. 5 \(Mr Boffin, on Silas Weg\
g\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( Meaty jelly, too, especially when a little salt, which is the case w\
hen there\222s ham, is mellering )Tj
T*
(to the organ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk.1, ch. 5 \(Silas Wegg\))Tj
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( There is in the Englishman a combination of qualities, a modesty, an\
independence, a )Tj
T*
(responsibility, a repose, combined with an absence of everything calcula\
ted to call a blush into )Tj
T*
(the cheek of a young person, which one would seek in vain among the Nati\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk.1, ch. 11 \(Mr Podsnap\))Tj
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( A slap-up gal in a bang-up chariot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk. 2, ch. 8)Tj
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( He\222d be sharper than a serpent\222s tooth, if he wasn\222t as dul\
l as ditch water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk. 3, ch. 10 \(Fanny Cleaver\))Tj
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(\221Our Mutual Friend\222 \(1865\) bk. 4, ch. 5 \(Bella\))Tj
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13.75 0 0 13.75 10 216.29173 Tm
( 4.52.16 Pickwick Papers)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 195.00456 Tm
( Heads, heads, take care of your heads....Five children\227mother\227\
tall lady, eating sandwiches\227)Tj
T*
(forgot the arch\227crash\227knock\227children look round\227mother\222s \
head off\227sandwich in her hand)Tj
T*
(\227no mouth to put it in\227head of a family off\227shocking, shocking!\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.17047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 2 \(Jingle\))Tj
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( \221I was ruminating,\222 said Mr Pickwick, \221on the strange mutab\
ility of human affairs.\222 \221Ah, I see\227)Tj
T*
(in at the palace door one day, out at the window the next. Philosopher, \
sir?\222 \221An observer of )Tj
T*
(human nature, sir,\222 said Mr Pickwick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 2)Tj
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( Kent, sir\227everybody knows Kent\227apples, cherries, hops, and wom\
en.)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 2 \(Jingle\))Tj
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( I wants to make your flesh creep.)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 8 \(The Fat Boy\))Tj
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( \221It\222s always best on these occasions to do what the mob do.\222\
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 13)Tj
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( \221Can I unmoved see thee dying)Tj
T*
( On a log,)Tj
T*
( Expiring frog!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 15 \(Mrs Leo Hunter\))Tj
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( Battledore and shuttlecock\222s a wery good game, vhen you an\222t t\
he shuttlecock and two lawyers )Tj
T*
(the battledores, in which case it gets too excitin\222 to be pleasant.)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 20 \(Mr Weller\))Tj
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( The wictim o\222 connubiality, as Blue Beard\222s domestic chaplain \
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T*
(buried him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 20 \(Mr Weller\))Tj
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( It\222s a wery remarkable circumstance...that poverty and oysters al\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 22 \(Sam Weller\))Tj
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( It\222s over, and can\222t be helped, and that\222s one consolation,\
as they always says in Turkey, ven )Tj
T*
(they cuts the wrong man\222s head off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 23 \(Sam Weller\))Tj
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( Dumb as a drum vith a hole in it, sir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 25 \(Sam Weller\))Tj
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( Ven you\222re a married man, Samivel, you\222ll understand a good ma\
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T*
(understand now; but vether it\222s worth while goin\222 through so much \
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T*
(charity-boy said ven he got to the end of the alphabet, is a matter o\222\
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 27 \(Mr Weller\))Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch.30)Tj
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( A double glass o\222 the inwariable.)Tj
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(Mr Weller in \221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 33)Tj
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( It\222s my opinion, sir, that this meeting is drunk, sir!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 33 \(Mr Stiggins\))Tj
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( \221Do you spell it with a \223 V\224 or a \223 W\224?\222 inquired \
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T*
(fancy of the speller, my Lord,\222 replied Sam [Weller].)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( \221Little to do, and plenty to get, I suppose?\222 said Sergeant Bu\
zfuz, with jocularity.)Tj
T*
( \221Oh, quite enough to get, sir, as the soldier said ven they order\
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T*
(lashes,\222 replied Sam. )Tj
T*
( \221You must not tell us what the soldier, or any other man, said, \
sir,\222 interposed the judge; \221it\222s )Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 34)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 34)Tj
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( A good uniform must work its way with the women, sooner or later.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 37 \(The Gentleman in Blue\))Tj
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( \221And a bird-cage, sir,\222 says Sam. \221Veels vithin veels, a pr\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 40)Tj
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( \221It would make anyone go to sleep, that bedstead would, whether t\
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 41)Tj
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( The have-his-carcase, next to the perpetual motion, is vun of the bl\
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T*
(made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 43 \(Sam Weller\))Tj
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( Anythin\222 for a quiet life, as the man said wen he took the sitiva\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.17047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 43 \(Sam Weller\).)Tj
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( \221Never...see...a dead postboy, did you?\222 inquired Sam...)Tj
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( \221No,\222 rejoined Bob, \221I never did.\222)Tj
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( \221No!\222 rejoined Sam triumphantly. \221Nor never vill; and there\
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T*
(see, and that\222s a dead donkey.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 51)Tj
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( \221\221Cos a coachman\222s a privileged indiwidual,\222 replied Mr \
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T*
(\221\221Cos a coachman may do vithout suspicion wot other men may not; \222\
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T*
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think that he ever means )Tj
T*
(to marry any vun among them.\222)Tj
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(\221Pickwick Papers\222 \(1837\) ch. 52)Tj
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T*
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(\221Sketches by Boz\222 \(1839\) Tales, ch. 3 \221Sentiment\222)Tj
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T*
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T*
(it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the win\
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T*
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T*
(going direct the other way.)Tj
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( I pass my whole life, miss, in turning an immense pecuniary Mangle.)Tj
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T*
(opposition to \222em.)Tj
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(\221A Tale of Two Cities\222 \(1859\) bk. 2, ch. 1 \(Jerry Cruncher\))Tj
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( \221It is possible\227that it may not come, during our lives...We sh\
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T*
( \221We shall have helped it,\222 returned madame.)Tj
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(\221A Tale of Two Cities\222 \(1859\) bk. 2, ch. 16 \(Monsieur and Madam\
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(\221A Tale of Two Cities\222 \(1859\) bk. 3, ch. 9 \(Jerry Cruncher\))Tj
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( It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it i\
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T*
(than I have ever known.)Tj
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(\221A Tale of Two Cities\222 \(1859\) bk. 3, ch. 15 \(Sydney Carton\222s\
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( My faith in the people governing is, on the whole, infinitesimal; my\
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( And Yesterday, or Centuries before?)Tj
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( This is the Hour of Lead\227)Tj
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( Remembered, if outlived,)Tj
T*
( As Freezing persons, recollect the Snow\227)Tj
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(\221After great pain, a formal feeling comes\222 \(1862\))Tj
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( Because I could not stop for Death\227)Tj
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T*
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(\221Because I could not stop for Death\222 \(c.1863\))Tj
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(\221Because I could not stop for Death\222 \(c.1863\))Tj
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(\221The Bustle in a House\222 \(c.1866\))Tj
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( That it can so endure)Tj
T*
( The accent of a coming Foot\227)Tj
T*
( The opening of a Door.)Tj
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T*
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( Requires sorest need.)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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( This is my letter to the world,)Tj
T*
( That never wrote to me,\227)Tj
T*
( The simple news that Nature told,)Tj
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( With tender majesty.)Tj
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( Her message is committed)Tj
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( To hands I cannot see;)Tj
T*
( For love of her sweet countrymen)Tj
T*
( Judge tenderly of me.)Tj
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(In R. N. Linscott \(ed.\) \221Selected Letters and Poems of Emily Dicki\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.2124 Tm
( 4.54 Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson 1862-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dissatisfaction with the world in which we live and determination to\
realize one that shall be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(better, are the prevailing characteristics of the modern spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.67047 Tm
(\221The Greek View of Life\222 \(1898\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.4624 Tm
( 4.55 John Dickinson 1732-1808)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have counted the cost of this contest, and find nothing so dreadf\
ul as voluntary slavery...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Our cause is just, our union is perfect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.92047 Tm
(Declaration of reasons for taking up arms against England, presented to \
Congress, 8 July 1775, in C. J. Still\350 )Tj
T*
(\221The Life and Times of John Dickinson\222 \(1891\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 449.00456 Tm
( Then join hand in hand, brave Americans all,\227)Tj
T*
( By uniting we stand, by dividing we fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.17047 Tm
(\221The Liberty Song\222 \(1768\), in \221The Writings of John Dickinson\
\222 vol. 1 \(1895\) p. 421)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 382.9624 Tm
( 4.56 Paul Dickson 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rowe\222s Rule: the odds are five to six that the light at the end o\
f the tunnel is the headlight of an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(oncoming train.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.42047 Tm
(\221Washingtonian\222 November 1978.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 295.2124 Tm
( 4.57 Denis Diderot 1713-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222esprit de l\222escalier.)Tj
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( Staircase wit.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(The witty riposte one thinks of only when one has left the drawing-room \
and is already on the way )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(downstairs, in \221Paradoxe sur le Com\350dien\222 \(written 1773-8, pub\
lished 1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.00456 Tm
( Voyez-vous cet oeuf. C\222est avec cela qu\222on renverse toutes les\
\350coles de th\350ologie, et tous les )Tj
T*
(temples de la terre.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( See this egg. It is with this that all the schools of theology and a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(to be overturned.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.42047 Tm
(\221Le R\352ve de d\222Alembert\222 \(written 1769, published 1830\) pt.\
1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 94.2124 Tm
( 4.58 Joan Didion 1934\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Was there ever in anyone\222s life span a point free in time, devoid\
of memory, a night when )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(choice was any more than the sum of all the choices gone before?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.67047 Tm
(\221Run River\222 \(1963\) ch. 4)Tj
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( When we start deceiving ourselves into thinking not that we want som\
ething or need )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(something, not that it is a pragmatic necessity for us to have it, but t\
hat it is a moral imperative )Tj
T*
(that we have it, then is when we join the fashionable madmen, and then i\
s when the thin whine of )Tj
T*
(hysteria is heard in the land, and then is when we are in bad trouble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 677.92047 Tm
(\221Slouching towards Bethlehem\222 \(1968\) \221On Morality\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 645.7124 Tm
( 4.59 Wentworth Dillon, Earl Of Roscommon c.1633-1685)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But words once spoke can never be recalled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221Art of Poetry\222 \(1680\) l. 438.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( Choose an author as you choose a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221Essay on Translated Verse\222 \(1684\) l. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( Immodest words admit of no defence,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For want of decency is want of sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221Essay on Translated Verse\222 \(1684\) l. 113)Tj
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( The multitude is always in the wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Essay on Translated Verse\222 \(1684\) l. 183)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 447.7124 Tm
( 4.60 Ernest Dimnet)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Architecture, of all the arts, is the one which acts the most slowly\
, but the most surely, on the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221What We Live By\222 \(1932\) pt. 2, ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 359.9624 Tm
( 4.61 Isak Dinesen \(Karen Blixen\) 1885-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A herd of elephant...pacing along as if they had an appointment at t\
he end of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 322.42047 Tm
(\221Out of Africa\222 \(1937\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 301.50456 Tm
( The giraffe, in their queer, inimitable, vegetative gracefulness...a\
family of rare, long-stemmed, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(speckled gigantic flowers slowly advancing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Out of Africa\222 \(1937\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( The true aristocracy and the true proletariat of the world are both \
in understanding with )Tj
T*
(tragedy. To them it is the fundamental principle of God, and the key, th\
e minor key, to existence. )Tj
T*
(They differ in this way from the bourgeoisie of all classes, who deny tr\
agedy, who will not )Tj
T*
(tolerate it, and to whom the word tragedy means in itself unpleasantness\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221Out of Africa\222 \(1937\) pt. 5, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( What is man, when you come to think upon him, but a minutely set, in\
genious machine for )Tj
T*
(turning, with infinite artfulness, the red wine of Shiraz into urine?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Seven Gothic Tales\222 \(1934\) p. 275)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 89.9624 Tm
( 4.62 Diogenes c.400-c.325 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Alexander...asked him if he lacked anything. \221Yes,\222 said he, \221\
that I do: that you stand out of my )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sun a little.\222)Tj
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(Plutarch \221Parallel Lives\222 \221Alexander\222 ch. 14, sect. 4 \(tran\
slated by T. North, 1579\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 4.63 Dionysius of Halicarnassus fl. 30-7 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History is philosophy from examples.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Rhetorica\222 ch. 11, sect. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 653.2124 Tm
( 4.64 Benjamin Disraeli \(First Earl of Beaconsfield\) 1804-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Though I sit down now, the time will come when you will hear me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(Maiden speech in the House of Commons, \221Hansard\222 7 December 1837)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 594.75456 Tm
( The Continent will not suffer England to be the workshop of the worl\
d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 15 March 1838)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.00456 Tm
( Thus you have a starving population, an absentee aristocracy, and an\
alien Church, and in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(addition the weakest executive in the world. That is the Irish Question.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 16 February 1844)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( The noble Lord is the Rupert of Parliamentary discussion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 24 April 1844 \(referring to Lord Stanley\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( The right hon. Gentleman caught the Whigs bathing, and walked away w\
ith their clothes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 28 February 1845 \(referring to Sir Robert Peel\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( Protection is not a principle, but an expedient.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 17 March 1845)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( A Conservative Government is an organized hypocrisy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 17 March 1845, col. 1028. Bagehot, quoting Disraeli in \221\
The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \221The )Tj
T*
(House of Lords\222, elaborated on the theme with the words \221so much d\
id the ideas of its \223head\224 differ from the )Tj
T*
(sensations of its \223tail\224.\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 326.25456 Tm
( He traces the steam-engine always back to the tea-kettle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 11 April 1845, col. 558 \(Sir Robert Peel\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( Justice is truth in action.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 11 February 1851)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.75456 Tm
( I read this morning an awful, though monotonous, manifesto in the gr\
eat organ of public )Tj
T*
(opinion, which always makes me tremble: Olympian bolts; and yet I could \
not help fancying )Tj
T*
(amid their rumbling terrors I heard the plaintive treble of the Treasury\
Bench.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 13 February 1851)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.00456 Tm
( He has to learn that petulance is not sarcasm, and that insolence is\
not invective.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 16 December 1852, col. 1653 \(Sir Charles Wood\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 143.25456 Tm
( England does not love coalitions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 16 December 1852)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 106.50456 Tm
( Finality is not the language of politics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 28 February 1859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.75456 Tm
( It is, I say, in the noble Lord\222s power to come to some really co\
rdial understanding...between )Tj
T*
(this country and France...and to put an end to these bloated armaments w\
hich only involve states )Tj
ET
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(in financial embarrassment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 8 May 1862, col. 1425)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He seems to think that posterity is a pack-horse, always ready to be\
loaded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 3 June 1862)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Colonies do not cease to be colonies because they are independent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 5 February 1863)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( You are not going, I hope, to leave the destinies of the British Emp\
ire to prigs and pedants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 5 February 1863)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( I hold that the characteristic of the present age is craving creduli\
ty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(Speech at Oxford, 25 November 1864, in \221The Times\222 26 November 186\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Man, my Lord, is a being born to believe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(Speech at Oxford, 25 November 1864, in \221The Times\222 26 November 186\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( Party is organized opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(Speech at Oxford, 25 November 1864, in \221The Times\222 26 November 186\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( Is man an ape or an angel? Now I am on the side of the angels.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(Speech at Oxford, 25 November 1864, in \221The Times\222 26 November 186\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( Assassination has never changed the history of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 1 May 1865, col. 1246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( I had to prepare the mind of the country, and...to educate our party\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(Speech at Edinburgh, 29 October 1867, in \221The Times\222 30 October 18\
67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( Change is inevitable in a progressive country. Change is constant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.67047 Tm
(Speech at Edinburgh, 29 October 1867, in \221The Times\222 30 October 18\
67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.75456 Tm
( We have legalized confiscation, consecrated sacrilege, and condoned \
high treason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 27 February 1871)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.00456 Tm
( I believe that without party Parliamentary government is impossible.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.17047 Tm
(Speech at Manchester, 3 April 1872, in \221The Times\222 4 April 1872)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.25456 Tm
( You behold a range of exhausted volcanoes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(Speaking of the Treasury Bench at Manchester, 3 April 1872, in \221The T\
imes\222 4 April 1872.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.50456 Tm
( Increased means and increased leisure are the two civilizers of man.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(Speech at Manchester, 3 April 1872, in \221The Times\222 4 April 1872)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.75456 Tm
( A University should be a place of light, of liberty, and of learning\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 11 March 1873, col. 1814)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.00456 Tm
( An author who speaks about his own books is almost as bad as a mothe\
r who talks about her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(own children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(At a banquet given by Glasgow on his installation as Lord Rector, 19 Nov\
ember 1873, in \221The Times\222 20 )Tj
T*
(November 1873)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( Upon the education of the people of this country the fate of this co\
untry depends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 15 June 1874, col. 1618)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( He is a great master of gibes and flouts and jeers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 5 August 1874, col. 1358 \(on the Marquis of Salisbury\)\
)Tj
ET
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( The health of the people is really the foundation upon which all the\
ir happiness and all their )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(powers as a state depend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(Speech, 24 July 1877)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( Cosmopolitan critics, men who are the friends of every country save \
their own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(Speech at Guildhall, 9 November 1877, in \221The Times\222 10 November 1\
877.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.25456 Tm
( Lord Salisbury and myself have brought you back peace\227but a peace\
I hope with honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 16 July 1878.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.50456 Tm
( A series of congratulatory regrets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(Referring to Lord Harrington\222s Resolution on the Berlin Treaty in a s\
peech at a banquet in The Duke of )Tj
T*
(Wellington\222s Riding School, Knightsbridge, 27 July 1878: \221The Tim\
es\222 29 July 1878)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.75456 Tm
( A sophistical rhetorician, inebriated with the exuberance of his own\
verbosity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(Referring to Gladstone in a speech at a banquet in The Duke of Wellingto\
n\222s Riding School, Knightsbridge, )Tj
T*
(27 July 1878: \221The Times\222 29 July 1878)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.00456 Tm
( I admit that there is gossip...that the government of the world is c\
arried on by sovereigns and )Tj
T*
(statesmen, and not by anonymous paragraph writers...or by the hare-brain\
ed chatter of )Tj
T*
(irresponsible frivolity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.17047 Tm
(Speech at Guildhall, London, 9 November 1878, in \221The Times\222 11 No\
vember 1878)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.25456 Tm
( The key of India is London.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 4 March 1881, col. 299)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.50456 Tm
( In the \221Town\222 yesterday, I am told \221some one asked Disraeli\
, in offering himself for )Tj
T*
(Marylebone, on what he intended to stand. \223On my head,\224 was the re\
ply.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.67047 Tm
(Letter, 8 April 1833, in \221Lord Beaconsfield\222s Correspondence with \
his Sister 1832-1852\222 \(1886\) p. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.75456 Tm
( There can be no economy where there is no efficiency.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.92047 Tm
(Address to his Constituents, 1 October 1868, in \221The Times\222 3 Octo\
ber 1868)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.00456 Tm
( No Government can be long secure without a formidable Opposition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.17047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.25456 Tm
( A government of statesmen or of clerks? Of Humbug or Humdrum?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.42047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 2, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.50456 Tm
( Conservatism discards Prescription, shrinks from Principle, disavows\
Progress; having rejected )Tj
T*
(all respect for antiquity, it offers no redress for the present, and mak\
es no preparation for the )Tj
T*
(future.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.67047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.75456 Tm
( \221A sound Conservative government,\222 said Taper, musingly. )Tj
T*
( \221I understand: Tory men and Whig measures.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.92047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 2, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.00456 Tm
( Youth is a blunder; Manhood a struggle; Old Age a regret.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.17047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 3, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.25456 Tm
( It seems to me a barren thing this Conservatism\227an unhappy cross-\
breed, the mule of politics )Tj
T*
(that engenders nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.42047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 3, ch. 5)Tj
ET
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( The depositary of power is always unpopular.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 4, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Where can we find faith in a nation of sectaries?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 4, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Man is only truly great when he acts from the passions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Coningsby\222 \(1844\) bk. 4, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Read no history: nothing but biography, for that is life without the\
ory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Contarini Fleming\222 \(1832\) pt. 1, ch. 23.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( The practice of politics in the East may be defined by one word\227d\
issimulation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Contarini Fleming\222 \(1832\) pt. 5, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( His Christianity was muscular.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1880\) ch.14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( The sweet simplicity of the three per cents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1880\) ch. 91.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( I believe they went out, like all good things, with the Stuarts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1880\) ch. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( Time is the great physician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221Henrietta Temple\222 \(1837\) bk. 6, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( They mean well; their feelings are strong, but their hearts are in t\
he right place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221The Infernal Marriage\222 \(1832\) pt. 1, 1 \(on the Furies\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( The blue ribbon of the turf.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.67047 Tm
(\221Lord George Bentinck\222 \(1852\) ch. 26 \(on the Derby\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.75456 Tm
( Every day when he looked into the glass, and gave the last touch to \
his consummate toilette, he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(offered his grateful thanks to Providence that his family was not unwort\
hy of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.00456 Tm
( A Protestant, if he wants aid or advice on any matter, can only go t\
o his solicitor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.25456 Tm
( London; a nation, not a city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.42047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( The gondola of London.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 27 \(a hansom cab\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( When a man fell into his anecdotage it was a sign for him to retire \
from the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( You know who the critics are? The men who have failed in literature \
and art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(\221Lothair\222 \(1870\) ch. 35.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.25456 Tm
( To do nothing and get something, formed a boy\222s ideal of a manly \
career.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221Sybil\222 \(1845\) bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.50456 Tm
( \221Two nations; between whom there is no intercourse and no sympath\
y; who are as ignorant of )Tj
T*
(each other\222s habits, thoughts, and feelings, as if they were dwellers\
in different zones, or )Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(inhabitants of different planets; who are formed by a different breeding\
, are fed by a different )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(food, are ordered by different manners, and are not governed by the same\
laws.\222)Tj
T*
( \221You speak of\227\222 said Egremont, hesitatingly, \221the rich a\
nd the poor.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Sybil\222 \(1845\) bk. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Mr Kremlin himself was distinguished for ignorance, for he had only \
one idea,\227and that was )Tj
T*
(wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Sybil\222 \(1845\) bk. 4, ch. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I was told that the Privileged and the People formed Two Nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Sybil\222 \(1845\) bk. 4, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The Youth of a Nation are the trustees of Posterity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Sybil\222 \(1845\) bk. 6, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( That fatal drollery called a representative government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Tancred\222 \(1847\) bk. 2, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( A majority is always the best repartee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Tancred\222 \(1847\) bk. 2, ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The East is a career.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Tancred\222 \(1847\) bk. 2, ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( London is a modern Babylon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Tancred\222 \(1847\) bk. 5, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Experience is the child of Thought, and Thought is the child of Acti\
on. We cannot learn men )Tj
T*
(from books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Vivian Grey\222 \(1826\) bk. 5, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( I repeat...that all power is a trust\227that we are accountable for \
its exercise\227that, from the )Tj
T*
(people, and for the people, all springs, and all must exist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Vivian Grey\222 \(1826\) bk. 6, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( All Paradise opens! Let me die eating ortolans to the sound of soft \
music!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221The Young Duke\222 \(1831\) bk. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( \221The age of chivalry is past,\222 said May Dacre. \221Bores have \
succeeded to dragons.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221The Young Duke\222 \(1831\) bk. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( We came here for fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(To John Bright, in the House of Commons, in Robert Blake \221Disraeli\222\
\(1966\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( The school of Manchester.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(Describing the free trade politics of Cobden and Bright, in Robert Blake\
\221Disraeli\222 \(1966\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( I will not go down to posterity talking bad grammar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(Said while correcting proofs of his last Parliamentary speech, 31 March \
1881, in Robert Blake )Tj
T*
(\221Disraeli\222 \(1966\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Take away that emblem of mortality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(On being offered an air cushion to sit on, 1881, in Robert Blake \221Dis\
raeli\222 \(1966\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Damn your principles! Stick to your party.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(Attributed to Disraeli and believed to have been said to Edward Bulwer-L\
ytton, in E. Latham \221Famous )Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Sayings and their Authors\222 \(1904\) p. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I never deny; I never contradict; I sometimes forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Said to Lord Esher of his relations with Queen Victoria, in Elizabeth Lo\
ngford \221Victoria R. I\222 \(1964\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Protection is not only dead, but damned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(In W. Monypenny and G. Buckle \221The Life of Benjamin Disraeli\222 vol.\
3 \(1914\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Pray remember, Mr Dean, no dogma, no Dean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(In W. Monypenny and G. Buckle \221The Life of Benjamin Disraeli\222 vol.\
4 \(1916\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( I am dead; dead, but in the Elysian fields.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(To a peer, on his elevation to the House of Lords, in W. Monypenny and G\
. Buckle \221The Life of Benjamin )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Disraeli\222 vol. 5 \(1920\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( When I want to read a novel, I write one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(In W. Monypenny and G. Buckle \221The Life of Benjamin Disraeli\222 vol.\
6 \(1920\) ch. 17.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Never complain and never explain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(In J. Morley \221The Life of William Ewart Gladstone\222 \(1903\) vol. 1\
, p. 123.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Everyone likes flattery; and when you come to Royalty you should lay\
it on with a trowel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(To Matthew Arnold, in G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\
\222 \(1898\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Coffee house babble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(On the Bulgarian Atrocities, 1876, in R. W. Seton Watson \221Britain in \
Europe 1789-1914\222 \(1955\) p. 515)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Attributed to Disraeli by Mark Twain in his \221Autobiography\222 \(1924\
\) vol. 1, p. 246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( No it is better not. She would only ask me to take a message to Albe\
rt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(On his death-bed, declining a proposed visit from Queen Victoria, in Rob\
ert Blake \221Disraeli\222 \(1966 ch. 32)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 340.4624 Tm
( 4.65 Isaac D\222Israeli 1766-1848)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is a wretched taste to be gratified with mediocrity when the exce\
llent lies before us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Curiosities of Literature\222 \(9th ed., 1834\) \221On Quotation\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( He wreathed the rod of criticism with roses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Curiosities of Literature\222 \(9th ed., 1834\) vol. 1, p. 20 \(on P\
ierre Bayle\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( There is an art of reading, as well as an art of thinking, and an ar\
t of writing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Literary Character\222 \(1795\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 197.2124 Tm
( 4.66 Austin Dobson \(Henry Austin Dobson\) 1840-1921)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All passes. Art alone)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Enduring stays to us;)Tj
T*
( The Bust outlasts the throne,\227)Tj
T*
( The Coin, Tiberius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221Ars Victrix\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.75456 Tm
( Fame is a food that dead men eat,\227)Tj
T*
( I have no stomach for such meat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221Fame is a Food\222 \(1906\))Tj
ET
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( The ladies of St James\222s!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They\222re painted to the eyes;)Tj
T*
( Their white it stays for ever,)Tj
T*
( Their red it never dies:)Tj
T*
( But Phyllida, my Phyllida!)Tj
T*
( Her colour comes and goes;)Tj
T*
( It trembles to a lily,\227)Tj
T*
( It wavers to a rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221The Ladies of St James\222s\222 \(1883\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( Time goes, you say? Ah no!)Tj
T*
( Alas, Time stays, we go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221The Paradox of Time\222 \(1877\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.2124 Tm
( 4.67 Ken Dodd 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The trouble with Freud is that he never played the Glasgow Empire Sa\
turday night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(In \221The Times\222 7 August 1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 454.4624 Tm
( 4.68 Philip Doddridge 1702-51)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ye servants of the Lord,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Each in his office wait,)Tj
T*
( Observant of his heavenly word)Tj
T*
( And watchful at his gate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(\221Hymns\222 \(1755\) \221The active Christian\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.00456 Tm
( My thoughts with ecstasy unknown,)Tj
T*
( While from his grave they view his throne,)Tj
T*
( Through mine own sepulchre can see)Tj
T*
( A paradise reserved for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(\221Hymns\222 \(1755\) \221Meditations on the Sepulchre in the Garden\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.25456 Tm
( O God of Bethel, by whose hand)Tj
T*
( Thy people still are fed,)Tj
T*
( Who through this weary pilgrimage)Tj
T*
( Hast all our fathers led.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221Hymns\222 \(1755\) \221O God of Bethel\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 149.2124 Tm
( 4.69 Mary Abigail Dodge)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Gail Hamilton \(8.21\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.70 Bubb Dodington \(first Bara Melcombe\) 1691-1762)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love thy country, wish it well,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not with too intense a care,)Tj
ET
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( \222Tis enough, that when it fell,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou its ruin didst not share.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In Joseph Spence \(1699-1768\) \221Anecdotes\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 4.71 Aelius Donatus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Latin Pereant, inquit, qui ante nos nostra dixerunt.)Tj
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( Confound those who have said our remarks before us.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(In St Jerome \221Commentary on Ecclesiastes\222 bk 1; J.-P. Migne \221Pa\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 4.72 J. P. Donleavy 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you don\222t have any money, the problem is food. When you have\
money, it\222s sex. When )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you have both it\222s health.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221The Ginger Man\222 \(1955\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 4.73 John Donne 1572-1631)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And new philosophy calls all in doubt,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The element of fire is quite put out;)Tj
T*
( The sun is lost, and th\222earth, and no man\222s wit)Tj
T*
( Can well direct him, where to look for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221An Anatomy of the World: The First Anniversary\222 \(1611\) l. 205)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( She, she is dead; she\222s dead; when thou know\222st this,)Tj
T*
( Thou know\222st how dry a cinder this world is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(\221An Anatomy of the World: The First Anniversary\222 \(1611\) l. 427)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 340.50456 Tm
( Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221The Anagram\222 \(1593-6\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( No spring, nor summer beauty hath such grace,)Tj
T*
( As I have seen in one autumnal face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221The Autumnal\222 \(1599-1601\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( Whoever loves, if he do not propose)Tj
T*
( The right true end of love, he\222s one that goes)Tj
T*
( To sea for nothing but to make him sick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221Love\222s Progress\222 \(1599-1601\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( The straight Hellespont between)Tj
T*
( The Sestos and Abydos of her breasts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221Love\222s Progress\222 \(1599-1601\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( By our first strange and fatal interview,)Tj
T*
( By all desires which thereof did ensue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221On His Mistress\222 \(1599-1601\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( Nurse, O my love is slain; I saw him go)Tj
T*
( O\222er the white Alps, alone; I saw him, I,)Tj
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( Assailed, fight, taken, stabbed, bleed, fall, and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221On His Mistress\222 \(1599-1601\))Tj
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( We easily know)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By this these angels from an evil sprite,)Tj
T*
( They set our hairs, but these our flesh upright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221To His Mistress Going to Bed\222 \(1593-6\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Licence my roving hands, and let them go,)Tj
T*
( Behind, before, above, between, below.)Tj
T*
( O my America, my new found land,)Tj
T*
( My kingdom, safeliest when with one man manned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Elegies\222 \221To His Mistress Going to Bed\222 \(1593-6\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Hail, Bishop Valentine, whose day this is,)Tj
T*
( All the air is thy Diocese.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221An Epithalamion...on the Lady Elizabeth and Count Palatine being Mar\
ried on St Valentine\222s Day\222 \(1613\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The household bird, with the red stomacher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221An Epithalamion...on the Lady Elizabeth and Count Palatine...\222 \(\
1613\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Clothed in her virgin white integrity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221A Funeral Elegy\222 \(1610\) l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( At the round earth\222s imagined corners, blow)Tj
T*
( Your trumpets, angels, and arise, arise)Tj
T*
( From death, you numberless infinities)Tj
T*
( Of souls, and to your scattered bodies go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(1609\) no. 4 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, OUP, 199\
0\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( All whom war, dearth, age, agues, tyrannies,)Tj
T*
( Despair, law, chance, hath slain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(1609\) no. 4 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, OUP, 199\
0\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Death be not proud, though some have called thee)Tj
T*
( Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so,)Tj
T*
( For, those, whom thou think\222st, thou dost overthrow,)Tj
T*
( Die not, poor death, nor yet canst thou kill me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(1609\) no. 6 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, OUP, 199\
0\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( One short sleep past, we wake eternally,)Tj
T*
( And death shall be no more; Death thou shalt die.)Tj
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(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(1609\) no. 6 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, OUP, 199\
0\))Tj
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( Batter my heart, three-personed God; for, you)Tj
T*
( As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend.)Tj
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(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(after 1609\) no. 10 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, O\
UP, 1990\))Tj
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( Take me to you, imprison me, for I)Tj
T*
( Except you enthral me, never shall be free,)Tj
T*
( Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.)Tj
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(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(after 1609\) no. 10 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, O\
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( I am a little world made cunningly)Tj
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( Of elements, and an angelic sprite.)Tj
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(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(after 1609\) no. 15 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, O\
UP, 1990\))Tj
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( What if this present were the world\222s last night?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Sonnets\222 \(after 1609\) no. 19 \(in J. Carey\222s edition, O\
UP, 1990\))Tj
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( As thou)Tj
T*
( Art jealous, Lord, so I am jealous now,)Tj
T*
( Thou lov\222st not, till from loving more, thou free)Tj
T*
( My soul; who ever gives, takes liberty:)Tj
T*
( O, if thou car\222st not whom I love)Tj
T*
( Alas, thou lov\222st not me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221A Hymn to Christ, at the Author\222s last going into Germany\222 \(1\
619\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Seal then this bill of my divorce to all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221A Hymn to Christ, at the Author\222s last going into Germany\222 \(1\
619\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( To see God only, I go out of sight:)Tj
T*
( And to \222scape stormy days, I choose)Tj
T*
( An everlasting night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221A Hymn to Christ, at the Author\222s last going into Germany\222 \(1\
619\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Wilt thou forgive that sin where I begun,)Tj
T*
( Which is my sin, though it were done before?)Tj
T*
( Wilt thou forgive those sins, through which I run)Tj
T*
( And do them still: though still I do deplore?)Tj
T*
( When thou hast done, thou hast not done,)Tj
T*
( For, I have more.)Tj
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( Wilt thou forgive that sin by which I have won)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Others to sin? and, made my sin their door?)Tj
T*
( Wilt thou forgive that sin which I did shun)Tj
T*
( A year, or two: but wallowed in, a score?)Tj
T*
( When thou has done, thou hast not done,)Tj
T*
( For I have more.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221A Hymn to God the Father\222 \(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Since I am coming to that holy room,)Tj
T*
( Where, with thy choir of saints for evermore,)Tj
T*
( I shall be made thy music; as I come)Tj
T*
( I tune the instrument here at the door,)Tj
T*
( And what I must do then, think now before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Hymn to God my God, in my Sickness\222 \(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( Immensity cloistered in thy dear womb,)Tj
T*
( Now leaves his well-beloved imprisonment.)Tj
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(\221La Corona\222 \(1609\) \221Nativity\222)Tj
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( Think then, my soul, that death is but a groom,)Tj
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( Which brings a taper to the outward room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Of the Progress of the Soul: The Second Anniversary\222 \(1612\) l. \
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( Her pure and eloquent blood)Tj
T*
( Spoke in her cheeks, and so distinctly wrought,)Tj
T*
( That one might almost say, her body thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Of the Progress of the Soul: The Second Anniversary\222 \(1612\) l. \
244)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( I sing the progress of a deathless soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Progress of the Soul\222 \(1601\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Great Destiny the commissary of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Progress of the Soul\222 \(1601\) st. 4)Tj
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( So, of a lone unhaunted place possessed,)Tj
T*
( Did this soul\222s second inn, built by the guest,)Tj
T*
( This living buried man, this quiet mandrake, rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Progress of the Soul\222 \(1601\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Nature\222s great masterpiece, an elephant,)Tj
T*
( The only harmless great thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Progress of the Soul\222 \(1601\) st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( On a huge hill,)Tj
T*
( Cragged, and steep, Truth stands, and he that will)Tj
T*
( Reach her, about must, and about must go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Satire\222 no. 3 \(1594-5\) l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Twice or thrice had I loved thee,)Tj
T*
( Before I knew thy face or name;)Tj
T*
( So in a voice, so in a shapeless flame,)Tj
T*
( Angels affect us oft, and worshipped be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Air and Angels\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Just such disparity)Tj
T*
( As is \222twixt air and angels\222 purity,)Tj
T*
( \222Twixt women\222s love, and men\222s will ever be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Air and Angels\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( All other things, to their destruction draw,)Tj
T*
( Only our love hath no decay;)Tj
T*
( This, no tomorrow hath, nor yesterday,)Tj
T*
( Running it never runs from us away,)Tj
T*
( But truly keeps his first, last, everlasting day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Anniversary\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Come live with me, and be my love,)Tj
T*
( And we will some new pleasures prove)Tj
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( Of golden sands, and crystal brooks,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With silken lines, and silver hooks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Bait\222)Tj
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( A naked thinking heart, that makes no show,)Tj
T*
( Is to a woman, but a kind of ghost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Blossom\222 l. 27)Tj
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( For God\222s sake hold your tongue, and let me love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Canonization\222)Tj
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( Dear love, for nothing less than thee)Tj
T*
( Would I have broke this happy dream,)Tj
T*
( It was a theme)Tj
T*
( For reason, much too strong for fantasy,)Tj
T*
( Therefore thou waked\222st me wisely; yet)Tj
T*
( My dream thou brok\222st not, but continued\222st it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Dream\222 \(\221Dear love, for nothing\
less than thee\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( So, if I dream I have you, I have you,)Tj
T*
( For, all our joys are but fantastical.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Dream\222 \(\221Image of her whom I lo\
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15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Where, like a pillow on a bed,)Tj
T*
( A pregnant bank swelled up, to rest)Tj
T*
( The violet\222s reclining head,)Tj
T*
( Sat we two, one another\222s best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Ecstasy\222)Tj
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( But O alas, so long, so far)Tj
T*
( Our bodies why do we forbear?)Tj
T*
( They\222re ours, though they\222re not we, we are)Tj
T*
( The intelligencies, they the sphere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Ecstasy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( So must pure lovers\222 souls descend)Tj
T*
( T\222 affections, and to faculties,)Tj
T*
( Which sense may reach and apprehend,)Tj
T*
( Else a great prince in prison lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Ecstasy\222)Tj
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( So, so, break off this last lamenting kiss,)Tj
T*
( Which sucks two souls, and vapours both away,)Tj
T*
( Turn thou ghost that way, and let me turn this,)Tj
T*
( And let our selves benight our happiest day.)Tj
T*
( We asked none leave to love; nor will we owe)Tj
T*
( Any, so cheap a death, as saying, Go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Expiration\222)Tj
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( Oh wrangling schools, that search what fire)Tj
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( Shall burn this world, had none the wit)Tj
T*
( Unto this knowledge to aspire,)Tj
T*
( That this her fever might be it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Fever\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Whoever comes to shroud me, do not harm)Tj
T*
( Nor question much)Tj
T*
( That subtle wreath of hair, which crowns my arm;)Tj
T*
( The mystery, the sign you must not touch,)Tj
T*
( For \222tis my outward soul,)Tj
T*
( Viceroy to that, which then to heaven being gone,)Tj
T*
( Will leave this to control,)Tj
T*
( And keep these limbs, her provinces, from dissolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Funeral\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( I wonder by my troth, what thou, and I)Tj
T*
( Did, till we loved? were we not weaned till then?)Tj
T*
( But sucked on country pleasures, childishly?)Tj
T*
( Or snorted we in the seven sleepers den?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Good-Morrow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( And now good morrow to our waking souls,)Tj
T*
( Which watch not one another out of fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Good-Morrow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Stand still, and I will read to thee)Tj
T*
( A lecture, love, in love\222s philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Lecture in the Shadow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( When I died last, and, dear, I die)Tj
T*
( As often as from thee I go,)Tj
T*
( Though it be but an hour ago,)Tj
T*
( And lovers\222 hours be full eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Legacy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( If yet I have not all thy love,)Tj
T*
( Dear, I shall never have it all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Lovers\222 Infiniteness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( I long to talk with some old lover\222s ghost,)Tj
T*
( Who died before the god of love was born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Love\222s Deity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( \222Tis the year\222s midnight, and it is the day\222s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Nocturnal upon St Lucy\222s Day\222)Tj
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( The world\222s whole sap is sunk:)Tj
T*
( The general balm th\222 hydroptic earth hath drunk.)Tj
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( When my grave is broke up again)Tj
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( Some second guest to entertain,)Tj
T*
( \(For graves have learnt that woman-head)Tj
T*
( To be to more than one a bed\))Tj
T*
( And he that digs it, spies)Tj
T*
( A bracelet of bright hair about the bone,)Tj
T*
( Will he not let us alone?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Relic\222)Tj
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( Go, and catch a falling star,)Tj
T*
( Get with child a mandrake root,)Tj
T*
( Tell me, where all past years are,)Tj
T*
( Or who cleft the Devil\222s foot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Song: Go and catch a falling star\222)Tj
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( Sweetest love, I do not go,)Tj
T*
( For weariness of thee,)Tj
T*
( Nor in hope the world can show)Tj
T*
( A fitter love for me;)Tj
T*
( But since that I)Tj
T*
( Must die at last, \222tis best,)Tj
T*
( To use my self in jest)Tj
T*
( Thus by feigned deaths to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221Song: Sweetest love, I do not go\222)Tj
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( Busy old fool, unruly sun,)Tj
T*
( Why dost thou thus,)Tj
T*
( Through windows, and through curtains call on us?)Tj
T*
( Must to thy motions lovers\222 seasons run?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Sun Rising\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Love, all alike, no season knows, nor clime,)Tj
T*
( Nor hours, days, months, which are the rags of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Sun Rising\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( This bed thy centre is, these walls thy sphere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Sun Rising\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( I am two fools, I know,)Tj
T*
( For loving, and for saying so)Tj
T*
( In whining poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Triple Fool\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( I have done one braver thing)Tj
T*
( Than all the Worthies did,)Tj
T*
( And yet a braver thence doth spring,)Tj
ET
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( Which is, to keep that hid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221The Undertaking\222)Tj
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( As virtuous men pass mildly away,)Tj
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( And whisper to their souls, to go,)Tj
T*
( Whilst some of their sad friends do say,)Tj
T*
( The breath goes now, and some say, no:)Tj
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( So let us melt, and make no noise,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No tear-floods, nor sigh-tempests move,)Tj
T*
( \222Twere profanation of our joys)Tj
T*
( To tell the laity our love.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.67047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Valediction: forbidding mourning\222)Tj
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( Thy firmness makes my circle just,)Tj
T*
( And makes me end, where I begun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.92047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Valediction: forbidding mourning\222)Tj
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( O more than moon,)Tj
T*
( Draw not up seas to drown me in thy sphere,)Tj
T*
( Weep me not dead, in thine arms, but forbear)Tj
T*
( To teach the sea what it may do too soon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Songs and Sonnets\222 \221A Valediction: of Weeping\222)Tj
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( Sir, more than kisses, letters mingle souls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(\221To Sir Henry Wotton\222 \(1597-8\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( And seeing the snail, which everywhere doth roam,)Tj
T*
( Carrying his own house still, still is at home,)Tj
T*
( Follow \(for he is easy paced\) this snail,)Tj
T*
( Be thine own palace, or the world\222s thy gaol.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(\221To Sir Henry Wotton\222 \(1597-8\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( We have a winding sheet in our mother\222s womb, which grows with us\
from our conception, )Tj
T*
(and we come into the world, wound up in that winding sheet, for we come \
to seek a grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Duel\222 \(1632\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( That which we call life, is but hebdomada mortium, a week of death, \
seven days, seven periods )Tj
T*
(of our life spent in dying, a dying seven times over; and there is an en\
d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Duel\222 \(1632\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( There we leave you, in that blessed dependancy, to hang upon him tha\
t hangs upon the Cross, )Tj
T*
(there bathe in his tears, there suck at his wounds, and lie down in peac\
e in his grave, till he )Tj
T*
(vouchsafe you a resurrection, and an ascension into that Kingdom, which \
he hath prepared for )Tj
T*
(you, with the inestimable price of his incorruptible blood. Amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Death\222s Duel\222 \(1632\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( But I do nothing upon my self, and yet I am mine own Executioner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221Devotions upon Emergent Occasions\222 \(1624\) \221Meditation XII\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( No man is an Island, entire of it self; every man is a piece of the \
Continent, a part of the main; )Tj
ET
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(if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a\
promontory were, as well )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as if a manor of thy friends or of thine own were; any man\222s death di\
minishes me, because I am )Tj
T*
(involved in Mankind; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell \
tolls; it tolls for thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221Devotions upon Emergent Occasions\222 \(1624\) \221Meditation XVII\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( My God, my God, thou art a direct God, may I not say a literal God, \
a God that wouldst be )Tj
T*
(understood literally and according to the plain sense of all that thou s\
ayest? But thou art also...a )Tj
T*
(figurative, a metaphorical God too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Devotions upon Emergent Occasions\222 \(1624\) \221Expostulation XIX\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( From this I testify her holy cheerfulness, and religious alacrity, \(\
one of the best evidences of a )Tj
T*
(good conscience\), that as she came to this place, God\222s house of Pra\
yer...she ever hastened her )Tj
T*
(family, and her company hither, with that cheerful provocation, For God\222\
s sake let\222s go, For )Tj
T*
(God\222s sake let\222s be there at the Confession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.42047 Tm
(\221A Sermon of Commemoration of the Lady Danvers\222 [George Herbert\222\
s mother] \(1627\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.50456 Tm
( Man is but earth; \222Tis true; but earth is the centre. That man wh\
o dwells upon himself, who is )Tj
T*
(always conversant in himself, rests in his true centre.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) Christmas Day, 1627)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.75456 Tm
( [Death] comes equally to us all, and makes us all equal when it come\
s. The ashes of an Oak in )Tj
T*
(the Chimney, are no epitaph of that Oak, to tell me how high or how larg\
e that was; It tells me )Tj
T*
(not what flocks it sheltered while it stood, nor what men it hurt when i\
t fell. The dust of great )Tj
T*
(persons\222 graves is speechless too, it says nothing, it distinguishes \
nothing: As soon the dust of a )Tj
T*
(wretch whom thou wouldest not, as of a Prince whom thou couldest not loo\
k upon, will trouble )Tj
T*
(thine eyes, if the wind blow it thither; and when a whirlwind hath blown\
the dust of the )Tj
T*
(Churchyard into the Church, and the man sweeps out the dust of the Churc\
h into the Churchyard, )Tj
T*
(who will undertake to sift those dusts again, and to pronounce, This is \
the Patrician, this is the )Tj
T*
(noble flower, and this the yeomanly, this the Plebeian bran.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.92047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) 8 March 1621/2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.00456 Tm
( There is nothing that God hath established in a constant course of n\
ature, and which therefore )Tj
T*
(is done every day, but would seem a Miracle, and exercise our admiration\
, if it were done but )Tj
T*
(once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.17047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) Easter Day, 25 March 1627)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.25456 Tm
( Poor intricated soul! Riddling, perplexed, labyrinthical soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.42047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) 25 January 1628/9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.50456 Tm
( A day that hath no pridie, nor postridie, yesterday doth not usher i\
t in, nor tomorrow shall not )Tj
T*
(drive it out. Methusalem, with all his hundreds of years, was but a mush\
room of a night\222s growth, )Tj
T*
(to this day, And all the four Monarchies, with all their thousands of ye\
ars, and all the powerful )Tj
T*
(Kings and all the beautiful Queens of this world, were but as a bed of f\
lowers, some gathered at )Tj
T*
(six, some at seven, some at eight, All in one Morning, in respect of thi\
s Day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) 30 April 1626 \221Eternity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.75456 Tm
( I throw myself down in my Chamber, and I call in, and invite God, an\
d his Angels thither, and )Tj
T*
(when they are there, I neglect God and his Angels, for the noise of a fl\
y, for the rattling of a )Tj
ET
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(coach, for the whining of a door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) 12 December 1626 \221At the Funeral of Sir\
William Cokayne\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A memory of yesterday\222s pleasures, a fear of tomorrow\222s danger\
s, a straw under my knee, a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(noise in mine ear, a light in mine eye, an anything, a nothing, a fancy,\
a chimera in my brain, )Tj
T*
(troubles me in my prayer. So certainly is there nothing, nothing in spir\
itual things, perfect in this )Tj
T*
(world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221LXXX Sermons\222 \(1640\) 12 December 1626 \221At the Funeral of Sir\
William Cokayne\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( They shall awake as Jacob did, and say as Jacob said, Surely the Lor\
d is in this place, and this )Tj
T*
(is no other but the house of God, and the gate of heaven, And into that \
gate they shall enter, and )Tj
T*
(in that house they shall dwell, where there shall be no Cloud nor Sun, n\
o darkness nor dazzling, )Tj
T*
(but one equal light, no noise nor silence, but one equal music, no fears\
nor hopes, but one equal )Tj
T*
(possession, no foes nor friends, but one equal communion and identity, n\
o ends nor beginnings, )Tj
T*
(but one equal eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221XXVI Sermons\222 \(1660\) 29 February 1627/8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( John Donne, Anne Donne, Un-done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(On being dismissed from the service of his father-in-law, Sir George Moo\
re: letter to his wife, in Izaak )Tj
T*
(Walton \221The Life of Dr Donne\222 \(first printed in \221LXXX Sermons\222\
, 1640\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 435.7124 Tm
( 4.74 Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith 1899-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let \221Dig for Victory\222 be the motto of every one with a garden \
and of every able-bodied man )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and woman capable of digging an allotment in their spare time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 3 October 1939, in \221The Times\222 4 October 1939)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 347.9624 Tm
( 4.75 Lord Alfred Douglas 1870-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am the Love that dare not speak its name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221Two Loves\222 \(1896\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.2124 Tm
( 4.76 Gavin Douglas c.1475-1522)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( And all small fowlys singis on the spray:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Welcum the lord of lycht and lamp of day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(\221Eneados\222 bk. 12, prologue l. 251)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 190.4624 Tm
( 4.77 James Douglas, fourth Earl Of Morton c1516-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Here lies he who neither feared nor flattered any flesh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(Of John Knox, said as he was buried, 26 November 1572, in George R. Pree\
dy \221The Life of John )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Knox\222 \(1940\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 105.7124 Tm
( 4.78 Keith Douglas 1920-44)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If at times my eyes are lenses)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( through which the brain explores)Tj
T*
( constellations of feeling)Tj
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( my ears yielding like swinging doors)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( admit princes to the corridors)Tj
T*
( into the mind, do not envy me.)Tj
T*
( I have a beast on my back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221B\352te Noire\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( And all my endeavours are unlucky explorers)Tj
T*
( come back, abandoning the expedition;)Tj
T*
( the specimens, the lilies of ambition)Tj
T*
( still spring in their climate, still unpicked:)Tj
T*
( but time, time is all I lacked)Tj
T*
( to find them, as the great collectors before me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221On Return from Egypt, 1943-4\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Remember me when I am dead)Tj
T*
( And simplify me when I\222m dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Simplify me when I\222m Dead\222 \(1941\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( But she would weep to see today)Tj
T*
( how on his skin the swart flies move;)Tj
T*
( the dust upon the paper eye)Tj
T*
( and the burst stomach like a cave.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For here the lover and killer are mingled)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( who had one body and one heart.)Tj
T*
( And death, who had the soldier singled)Tj
T*
( has done the lover mortal hurt.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Vergissmeinnicht, 1943\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 302.9624 Tm
( 4.79 Norman Douglas 1868-1952)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To find a friend one must close one eye. To keep him\227two.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Almanac\222 \(1941\) p. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely o\
pened a tavern for his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221South Wind\222 \(1917\) ch. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 178.4624 Tm
( 4.80 Sir Alec Douglas-Home 1903\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Lord Home \(8.125\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.81 Lorenzo Dow 1777-1834)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You will be damned if you do\227And you will be damned if you don\222\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on the Love of God\222 \(1836\) ch. 6 \(on \221the doctr\
ine of Particular Election\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 53.9624 Tm
( 4.82 Ernest Dowson 1867-1900)Tj
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( I have forgot much, Cynara! gone with the wind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Flung roses, roses, riotously, with the throng,)Tj
T*
( Dancing, to put thy pale, lost lilies out of mind;)Tj
T*
( But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,)Tj
T*
( Yea, all the time, because the dance was long:)Tj
T*
( I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Non Sum Qualis Eram\222 \(also known as \221Cynara\222\).)Tj
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( They are not long, the weeping and the laughter,)Tj
T*
( Love and desire and hate:)Tj
T*
( I think they have no portion in us after)Tj
T*
( We pass the gate.)Tj
T*
( They are not long, the days of wine and roses:)Tj
T*
( Out of a misty dream)Tj
T*
( Our path emerges for a while, then closes)Tj
T*
( Within a dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Vitae Summa Brevis\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.2124 Tm
( 4.83 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 1859-1930)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and co\
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0 -1.2 TD
(more difficult is it to bring it home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1892\) \221The Boscombe Vall\
ey Mystery\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( It is my belief, Watson, founded upon my experience, that the lowest\
and vilest alleys in )Tj
T*
(London do not present a more dreadful record of sin than does the smilin\
g and beautiful )Tj
T*
(countryside.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1892\) \221The Copper Beeche\
s\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.00456 Tm
( A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furnit\
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T*
(and the rest he can put away in the lumber room of his library, where he\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1892\) \221The Five Orange P\
ips\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( It is quite a three-pipe problem, and I beg that you won\222t speak \
to me for fifty minutes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1892\) \221The Red-Headed Le\
ague\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.50456 Tm
( You see, but you do not observe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1892\) \221Scandal in Bohemi\
a\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( Of all ruins that of a noble mind is the most deplorable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221His Last Bow\222 \(1917\) \221The Dying Detective\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( Good old Watson! You are the one fixed point in a changing age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221His Last Bow\222 \(1917\) title story)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( \221Excellent,\222 I cried. \221Elementary,\222 said he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1894\) \221The Crooked Man\222.\
\221Elementary, my dear Watson\222 is not found )Tj
T*
(in any book by Conan Doyle, although a review of the film \221The Return\
of Sherlock Holmes\222 in \221New York )Tj
T*
(Times\222 19 October 1929, p. 22, states: \221In the final scene Dr Wats\
on is there with his \221Amazing, Holmes\222, and )Tj
T*
(Holmes comes forth with his \221Elementary, my dear Watson, elementary\222\
\222)Tj
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( Ex-Professor Moriarty of mathematical celebrity...is the Napoleon of\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.67047 Tm
(\221The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1894\) \221The Final Problem\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 712.75456 Tm
( I didn\222t think there was a soul in England who didn\222t know God\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Staunton, the back three-quarter, Cambridge, Blackheath, and five)Tj
T*
( Internationals. Good Lord! Mr Holmes where have you lived.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.92047 Tm
(\221The Return of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1905\) \221The Missing Three-Qua\
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15 0 0 15 10 640.00456 Tm
( You live in a different world to me, Mr Watson, a sweeter and a heal\
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T*
(ramifications stretch out into many sections of society, but never, I am\
happy to say, into amateur )Tj
T*
(sport, which is the best and soundest thing in England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.17047 Tm
(\221The Return of Sherlock Holmes\222 \(1905\) \221The Missing Three-Qua\
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15 0 0 15 10 567.25456 Tm
( Detection is, or ought to be, an exact science, and should be treate\
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T*
(unemotional manner. You have attempted to tinge it with romanticism, whi\
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T*
(same effect as if you worked a love-story or an elopement into the fifth\
proposition of Euclid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.42047 Tm
(\221The Sign of Four\222 \(1890\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.50456 Tm
( In an experience of women that extends over many nations and three s\
eparate continents, I )Tj
T*
(have never looked upon a face which gave a clearer promise of a refined \
and sensitive nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(\221The Sign of Four\222 \(1890\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impos\
sible, whatever remains, )Tj
T*
(however improbable, must be the truth?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.92047 Tm
(\221The Sign of Four\222 \(1890\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.00456 Tm
( You know my methods. Apply them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.17047 Tm
(\221The Sign of Four\222 \(1890\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.25456 Tm
( It is the unofficial force\227the Baker Street irregulars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.42047 Tm
(\221The Sign of Four\222 \(1890\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 311.50456 Tm
( London, that great cesspool into which all the loungers and idlers o\
f the)Tj
T*
( Empire are irresistibly drained.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.67047 Tm
(\221A Study in Scarlet\222 \(1888\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.75456 Tm
( Where there is no imagination there is no horror.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(\221A Study in Scarlet\222 \(1888\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.00456 Tm
( The vocabulary of \221Bradshaw\222 is nervous and terse, but limited\
. The selection of words would )Tj
T*
(hardly lend itself to the sending of general messages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(\221The Valley of Fear\222 \(1915\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly re\
cognizes genius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.42047 Tm
(\221The Valley of Fear\222 \(1915\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.50456 Tm
( What of the bow?)Tj
T*
( The bow was made in England,)Tj
T*
( Of true wood, of yew wood,)Tj
T*
( The wood of English bows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.67047 Tm
(\221The White Company\222 \(1891\) \221Song of the Bow\222)Tj
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( 4.84 Sir Francis Doyle 1810-88)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Last night, among his fellow roughs,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He jested, quaffed, and swore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221The Private of the Buffs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( His creed no parson ever knew,)Tj
T*
( For this was still his \221simple plan\222,)Tj
T*
( To have with clergymen to do)Tj
T*
( As little as a Christian can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221The Unobtrusive Christian\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 574.4624 Tm
( 4.85 Sir Francis Drake c.1540-96)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There must be a beginning of any great matter, but the continuing un\
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0 -1.2 TD
(thoroughly finished yields the true glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(Dispatch to Sir Francis Walsingham, 17 May 1587, in \221Navy Records Soc\
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15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( There is plenty of time to win this game, and to thrash the Spaniard\
s too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(Attributed, in \221Dictionary of National Biography\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( The singeing of the King of Spain\222s Beard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(On the expedition to Cadiz, 1587, in Francis Bacon \221Considerations to\
uching a War with Spain\222 \(1629\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( I must have the gentleman to haul and draw with the mariner, and the\
mariner with the )Tj
T*
(gentleman...I would know him, that would refuse to set his hand to a rop\
e, but I know there is not )Tj
T*
(any such here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(In J. S. Corbett \221Drake and the Tudor Navy\222 \(1898\) vol. 1, ch. 9\
)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 340.4624 Tm
( 4.86 Joseph Rodman Drake 1795-1820)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Forever float that standard sheet!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where breathes the foe but falls before us,)Tj
T*
( With Freedom\222s soil beneath our feet,)Tj
T*
( And Freedom\222s banner streaming o\222er us?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221The American Flag\222 in New York Evening Post, 29 May 1819 \(attrib\
uted also to Fitz-Greene Halleck\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 216.7124 Tm
( 4.87 William A. Drake 1899\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Greta Garbo \(7.11\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.88 Michael Drayton 1563-1631)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fair stood the wind for France)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When we our sails advance,)Tj
T*
( Nor now to prove our chance)Tj
T*
( Longer will tarry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(\221To the Cambro-Britons\222 \(1619\) \221Agincourt\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.50456 Tm
( O when shall English men)Tj
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( With such acts fill a pen?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or England breed again)Tj
T*
( Such a King Harry?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221To the Cambro-Britons\222 \(1619\) \221Agincourt\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Ill news hath wings, and with the wind doth go,)Tj
T*
( Comfort\222s a cripple and comes ever slow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Barrons\222 Wars\222 \(1603\) canto 2, st. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( He of a temper was so absolute,)Tj
T*
( As that it seemed when Nature him began,)Tj
T*
( She meant to show all, that might be in man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Barrons\222 Wars\222 \(1603\) canto 3, st. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The mind is free, whate\222er afflict the man,)Tj
T*
( A King\222s a King, do Fortune what she can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Barrons\222 Wars\222 \(1603\) canto 5, st. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Thus when we fondly flatter our desires,)Tj
T*
( Our best conceits do prove the greatest liars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Barrons\222 Wars\222 \(1603\) canto 6, st. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( When Time shall turn those amber locks to grey,)Tj
T*
( My verse again shall gild and make them gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221England\222s Heroical Epistles\222 \(1597\) \221Henry Howard, Earl o\
f Surrey, to the Lady Geraldine\222 l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Queens hereafter shall be glad to live)Tj
T*
( Upon the alms of thy superfluous praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Idea\222 \(1619\) sonnet 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Since there\222s no help, come let us kiss and part,)Tj
T*
( Nay, I have done: you get no more of me,)Tj
T*
( And I am glad, yea glad with all my heart,)Tj
T*
( That thus so cleanly, I myself can free,)Tj
T*
( Shake hands for ever, cancel all our vows,)Tj
T*
( And when we meet at any time again,)Tj
T*
( Be it not seen in either of our brows,)Tj
T*
( That we one jot of former love retain;)Tj
T*
( Now at the last gasp of Love\222s latest breath,)Tj
T*
( When his pulse failing, Passion speechless lies,)Tj
T*
( When Faith is kneeling by his bed of death,)Tj
T*
( And Innocence is closing up his eyes,)Tj
T*
( Now if thou wouldst, when all have given him over,)Tj
T*
( From death to life, thou might\222st him yet recover.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Idea\222 \(1619\) sonnet 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( That shire which we the Heart of England well may call.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Poly-Olbion\222 \(1612-22\) song 13, l. 2 \(Warwickshire\))Tj
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( Crave the tuneful nightingale to help you with her lay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The ousel and the throstlecock, chief music of our May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Garland\222 \(1593\) eclogue 3, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( To my mild tutor merrily I came)Tj
T*
( \(For I was then a proper goodly page)Tj
T*
( Much like a pigmy, scarce ten years of age\))Tj
T*
( Clasping my slender arms about his thigh.)Tj
T*
( O my dear master! cannot you \(quoth I\))Tj
T*
( Make me a poet? Do it, if you can,)Tj
T*
( And you shall see, I\222ll quickly be a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221To Henry Reynolds, of Poets and Poesy\222 l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Had in him those brave translunary things,)Tj
T*
( That the first poets had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221To Henry Reynolds, of Poets and Poesy\222 l.106 \(on Marlowe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( For that fine madness still he did retain)Tj
T*
( Which rightly should possess a poet\222s brain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221To Henry Reynolds, of Poets and Poesy\222 l. 109 \(on Marlowe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Next these, learn\222d Jonson, in this list I bring,)Tj
T*
( Who had drunk deep of the Pierian spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221To Henry Reynolds, of Poets and Poesy\222 l. 129.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( I pray thee leave, love me no more,)Tj
T*
( Call home the heart you gave me,)Tj
T*
( I but in vain the saint adore,)Tj
T*
( That can, but will not, save me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221To His Coy Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( These poor half-kisses kill me quite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221To His Coy Love\222)Tj
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( 4.89 William Drennan 1754-1820)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nor one feeling of vengeance presume to defile)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The cause, or the men, of the Emerald Isle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(\221Erin\222 \(1795\) st. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 162.7124 Tm
( 4.90 John Drinkwater 1882-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In the corridors under there is nothing but sleep.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And stiller than ever on orchard boughs they keep)Tj
T*
( Tryst with the moon, and deep is the silence, deep)Tj
T*
( On moon-washed apples of wonder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.17047 Tm
(\221Moonlit Apples\222 \(1917\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 38.9624 Tm
( 4.91 Thomas Drummond 1797-1840)Tj
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( Property has its duties as well as its rights.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 731.42047 Tm
(Letter to the Earl of Donoughmore, 22 May 1838, in R. Barry O\222Brien \221\
Thomas Drummond...Life and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Letters\222 \(1889\) p. 284)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.92 William Drummond of Hawthornden 1585-1649)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Only the echoes which he made relent,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ring from their marble caves repent, repent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.67047 Tm
(\221For the Baptist\222 \(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.75456 Tm
( Phoebus, arise,)Tj
T*
( And paint the sable skies,)Tj
T*
( With azure, white, and red.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(\221Song: Phoebus, arise\222 \(1614\))Tj
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( A morn)Tj
T*
( Of bright carnations did o\222erspread her face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet: Alexis here she stayed\222 \(1614\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.25456 Tm
( I long to kiss the image of my death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnet: Sleep, Silence Child\222 \(1614\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.93 John Dryden 1631-1700)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( In pious times, ere priestcraft did begin,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Before polygamy was made a sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.67047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.75456 Tm
( Then Israel\222s monarch, after Heaven\222s own heart,)Tj
T*
( His vigorous warmth did, variously, impart)Tj
T*
( To wives and slaves: and, wide as his command,)Tj
T*
( Scattered his Maker\222s image through the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.92047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.00456 Tm
( Whate\222er he did was done with so much ease,)Tj
T*
( In him alone, \222twas natural to please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.17047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.25456 Tm
( Plots, true or false, are necessary things,)Tj
T*
( To raise up commonwealths and ruin kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.42047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 83)Tj
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( Of these the false Achitophel was first,)Tj
T*
( A name to all succeeding ages curst.)Tj
T*
( For close designs and crooked counsels fit,)Tj
T*
( Sagacious, bold, and turbulent of wit,)Tj
T*
( Restless, unfixed in principles and place,)Tj
T*
( In power unpleased, impatient of disgrace;)Tj
T*
( A fiery soul, which working out its way,)Tj
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( Fretted the pigmy body to decay:)Tj
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T*
( A daring pilot in extremity;)Tj
T*
( Pleased with the danger, when the waves went high)Tj
T*
( He sought the storms; but for a calm unfit,)Tj
T*
( Would steer too nigh the sands to boast his wit.)Tj
T*
( Great wits are sure to madness near allied,)Tj
T*
( And thin partitions do their bounds divide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 150)Tj
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( Why should he, with wealth and honour blest,)Tj
T*
( Refuse his age the needful hours of rest?)Tj
T*
( Punish a body which he could not please;)Tj
T*
( Bankrupt of life, yet prodigal of ease?)Tj
T*
( And all to leave what with his toil he won)Tj
T*
( To that unfeathered two-legged thing, a son.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 165)Tj
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T*
( Resolved to ruin or to rule the state.)Tj
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(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 173)Tj
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( The people\222s prayer, the glad diviner\222s theme,)Tj
T*
( The young men\222s vision and the old men\222s dream!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 238)Tj
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( All empire is no more than power in trust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 411)Tj
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( Better one suffer, than a nation grieve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 416)Tj
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( But far more numerous was the herd of such)Tj
T*
( Who think too little and who talk too much.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 533)Tj
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( A man so various that he seemed to be)Tj
T*
( Not one, but all mankind\222s epitome.)Tj
T*
( Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong;)Tj
T*
( Was everything by starts, and nothing long:)Tj
T*
( But, in the course of one revolving moon,)Tj
T*
( Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 545)Tj
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( In squandering wealth was his peculiar art:)Tj
T*
( Nothing went unrewarded, but desert.)Tj
T*
( Beggared by fools, whom still he found too late:)Tj
T*
( He had his jest, and they had his estate.)Tj
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( Youth, beauty, graceful action seldom fail:)Tj
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(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 723)Tj
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( For who can be secure of private right,)Tj
T*
( If sovereign sway may be dissolved by might?)Tj
T*
( Nor is the people\222s judgement always true:)Tj
T*
( The most may err as grossly as the few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 779)Tj
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( Never was patriot yet, but was a fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 968)Tj
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( Beware the fury of a patient man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 1, l. 1005)Tj
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( Doeg, though without knowing how or why,)Tj
T*
( Made still a blund\222ring kind of melody;)Tj
T*
( Spurred boldly on, and dashed through thick and thin,)Tj
T*
( Through sense and nonsense, never out nor in;)Tj
T*
( Free from all meaning, whether good or bad,)Tj
T*
( And in one word, heroically mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 2, l. 412)Tj
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( Rhyme is the rock on which thou art to wreck.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Absalom and Achitophel\222 \(1681\) pt. 2, l. 486)Tj
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( Happy, happy, happy, pair!)Tj
T*
( None but the brave,)Tj
T*
( None but the brave,)Tj
T*
( None but the brave deserves the fair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 4)Tj
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( With ravished ears)Tj
T*
( The monarch hears,)Tj
T*
( Assumes the god,)Tj
T*
( Affects to nod,)Tj
T*
( And seems to shake the spheres.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 42)Tj
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( Drinking is the soldier\222s pleasure;)Tj
T*
( Rich the treasure;)Tj
T*
( Sweet the pleasure;)Tj
T*
( Sweet is pleasure after pain.)Tj
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(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 57)Tj
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T*
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T*
( By those his former bounty fed;)Tj
T*
( On the bare earth exposed he lies,)Tj
T*
( With not a friend to close his eyes.)Tj
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(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 78)Tj
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T*
( The various turns of chance below.)Tj
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(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 85)Tj
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( War, he sung, is toil and trouble;)Tj
T*
( Honour but an empty bubble.)Tj
T*
( Never ending, still beginning,)Tj
T*
( Fighting still, and still destroying,)Tj
T*
( If the world be worth thy winning,)Tj
T*
( Think, oh think, it worth enjoying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 97)Tj
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( Sighed and looked, and sighed again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 120)Tj
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( Let old Timotheus yield the prize,)Tj
T*
( Or both divide the crown:)Tj
T*
( He raised a mortal to the skies;)Tj
T*
( She drew an angel down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Alexander\222s Feast\222 \(1697\) l. 177 \(on \221Divine Cecilia\222\
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( Errors, like straws, upon the surface flow;)Tj
T*
( He who would search for pearls must dive below.)Tj
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(\221All for Love\222 \(1678\) prologue)Tj
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( My love\222s a noble madness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221All for Love\222 \(1678\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
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( Give, you gods,)Tj
T*
( Give to your boy, your Caesar,)Tj
T*
( The rattle of a globe to play withal,)Tj
T*
( This gewgaw world, and put him cheaply off:)Tj
T*
( I\222ll not be pleased with less than Cleopatra.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221All for Love\222 \(1678\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
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( Men are but children of a larger growth;)Tj
T*
( Our appetites as apt to change as theirs,)Tj
T*
( And full as craving too, and full as vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221All for Love\222 \(1678\) act 4, sc. 1.)Tj
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( Welcome, thou kind deceiver!)Tj
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( Thou best of thieves; who, with an easy key,)Tj
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( Dost open life, and, unperceived by us,)Tj
T*
( Even steal us from ourselves.)Tj
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(\221All for Love\222 \(1678\) act 5, sc. 1 \(of Love\))Tj
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( By viewing nature, nature\222s handmaid art,)Tj
T*
( Makes mighty things from small beginnings grow:)Tj
T*
( Thus fishes first to shipping did impart,)Tj
T*
( Their tail the rudder, and their head the prow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Annus Mirabilis\222 \(1667\) st. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( An horrid stillness first invades the ear,)Tj
T*
( And in that silence we the tempest fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Astraea Redux\222 \(1660\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Death, in itself, is nothing; but we fear,)Tj
T*
( To be we know not what, we know not where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Aureng-Zebe\222 \(1675\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( None would live past years again,)Tj
T*
( Yet all hope pleasure in what yet remain;)Tj
T*
( And, from the dregs of life, think to receive,)Tj
T*
( What the first sprightly running could not give.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Aureng-Zebe\222 \(1675\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Refined himself to soul, to curb the sense)Tj
T*
( And made almost a sin of abstinence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Character of a Good Parson\222 \(1700\) l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( I am as free as nature first made man,)Tj
T*
( Ere the base laws of servitude began,)Tj
T*
( When wild in woods the noble savage ran.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Granada\222 \(1670\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Forgiveness to the injured does belong;)Tj
T*
( But they ne\222er pardon, who have done the wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Granada\222 \(1670\) pt. 2, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Thou strong seducer, opportunity!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Granada\222 \(1670\) pt. 2, act 4, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Bold knaves thrive without one grain of sense,)Tj
T*
( But good men starve for want of impudence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Constantine the Great\222 \(1684\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( He trudged along unknowing what he sought,)Tj
T*
( And whistled as he went, for want of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Cymon and Iphigenia\222 \(1700\) l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( She hugged the offender, and forgave the offence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Cymon and Iphigenia\222 \(1700\) l. 367.)Tj
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( Of seeming arms to make a short essay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Then hasten to be drunk, the business of the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Cymon and Iphigenia\222 \(1700\) l. 407)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( His colours laid so thick on every place,)Tj
T*
( As only showed the paint, but hid the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Epistle \221To my honoured friend Sir Robert Howard\222 l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Better to hunt in fields, for health unbought,)Tj
T*
( Than fee the doctor for a nauseous draught.)Tj
T*
( The wise, for cure, on exercise depend;)Tj
T*
( God never made his work, for man to mend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Epistle \221To my honoured kinsman John Driden\222 l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Even victors are by victories undone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(Epistle \221To my honoured kinsman John Driden\222 l. 164)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( For he was great, ere fortune made him so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Heroic Stanzas\222 \(1659, on the death of Oliver Cromwell\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( And doomed to death, though fated not to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 1, l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( For truth has such a face and such a mien)Tj
T*
( As to be loved needs only to be seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 1, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( My manhood, long misled by wandering fires,)Tj
T*
( Followed false lights; and when their glimpse was gone)Tj
T*
( My pride struck out new sparkles of her own...)Tj
T*
( Good life be now my task: my doubts are done;)Tj
T*
( \(What more could fright my faith than Three in One?\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 1, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Reason to rule, but mercy to forgive:)Tj
T*
( The first is law, the last prerogative.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 1, l. 261)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Either be wholly slaves or wholly free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 2, l. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Much malice mingled with a little wit)Tj
T*
( Perhaps may censure this mysterious writ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( For present joys are more to flesh and blood)Tj
T*
( Than a dull prospect of a distant good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 3, l. 364)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( By education most have been misled;)Tj
T*
( So they believe, because they so were bred.)Tj
T*
( The priest continues what the nurse began,)Tj
ET
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( And thus the child imposes on the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 3, l. 389)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( T\222abhor the makers, and their laws approve,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is to hate traitors and the treason love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 3, l. 706.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( For those whom God to ruin has designed,)Tj
T*
( He fits for fate, and first destroys their mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Hind and the Panther\222 \(1687\) pt. 3, l. 1093.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( And love\222s the noblest frailty of the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Indian Emperor\222 \(1665\) act 2, sc. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Repentance is the virtue of weak minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Indian Emperor\222 \(1665\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( For all the happiness mankind can gain)Tj
T*
( Is not in pleasure, but in rest from pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Indian Emperor\222 \(1665\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( That fairy kind of writing which depends only upon the force of imag\
ination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221King Arthur\222 \(1691\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( War is the trade of kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221King Arthur\222 \(1691\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Fairest Isle, all isles excelling,)Tj
T*
( Seat of pleasures, and of loves;)Tj
T*
( Venus here will choose her dwelling,)Tj
T*
( And forsake her Cyprian groves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221King Arthur\222 \(1691\) act 5 \221Song of Venus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Ovid, the soft philosopher of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Love Triumphant\222 \(1694\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Thou tyrant, tyrant Jealousy,)Tj
T*
( Thou tyrant of the mind!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Love Triumphant\222 \(1694\) act 3, sc. 1 \221Song of Jealousy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( All human things are subject to decay,)Tj
T*
( And, when fate summons, monarchs must obey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221MacFlecknoe\222 \(1682\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,)Tj
T*
( But Shadwell never deviates into sense.)Tj
T*
( Some beams of wit on other souls may fall,)Tj
T*
( Strike through and make a lucid interval;)Tj
T*
( But Shadwell\222s genuine night admits no ray,)Tj
T*
( His rising fogs prevail upon the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221MacFlecknoe\222 \(1682\) l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( Thy genius calls thee not to purchase fame)Tj
ET
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( In keen iambics, but mild anagram:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Leave writing plays, and choose for thy command)Tj
T*
( Some peaceful province in Acrostic Land.)Tj
T*
( There thou mayest wings display and altars raise,)Tj
T*
( And torture one poor word ten thousand ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221MacFlecknoe\222 \(1682\) l. 203)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( I am resolved to grow fat and look young till forty, and then slip o\
ut of the world with the first )Tj
T*
(wrinkle and the reputation of five-and-twenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Maiden Queen\222 \(1668\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( I am to be married within these three days; married past redemption.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Marriage \341 la Mode\222 \(1672\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( We loathe our manna, and we long for quails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Medal\222 \(1682\) l. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( But treason is not owned when \222tis descried;)Tj
T*
( Successful crimes alone are justified.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Medal\222 \(1682\) l. 207)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Whatever is, is in its causes just.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Oedipus\222 \(written jointly with Nathaniel Lee, q.v., 1679\) act 3\
, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( But love\222s a malady without a cure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 2, l. 110)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Fool, not to know that love endures no tie,)Tj
T*
( And Jove but laughs at lovers\222 perjury.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 2, l. 148.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( And Antony, who lost the world for love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 2, l. 607)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Repentance is but want of power to sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 3, l. 813)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Since every man who lives is born to die,)Tj
T*
( And none can boast sincere felicity,)Tj
T*
( With equal mind, what happens, let us bear,)Tj
T*
( Nor joy nor grieve too much for things beyond our care.)Tj
T*
( Like pilgrims to th\222 appointed place we tend;)Tj
T*
( The world\222s an inn, and death the journey\222s end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 3, l. 883)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( A virgin-widow, and a mourning bride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Palamon and Arcite\222 \(1700\) bk. 3, l. 927)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( But \222tis the talent of our English nation,)Tj
T*
( Still to be plotting some new reformation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221The Prologue at Oxford, 1680\222; prologue to Nathaniel Lee \221Soph\
onisba\222 \(2nd ed., 1681\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( So poetry, which is in Oxford made)Tj
ET
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( An art, in London only is a trade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Prologue to the University of Oxon...at the Acting of The Silent Wom\
an\222 \(1673\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( And this unpolished rugged verse I chose)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As fittest for discourse and nearest prose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Religio Laici\222 \(1682\) l. 453)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I strongly wish for what I faintly hope:)Tj
T*
( Like the day-dreams of melancholy men,)Tj
T*
( I think and think on things impossible,)Tj
T*
( Yet love to wander in that golden maze.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Rival Ladies\222 \(1664\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( A very merry, dancing, drinking,)Tj
T*
( Laughing, quaffing, and unthinking time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Secular Masque\222 \(1700\) l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Joy ruled the day, and Love the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Secular Masque\222 \(1700\) l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( All, all of a piece throughout;)Tj
T*
( Thy chase had a beast in view;)Tj
T*
( Thy wars brought nothing about;)Tj
T*
( Thy lovers were all untrue.)Tj
T*
( \222Tis well an old age is out,)Tj
T*
( And time to begin a new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Secular Masque\222 \(1700\) l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( For secrets are edged tools,)Tj
T*
( And must be kept from children and from fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Sir Martin Mar-All\222 \(1667\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( From harmony, from heavenly harmony)Tj
T*
( This universal frame began:)Tj
T*
( From harmony to harmony)Tj
T*
( Through all the compass of the notes it ran,)Tj
T*
( The diapason closing full in Man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221A Song for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1687\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( What passion cannot Music raise and quell?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221A Song for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1687\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( The soft complaining flute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221A Song for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1687\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( The trumpet shall be heard on high,)Tj
T*
( The dead shall live, the living die,)Tj
T*
( And Music shall untune the sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221A Song for St Cecilia\222s Day\222 \(1687\) \221Grand Chorus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( There is a pleasure sure,)Tj
ET
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( In being mad, which none but madmen know!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Friar\222 \(1681\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( And, dying, bless the hand that gave the blow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Friar\222 \(1681\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Mute and magnificent, without a tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Threnodia Augustalis\222 \(1685\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Freedom which in no other land will thrive,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Freedom an English subject\222s sole prerogative.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Threnodia Augustalis\222 \(1685\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Wit will shine)Tj
T*
( Through the harsh cadence of a rugged line.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of Mr Oldham\222 \(1684\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Thou youngest virgin-daughter of the skies,)Tj
T*
( Made in the last promotion of the blest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221To the pious Memory of...Mrs Anne Killigrew\222 \(1686\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( And he, who servilely creeps after sense,)Tj
T*
( Is safe, but ne\222er will reach an excellence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Tyrannic Love\222 \(1669\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( All delays are dangerous in war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Tyrannic Love\222 \(1669\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Pains of love be sweeter far)Tj
T*
( Than all other pleasures are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Tyrannic Love\222 \(1669\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( Happy the man, and happy he alone,)Tj
T*
( He, who can call to-day his own:)Tj
T*
( He who, secure within, can say,)Tj
T*
( To-morrow do thy worst, for I have lived to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(Translation of Horace \221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 29.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Not Heaven itself upon the past has power;)Tj
T*
( But what has been, has been, and I have had my hour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(Translation of Horace \221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( I can enjoy her while she\222s kind;)Tj
T*
( But when she dances in the wind,)Tj
T*
( And shakes the wings, and will not stay,)Tj
T*
( I puff the prostitute away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(Translation of Horace \221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 29 \(prostitute Fortune\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Look round the habitable world! how few)Tj
T*
( Know their own good; or knowing it, pursue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(Translation of Juvenal \221Satires\222 no. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( To see and be seen, in heaps they run;)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Some to undo, and some to be undone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Translation of Ovid \221The Art of Love\222 bk. 1, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( She knows her man, and when you rant and swear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Can draw you to her with a single hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Translation of Persius \221Satires\222 no. 5, l. 246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Arms, and the man I sing, who, forced by fate,)Tj
T*
( And haughty Juno\222s unrelenting hate,)Tj
T*
( Expelled and exiled, left the Trojan shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Translation of Virgil \221Aeneid\222 \(\221Aeneis\222, 1697\) bk. 1, l. \
1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( We must beat the iron while it is hot, but we may polish it at leisu\
re.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Aeneis\222 \(1697\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Every age has a kind of universal genius, which inclines those that \
live in it to some particular )Tj
T*
(studies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay of Dramatic Poesy\222 \(1668\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( A thing well said will be wit in all languages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay of Dramatic Poesy\222 \(1668\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( He was the man who of all modern, and perhaps ancient poets, had the\
largest and most )Tj
T*
(comprehensive soul...He was naturally learn\222d; he needed not the spec\
tacles of books to read )Tj
T*
(Nature: he looked inwards, and found her there...He is many times flat, \
insipid; his comic wit )Tj
T*
(degenerating into clenches, his serious swelling into bombast. But he is\
always great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay of Dramatic Poesy\222 \(1668\) on Shakespeare)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( He invades authors like a monarch; and what would be theft in other \
poets, is only victory in )Tj
T*
(him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay of Dramatic Poesy\222 \(1668\) on Ben Jonson)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( If by the people you understand the multitude, the hoi polloi, \222t\
is no matter what they think; )Tj
T*
(they are sometimes in the right, sometimes in the wrong: their judgement\
is a mere lottery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay of Dramatic Poesy\222 \(1668\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( [Shakespeare] is the very Janus of poets; he wears almost everywhere\
two faces; and you have )Tj
T*
(scarce begun to admire the one, ere you despise the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Dramatic Poetry of the Last Age\222 \(1672\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( What judgement I had increases rather than diminishes; and thoughts,\
such as they are, come )Tj
T*
(crowding in so fast upon me, that my only difficulty is to choose or rej\
ect; to run them into verse )Tj
T*
(or to give them the other harmony of prose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Fables Ancient and Modern\222 \(1700\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( \222Tis sufficient to say [of Chaucer], according to the proverb, th\
at here is God\222s plenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Fables Ancient and Modern\222 \(1700\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( [Chaucer] is a perpetual fountain of good sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Fables Ancient and Modern\222 \(1700\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( One of our late great poets is sunk in his reputation, because he co\
uld never forgive any conceit )Tj
T*
(which came in his way; but swept like a drag-net, great and small. There\
was plenty enough, but )Tj
ET
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(the dishes were ill-sorted; whole pyramids of sweetmeats, for boys and w\
omen; but little of solid )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(meat for men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Fables Ancient and Modern\222 \(1700\) preface \(on Abraham Cowley\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( How easy it is to call rogue and villain, and that wittily! But how \
hard to make a man appear a )Tj
T*
(fool, a blockhead, or a knave, without using any of those opprobrious te\
rms! To spare the )Tj
T*
(grossness of the names, and to do the thing yet more severely, is to dra\
w a full face, and to make )Tj
T*
(the nose and cheeks stand out, and yet not to employ any depth of shadow\
ing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Of Satire\222 \(1693\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Sure the poet...spewed up a good lump of clotted nonsense at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221On Settle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( A man may be capable, as Jack Ketch\222s wife said of his servant, o\
f a plain piece of work, a )Tj
T*
(bare hanging; but to make a malefactor die sweetly was only belonging to\
her husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221On Settle\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 504.7124 Tm
( 4.94 Alexander Dubcek 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ve sluzb ch lidu dclali takovou politiku, aby socialismus neztr cel \
svou lidskou tv r.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( In the service of the people we followed a policy so that socialism \
would not lose its human )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(face.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(In \221Rud\351 Pr\341vo\222 19 July 1968. A resolution by the party grou\
p in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in 1968, )Tj
T*
(referred to Czechoslovakian foreign policy acquiring \221its own defined\
face\222: Rud\351 Pr\341vo 14 March 1968)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.2124 Tm
( 4.95 Joachim Du Bellay 1522-60)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( France, m\351re des arts, des armes et des lois.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( France, mother of arts, of warfare, and of laws.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Les regrets\222 \(1558\) sonnet no. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Heureux qui comme Ulysse a fait un beau voyage)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ou comme cestuy l\341 qui conquit la toison,)Tj
T*
( Et puis est retourn\350, plein d\222usage et raison,)Tj
T*
( Vivre entre ses parents le reste de son aage!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Happy he who like Ulysses has made a great journey, or like that man\
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0 -1.2 TD
(then came home, full of experience and good sense, to live the rest of h\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Les regrets\222 \(1558\) sonnet no. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Plus que le marbre dur me plaist l\222ardoise fine,)Tj
T*
( Plus mon Loyre Gaulois, que le Tybre Latin,)Tj
T*
( Plus mon petit Lyr\350, que le mont Palatin,)Tj
T*
( Et plus que l\222air marin la doulceur angevine.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I love thin slate more than hard marble, my Gallic Loire more than t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Lir\350 more than the Palatine Hill, and more than the sea air the sweet\
ness of Anjou.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Les regrets\222 \(1558\) sonnet no. 31)Tj
ET
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( 4.96 W. E. B. Du Bois \(William Eward Burghardt Du Bois\) 1868-1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One thing alone I charge you. As you live, believe in life! Always h\
uman beings will live and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(progress to greater, broader and fuller life. The only possible death is\
to lose belief in this truth )Tj
T*
(simply because the great end comes slowly, because time is long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(Last message, written 26 June, 1957, and read at his funeral, 1963, in \221\
Journal of Negro History\222 April 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.50456 Tm
( The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the colour li\
ne\227the relation of the )Tj
T*
(darker to the lighter races of men in Asia and Africa, in America and th\
e islands of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.67047 Tm
(\221The Souls of the Black Folk\222 \(1903\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.75456 Tm
( Herein lies the tragedy of the ape: not that men are poor...not that\
men are wicked...but that )Tj
T*
(men know so little of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.92047 Tm
(\221The Souls of the Black Folk\222 \(1903\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 537.7124 Tm
( 4.97 Stephen Duck 1705-56)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let those who feast at ease on dainty fare,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pity the reapers, who their feasts prepare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Thresher\222s Labour\222 \(1730\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Like Sisyphus, our work is never done;)Tj
T*
( Continually rolls back the restless stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Thresher\222s Labour\222 \(1730\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 395.2124 Tm
( 4.98 Mme Du Deffand \(Marie de Vichy-Chamrond\) 1697-1780)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La distance n\222y fait rien; il n\222y a que le premier pas qui co\373\
te.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The distance is nothing; it is only the first step that is difficult\
.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(Commenting on the legend that St Denis, carrying his head in his hands, \
walked two leagues: letter to Jean Le )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Rond d\222Alembert, 7 July 1763, in Gaston Maugras \221Trois mois \341 l\
a cour de Fr\350d\350ric\222 \(1886\) p. 28)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 288.7124 Tm
( 4.99 George Duffield 1818-88)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Stand up!\227stand up for Jesus!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ye soldiers of the Cross.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus\222 \(1858 hymn\) in C. D. Cleveland \221\
Lyra Sacra Americana\222 \(1868\), the opening )Tj
T*
(line inspired by the dying words of the American evangelist, Dudley Atki\
ns Tyng, to Duffield: \221Tell them to )Tj
T*
(stand up for Jesus\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 170.9624 Tm
( 4.100 Georges Duhamel 1884-1966)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Je respecte trop l\222id\350e de Dieu pour la rendre responsable d\222\
un monde aussi absurde.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I have too much respect for the idea of God to make it responsible f\
or such an absurd world.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.67047 Tm
(\221Le d\350sert de Bi\351vres\222 \(1937\) in \221Chronique des Pasquie\
r\222 \(1948\) vol. 5, p. 249)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 79.4624 Tm
( 4.101 Raoul Duke)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Hunter S. Thompson \(8.36\) in Volume II)Tj
ET
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( 4.102 John Foster Dulles 1888-1959)Tj
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( You have to take chances for peace, just as you must take chances in\
war. Some say that we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(were brought to the verge of war. Of course we were brought to the verge\
of war. The ability to )Tj
T*
(get to the verge without getting into the war is the necessary art. If y\
ou cannot master it, you )Tj
T*
(inevitably get into war. If you try to run away from it, if you are scar\
ed to go to the brink, you are )Tj
T*
(lost. We\222ve had to look it square in the face\227on the question of e\
nlarging the Korean war, on the )Tj
T*
(question of getting into the Indochina war, on the question of Formosa. \
We walked to the brink )Tj
T*
(and we looked it in the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(In \221Life\222 16 January 1956)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( If...the European Defence Community should not become effective; if \
France and Germany )Tj
T*
(remain apart...That would compel an agonizing reappraisal of basic Unite\
d States policy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(Speech to NATO Council in Paris, 14 December 1953, in \221New York Times\
\222 15 December 1953, p. 14)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 520.4624 Tm
( 4.103 Alexandre Dumas 1802-70)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cherchons la femme.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Let us look for the woman.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.17047 Tm
(\221Les Mohicans de Paris\222 \(1854-5\) passim; in the form Cherchez la\
femme attributed to Joseph Fouch\350 \(1763-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1820\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Tous pour un, un pour tous.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( All for one, one for all.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.67047 Tm
(\221Les Trois Mousquetaires\222 \(1844\) ch. 9.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 355.4624 Tm
( 4.104 Dame Daphne Du Maurier 1907-89)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Rebecca\222 \(1938\) ch. 1, opening words)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 285.7124 Tm
( 4.105 Charles Fran\347ois du P\350rier Dumouriez 1739-1823)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Les courtisans qui l\222entourent n\222ont rien oubli\350 et n\222on\
t rien appris.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The courtiers who surround him have forgotten nothing and learnt not\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(Of Louis XVIII, at the time of the Declaration of Verona, September 1795\
, in \221Examen impartial d\222un \310crit )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(intitul\350 D\350claration de Louis XVII\222 \(1795\) p. 40; these words\
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T*
(to the French on his return from Elba)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 164.2124 Tm
( 4.106 Paul Lawrence Dunbar 1872-1906)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I know why the caged bird sings!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Sympathy\222 st. 3 \(and title of autobiographical novel by Maya Ang\
elou, 1969\).)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 94.4624 Tm
( 4.107 William Dunbar c.1465-c.1513)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I that in heill wes and gladnes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Am trublit now with gret seiknes)Tj
ET
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( And feblit with infirmitie:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Timor mortis conturbat me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Lament for the Makaris\222 \(makaris makers, i.e. poets\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( All love is lost but upon God alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Merle and the Nightingale\222 st. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 4.108 Isadora Duncan 1878-1927)Tj
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( Adieu, mes amis. Je vais \341 la gloire.)Tj
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( Farewell, my friends. I go to glory.)Tj
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(Last words before her scarf caught in a car wheel, breaking her neck, in\
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0 -1.2 TD
(End\222 \(1929\) ch. 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.109 Ian Dunlop)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The shock of the new: seven historic exhibitions of modern art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1972\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.9624 Tm
( 4.110 John Dunning \(Baron Ashburton\) 1731-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The influence of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and ought t\
o be diminished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.42047 Tm
(Resolution passed in the House of Commons, 6 April, 1780, in \221Parliam\
entary History of England\222 \(T. C. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Hansard, 1814\) vol. 21, col. 347)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.2124 Tm
( 4.111 James Duport 1606-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Quem Jupiter vult perdere, dementat prius.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Whom God would destroy He first sends mad.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Homeri Gnomologia\222 \(1660\) p. 282.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 297.7124 Tm
( 4.112 Richard Duppa 1770-1831)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In language, the ignorant have prescribed laws to the learned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Maxims\222 \(1830\) no. 252)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 227.9624 Tm
( 4.113 Leo Durocher 1906-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I called off his players\222 names as they came marching up the step\
s behind him...All nice guys. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(They\222ll finish last. Nice guys. Finish last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(Casual remark at a practice ground in the presence of a number of journa\
lists, July 1946: in \221Nice Guys Finish )Tj
T*
(Last\222 \(as the remark generally is quoted, 1975\) pt. 1, p. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 125.2124 Tm
( 4.114 Ian Dury 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sex and drugs and rock and roll.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1977\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( I could be the catalyst that sparks the revolution.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I could be an inmate in a long term institution)Tj
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( I could lean to wild extremes I could do or die,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I could yawn and be withdrawn and watch them gallop by,)Tj
T*
( What a waste, what a waste, what a waste, what a waste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221What a Waste\222 \(1978 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 4.115 Sir Edward Dyer d. 1607)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My mind to me a kingdom is.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Such perfect joy therein I find)Tj
T*
( That it excels all other bliss)Tj
T*
( That world affords or grows by kind.)Tj
T*
( Though much I want which most would have,)Tj
T*
( Yet still my mind forbids to crave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.42047 Tm
(\221In praise of a contented mind\222 \(1588\); attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.50456 Tm
( Some have too much, yet still do crave;)Tj
T*
( I little have, and seek no more.)Tj
T*
( They are but poor, though much they have,)Tj
T*
( And I am rich with little store.)Tj
T*
( They poor, I rich; they beg, I give;)Tj
T*
( They lack, I leave; they pine, I live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221In praise of a contented mind\222 \(1588\); attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 382.4624 Tm
( 4.116 John Dyer 1699-1757)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The care of sheep, the labors of the loom,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And arts of trade, I sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(\221The Fleece\222 \(1757\) bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.00456 Tm
( The younger hands)Tj
T*
( Ply at the easy work of winding yarn)Tj
T*
( On swiftly-circling engines, and their notes)Tj
T*
( Warble together as a choir of larks:)Tj
T*
( Such joy arises in the mind employed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221The Fleece\222 \(1757\) bk. 3, l. 281)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.25456 Tm
( Industry)Tj
T*
( Which dignifies the artist, lifts the swain,)Tj
T*
( And the straw cottage to a palace turns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(\221The Fleece\222 \(1757\) bk. 3, l. 332)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( While, ever and anon, there falls)Tj
T*
( Huge heaps of hoary, mouldered walls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Grongar Hill\222 \(1726\) l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.75456 Tm
( But transient is the smile of fate:)Tj
T*
( A little rule, a little sway,)Tj
ET
EMC
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( A sunbeam in a winter\222s day,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is all the proud and mighty have)Tj
T*
( Between the cradle and the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Grongar Hill\222 \(1726\) l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The town and village, dome and farm,)Tj
T*
( Each give each a double charm,)Tj
T*
( As pearls upon an Ethiop\222s arm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Grongar Hill\222 \(1726\) l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( The pilgrim oft)Tj
T*
( At dead of night, mid his orison hears)Tj
T*
( Aghast the voice of Time, disparting tow\222rs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Ruins of Rome\222 \(1740\) l. 38)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 523.4624 Tm
( 4.117 John Dyer fl. 1714)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And he that will this health deny,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Down among the dead men let him lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221Down among the Dead Men\222 \(c.1700\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 435.7124 Tm
( 4.118 Bob Dylan \(Robert Zimmerman\) 1941\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221No reason to get excited,\222 the thief, he kindly spoke,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221There are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke.)Tj
T*
( But you and I, we\222ve been thro\222 that, and this is not our fate\
,)Tj
T*
( So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221All Along the Watchtower\222 \(1968 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( I ain\222t lookin\222 to block you up,)Tj
T*
( Shock or knock or lock you up,)Tj
T*
( Analyze you, categorize you,)Tj
T*
( Finalize you or advertise you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221All I Really Want To Do\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.50456 Tm
( How many roads must a man walk down)Tj
T*
( Before you can call him a man?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.67047 Tm
(\221Blowin\222 in the Wind\222 \(1962 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.75456 Tm
( How many years can a mountain exist)Tj
T*
( Before it\222s washed to the sea?)Tj
T*
( Yes, `n\222 how many years can some people exist)Tj
T*
( Before they\222re allowed to be free?)Tj
T*
( Yes, `n\222 how many times can a man turn his head,)Tj
T*
( Pretending he just doesn\222t see?)Tj
T*
( The answer, my friend, is blowin\222 in the wind,)Tj
T*
( The answer is blowin\222 in the wind.)Tj
ET
EMC
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(\221Blowin\222 in the Wind\222 \(1962 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Through the mad mystic hammering of the wild ripping hail)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The sky cracked its poems in naked wonder...)Tj
T*
( An\222 we gazed upon the chimes of freedom flashing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Chimes of Freedom\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Praise be to Nero\222s Neptune)Tj
T*
( The Titanic sails at dawn)Tj
T*
( And everybody\222s shouting)Tj
T*
( \221Which Side Are You On?\222)Tj
T*
( And Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot)Tj
T*
( Fighting in the captain\222s tower)Tj
T*
( While calypso singers laugh at them)Tj
T*
( And fishermen hold flowers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Desolation Row\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( I ain\222t sayin\222 you treated me unkind)Tj
T*
( You could have done better but I don\222t mind)Tj
T*
( You just kinda wasted my precious time)Tj
T*
( But don\222t think twice, it\222s all right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Don\222t Think Twice, It\222s All Right\222 \(1963 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( The motorcycle black madonna)Tj
T*
( Two-wheeled gypsy queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Gates of Eden\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( I saw ten thousand talkers whose tongues were all broken,)Tj
T*
( I saw guns and sharp swords, in the hands of young children,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s a hard, and it\222s a hard, it\222s a hard, it\222s a ha\
rd,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s a hard rain\222s a gonna fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221A Hard Rain\222s A Gonna Fall\222 \(1963 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( It was gravity which pulled us down and destiny which broke us apart\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Idiot Wind\222 \(1974 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Money doesn\222t talk, it swears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221It\222s Alright, Ma \(I\222m Only Bleeding\)\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( My love she speaks softly,)Tj
T*
( She knows there\222s no success like failure)Tj
T*
( And that failure\222s no success at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Love Minus Zero / No Limit\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Hey! Mr Tambourine Man, play a song for me.)Tj
T*
( I\222m not sleepy and there is no place I\222m going to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Mr Tambourine Man\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Then take me disappearin\222 through the smoke rings of my mind,)Tj
T*
( Down the foggy ruins of time, far past the frozen leaves,)Tj
ET
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( The haunted, frightened trees, out to the windy beach,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Mr Tambourine Man\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( \221Equality,\222 I spoke the word)Tj
T*
( As if a wedding vow)Tj
T*
( Ah, but I was so much older then,)Tj
T*
( I\222m younger than that now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221My Back Pages\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Sara, Sara)Tj
T*
( Scorpio Sphinx in a calico dress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Sara \(1975 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Se\361or, se\361or, do you know where we\222re headin\222?)Tj
T*
( Lincoln County Road or Armageddon?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Se\361or \(Tale of Yankee Power\)\222 \(1978 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Now the preacher looked so baffled)Tj
T*
( When I asked why he dressed)Tj
T*
( With twenty pounds of headlines)Tj
T*
( Stapled to his chest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again\222 \(1966 song\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Don\222t follow leaders)Tj
T*
( Watch the parkin\222 meters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Subterranean Homesick Blues\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Come mothers and fathers,)Tj
T*
( Throughout the land)Tj
T*
( And don\222t criticize)Tj
T*
( What you can\222t understand.)Tj
T*
( Your sons and your daughters)Tj
T*
( Are beyond your command)Tj
T*
( Your old road is)Tj
T*
( Rapidly agin\222)Tj
T*
( Please get out of the new one)Tj
T*
( If you can\222t lend your hand)Tj
T*
( For the times they are a-changin\222!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221The Times They Are A-Changing\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( But I can\222t think for you)Tj
T*
( You\222ll have to decide,)Tj
T*
( Whether Judas Iscariot)Tj
T*
( Had God on his side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221With God on our Side\222 \(1963 song\))Tj
ET
EMC
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( 5.0 E)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 716.9624 Tm
( 5.1 Abba Eban 1915\227)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History teaches us that men and nations behave wisely once they have\
exhausted all other )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(alternatives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(Speech in London, 16 December 1970, in \221The Times\222 17 December 197\
0)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.2124 Tm
( 5.2 Sir Anthony Eden \(Earl of Avon\) 1897-1977)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are in an armed conflict; that is the phrase I have used. There h\
as been no declaration of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 1 November 1956, col. 1641)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.4624 Tm
( 5.3 Marriott Edgar 1880-1951)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s a famous seaside place called Blackpool,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That\222s noted for fresh air and fun,)Tj
T*
( And Mr and Mrs Ramsbottom)Tj
T*
( Went there with young Albert, their son.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A grand little lad was young Albert,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All dressed in his best; quite a swell)Tj
T*
( With a stick with an \222orse\222s \222ead \222andle,)Tj
T*
( The finest that Woolworth\222s could sell.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The Magistrate gave his opinion)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That no one was really to blame)Tj
T*
( And he said that he hoped the Ramsbottoms)Tj
T*
( Would have further sons to their name.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( At that Mother got proper blazing, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221And thank you, sir, kindly,\222 said she. )Tj
T*
( \221What, waste all our lives raising children )Tj
T*
( To feed ruddy Lions? Not me!\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT2 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(\221The Lion and Albert\222 \(1932\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 190.4624 Tm
( 5.4 Maria Edgeworth 1768-1849)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Well! some people talk of morality, and some of religion, but give m\
e a little snug property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221The Absentee\222 \(1812\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( To be sure a love match was the only thing for happiness, where the \
parties could any way )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(afford it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Castle Rackrent\222 \(1800\) \221Continuation of Memoirs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Come when you\222re called;)Tj
T*
( And do as you\222re bid;)Tj
T*
( Shut the door after you;)Tj
ET
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( And you\222ll never be chid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Contrast\222 \(1804\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Business was his aversion; pleasure was his business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Contrast\222 \(1804\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Possessed, as are all the fair daughters of Eve, of an hereditary pr\
opensity, transmitted to them )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(undiminished through succeeding generations, to be \223soon moved with t\
he slightest touch of )Tj
T*
(blame\224; very little precept and practice will confirm them in the hab\
it, and instruct them in all the )Tj
T*
(maxims, of self-justification.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification\222 \(1787\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( What a misfortune it is to be born a woman!...Why seek for knowledge\
, which can prove only )Tj
T*
(that our wretchedness is irremediable? If a ray of light break in upon u\
s, it is but to make )Tj
T*
(darkness more visible; to show us the new limits, the Gothic structure, \
the impenetrable barriers )Tj
T*
(of our prison.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Leonora\222 \(1806\) Letter 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Man is to be held only by the slightest chains, with the idea that h\
e can break them at pleasure, )Tj
T*
(he submits to them in sport.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Letters of Julia and Caroline\222 \(1787\) Letter 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.9624 Tm
( 5.5 Duke of Edinburgh 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh \(4.54\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 5.6 Thomas Alva Edison 1847-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Genius is one per cent inspiration, ninety-nine per cent perspiratio\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(In \221Harper\222s Monthly Magazine\222 September 1932 \(having been sai\
d c.1903\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 307.4624 Tm
( 5.7 James Edmeston 1791-1867)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O\222er the world\222s tempestuous sea;)Tj
T*
( Guard us, guide us, keep us, feed us,)Tj
T*
( For we have no help but Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(\221Sacred Lyrics\222 \(1821\) \221Lead Us, Heavenly Father\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 183.7124 Tm
( 5.8 John Maxwell Edmonds 1875-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you go home, tell them of us and say,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221For your tomorrows these gave their today.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(\221Inscriptions Suggested for War Memorials\222 \(1919\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 95.9624 Tm
( 5.9 King Edward III 1312-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Also say to them, that they suffre hym this day to wynne his spurres\
, for if god be pleased, I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(woll this journey be his, and the honoure therof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(Speaking of the Black Prince at Cr\350cy, 1345 \(commonly quoted as \221\
Let the boy win his spurs\222\) in \221The )Tj
ET
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(Chronicle of Froissart\222 translated by Sir John Bourchier Lord Berners\
\(1523-5\) ch. 130)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 5.10 King Edward VII 1841-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I thought everyone must know that a short jacket is always worn with\
a silk hat at a private )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(view in the morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(To Sir Frederick Ponsonby, who had proposed to accompany him in a tail-c\
oat, in Sir Philip Magnus \221Edward )Tj
T*
(VII\222 \(1964\) ch. 19)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 620.2124 Tm
( 5.11 King Edward VIII \(Duke of Windsor\) 1894-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( These works brought all these people here. Something should be done \
to get them at work )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.67047 Tm
(Speaking at the derelict Dowlais Iron and Steel Works, 18 November 1936,\
in \221Western Mail\222 19 November )Tj
T*
(1936 \(generally quoted \221Something must be done\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 528.75456 Tm
( At long last I am able to say a few words of my own...you must belie\
ve me when I tell you that )Tj
T*
(I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility a\
nd to discharge my duties )Tj
T*
(as King as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman \
I love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.92047 Tm
(Radio broadcast following his abdication, 11 December 1936, in \221The T\
imes\222 12 December 1936)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 456.00456 Tm
( The thing that impresses me most about America is the way parents ob\
ey their children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(\221Look\222 5 March 1957)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 407.9624 Tm
( 5.12 Richard Edwardes c.1523-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In going to my naked bed, as one that would have slept,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I heard a wife sing to her child, that long before had wept.)Tj
T*
( She sighed sore, and sang full sweet, to bring the babe to rest,)Tj
T*
( That would not cease, but cried still in sucking at her breast.)Tj
T*
( She was full weary of her watch and grieved with her child,)Tj
T*
( She rocked it, and rated it, till that on her it smiled.)Tj
T*
( Then did she say, \221Now have I found this proverb true to prove:)Tj
T*
( The falling out of faithful friends, renewing is of love.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Paradise of dainty devices\222 \(1576\) \221Amantium Irae\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 212.2124 Tm
( 5.13 Jonathan Edwards 1629-1712)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The bodies of those that made such a noise and tumult when alive, wh\
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0 -1.2 TD
(among the graves of their neighbours as any others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Procrastination\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 124.4624 Tm
( 5.14 Jonathan Edwards 1703-58)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Of all Insects no one is more wonderful than the spider especially w\
ith Respect to their )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sagacity and admirable way of working...I...once saw a very large spider\
to my surprise )Tj
T*
(swimming in the air...and others have assured me that they often have se\
en spiders fly, the )Tj
T*
(appearance is truly very pretty and pleasing.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Flying Spider\227Observations by Jonathan Edwards when a boy\222\
\221Of Insects\222 \(written in his early youth\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in \221Andover Review\222 vol. 13 \(1890\) p. 5)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 5.15 Oliver Edwards 1711-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have tried too in my time to be a philosopher; but, I don\222t kno\
w how, cheerfulness was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(always breaking in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 652.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 17 Apri\
l 1778)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 631.50456 Tm
( For my part now, I consider supper as a turnpike through which one m\
ust pass, in order to get )Tj
T*
(to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 17 Apri\
l 1778. Boswell notes: \221I am not absolutely )Tj
T*
(sure but this was my own suggestion, though it is truly in the character\
of Edwards\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 550.4624 Tm
( 5.16 Sarah Egerton 1670-1723)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From the first dawn of life unto the grave,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Poor womankind\222s in every state a slave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.92047 Tm
(\221The Emulation\222 \(1703\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.00456 Tm
( We will our rights in learning\222s world maintain;)Tj
T*
( Wit\222s empire now shall know a female reign.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(\221The Emulation\222 \(1703\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 407.9624 Tm
( 5.17 John Ehrlichman 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I think we ought to let him hang there. Let him twist slowly, slowly\
in the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(Speaking of Patrick Gray \(regarding his nomination as director of the F\
BI\) in a telephone conversation with )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(John Dean: \221Washington Post\222 27 July 1973, p. A27)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 323.2124 Tm
( 5.18 Albert Einstein 1879-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Raffiniert ist der Herrgott, aber boshaft ist er nicht.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God is subtle but he is not malicious.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(Remark made at Princeton University, c.9 May 1921, in R. W. Clark \221Ei\
nstein\222 \(1973\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Jedenfalls bin ich \374berzeugt, dass der nicht w\374rfelt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( At any rate, I am convinced that He does not play dice.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(Referring to God in a letter to Max Born, 4 December 1926: \221Einstein\
und Born Briefwechsel\222 \(1969\) p. 130 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\(often quoted as Gott w\374rfelt nicht God does not play dice\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( If my theory of relativity is proven correct, Germany will claim me \
as a German and France )Tj
T*
(will declare that I am a citizen of the world. Should my theory prove un\
true, France will say that I )Tj
T*
(am a German and Germany will declare that I am a Jew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(Address at the Sorbonne, Paris, possibly early December 1929, in \221New\
York Times\222 16 February 1930)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything save our mode\
s of thinking and we )Tj
T*
(thus drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(Telegram sent to prominent Americans, 24 May 1946, in \221New York Times\
\222 25 May 1946)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( If A is a success in life, then A equals x plus y plus z. Work is x;\
y is play; and z is keeping )Tj
ET
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(your mouth shut.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 15 January 1950)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Science, Philosophy and Religion: a Symposium\222 \(1941\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Nationalism is an infantile sickness. It is the measles of the human\
race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(In Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman \221Albert Einstein, the Human Side\222\
\(1979\) p. 38)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 631.4624 Tm
( 5.19 Dwight D. Eisenhower 1890-1969)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired s\
ignifies, in the final sense, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and ar\
e not clothed. This world )Tj
T*
(in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its lab\
ourers, the genius of its )Tj
T*
(scientists, the hopes of its children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Speech in Washington, 16 April 1953, in \221Public Papers of Presidents \
1953\222 \(1960\) p. 182)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( You have broader considerations that might follow what you might cal\
l the \221falling domino\222 )Tj
T*
(principle. You have a row of dominoes set up. You knock over the first o\
ne, and what will )Tj
T*
(happen to the last one is that it will go over very quickly. So you have\
the beginning of a )Tj
T*
(disintegration that would have the most profound influences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(Speech at press conference, 7 April 1954, in \221Public Papers of Presid\
ents 1954\222 \(1960\) p. 383)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( I think that people want peace so much that one of these days govern\
ments had better get out )Tj
T*
(of the way and let them have it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(Broadcast discussion, 31 August 1959, in \221Public Papers of Presidents\
1959\222 \(1960\) p. 625)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 362.2124 Tm
( 5.20 Edward Elgar 1857-1934)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To my friends pictured within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Enigma Variations\222 \(1899\) dedication)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 292.4624 Tm
( 5.21 George Eliot \(Mary Ann Evans\) 1819-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds; and until\
we know what has been )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(or will be the peculiar combination of outward with inward facts, which \
constitute a man\222s )Tj
T*
(critical actions, it will be better not to think ourselves wise about hi\
s character.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.92047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.00456 Tm
( A maggot must be born i\222 the rotten cheese to like it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 161.25456 Tm
( He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( Deep, unspeakable suffering may well be called a baptism, a regenera\
tion, the initiation into a )Tj
T*
(new state.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.75456 Tm
( We hand folks over to God\222s mercy, and show none ourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch.42)Tj
ET
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( The mother\222s yearning, that completest type of the life in anothe\
r life which is the essence of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(real human love, feels the presence of the cherished child even in the d\
ebased, degraded man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Adam Bede\222 \(1859\) ch. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Gossip is a sort of smoke that comes from the dirty tobacco-pipes of\
those who diffuse it: it )Tj
T*
(proves nothing but the bad taste of the smoker.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Daniel Deronda\222 \(1876\) bk. 2, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( A difference of taste in jokes is a great strain on the affections.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Daniel Deronda\222 \(1876\) bk. 2, ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( There is a great deal of unmapped country within us which would have\
to be taken into )Tj
T*
(account in an explanation of our gusts and storms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Daniel Deronda\222 \(1876\) bk. 3, ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Friendships begin with liking or gratitude\227roots that can be pull\
ed up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Daniel Deronda\222 \(1876\) bk. 4, ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Half the sorrows of women would be averted if they could repress the\
speech they know to be )Tj
T*
(useless; nay, the speech they have resolved not to make.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( There is no private life which has not been determined by a wider pu\
blic life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( An election is coming. Universal peace is declared, and the foxes ha\
ve a sincere interest in )Tj
T*
(prolonging the lives of the poultry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( A little daily embroidery had been a constant element in Mrs Transom\
e\222s life; that soothing )Tj
T*
(occupation of taking stitches to produce what neither she nor any one el\
se wanted, was then the )Tj
T*
(resource of many a well-born and unhappy woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Speech is often barren; but silence also does not necessarily brood \
over a full nest. Your still )Tj
T*
(fowl, blinking at you without remark, may all the while be sitting on on\
e addled egg; and when it )Tj
T*
(takes to cackling will have nothing to announce but that addled delusion\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( A woman can hardly ever choose...she is dependent on what happens to\
her. She must take )Tj
T*
(meaner things, because only meaner things are within her reach.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( There\222s many a one who would be idle if hunger didn\222t pinch hi\
m; but the stomach sets us to )Tj
T*
(work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( \221Abroad\222, that large home of ruined reputations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Felix Holt\222 \(1866\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Many Theresas have been born who found for themselves no epic life w\
herein there was a )Tj
T*
(constant unfolding of far-resonant action; perhaps only a life of mistak\
es, the offspring of a )Tj
T*
(certain spiritual grandeur ill-matched with the meanness of opportunity;\
perhaps a tragic failure )Tj
ET
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(which found no sacred poet and sank unwept into oblivion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) Prelude)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A woman dictates before marriage in order that she may have an appet\
ite for submission )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(afterwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 1, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( He said he should prefer not to know the sources of the Nile, and th\
at there should be some )Tj
T*
(unknown regions preserved as hunting-grounds for the poetic imagination.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 1, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Among all forms of mistake, prophecy is the most gratuitous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Plain women he regarded as he did the other severe facts of life, to\
be faced with philosophy )Tj
T*
(and investigated by science.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Any one watching keenly the stealthy convergence of human lots, sees\
a slow preparation of )Tj
T*
(effects from one life or another, which tells like a calculated irony on\
the indifference or the )Tj
T*
(frozen stare with which we look at our unintroduced neighbour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( If we had a keen vision and feeling of all ordinary human life, it w\
ould be like hearing the )Tj
T*
(grass grow and the squirrel\222s heart beat, and we should die of that r\
oar which lies on the other )Tj
T*
(side of silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 2, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( We do not expect people to be deeply moved by what is not unusual. T\
hat element of tragedy )Tj
T*
(which lies in the very fact of frequency, has not yet wrought itself int\
o the coarse emotion of )Tj
T*
(mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 2, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( A woman, let her be as good as she may, has got to put up with the l\
ife her husband makes for )Tj
T*
(her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 3, ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( It is an uneasy lot at best, to be what we call highly taught and ye\
t not to enjoy: to be present at )Tj
T*
(this great spectacle of life and never to be liberated from a small hung\
ry shivering self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 3, ch. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( A man is seldom ashamed of feeling that he cannot love a woman so we\
ll when he sees a )Tj
T*
(certain greatness in her: nature having intended greatness for men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Middlemarch\222 \(1871-2\) bk. 4, ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Anger and jealousy can no more bear to lose sight of their objects t\
han love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221The Mill on the Floss\222 \(1860\) bk. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( The dead level of provincial existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221The Mill on the Floss\222 \(1860\) bk. 5, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221The Mill on the Floss\222 \(1860\) bk. 6, ch. 3.)Tj
ET
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( I should like to know what is the proper function of women, if it is\
not to make reasons for )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(husbands to stay at home, and still stronger reasons for bachelors to go\
out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221The Mill on the Floss\222 \(1860\) bk. 6, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( In every parting there is an image of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(\221Scenes of Clerical Life\222 \(1858\) \221Amos Barton\222 ch. 10)Tj
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( Errors look so very ugly in persons of small means\227one feels they\
are taking quite a liberty in )Tj
T*
(going astray; whereas people of fortune may naturally indulge in a few d\
elinquencies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Scenes of Clerical Life\222 \(1858\) \221Janet\222s Repentance\222 c\
h. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( Debasing the moral currency.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221The Impressions of Theophrastus Such\222 \(1879\) essay title)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( Oh may I join the choir invisible)Tj
T*
( Of those immortal dead who live again)Tj
T*
( In minds made better by their presence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Oh May I Join the Choir Invisible\222 \(1867\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( Life is too precious to be spent in this weaving and unweaving of fa\
lse impressions, and it is )Tj
T*
(better to live quietly under some degree of misrepresentation than to at\
tempt to remove it by the )Tj
T*
(uncertain process of letter-writing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(Letter to Mrs Peter Taylor, 8 June 1856)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( If art does not enlarge men\222s sympathies, it does nothing morally\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(Letter, 5 July 1859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( The idea of God, so far as it has been a high spiritual influence, i\
s the ideal of a goodness )Tj
T*
(entirely human.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(In G. S. Haight \(ed.\) \221The George Eliot Letters\222 vol. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( She, stirred somewhat beyond her wont, and taking as her text the th\
ree words which have )Tj
T*
(been used so often as the inspiring trumpet-calls of men\227the words Go\
d, Immortality, Duty\227)Tj
T*
(pronounced, with terrible earnestness, how inconceivable was the first, \
how unbelievable the )Tj
T*
(second, and yet how peremptory and absolute the third. Never, perhaps, h\
ave sterner accents )Tj
T*
(affirmed the sovereignty of impersonal and unrecompensing Law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.67047 Tm
(F. W. H. Myers \221George Eliot\222, in \221Century Magazine\222 Novembe\
r 1881)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 212.4624 Tm
( 5.22 T. S. Eliot \(Thomas Stearns Eliot\) 1888-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Because I do not hope to turn again)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Because I do not hope)Tj
T*
( Because I do not hope to turn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.92047 Tm
(\221Ash-Wednesday\222 \(1930\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.00456 Tm
( Because these wings are no longer wings to fly)Tj
T*
( But merely vans to beat the air)Tj
T*
( The air which is now thoroughly small and dry)Tj
T*
( Smaller and dryer than the will)Tj
T*
( Teach us to care and not to care)Tj
ET
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( Teach us to sit still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Ash-Wednesday\222 \(1930\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Lady, three white leopards sat under a juniper-tree)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In the cool of the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Ash-Wednesday\222 \(1930\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( You\222ve missed the point completely, Julia:)Tj
T*
( There were no tigers. That was the point.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Cocktail Party\222 \(1950\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( What is hell?)Tj
T*
( Hell is oneself,)Tj
T*
( Hell is alone, the other figures in it)Tj
T*
( Merely projections. There is nothing to escape from)Tj
T*
( And nothing to escape to. One is always alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Cocktail Party\222 \(1950\) act 1, sc. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Where are the eagles and the trumpets?)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Buried beneath some snow-deep Alps.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Over buttered scones and crumpets)Tj
T*
( Weeping, weeping multitudes)Tj
T*
( Droop in a hundred A.B.C.\222s.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221Cooking Egg\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( Success is relative:)Tj
T*
( It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(\221The Family Reunion\222 \(1939\) pt. 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( Round and round the circle)Tj
T*
( Completing the charm)Tj
T*
( So the knot be unknotted)Tj
T*
( The cross be uncrossed)Tj
T*
( The crooked be made straight)Tj
T*
( And the curse be ended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221The Family Reunion\222 \(1939\) pt. 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Stand on the highest pavement of the stair\227)Tj
T*
( Lean on a garden urn\227)Tj
T*
( Weave, weave the sunlight in your hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221La Figlia Che Piange\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Sometimes these cogitations still amaze)Tj
T*
( The troubled midnight and the noon\222s repose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221La Figlia Che Piange\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Time present and time past)Tj
T*
( Are both perhaps present in time future,)Tj
T*
( And time future contained in time past.)Tj
ET
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(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Burnt Norton\222 \(1936\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( Footfalls echo in the memory)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Down the passage which we did not take)Tj
T*
( Towards the door we never opened)Tj
T*
( Into the rose-garden. My words echo)Tj
T*
( Thus, in your mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.92047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Burnt Norton\222 \(1936\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.00456 Tm
( Human kind)Tj
T*
( Cannot bear very much reality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Burnt Norton\222 \(1936\) pt. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.25456 Tm
( At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless\
;)Tj
T*
( Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,)Tj
T*
( But neither arrest nor movement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.42047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Burnt Norton\222 \(1936\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.50456 Tm
( Words strain,)Tj
T*
( Crack and sometimes break, under the burden,)Tj
T*
( Under the tension, slip, slide, perish,)Tj
T*
( Decay with imprecision, will not stay in place,)Tj
T*
( Will not stay still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.67047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Burnt Norton\222 \(1936\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.75456 Tm
( In my beginning is my end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.92047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.00456 Tm
( That was a way of putting it\227not very satisfactory:)Tj
T*
( A periphrastic study in a worn-out poetical fashion,)Tj
T*
( Leaving one still with the intolerable wrestle)Tj
T*
( With words and meanings. The poetry does not matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.17047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.25456 Tm
( The houses are all gone under the sea.)Tj
T*
( The dancers are all gone under the hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.42047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.50456 Tm
( O dark dark dark. They all go into the dark,)Tj
T*
( The vacant interstellar spaces, the vacant into the vacant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.67047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.75456 Tm
( The wounded surgeon plies the steel)Tj
T*
( That questions the distempered part;)Tj
T*
( Beneath the bleeding hands we feel)Tj
T*
( The sharp compassion of the healer\222s art)Tj
T*
( Resolving the enigma of the fever chart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.00456 Tm
( Each venture)Tj
ET
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( Is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With shabby equipment always deteriorating)Tj
T*
( In the general mess of imprecision of feeling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221East Coker\222 \(1940\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I do not know much about gods; but I think that the river)Tj
T*
( Is a strong brown god\227sullen, untamed and intractable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221The Dry Salvages\222 \(1941\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( And what the dead had no speech for, when living,)Tj
T*
( They can tell you, being dead: the communication)Tj
T*
( Of the dead is tongued with fire beyond the language of the living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Ash on an old man\222s sleeve)Tj
T*
( Is all the ash the burnt roses leave.)Tj
T*
( Dust in the air suspended)Tj
T*
( Marks the place where a story ended.)Tj
T*
( Dust inbreathed was a house\227)Tj
T*
( The wall, the wainscot and the mouse.)Tj
T*
( The death of hope and despair,)Tj
T*
( This is the death of air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Since our concern was speech, and speech impelled us)Tj
T*
( To purify the dialect of the tribe)Tj
T*
( And urge the mind to aftersight and foresight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( We shall not cease from exploration)Tj
T*
( And the end of all our exploring)Tj
T*
( Will be to arrive where we started)Tj
T*
( And know the place for the first time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( What we call the beginning is often the end)Tj
T*
( And to make an end is to make a beginning.)Tj
T*
( The end is where we start from.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( A people without history)Tj
T*
( Is not redeemed from time, for history is a pattern)Tj
T*
( Of timeless moments. So, while the light fails)Tj
T*
( On a winter\222s afternoon, in a secluded chapel)Tj
T*
( History is now and England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( A condition of complete simplicity)Tj
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( \(Costing not less than everything\))Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all shall be well and)Tj
T*
( All manner of thing shall be well)Tj
T*
( When the tongues of flame are in-folded)Tj
T*
( Into the crowned knot of fire)Tj
T*
( And the fire and the rose are one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Four Quartets\222 \221Little Gidding\222 \(1942\) pt. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Here I am, an old man in a dry month)Tj
T*
( Being read to by a boy, waiting for rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Gerontion\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( After such knowledge, what forgiveness? Think now)Tj
T*
( History has many cunning passages, contrived corridors)Tj
T*
( And issues, deceives with whispering ambitions,)Tj
T*
( Guides us by vanities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Gerontion\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Tenants of the house,)Tj
T*
( Thoughts of a dry brain in a dry season.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Gerontion\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( The hippopotamus\222s day)Tj
T*
( Is passed in sleep; at night he hunts;)Tj
T*
( God works in a mysterious way\227)Tj
T*
( The Church can feed and sleep at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221The Hippopotamus\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( We are the hollow men)Tj
T*
( We are the stuffed men)Tj
T*
( Leaning together)Tj
T*
( Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221The Hollow Men\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Here we go round the prickly pear)Tj
T*
( Prickly pear prickly pear)Tj
T*
( Here we go round the prickly pear)Tj
T*
( At five o\222clock in the morning.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Between the idea)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the reality)Tj
T*
( Between the motion)Tj
T*
( And the act)Tj
T*
( Falls the Shadow.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221The Hollow Men\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( This is the way the world ends)Tj
T*
( Not with a bang but a whimper.)Tj
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(\221The Hollow Men\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A cold coming we had of it,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Just the worst time of the year)Tj
T*
( For a journey, and such a long journey:)Tj
T*
( The ways deep and the weather sharp,)Tj
T*
( The very dead of winter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Journey of the Magi\222 \(1927\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( But set down)Tj
T*
( This set down)Tj
T*
( This: were we led all that way for)Tj
T*
( Birth or Death? There was a Birth, certainly,)Tj
T*
( We had evidence and no doubt. I had seen birth and death)Tj
T*
( But had thought they were different; this Birth was)Tj
T*
( Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.)Tj
T*
( We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,)Tj
T*
( But no longer at ease here, in the old dispensation,)Tj
T*
( With an alien people clutching their gods.)Tj
T*
( I should be glad of another death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221Journey of the Magi\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( Let us go then, you and I,)Tj
T*
( When the evening is spread out against the sky)Tj
T*
( Like a patient etherized upon a table.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( In the room the women come and go)Tj
T*
( Talking of Michelangelo.)Tj
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( The yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes.)Tj
T*
( Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( I have measured out my life with coffee spoons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( I should have been a pair of ragged claws)Tj
T*
( Scuttling across the floors of silent seas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker,)Tj
T*
( And I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker,)Tj
T*
( And in short, I was afraid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be;)Tj
T*
( Am an attendant lord, one that will do)Tj
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( To swell a progress, start a scene or two,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Advise the prince.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I grow old...I grow old...)Tj
T*
( I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.)Tj
T*
( I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( I do not think that they will sing to me.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.92047 Tm
(\221The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 564.00456 Tm
( I am aware of the damp souls of housemaids)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sprouting despondently at area gates.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.17047 Tm
(\221Morning at the Window\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 509.25456 Tm
( Polyphiloprogenitive)Tj
T*
( The sapient sutlers of the Lord)Tj
T*
( Drift across window-panes)Tj
T*
( In the beginning was the Word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 439.42047 Tm
(\221Mr Eliot\222s Sunday Morning Service\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 418.50456 Tm
( Yet we have gone on living,)Tj
T*
( Living and partly living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(\221Murder in the Cathedral\222 \(1935\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.75456 Tm
( The last temptation is the greatest treason:)Tj
T*
( To do the right deed for the wrong reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Murder in the Cathedral\222 \(1935\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.00456 Tm
( Clear the air! clean the sky! wash the wind! take the stone from sto\
ne, take the skin from the )Tj
T*
(arm, take the muscle from bone, and wash them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.17047 Tm
(\221Murder in the Cathedral\222 \(1935\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 254.25456 Tm
( Macavity, Macavity, there\222s no one like Macavity,)Tj
T*
( There never was a Cat of such deceitfulness and suavity.)Tj
T*
( He always has an alibi, and one or two to spare:)Tj
T*
( At whatever time the deed took place\227MACAVITY WASN\222T THERE!)Tj
T*
( And they say that all the Cats whose wicked deeds are widely known)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(\221Old Possum\222s Book of Practical Cats\222 \(1939\) \221Macavity: th\
e Mystery Cat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( The winter evening settles down)Tj
T*
( With smell of steaks in passageways.)Tj
T*
( Six o\222clock.)Tj
T*
( The burnt-out ends of smoky days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(\221Preludes\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.75456 Tm
( Every street lamp that I pass)Tj
ET
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( Beats like a fatalistic drum,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And through the spaces of the dark)Tj
T*
( Midnight shakes the memory)Tj
T*
( As a madman shakes a dead geranium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Rhapsody on a Windy Night\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Where is the Life we have lost in living?)Tj
T*
( Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?)Tj
T*
( Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Rock\222 \(1934\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( And the wind shall say: \221Here were decent godless people:)Tj
T*
( Their only monument the asphalt road)Tj
T*
( And a thousand lost golf balls.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Rock\222 \(1934\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Birth, and copulation, and death.)Tj
T*
( That\222s all the facts when you come to brass tacks:)Tj
T*
( Birth, and copulation, and death.)Tj
T*
( I\222ve been born, and once is enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Sweeney Agonistes\222 \(1932\) \221Fragment of an Agon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Any man has to, needs to, wants to)Tj
T*
( Once in a lifetime, do a girl in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Sweeney Agonistes\222 \(1932\) \221Fragment of an Agon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I gotta use words when I talk to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Sweeney Agonistes\222 \(1932\) \221Fragment of an Agon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( The host with someone indistinct)Tj
T*
( Converses at the door apart,)Tj
T*
( The nightingales are singing near)Tj
T*
( The Convent of the Sacred Heart,)Tj
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( And sang within the bloody wood)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When Agamemnon cried aloud)Tj
T*
( And let their liquid siftings fall)Tj
T*
( To stain the stiff dishonoured shroud.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Sweeney among the Nightingales\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( April is the cruellest month, breeding)Tj
T*
( Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing)Tj
T*
( Memory and desire, stirring)Tj
T*
( Dull roots with spring rain.)Tj
T*
( Winter kept us warm, covering)Tj
T*
( Earth in forgetful snow, feeding)Tj
T*
( A little life with dried tubers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 1)Tj
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( I read, much of the night, and go south in the winter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 1)Tj
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( And I will show you something different from either)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Your shadow at morning striding behind you)Tj
T*
( Or your shadow at evening rising to meet you;)Tj
T*
( I will show you fear in a handful of dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Madame Sosostris, famous clairvoyante,)Tj
T*
( Had a bad cold, nevertheless)Tj
T*
( Is known to be the wisest woman in Europe,)Tj
T*
( With a wicked pack of cards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Unreal City,)Tj
T*
( Under the brown fog of a winter dawn,)Tj
T*
( A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many,)Tj
T*
( I had not thought death had undone so many.)Tj
T*
( Sighs, short and infrequent, were exhaled,)Tj
T*
( And each man fixed his eyes before his feet)Tj
T*
( Flowed up the hill and down King William Street,)Tj
T*
( To where Saint Mary Woolnoth kept the hours)Tj
T*
( With a dead sound on the final stroke of nine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( The Chair she sat in, like a burnished throne,)Tj
T*
( Glowed on the marble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( And still she cried, and still the world pursues, \221Jug Jug\222 to\
dirty ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( I think we are in rats\222 alley)Tj
T*
( Where the dead men lost their bones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( O O O O that Shakespeherian Rag\227)Tj
T*
( It\222s so elegant)Tj
T*
( So intelligent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Hurry up please it\222s time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( But at my back from time to time I hear)Tj
T*
( The sound of horns and motors, which shall bring)Tj
T*
( Sweeney to Mrs Porter in the spring.)Tj
T*
( O the moon shone bright on Mrs Porter)Tj
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( And on her daughter)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They wash their feet in soda water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( At the violet hour, when the eyes and back)Tj
T*
( Turn upward from the desk, when the human engine waits)Tj
T*
( Like a taxi throbbing waiting,)Tj
T*
( I, Tiresias, though blind, throbbing between two lives,)Tj
T*
( Old man with wrinkled female breasts, can see)Tj
T*
( At the violet hour, the evening hour that strives)Tj
T*
( Homeward, and brings the sailor home from sea,)Tj
T*
( The typist home at teatime, clears her breakfast, lights)Tj
T*
( Her stove, and lays out food in tins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( I Tiresias, old man with wrinkled dugs)Tj
T*
( Perceived the scene, and foretold the rest\227)Tj
T*
( I too awaited the expected guest.)Tj
T*
( He, the young man carbuncular, arrives,)Tj
T*
( A small house agent\222s clerk, with one bold stare,)Tj
T*
( One of the low on whom assurance sits)Tj
T*
( As a silk hat on a Bradford millionaire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( When lovely woman stoops to folly and)Tj
T*
( Paces about her room again, alone,)Tj
T*
( She smoothes her hair with automatic hand,)Tj
T*
( And puts a record on the gramophone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( Phlebas the Phoenician, a fortnight dead,)Tj
T*
( Forgot the cry of gulls, and the deep sea swell)Tj
T*
( And the profit and loss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( Who is the third who walks always beside you?)Tj
T*
( When I count, there are only you and I together)Tj
T*
( But when I look ahead up the white road)Tj
T*
( There is always another one walking beside you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( A woman drew her long black hair out tight)Tj
T*
( And fiddled whisper music on those strings)Tj
T*
( And bats with baby faces in the violet light)Tj
T*
( Whistled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 5)Tj
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( These fragments I have shored against my ruins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Waste Land\222 \(1922\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Webster was much possessed by death)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And saw the skull beneath the skin;)Tj
T*
( And breastless creatures underground)Tj
T*
( Leaned backward with a lipless grin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Whispers of Immortality\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye)Tj
T*
( Is underlined for emphasis;)Tj
T*
( Uncorseted, her friendly bust)Tj
T*
( Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Whispers of Immortality\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( We know too much and are convinced of too little. Our literature is \
a substitute for religion, )Tj
T*
(and so is our religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221A Dialogue on Dramatic Poetry\222 \(1928\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Comparison and analysis are the chief tools of the critic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Function of Criticism\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( In the seventeenth century a dissociation of sensibility set in, fro\
m which we have never )Tj
T*
(recovered; and this dissociation, as is natural, was due to the influenc\
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T*
(poets of the century, Milton and Dryden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Metaphysical Poets\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Poets in our civilization, as it exists at present, must be difficul\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Metaphysical Poets\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The only way of expressing emotion in the form of art is by finding \
an \221objective correlative\222; )Tj
T*
(in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events which s\
hall be the formula of that )Tj
T*
(particular emotion; such that when the external facts, which must termin\
ate in sensory )Tj
T*
(experience, are given, the emotion is immediately evoked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Sacred Wood\222 \(1920\) \221Hamlet and his Problems\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Sacred Wood\222 \(1920\) \221Philip Massinger\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Someone said: \221The dead writers are remote from us because we kno\
w so much more than they )Tj
T*
(did.\222 Precisely, and they are that which we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221The Sacred Wood\222 \(1920\) \221Tradition and Individual Talent\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion\
; it is not the expression of )Tj
T*
(personality but an escape from personality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221The Sacred Wood\222 \(1920\) \221Tradition and Individual Talent\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( To me...[The Wasteland] was only the relief of a personal and wholly\
insignificant grouse )Tj
T*
(against life; it is just a piece of rhythmical grumbling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221The Wasteland\222 \(ed. Valerie Eliot, 1971\) epigraph)Tj
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( 5.23 Queen Elizabeth I 1533-1603)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am your anointed Queen. I will never be by violence constrained to\
do anything. I thank God )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that I am endued with such qualities that if I were turned out of the Re\
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T*
(able to live in any place in Christome.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(Speech to Members of Parliament, 5 November 1566, in J. E. Neale \221Eli\
zabeth I and her Parliaments 1559-)Tj
T*
(1581\222 \(1953\) pt. 3, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( As for me, I see no such great cause why I should either be fond to \
live or fear to die. I have )Tj
T*
(had good experience of this world, and I know what it is to be a subject\
and what to be a )Tj
T*
(sovereign. Good neighbours I have had, and I have met with bad: and in t\
rust I have found )Tj
T*
(treason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Speech to Parliament, 1586, in William Camden \221Annales rerum anglican\
um\222 \(1615\) bk. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the he\
art and stomach of a )Tj
T*
(king, and of a king of England too; and think foul scorn that Parma or S\
pain, or any prince of )Tj
T*
(Europe, should dare to invade the borders of my realm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(Speech to the troops at Tilbury on the approach of the Armada, 1588, in \
Lord Somers \221A Third Collection of )Tj
T*
(Scarce and Valuable Tracts\222 \(1751\) p. 196)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( Though God hath raised me high, yet this I count the glory of my cro\
wn: that I have reigned )Tj
T*
(with your loves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(The Golden Speech, 1601, in \221The Journals of All the Parliaments Duri\
ng the Reign of Queen Elizabeth\222...)Tj
T*
(Collected by Sir Simonds D\222Ewes \(1682\) p. 659)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( Like strawberry wives, that laid two or three great strawberries at \
the mouth of their pot, and )Tj
T*
(all the rest were little ones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(Describing the tactics of the Commission of Sales, in their dealings wit\
h her, in Francis Bacon \221Apophthegms )Tj
T*
(New and Old\222 \(1625\) no. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 325.50456 Tm
( Good-morning, gentlemen both.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(To a delegation of eighteen tailors, in F. Chamberlin \221The Sayings of\
Queen Elizabeth\222 \(1923\) p. 28. \221Concise )Tj
T*
(Oxford Dictionary of Proverbs\222 \221Nine tailors make a man\222 under \
nine)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 273.75456 Tm
( I will make you shorter by the head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(To the leaders of her Council, who were opposing her course towards Mary\
Queen of Scots, in F. Chamberlin )Tj
T*
(\221The Sayings of Queen Elizabeth\222 \(1923\) p. 224)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( \222Twas God the word that spake it,)Tj
T*
( He took the bread and brake it;)Tj
T*
( And what the word did make it;)Tj
T*
( That I believe, and take it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(Answer on being asked her opinion of Christ\222s presence in the Sacrame\
nt, in S. Clarke \221The Marrow of )Tj
T*
(Ecclesiastical History\222 \(1675\) pt. 2, bk. 1 \221The Life of Queen E\
lizabeth\222 p. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( If thy heart fails thee, climb not at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(Lines after Sir Walter Ralegh, written on a window-pane: Thomas Fuller \
\221Worthies of England\222 vol. 1, p. 419.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.4624 Tm
( Must! Is )Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
(must)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
( a word to be addressed to princes? Little man, little man! thy father, \
if he had )Tj
T*
(been alive, durst not have used that word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.62831 Tm
(To Robert Cecil, on his advising her she must go to bed, in J. R. Green \
\221A Short History of the English )Tj
ET
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(People\222 \(1874\) ch. 7; \221Dodd\222s Church History of England\222 v\
ol. 3 \(ed. M. A. Tierney, 1840\) adds: \221but thou )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(knowest I must die, and that maketh thee so presumptuous\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Madam I may not call you; mistress I am ashamed to call you; and so \
I know not what to call )Tj
T*
(you; but howsoever, I thank you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(To the wife of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Queen not approving of \
married clergy, in Sir John )Tj
T*
(Harington \221A Brief View of the State of the Church of England\222 \(1\
653\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 649.50456 Tm
( God may pardon you, but I never can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 633.67047 Tm
(To the dying Countess of Nottingham, in David Hume \221The History of En\
gland under the House of )Tj
T*
(Tudor\222 \(1759\) vol. 2, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 597.75456 Tm
( The queen of Scots is this day leichter of a fair son, and I am but \
a barren stock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.92047 Tm
(To her ladies. \221The Memoirs of Sir James Melville\222 \(1683\) p. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 561.00456 Tm
( My Lord, I had forgot the fart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.17047 Tm
(In \221Oxford Book of Political Anecdotes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 524.25456 Tm
( The daughter of debate, that eke discord doth sow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.42047 Tm
(On Mary Queen of Scots in George Puttenham \(ed.\) \221The Art of Engli\
sh Poesie\222 \(1589\) bk. 3, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.50456 Tm
( Anger makes dull men witty, but it keeps them poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(To Sir Edward Dyer, in T. Tenison \(ed.\) \221Baconiana\222 \(1679\) Ap\
ophthegm 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.75456 Tm
( Semper eadem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ever the same.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(Motto)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( I would not open windows into men\222s souls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(??)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( All my possessions for a moment of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(Last words)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 307.4624 Tm
( 5.24 Queen Elizabeth II 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or s\
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0 -1.2 TD
(service and the service of our great Imperial family to which we all bel\
ong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.92047 Tm
(Broadcast speech \(as Princess Elizabeth\) to the Commonwealth from Cape\
Town, 21 April 1947, in \221The )Tj
T*
(Times\222 22 April 1947)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.00456 Tm
( I think everybody really will concede that on this, of all days, I s\
hould begin my speech with )Tj
T*
(the words \221My husband and I\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(Speech at Guildhall, London, on her 25th wedding anniversary, 20 Novembe\
r 1972, in \221The Times\222 21 )Tj
T*
(November 1972)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 134.9624 Tm
( 5.25 Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother 1900\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m glad we\222ve been bombed. It makes me feel I can look the Ea\
st End in the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(To a policeman, 13 September 1940, in John Wheeler-Bennett \221King Geor\
ge VI\222 \(1958\) pt. 3, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( How small and selfish sorrow is. But it bangs one about until one is\
senseless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Letter to Edith Sitwell, seven months after the death of George VI, in P\
enelope Mortimer \221Queen )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Elizabeth\222 \(1986)Tj
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( The children won\222t leave without me; I shan\222t leave without th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(leave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(On the suggestion that the royal family be evacuated during the Blitz)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 5.26 Alf Ellerton)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Belgium put the kibosh on the Kaiser.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1914\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 5.27 John Ellerton 1826-93)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The day Thou gavest, Lord, is ended,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The darkness falls at Thy behest.)Tj
T*
( To Thee our morning hymns ascended,)Tj
T*
( Thy praise shall sanctify our rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(Hymn \(1870\) in \221A Liturgy for Missionary Meetings\222 \(1871\), the\
first line being borrowed from an earlier, )Tj
T*
(anonymous hymn)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 489.75456 Tm
( This is the day of prayer:)Tj
T*
( Let earth to Heav\222n draw near;)Tj
T*
( Lift up our hearts to seek Thee there,)Tj
T*
( Come down to meet us here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.92047 Tm
(\221This is the day of light\222 \(1867 hymn\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 387.7124 Tm
( 5.28 Jane Elliot 1727-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222ve heard them lilting, at the ewe milking.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lasses a\222 lilting, before dawn of day;)Tj
T*
( But now they are moaning, on ilka green loaning;)Tj
T*
( The flowers of the forest are a\222 wede away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.17047 Tm
(\221The Flowers of the Forest\222 \(1769\) the most popular version of t\
he traditional lament for Flodden)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 263.9624 Tm
( 5.29 Charlotte Elliott 1789-1871)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Christian! seek not yet repose,\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hear thy guardian angel say;)Tj
T*
( Thou art in the midst of foes\227)Tj
T*
( \221Watch and pray.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Morning and Evening Hymns\222 \(1836\) \221Christian! seek not yet r\
epose\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Just as I am, without one plea)Tj
T*
( But that Thy blood was shed for me,)Tj
T*
( And that Thou bidd\222st me come to Thee,)Tj
T*
( O Lamb of God, I come!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Invalid\222s Hymn Book\222 \(1834\) \221Just as I am\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 49.4624 Tm
( 5.30 Ebenezer Elliott 1781-1849)Tj
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( What is a communist? One who hath yearnings)Tj
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( For equal division of unequal earnings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221More Verse and Prose\222 \(1850\) \221Epigram\222)Tj
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( When wilt thou save the people?)Tj
T*
( Oh, God of Mercy! when?)Tj
T*
( The people, Lord, the people!)Tj
T*
( Not thrones and crowns, but men!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221More Verse and Prose\222 \(1850\) \221The People\222s Anthem\222)Tj
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( 5.31 George Ellis 1753-1815)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Snowy, Flowy, Blowy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Showery, Flowery, Bowery,)Tj
T*
( Hoppy, Croppy, Droppy,)Tj
T*
( Breezy, Sneezy, Freezy.)Tj
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(\221The Twelve Months\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 472.4624 Tm
( 5.32 Havelock Ellis \(Henry Havelock Ellis\) 1859-1939)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What we call \221progress\222 is the exchange of one nuisance for an\
other nuisance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.92047 Tm
(\221Impressions and Comments\222 \(1914\) 31 July 1912)Tj
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( All civilization has from time to time become a thin crust over a vo\
lcano of revolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(\221Little Essays of Love and Virtue\222 \(1922\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.9624 Tm
( 5.33 Elstow)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( With thanks to God we know the way to heaven, to be as ready by wate\
r as by land, and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(therefore we care not which way we go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(When threatened with drowning by Henry VIII, in John Stow \221The Annals\
of England\222 \(1615\) p. 543.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.2124 Tm
( 5.34 Paul Eluard 1895-1952)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Adieu tristesse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Bonjour tristesse)Tj
T*
( Tu es inscrite dans les lignes du plafond.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Farewell sadness Good-day sadness You are inscribed in the lines of \
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.92047 Tm
(\221A peine d\350figur\350e\222 \(1932\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 150.7124 Tm
( 5.35 Ralph Waldo Emerson 1803-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If the red slayer think he slays,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or if the slain think he is slain,)Tj
T*
( They know not well the subtle ways)Tj
T*
( I keep, and pass, and turn again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221Brahma\222 \(1867\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.25456 Tm
( I am the doubter and the doubt,)Tj
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( And I the hymn the Brahmin sings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Brahma\222 \(1867\))Tj
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( By the rude bridge that arched the flood,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their flag to April\222s breeze unfurled,)Tj
T*
( Here once the embattled farmers stood,)Tj
T*
( And fired the shot heard round the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(\221Hymn Sung at the Completion of the Concord Monument\222 19 April 183\
6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.75456 Tm
( Good-bye, proud world! I\222m going home:)Tj
T*
( Thou art not my friend, and I\222m not thine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221Good-bye\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( Things are in the saddle,)Tj
T*
( And ride mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221Ode\222 Inscribed to W. H. Channing \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( I like a church; I like a cowl;)Tj
T*
( I love a prophet of the soul;)Tj
T*
( And on my heart monastic aisles)Tj
T*
( Fall like sweet strains, or pensive smiles;)Tj
T*
( Yet not for all his faith can see,)Tj
T*
( Would I that cowl\351d churchman be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.42047 Tm
(\221The Problem\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( He builded better than he knew;\227)Tj
T*
( The conscious stone to beauty grew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.67047 Tm
(\221The Problem\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.75456 Tm
( The frolic architecture of the snow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.92047 Tm
(\221The Snowstorm\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.00456 Tm
( Wilt thou seal up the avenues of ill?)Tj
T*
( Pay every debt, as if God wrote the bill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.17047 Tm
(\221Solution\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.25456 Tm
( So nigh is grandeur to our dust,)Tj
T*
( So near is God to man,)Tj
T*
( When Duty whispers low,)Tj
T*
( Thou must,)Tj
T*
( The youth replies,)Tj
T*
( I can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.42047 Tm
(\221Voluntaries\222 no. 3 \(1867\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.50456 Tm
( Make yourself necessary to someone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.67047 Tm
(\221The Conduct of Life\222 \(1860\) \221Considerations by the way\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.75456 Tm
( All sensible people are selfish, and nature is tugging at every cont\
ract to make the terms of it )Tj
T*
(fair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.92047 Tm
(\221The Conduct of Life\222 \(1860\) \221Considerations by the way\222)Tj
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( Art is a jealous mistress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.17047 Tm
(\221The Conduct of Life\222 \(1860\) \221Wealth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.25456 Tm
( The louder he talked of his honour, the faster we counted our spoons\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.42047 Tm
(\221The Conduct of Life\222 \(1860\) \221Worship\222.)Tj
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( I feel, in regard to this aged England...that she sees a little bett\
er on a cloudy day, and that, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(storm of battle and calamity, she has a secret vigour and a pulse like a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.67047 Tm
(\221English Traits\222 \(1856\) \221Speech at Manchester\222 \(1847\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.75456 Tm
( Beauty will not come at the call of a legislature...It will come, as\
always, unannounced, and )Tj
T*
(spring up between the feet of brave and earnest men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Art\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.00456 Tm
( Conversation is a game of circles. In conversation we pluck up the t\
ermini which bound the )Tj
T*
(common of silence on every side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Circles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.25456 Tm
( People wish to be settled: only as far as they are unsettled is ther\
e any hope for them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Circles\222)Tj
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( Thou art to me a delicious torment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.75456 Tm
( A friend is a person with whom I may be sincere. Before him I may th\
ink aloud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.00456 Tm
( The only reward of virtue is virtue; the only way to have a friend i\
s to be one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Friendship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.25456 Tm
( We need books of this tart, cathartic virtue, more than books of pol\
itical science or of private )Tj
T*
(economy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.42047 Tm
(On Plutarch\222s Lives, in \221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Heroism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.50456 Tm
( It was a high counsel that I once heard given to a young person, \221\
Always do what you are )Tj
T*
(afraid to do.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Heroism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.75456 Tm
( There is properly no history; only biography.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221History\222.)Tj
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( The faith that stands on authority is not faith.)Tj
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(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221The Over-Soul\222)Tj
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( In skating over thin ice, our safety is in our speed.)Tj
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(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Prudence\222)Tj
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( It is easy in the world to live after the world\222s opinion; it is \
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T*
(own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.67047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Self-Reliance\222)Tj
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( A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by li\
ttle statesmen and )Tj
T*
(philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothi\
ng to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Self-Reliance\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.00456 Tm
( Is it so bad, then, to be misunderstood? Pythagoras was misunderstoo\
d, and)Tj
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( Socrates, and Jesus, and Luther, and Copernicus, and Galileo, and Ne\
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0 -1.2 TD
(wise spirit that ever took flesh. To be great is to be misunderstood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1841\) \221Self-Reliance\222)Tj
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( To fill the hour\227that is happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Essays. Second Series\222 \(1844\) \221Experience\222)Tj
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( The years teach much which the days never know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Essays. Second Series\222 \(1844\) \221Experience\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.75456 Tm
( Men are conservatives when they are least vigorous, or when they are\
most luxurious. They are )Tj
T*
(conservatives after dinner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.92047 Tm
(\221Essays. Second Series\222 \(1844\) \221New England Reformers\222)Tj
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( Every man is wanted, and no man is wanted much.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.17047 Tm
(\221Essays. Second Series\222 \(1844\) \221Nominalist and Realist\222)Tj
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( Language is fossil poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.42047 Tm
(\221Essays. Second Series\222 \(1844\) \221The Poet\222)Tj
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( What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not been discovered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.67047 Tm
(\221Fortune of the Republic\222 \(1878\) p. 3)Tj
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( Old age brings along with its uglinesses the comfort that you will s\
oon be out of it,\227which )Tj
T*
(ought to be a substantial relief to such discontented pendulums as we ar\
e. To be out of the war, )Tj
T*
(out of debt, out of the drouth, out of the blues, out of the dentist\222\
s hands, out of the second )Tj
T*
(thoughts, mortifications, and remorses that inflict such twinges and sho\
oting pains,\227out of the )Tj
T*
(next winter, and the high prices, and company below your ambition,\227su\
rely these are soothing )Tj
T*
(hints.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.92047 Tm
(Journal, 1864, in Linda Allardt et al. \(eds.\) \221The Journals and Mi\
scellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo )Tj
T*
(Emerson\222 vol. 15, 1860-6 \(1982\) p. 428)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Is not marriage an open question, when it is alleged, from the begin\
ning of the world, that such )Tj
T*
(as are in the institution wish to get out; and such as are out wish to g\
et in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Representative Men\222 \(1850\) \221Montaigne\222)Tj
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( Every hero becomes a bore at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Representative Men\222 \(1850\) \221Uses of Great Men\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Hitch your wagon to a star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Society and Solitude\222 \(1870\) \221Civilization\222)Tj
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( We boil at different degrees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Society and Solitude\222 \(1870\) \221Eloquence\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( America is a country of young men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Society and Solitude\222 \(1870\) \221Old Age\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Glittering generalities! They are blazing ubiquities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(On Choate \(attributed\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( If a man write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a bett\
er mouse-trap than his )Tj
T*
(neighbour, tho\222 he build his house in the woods, the world will make \
a beaten path to his door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(Attributed to Emerson in Sarah S. B. Yule \221Borrowings\222 \(1889\). M\
rs Yule states in The Docket February )Tj
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(occasion of a long controversy, owing to Elbert Hubbard\222s claim to it\
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( 5.36 Sir William Empson 1906-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Waiting for the end, boys, waiting for the end.)Tj
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(\221Just a smack at Auden\222)Tj
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( It is this deep blankness is the real thing strange.)Tj
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( The more things happen to you the more you can\222t)Tj
T*
( Tell or remember even what they were.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( The contradictions cover such a range.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The talk would talk and go so far about.)Tj
T*
( You don\222t want madhouse and the whole thing there.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Let it Go\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( Slowly the poison the whole blood stream fills.)Tj
T*
( It is not the effort nor the failure tires.)Tj
T*
( The waste remains, the waste remains and kills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Missing Dates\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( Seven types of ambiguity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1930\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.2124 Tm
( 5.37 Friedrich Engels 1820-95)Tj
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( Der Staat wird nicht \221abgeschaft\222, er stirbt ab.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The State is not \221abolished\222, it withers away.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Anti-D\374hring\222 \(1878\) pt. 3, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( See also Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels \(1.86\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 5.38 Thomas Dunn English 1819-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh! don\222t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown,)Tj
T*
( Who wept with delight when you gave her a smile,)Tj
T*
( And trembled with fear at your frown?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221Ben Bolt\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 161.2124 Tm
( 5.39 Ennius 239-169 B.C.)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( O Tite tute Tati tibi tanta tyranne tulisti!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O tyrant Titus Tatius, what a lot you brought upon yourself!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Annals\222 bk. 1 \(l. 104 in O. Skutch \(ed.\) \221The Annals of Q.\
Ennius\222, 1985\))Tj
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( Moribus antiquis res stat Romana virisque.)Tj
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( The Roman state survives by its ancient customs and its manhood.)Tj
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(\221Annals\222 bk. 5 \(l. 156 in O. Skutch \(ed.\) \221The Annals of Q.\
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( And yet I love this false, this worthless man,)Tj
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( With all the passion that a woman can;)Tj
T*
( Dote on his imperfections, though I spy)Tj
T*
( Nothing to love; I love, and know not why.)Tj
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( 5.41 Sir Jacob Epstein 1880-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Why don\222t they stick to murder and leave art to us?)Tj
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(Telegram sent to the Warden of New College, Oxford, on hearing of Krusch\
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(\221Lazarus\222 in the College chapel)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks i\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.17047 Tm
(\221Casablanca\222 \(1942 film\); spoken by Humphrey Bogart)Tj
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( If she can stand it, I can. Play it!)Tj
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(\221Casablanca\222 \(1942 film\); spoken by Humphrey Bogart and usually \
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0 -1.2 TD
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( Here\222s looking at you, kid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.67047 Tm
(\221Casablanca\222 \(1942 film\); spoken by Humphrey Bogart)Tj
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( Major Strasser has been shot. Round up the usual suspects.)Tj
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(\221Casablanca\222 \(1942 film\); spoken by Claude Rains)Tj
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( 5.43 Olaudah Equiano c.1745-c.1797)Tj
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( We are...a nation of dancers, singers and poets.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.42047 Tm
(\221Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano\222 \(1789\) ch. 3)Tj
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( In regione caecorum rex est lustus.)Tj
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(know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.)Tj
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(\221Anger in the Sky\222 \(1943\) p. 137)Tj
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( 5.46 Robert Devereux, Earl Of Essex 1566-1601)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Reasons are not like garments, the worse for wearing.)Tj
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(Letter to Lord Willoughby, 4 January 1599, in \221Notes and Queries\222 \
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( 5.47 Henri Estienne 1531-98)Tj
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( Si jeunesse savoit; si vieillesse pouvoit.)Tj
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( If youth knew; if age could.)Tj
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(\221Les Pr\350mices\222 \(1594\) bk. 4, epigram 4)Tj
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( 5.48 Sir George Etherege \(or Etheredge\) c.1635-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I walk within the purlieus of the Law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(\221Love in a Tub\222 \(1664\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221The Man of Mode\222 \(1676\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( Writing, Madam, \222s a mechanic part of wit! A gentleman should nev\
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T*
(billet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221The Man of Mode\222 \(1676\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
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( Fear not, though love and beauty fail,)Tj
T*
( My reason shall my heart direct:)Tj
T*
( Your kindness now will then prevail,)Tj
T*
( And passion turn into respect:)Tj
T*
( Chloris, at worst, you\222ll in the end)Tj
T*
( But change your Lover for a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
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( 5.49 Euclid fl. c.300 B.C.)Tj
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( A line is length without breadth.)Tj
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(\221Elementa\222 bk. 1, definition 2)Tj
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( There is no \221royal road\222 to geometry.)Tj
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(Said to Ptolemy I, in Proclus \221Commentary on the First Book of Euclid\
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( 5.50 Euripides c.485-406 B.C.)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( My tongue swore, but my mind\222s unsworn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Hippolytus\222 l. 612 \(Hippolytus, justifying his breaking of an oa\
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T*
( Under this stone, Reader, survey)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dead Sir John Vanbrugh\222s house of clay.)Tj
T*
( Lie heavy on him, Earth! for he)Tj
T*
( Laid many heavy loads on thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on Sir John Vanbrugh, Architect of Blenheim Palace\222)Tj
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( 5.52 John Evelyn 1620-1706)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( This knight was indeed a valiant Gent: but not a little given to rom\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.92047 Tm
(E. S. de Beer \(ed.\) \221The Diary of John Evelyn\222 \(1955\) vol. 3,\
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( Mulberry Garden, now the only place of refreshment about the town fo\
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T*
(quality to be exceedingly cheated at.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.17047 Tm
(E. S. de Beer \(ed.\) \221The Diary of John Evelyn\222 \(1955\) vol. 3,\
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15 0 0 15 10 380.25456 Tm
( That miracle of a youth, Mr Christopher Wren.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(E. S. de Beer \(ed.\) \221The Diary of John Evelyn\222 \(1955\) vol. 3,\
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15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( I saw Hamlet Prince of Denmark played, but now the old play began to\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(E. S. de Beer \(ed.\) \221The Diary of John Evelyn\222 \(1955\) vol. 3,\
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( 5.53 David Everett 1769-1813)Tj
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( You\222d scarce expect one of my age)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And if I chance to fall below)Tj
T*
( Demosthenes or Cicero,)Tj
T*
( Don\222t view me with a critic\222s eye,)Tj
T*
( But pass my imperfections by.)Tj
T*
( Large streams from little fountains flow,)Tj
T*
( Tall oaks from little acorns grow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Lines Written for a School Declamation\222)Tj
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( 5.54 Viscount Eversley)Tj
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( See Charles Shaw-Lefevre \(7.71\) in Volume II)Tj
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( 5.55 William Norman Ewer 1885-1976)Tj
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( I gave my life for freedom\227This I know:)Tj
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( For those who bade me fight had told me so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Five Souls\222 \(1917\))Tj
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( How odd)Tj
T*
( Of God)Tj
T*
( To choose)Tj
T*
( The Jews.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(In \221Week-End Book\222 \(1924\) p. 117.)Tj
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/TT2 1 Tf
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( 6.1 F. W. Faber 1814-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The music of the Gospel leads us home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.67047 Tm
(\221Oratory Hymns\222 \(1854\) \221The Pilgrims of the Night\222)Tj
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( My God, how wonderful Thou art!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy Majesty how bright!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221Oratory Hymns\222 \(1854\) \221The Eternal Father\222)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Finally he paid the debt of nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(\221The New Chronicles of England and France\222 \(1516\) pt. 1, ch. 41)Tj
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( King Henry [I] being in Normandy, after some writers, fell from or w\
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0 -1.2 TD
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prey, and thereof died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221The New Chronicles of England and France\222 pt. 1, ch. 229. Ranulph\
us Higden\222s account, Polychronicon vol. )Tj
T*
(7, p. 42, does not attribute Henry\222s death to any direct cause. Fabya\
n may have derived the notion of \221surfeit\222 )Tj
T*
(from an anonymous and rather fanciful translation of Higden\222s nocuera\
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T*
(MS 2261, f. 354 b.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( The Duke of Clarence...then being a prisoner in the Tower, was secre\
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T*
(drowned in a barrel of Malmesey wine within the said Tower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221The New Chronicles of England and France\222 pt. 2 \(1477\); early e\
ditions have the spelling malvesye)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 211.4624 Tm
( 6.3 Clifton Fadiman 1904\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Milk\222s leap toward immortality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Any Number Can Play\222 \(1957\) p. 105 \(definition of cheese\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( The mama of dada.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Party of One\222 \(1955\) p. 90 \(of Gertrude Stein\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
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( 6.4 Lucius Cary \(second Viscount Falkland\) 1610-43)Tj
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T*
( When it is not necessary to change, it is necessary not to change.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Discourses of Infallibility\222 \(1660\) \221A Speech concerning Epi\
scopacy\222 1641)Tj
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( 6.5 Sir Richard Fanshawe 1605-66)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Sheathing in fawning looks the deadly knife)Tj
T*
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T*
( It more securely might bereave his life:)Tj
T*
( Then threw him to a scaffold from a throne.)Tj
T*
( Much doctrine lies under this little stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.42047 Tm
(\221Il Pastor Fido\222 \(1648\) \221The Fall\222)Tj
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( White Peace \(the beautiful\222st of things\))Tj
T*
( Seems here her everlasting rest)Tj
T*
( To fix, and spreads her downy wings over the nest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221Il Pastor Fido\222 \(1648\) \221An Ode, upon occasion of His Majesty\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 520.4624 Tm
( 6.6 Michael Faraday 1791-1867)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tyndall, I must remain plain Michael Faraday to the last; and let me\
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0 -1.2 TD
(accepted the honour which the Royal Society desires to confer upon me, I\
would not answer for )Tj
T*
(the integrity of my intellect for a single year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(On being offered the Presidency of the Royal Society, in J. Tyndall \221\
Faraday as a Discoverer\222 \(1868\) )Tj
T*
(\221Illustrations of Character\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 6.7 Eleanor Farjeon 1881-1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Morning has broken)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like the first morning,)Tj
T*
( Blackbird has spoken)Tj
T*
( Like the first bird.)Tj
T*
( Praise for the singing!)Tj
T*
( Praise for the morning!)Tj
T*
( Praise for them, springing)Tj
T*
( Fresh from the Lord!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221Children\222s Bells\222 \(1957\) \221A Morning Song \(for the First \
Day of Spring\)\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 203.9624 Tm
( 6.8 Edward Farmer c.1809-76)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have no pain, dear mother, now;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But oh! I am so dry:)Tj
T*
( Just moisten poor Jim\222s lips once more;)Tj
T*
( And, mother, do not cry!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.42047 Tm
(\221The Collier\222s Dying Child\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 80.2124 Tm
( 6.9 King Farouk of Egypt 1920-65)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The whole world is in revolt. Soon there will be only five Kings lef\
t\227the King of England, the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(King of Spades, the King of Clubs, the King of Hearts and the King of Di\
amonds.)Tj
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(Said to Lord Boyd-Orr at a conference in Cairo, 1948, in Lord Boyd-Orr \221\
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( 6.10 George Farquhar c.1677-1707)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sir, you shall taste my Anno Domini.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 684.92047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( I have fed purely upon ale; I have eat my ale, drank my ale, and I a\
lways sleep upon ale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.17047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 627.25456 Tm
( My Lady Bountiful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.42047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.50456 Tm
( There is no scandal like rags, nor any crime so shameful as poverty.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.67047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.75456 Tm
( There\222s some diversion in a talking blockhead; and since a woman \
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.92047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.00456 Tm
( No woman can be a beauty without a fortune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.17047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.25456 Tm
( I believe they talked of me, for they laughed consumedly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.42047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.50456 Tm
( \222Twas for the good of my country that I should be abroad.\227Anyt\
hing for the good of one\222s )Tj
T*
(country\227I\222m a Roman for that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.75456 Tm
( Aimwell: Then you understand Latin, Mr Bonniface?)Tj
T*
( Bonniface: Not I, Sir, as the saying is, but he talks it so very fa\
st that I\222m sure it must be good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.92047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.00456 Tm
( Spare all I have, and take my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.17047 Tm
(\221The Beaux\222 Stratagem\222 \(1707\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.25456 Tm
( I hate all that don\222t love me, and slight all that do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.42047 Tm
(\221The Constant Couple\222 \(1699\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.50456 Tm
( Grant me some wild expressions, Heavens, or I shall burst\227...Word\
s, words or I shall burst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.67047 Tm
(\221The Constant Couple\222 \(1699\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.75456 Tm
( Charming women can true converts make,)Tj
T*
( We love the precepts for the teacher\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.92047 Tm
(\221The Constant Couple\222 \(1699\) act 5, sc. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.00456 Tm
( Crimes, like virtues, are their own rewards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.17047 Tm
(\221The Inconstant\222 \(1702\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.25456 Tm
( Money is the sinews of love, as of war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(\221Love and a Bottle\222 \(1698\) act 2, sc. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.50456 Tm
( Poetry\222s a mere drug, Sir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.67047 Tm
(\221Love and a Bottle\222 \(1698\) act 3, sc. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.75456 Tm
( Hanging and marriage, you know, go by Destiny.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Recruiting Officer\222 \(1706\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.00456 Tm
( I could be mighty foolish, and fancy my self mighty witty; Reason st\
ill keeps its throne, but it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(nods a little, that\222s all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.17047 Tm
(\221The Recruiting Officer\222 \(1706\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.25456 Tm
( A lady, if undressed at Church, looks silly,)Tj
T*
( One cannot be devout in dishabilly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.42047 Tm
(\221The Stage Coach\222 \(1704\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.50456 Tm
( I\222m privileged to be very impertinent, being an Oxonian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.67047 Tm
(\221Sir Harry Wildair\222 \(1701\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.4624 Tm
( 6.11 David Glasgow Farragut 1801-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.92047 Tm
(At the battle of Mobile Bay, 5 August 1864 \(\221torpedoes\222 were mine\
s\). Capt. A. T. Mahan \221Admiral )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Farragut\222 \(1892\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 491.7124 Tm
( 6.12 William Faulkner 1897-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He [the writer] must teach himself that the basest of all things is \
to be afraid and, teaching )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for any\
thing but the old verities )Tj
T*
(and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking which any stor\
y is ephemeral and doomed)Tj
T*
(\227love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 400.17047 Tm
(Nobel Prize speech, 1950, in \221Les Prix Nobel en 1950\222 \(1951\) p. \
71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 379.25456 Tm
( I believe man will not merely endure, he will prevail. He is immorta\
l, not because he, alone )Tj
T*
(among creatures, has an inexhaustible voice but because he has a soul, a\
spirit capable of )Tj
T*
(compassion and sacrifice and endurance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.42047 Tm
(Nobel Prize speech, 1950, in \221Les Prix Nobel en 1950\222 \(1951\) p. \
71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.50456 Tm
( The writer\222s only responsibility is to his art. He will be comple\
tely ruthless if he is a good one. )Tj
T*
(He has a dream. It anguishes him so much he must get rid of it. He has n\
o peace until then. )Tj
T*
(Everything goes by the board...If a writer has to rob his mother, he wil\
l not hesitate; the Ode on a )Tj
T*
(Grecian Urn is worth any number of old ladies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.67047 Tm
(In \221Paris Review\222 Spring 1956, p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.75456 Tm
( A man shouldn\222t fool with booze until he\222s fifty; then he\222s\
a damn fool if he doesn\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.92047 Tm
(In James M. Webb and A. Wigfall Green \221William Faulkner of Oxford\222\
\(1965\) p. 110)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.7124 Tm
( 6.13 Guy Fawkes 1570-1606)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A desperate disease requires a dangerous remedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.17047 Tm
(6 November 1605. \221Dictionary of National Biography\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.9624 Tm
( 6.14 James Fenton 1949\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( It is not what they built. It is what they knocked down.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It is not the houses. It is the spaces between the houses.)Tj
T*
( It is not the streets that exist. It is the streets that no longer e\
xist.)Tj
ET
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(\221German Requiem\222 \(1981\) p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.2124 Tm
( 6.15 Edna Ferber 1887-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Being an old maid is like death by drowning, a really delightful sen\
sation after you cease to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(struggle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 666.67047 Tm
(In R. E. Drennan \221Wit\222s End\222 \(1973\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 634.4624 Tm
( 6.16 Emperor Ferdinand I 1503-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fiat justitia et pereat mundus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let justice be done, though the world perish.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(Motto. Johannes Manlius \221Locorum Communium Collectanea\222 \(Basle, 1\
563\) vol. 2, p. 290.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 542.9624 Tm
( 6.17 Robert Fergusson 1750-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For thof ye had as wise a snout on)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As Shakespeare or Sir Isaac Newton,)Tj
T*
( Your judgement fouk woud hae a doubt on,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll tak my aith,)Tj
T*
( Till they could see ye wi\222 a suit on)Tj
T*
( O\222 gude Braid Claith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(\221Braid Claith\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.50456 Tm
( The Lawyers may revere that tree)Tj
T*
( Where thieves so oft have swung,)Tj
T*
( Since, by the Law\222s most wise decree,)Tj
T*
( Her thieves are never hung.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Epigram on a Lawyer\222s desiring one of the Tribe to look with resp\
ect to a Gibbet\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 292.4624 Tm
( 6.18 Ludwig Feuerbach 1804-72)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Der Mensch ist, was er isst.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Man is what he eats.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(In Jacob Moleschott \221Lehre der Nahrungsmittel: F\374r das Volk\222 \(\
1850\) \221Advertisement\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 200.9624 Tm
( 6.19 Eric Field)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Your King and Country need you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(World War I recruitment slogan, in \221Advertising\222 \(1959\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 131.2124 Tm
( 6.20 Eugene Field 1850-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( But I, when I undress me)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Each night, upon my knees,)Tj
T*
( Will ask the Lord to bless me,)Tj
T*
( With apple pie and cheese.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.67047 Tm
(\221Apple Pie and Cheese\222)Tj
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( Wynken, Blynken, and Nod one night)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sailed off in a wooden shoe\227)Tj
T*
( Sailed on a river of crystal light,)Tj
T*
( Into a sea of dew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.92047 Tm
(\221Wynken, Blynken, and Nod\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.00456 Tm
( He played the King as though under momentary apprehension that someo\
ne else was about to )Tj
T*
(play the ace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.17047 Tm
(Writing of Creston Clarke as King Lear, in a review attributed to Field,\
in the \221Denver Tribune\222 c.1880)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 591.9624 Tm
( 6.21 Henry Fielding 1707-54)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It hath been often said, that it is not death, but dying, which is t\
errible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.42047 Tm
(\221Amelia\222 \(1751\) bk. 3, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.50456 Tm
( One fool at least in every married couple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Amelia\222 \(1751\) bk. 9, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( Oh! The roast beef of England,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And old England\222s roast beef.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221The Grub Street Opera\222 \(1731\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( He in a few minutes ravished this fair creature, or at least would h\
ave ravished her, if she had )Tj
T*
(not, by a timely compliance, prevented him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221Jonathan Wild\222 \(1743\) bk. 3, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( To whom nothing is given, of him can nothing be required.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(\221Joseph Andrews\222 \(1742\) bk. 2, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( I describe not men, but manners; not an individual, but a species.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(\221Joseph Andrews\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221Joseph Andrews\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( Love and scandal are the best sweeteners of tea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.17047 Tm
(\221Love in Several Masques\222 \(1728\) act 4, sc. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.25456 Tm
( Necessity is a bad recommendation to favours...which as seldom fall \
to those who really want )Tj
T*
(them, as to those who really deserve them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.42047 Tm
(\221The Modern Husband\222 \(1732\) act 2, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.50456 Tm
( Map me no maps, sir, my head is a map, a map of the whole world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.67047 Tm
(\221Rape upon Rape\222 \(1730\) act 2, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.75456 Tm
( When I mention religion, I mean the Christian religion; and not only\
the)Tj
T*
( Christian religion, but the Protestant religion; and not only the)Tj
T*
( Protestant religion but the Church of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 3, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( Thwackum was for doing justice, and leaving mercy to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 3, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.25456 Tm
( What is commonly called love, namely the desire of satisfying a vora\
cious appetite with a )Tj
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(certain quantity of delicate white human flesh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.42047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 6, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.50456 Tm
( O! more than Gothic ignorance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.67047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 7, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.75456 Tm
( His designs were strictly honourable, as the phrase is; that is, to \
rob a lady of her fortune by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(way of marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.92047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 11, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.00456 Tm
( That monstrous animal, a husband and wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Jones\222 \(1749\) bk. 15, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.25456 Tm
( All Nature wears one universal grin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.42047 Tm
(\221Tom Thumb the Great\222 \(1731\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.50456 Tm
( When I\222m not thanked at all, I\222m thanked enough,)Tj
T*
( I\222ve done my duty, and I\222ve done no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.67047 Tm
(\221Tom Thumb the Great\222 \(1731\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.75456 Tm
( The dusky night rides down the sky,)Tj
T*
( And ushers in the morn;)Tj
T*
( The hounds all join in glorious cry,)Tj
T*
( The huntsman winds his horn:)Tj
T*
( And a-hunting we will go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.92047 Tm
(\221A-Hunting We Will Go\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 374.7124 Tm
( 6.22 Dorothy Fields 1905-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A fine romance with no kisses.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A fine romance, my friend, this is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.17047 Tm
(\221A Fine Romance\222 \(1936 song; music by Jerome Kern\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 286.9624 Tm
( 6.23 W. C. Fields \(William Claude Dukenfield\) 1880-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never give a sucker an even break.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.42047 Tm
(Title of a W. C. Fields film \(1941\); the catch-phrase \(Fields\222s ow\
n\) is said to have originated in the musical )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(comedy \221Poppy\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.50456 Tm
( Some weasel took the cork out of my lunch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.67047 Tm
(\221You Can\222t Cheat an Honest Man\222 \(1939 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.75456 Tm
( It ain\222t a fit night out for man or beast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.92047 Tm
(Adopted by Fields but claimed by him not to be original. Letter, 8 Febru\
ary 1944, in R. J. Fields \(ed.\) \221W. C. )Tj
T*
(Fields by Himself\222 \(1974\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.00456 Tm
( Hell, I never vote for anybody. I always vote against.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.17047 Tm
(In Robert Lewis Taylor \221W. C. Fields: His Follies and Fortunes\222 \(\
1950\) p. 228.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.25456 Tm
( See also Leo Rosten \(6.87\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.24 Harry Julian Fink, Rita M. Fink, and Dean Riesner)Tj
ET
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( Go ahead, make my day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Dirty Harry\222 \(1971 film\); spoken by Clint Eastwood)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 6.25 Ronald Firbank 1886-1926)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221O! help me, heaven,\222 she prayed, \221to be decorative and to \
do right!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221The Flower Beneath the Foot\222 \(1923\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( I remember the average curate at home as something between a eunuch \
and a snigger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(\221The Flower Beneath the Foot\222 \(1923\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( There was a pause\227just long enough for an angel to pass, flying s\
lowly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.92047 Tm
(\221Vainglory\222 \(1915\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.00456 Tm
( All millionaires love a baked apple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(\221Vainglory\222 \(1915\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( \221I know of no joy,\222 she airily began, \221greater than a cool \
white dress after the sweetness of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(confession.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Valmouth\222 \(1919\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 470.2124 Tm
( 6.26 L\222Abb\350 Edgeworth De Firmont 1745-1807)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fils de Saint Louis, montez au ciel.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Son of Saint Louis, ascend to heaven.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(Said to Louis XVI as he mounted the steps of the guillotine at his execu\
tion, 1793, and attributed to L\222Abb\350 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Edgeworth; no documentary proof)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 363.7124 Tm
( 6.27 Fred Fisher 1875-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Ada Benson \(2.88\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.28 H. A. L. Fisher 1856-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Men wiser and more learned than I have discerned in history a plot, \
a rhythm, a predetermined )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pattern. These harmonies are concealed from me. I can see only one emerg\
ency following upon )Tj
T*
(another as wave follows upon wave, only one great fact with respect to w\
hich, since it is unique, )Tj
T*
(there can be no generalizations, only one safe rule for the historian: t\
hat he should recognize in )Tj
T*
(the development of human destinies the play of the contingent and the un\
foreseen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221A History of Europe\222 \(1935\) p. vii)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( Purity of race does not exist. Europe is a continent of energetic mo\
ngrels.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221A History of Europe\222 \(1935\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 130.4624 Tm
( 6.29 John Arbuthnot Fisher \(Baron Fisher\) 1841-1920)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The essence of war is violence. Moderation in war is imbecility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(Lecture notes 1899-1902, in R. H. Bacon \221Life of Lord Fisher\222 \(19\
29\) vol. 1, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Sack the lot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(Letter to \221The Times\222, 2 September 1919)Tj
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( Never contradict Never explain Never apologize \(Those are the secre\
ts of a happy life!\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to \221The Times\222, 5 September 1919.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Favouritism is the secret of efficiency.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Inscribed in the log of HMS Vernon, in W. S. Churchill \221Great Contemp\
oraries\222 \(1937\) \221Lord Fisher and his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(biographer\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Yours till Hell freezes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Attributed to Fisher, but not original. F. Ponsonby \221Reflections of T\
hree Reigns\222 \(1951\) p. 131: \221Once an )Tj
T*
(officer in India wrote to me and ended his letter \223Yours till Hell fr\
eezes\224. I used this forcible expression in a )Tj
T*
(letter to Fisher, and he adopted it\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 586.4624 Tm
( 6.30 Marve Fisher)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I want an old-fashioned house)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With an old-fashioned fence)Tj
T*
( And an old-fashioned millionaire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 512.92047 Tm
(\221An Old-Fashioned Girl\222 \(1954 song; popularized by Eartha Kitt\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 480.7124 Tm
( 6.31 Albert H. Fitz)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You are my honey, honeysuckle, I am the bee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221The Honeysuckle and the Bee\222 \(1901 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 410.9624 Tm
( 6.32 Charles Fitzgeffrey c.1575-1638)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( And bold and hard adventures t\222 undertake,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Leaving his country for his country\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Sir Francis Drake\222 \(1596\) st. 213)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 323.2124 Tm
( 6.33 Edward Fitzgerald 1809-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Awake! for Morning in the bowl of night)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Has flung the stone that puts the stars to flight:)Tj
T*
( And Lo! the Hunter of the East has caught)Tj
T*
( The Sultan\222s turret in a noose of light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( And look\227a thousand blossoms with the day)Tj
T*
( Woke\227and a thousand scattered into clay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( Each morn a thousand roses brings, you say;)Tj
T*
( Yes, but where leaves the rose of yesterday?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( Here with a loaf of bread beneath the bough,)Tj
T*
( A flask of wine, a book of verse\227and Thou)Tj
T*
( Beside me singing in the wilderness\227)Tj
T*
( And wilderness is paradise enow.)Tj
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(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 11; ; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221A book of verses underneath the bough, ; )Tj
T*
( A jug of wine, a loaf of bread\227and Thou ; )Tj
T*
( Beside me singing in the wilderness ; )Tj
T*
( Oh, wilderness were paradise enow!\222 ; )Tj
T*
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.25456 Tm
( Ah, take the cash in hand and waive the rest;)Tj
T*
( Oh, the brave music of a distant drum!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 12; ; )Tj
T*
( \221Ah, take the cash and let the credit go, ; )Tj
T*
( Nor heed the rumble of a distant drum!\222 ; )Tj
T*
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 559.50456 Tm
( Think, in this battered caravanserai)Tj
T*
( Whose doorways are alternate night and day,)Tj
T*
( How sultan after sultan with his pomp)Tj
T*
( Abode his hour or two, and went his way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 15; )Tj
T*
( \221Think, in this battered caravanserai ; )Tj
T*
( Whose portals are alternate night and day, ; )Tj
T*
( How sultan after sultan with his pomp ; )Tj
T*
( Abode his destined hour, and went his way.\222 ; )Tj
T*
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( I sometimes think that never blows so red)Tj
T*
( The rose as where some buried Caesar bled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( Ah, my belov\350d, fill the cup that clears)Tj
T*
( To-day of past regrets and future fears:)Tj
T*
( To-morrow!\227Why, to-morrow I may be)Tj
T*
( Myself with yesterday\222s seven thousand years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( Ah, make the most of what we yet may spend,)Tj
T*
( Before we too into the dust descend;)Tj
T*
( Dust into dust, and under dust, to lie,)Tj
T*
( Sans wine, sans song, sans singer, and\227sans End!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( Oh, come with old Khayy m, and leave the wise)Tj
T*
( To talk; one thing is certain, that life flies;)Tj
T*
( One thing is certain, and the rest is lies;)Tj
T*
( The flower that once hath blown for ever dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 26; ; )Tj
T*
( \221Oh threats of Hell and hopes of Paradise! ; )Tj
T*
( One thing at least is certain\227This life flies; ; )Tj
T*
( One thing is certain and the rest is lies; ; )Tj
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( The flower that once has blown for ever dies.\222 ; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( With them the seed of wisdom did I sow,)Tj
T*
( And with mine own hand wrought to make it grow;)Tj
T*
( And this was all the harvest that I reaped\227)Tj
T*
( \221I came like water, and like wind I go\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( Ah, fill the cup:\227what boots it to repeat)Tj
T*
( How time is slipping underneath our feet:)Tj
T*
( Unborn TO-MORROW, and dead YESTERDAY,)Tj
T*
( Why fret about them if TO-DAY be sweet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( The grape that can with logic absolute)Tj
T*
( The two-and-seventy jarring sects confute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( For in and out, above, about, below,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis nothing but a magic shadow-show,)Tj
T*
( Played in a box whose candle is the sun,)Tj
T*
( Round which we phantom figures come and go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( Strange, is it not? that of the myriads who)Tj
T*
( Before us passed the door of darkness through,)Tj
T*
( Not one returns to tell us of the road,)Tj
T*
( Which to discover we must travel too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 322.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 301.50456 Tm
( \222Tis all a chequer-board of nights and days)Tj
T*
( Where Destiny with Men for pieces plays:)Tj
T*
( Hither and thither moves, and mates, and slays,)Tj
T*
( And one by one back in the closet lays.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 49;)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( \221But helpless pieces of the game he plays)Tj
T*
( Upon this chequer-board of nights and days;)Tj
T*
( Hither and thither moves, and checks, and slays,)Tj
T*
( And one by one back in the closet lays.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( The ball no question makes of Ayes and Noes,)Tj
T*
( But here or there as strikes the player goes;)Tj
T*
( And he that tossed you down into the field,)Tj
T*
( He knows about it all\227he knows\227he knows!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 70)Tj
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( The moving finger writes; and, having writ,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Moves on: nor all thy piety nor wit)Tj
T*
( Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,)Tj
T*
( Nor all thy tears wash out a word of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 51; \221all y\
our tears\222 in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( And that inverted bowl we call The Sky,)Tj
T*
( Whereunder crawling cooped we live and die,)Tj
T*
( Lift not thy hands to)Tj
T*
( It for help\227for It)Tj
T*
( Rolls impotently on as Thou or I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 52;)Tj
T*
( \221...they call the Sky... As impotently moves as you or I.\222 )Tj
T*
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 523.50456 Tm
( Drink! for you know not whence you came, nor why:)Tj
T*
( Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.75456 Tm
( After a momentary silence spake)Tj
T*
( Some vessel of a more ungainly make;)Tj
T*
( \221They sneer at me for leaning all awry;)Tj
T*
( What! did the hand then of the potter shake?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.00456 Tm
( \221Who is the potter, pray, and who the pot?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.25456 Tm
( Then said another\227\222Surely not in vain)Tj
T*
( My substance from the common earth was ta\222en,)Tj
T*
( That He who subtly wrought me into shape,)Tj
T*
( Should stamp me back to common earth again.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 250.50456 Tm
( Indeed the idols I have loved so long)Tj
T*
( Have done my credit in this world much wrong:)Tj
T*
( Have drowned my glory in a shallow cup)Tj
T*
( And sold my reputation for a song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(4th ed., 1879\) st. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( Alas, that spring should vanish with the rose!)Tj
T*
( That youth\222s sweet-scented manuscript should close!)Tj
T*
( The nightingale that in the branches sang,)Tj
T*
( Ah, whence, and whither flown again, who knows!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( And when Thyself with shining foot shall pass)Tj
T*
( Among the guests star-scattered on the grass,)Tj
ET
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( And in thy joyous errand reach the spot)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where I made one\227turn down an empty glass!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Rub\341iy\341t of Omar Khayy\341m\222 \(1859\) st. 75;)Tj
T*
( \221And when like her, O Saki, you shall pass...)Tj
T*
( And in your joyous errand reach the spot.\222)Tj
T*
(in 4th ed. \(1879\) st. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 653.25456 Tm
( Mrs Browning\222s death is rather a relief to me, I must say: no mor\
e Aurora Leighs, thank God! )Tj
T*
(A woman of real genius, I know; but what is the upshot of it all? She an\
d her sex had better mind )Tj
T*
(the kitchen and their children; and perhaps the poor: except in such thi\
ngs as little novels, they )Tj
T*
(only devote themselves to what men do much better, leaving that which me\
n do worse or not at )Tj
T*
(all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 565.42047 Tm
(Letter to W. H. Thompson, 15 July 1861.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 544.50456 Tm
( Taste is the feminine of genius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 528.67047 Tm
(Letter to J. R. Lowell, October 1877)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 496.4624 Tm
( 6.34 F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and\
me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221All the Sad Young Men\222 \(1926\) \221Rich Boy\222, to which Ernest\
Hemingway replied, \221Yes, they have more )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(money\222, in \221Esquire\222 August 1936 \221The Snows of Kilimanjaro\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( The beautiful and damned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( No grand idea was ever born in a conference, but a lot of foolish id\
eas have died there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(Edmund Wilson \(ed.\) \221The Crack-Up\222 \(1945\) \221Note-Books E\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(Edmund Wilson \(ed.\) \221The Crack-Up\222 \(1945\) \221Note-Books E\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o\222clock in th\
e morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221Esquire\222 March 1936 \221Handle with Care\222; \221dark night of t\
he soul\222 is a translation of the Spanish title of a )Tj
T*
(work by St John of the Cross, known in English as \221The Ascent of Moun\
t Carmel\222 \(1578-80\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( In his blue gardens, men and girls came and went like moths among th\
e whisperings and the )Tj
T*
(champagne and the stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Great Gatsby\222 \(1925\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Her voice is full of money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Great Gatsby\222 \(1925\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( They were careless people, Tom and Daisy\227they smashed up things a\
nd creatures and then )Tj
T*
(retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever \
it was that kept them )Tj
T*
(together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221The Great Gatsby\222 \(1925\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by\
year recedes before us. It )Tj
T*
(eluded us then, but that\222s no matter...So we beat on, boats against t\
he current, borne back )Tj
T*
(ceaselessly into the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221The Great Gatsby\222 \(1925\) ch. 9)Tj
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( There are no second acts in American lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Edmund Wilson \(ed.\) \221The Last Tycoon\222 \(1941\) \221Hollywood, e\
tc.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 6.35 Bud Flanagan \(Chaim Reeven Weintrop\) 1896-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Underneath the Arches,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I dream my dreams away,)Tj
T*
( Underneath the Arches,)Tj
T*
( On cobble-stones I lay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(\221Underneath the Arches\222 \(1932 song; additional words by Reg Conne\
lly\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 581.2124 Tm
( 6.36 Michael Flanders 1922-75 and Donald Swann 1923\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Have Some Madeira, M\222dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(Title of song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.75456 Tm
( Mud! Mud! Glorious mud!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood.)Tj
T*
( So, follow me, follow,)Tj
T*
( Down to the hollow,)Tj
T*
( And there let us wallow)Tj
T*
( In glorious mud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.92047 Tm
(\221The Hippopotamus\222 \(1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.00456 Tm
( Eating people is wrong!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221The Reluctant Cannibal\222 \(1956 song\); adopted as the title of a \
novel \(1959\) by Malcolm Bradbury)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( The English, the English, the English are best!)Tj
T*
( I wouldn\222t give tuppence for all of the rest!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Patriotic Prejudice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 304.50456 Tm
( That monarch of the road,)Tj
T*
( Observer of the Highway Code,)Tj
T*
( That big six-wheeler)Tj
T*
( Scarlet-painted)Tj
T*
( London Transport)Tj
T*
( Diesel-engined)Tj
T*
( Ninety-seven horse power)Tj
T*
( Omnibus!)Tj
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(\221A Transport of Delight\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 130.4624 Tm
( 6.37 Thomas Flatman 1637-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s an experienced rebel, Time,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And in his squadrons Poverty;)Tj
T*
( There\222s Age that brings along with him)Tj
T*
( A terrible artillery:)Tj
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( And if against all these thou keep\222st thy crown,)Tj
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( Th\222usurper Death will make thee lay it down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Poems\222 \(1686\) \221The Defiance\222)Tj
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( 6.38 Gustave Flaubert 1821-80)Tj
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( Language is like a cracked kettle on which we beat out tunes for bea\
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(time we long to move the stars to pity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Madame Bovary\222 pt. 1, ch. 12)Tj
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( You can calculate the worth of a man by the number of his enemies, a\
nd the importance of a )Tj
T*
(work of art by the amount that it is attacked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Letter to Louise Colet, 14 June 1853)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Everything you invent is true: you can be sure of that. Poetry is a \
subject as precise as )Tj
T*
(geometry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(Letter to Louise Colet, 14 August 1853)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Les livres ne se font pas comme les enfants, mais comme les pyramide\
s...et \347a ne sert \341 rien! et )Tj
T*
(\347a reste dans le d\350sert!...Les chacals pissent au bas et les bourg\
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( Books are made not like children but like pyramids...and they\222re \
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(in the desert!...Jackals piss at their foot and the bourgeois climb up o\
n them.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(Letter to Ernest Feydeau, November/December 1857)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.39 James Elroy Flecker 1884-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We who with songs beguile your pilgrimage)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And swear that beauty lives though lilies die,)Tj
T*
( We poets of the proud old lineage)Tj
T*
( Who sing to find your hearts, we know not why,\227)Tj
T*
( What shall we tell you? Tales, marvellous tales)Tj
T*
( Of ships and stars and isles where good men rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221Prologue\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( When the great markets by the sea shut fast)Tj
T*
( All that calm Sunday that goes on and on:)Tj
T*
( When even lovers find their peace at last,)Tj
T*
( And earth is but a star, that once had shone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221Prologue\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( For lust of knowing what should not be known,)Tj
T*
( We take the Golden Road to Samarkand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) pt. 1, \221Epilogue\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( And some to Meccah turn to pray, and I toward thy bed, Yasmin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221Yasmin\222)Tj
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( The dragon-green, the luminous, the dark, the serpent-haunted sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221The Gates of Damasc\
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( A ship, an isle, a sickle moon\227)Tj
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( With few but with how splendid stars)Tj
T*
( The mirrors of the sea are strewn)Tj
T*
( Between their silver bars!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221A Ship, an Isle, an\
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15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Noon strikes on England, noon on Oxford town,)Tj
T*
( Beauty she was statue cold\227there\222s blood upon her gown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221The Dying Patriot\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( West of these out to seas colder than the Hebrides)Tj
T*
( I must go)Tj
T*
( Where the fleet of stars is anchored and the young)Tj
T*
( Star captains glow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Golden Journey to Samarkand\222 \(1913\) \221The Dying Patriot\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( I have seen old ships sail like swans asleep)Tj
T*
( Beyond the village which men still call Tyre,)Tj
T*
( With leaden age o\222ercargoed, dipping deep)Tj
T*
( For Famagusta and the hidden sun)Tj
T*
( That rings black Cyprus with a lake of fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Old Ships\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( It was so old a ship\227who knows, who knows?)Tj
T*
( \227And yet so beautiful, I watched in vain)Tj
T*
( To see the mast burst open with a rose,)Tj
T*
( And the whole deck put on its leaves again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Old Ships\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( O friend unseen, unborn, unknown,)Tj
T*
( Student of our sweet English tongue,)Tj
T*
( Read out my words at night, alone:)Tj
T*
( I was a poet, I was young.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence\222 \(1910\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.2124 Tm
( 6.40 Richard Flecknoe d. c.1678)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Still-born Silence! thou that art)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Floodgate of the deeper heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Miscellania\222 \(1653\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 127.4624 Tm
( 6.41 Ian Fleming 1908-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A medium Vodka dry Martini\227with a slice of lemon peel. Shaken and\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Dr No\222 \(1958\) ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 57.7124 Tm
( 6.42 Marjory Fleming 1803-11)Tj
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( A direful death indeed they had)Tj
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T*
( But she was more than usual calm)Tj
T*
( She did not give a singel dam.)Tj
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(\221Journal\222 p. 29)Tj
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( The most devilish thing is 8 times 8 and 7 times 7 it is what nature\
itselfe cant endure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( To-day I pronounced a word which should never come out of a lady\222\
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T*
(John a Impudent Bitch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( I am going to turn over a new life and am going to be a very good gi\
rl and be obedient to Isa )Tj
T*
(Keith, here there is plenty of gooseberries which makes my teeth watter.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( I hope I will be religious again but as for regaining my character I\
despare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( An annibabtist is a thing I am not a member of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Sentiment is what I am not acquainted with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 p. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( My dear Isa, I now sit down on my botom to answer all your kind and \
beloved letters which )Tj
T*
(you was so good as to write to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Letters\222 no. 1 \221To Isabella\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( O lovely O most charming pug)Tj
T*
( Thy graceful air and heavenly mug...)Tj
T*
( His noses cast is of the roman)Tj
T*
( He is a very pretty weoman)Tj
T*
( I could not get a rhyme for roman)Tj
T*
( And was oblidged to call it weoman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Poems\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 212.9624 Tm
( 6.43 Robert, Marquis de Flers 1872-1927 and Arman de Caillavet 1869-191\
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( D\350mocratie est le nom que nous donnons au peuple toutes les fois \
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Democracy is the name we give the people whenever we need them.)Tj
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(\221L\222habit vert\222 act 1, sc. 12, in \221La petite illustration s\350\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 121.4624 Tm
( 6.44 Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun 1655-1716)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( I knew a very wise man so much of Sir Chr\227\222s sentiment, that h\
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0 -1.2 TD
(permitted to make all the ballads, he need not care who should make the \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221An Account of a Conversation concerning a Right Regulation of Govern\
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T*
(Letter to the Marquis of Montrose\222 \(1704\) in \221Political Works\222\
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( Best while you have it use your breath,)Tj
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( There is no drinking after death.)Tj
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T*
(sc. 2 \221Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.25456 Tm
( And he that will go to bed sober,)Tj
T*
( Falls with the leaf still in October.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.42047 Tm
(\221The Bloody Brother\222 act 2, sc. 2 \221Song\222)Tj
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( Three merry boys, and three merry boys,)Tj
T*
( And three merry boys are we,)Tj
T*
( As ever did sing in a hempen string)Tj
T*
( Under the Gallows-Tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.67047 Tm
(\221The Bloody Brother\222 act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 511.75456 Tm
( Come, we are stark naught all, bad\222s the best of us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.92047 Tm
(\221The Bloody Brother\222 act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 475.00456 Tm
( Death hath so many doors to let out life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.17047 Tm
(\221The Custom of the Country\222 \(with Massinger\) act 2, sc. 2.)Tj
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( Orpheus with his lute made trees,)Tj
T*
( And the mountain tops that freeze,)Tj
T*
( Bow themselves when he did sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(with Shakespeare, performed 1613\) act 3, sc. 1 \221\
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15 0 0 15 10 365.50456 Tm
( In sweet music is such art)Tj
T*
( Killing care and grief of heart)Tj
T*
( Fall asleep, or hearing die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(with Shakespeare, performed 1613\) act 3, sc. 1 \221\
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15 0 0 15 10 292.75456 Tm
( Our acts our angels are, or good or ill,)Tj
T*
( Our fatal shadows that walk by us still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.92047 Tm
(\221The Honest Man\222s Fortune\222 epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.00456 Tm
( Nothing\222s so dainty sweet, as lovely melancholy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.17047 Tm
(\221The Nice Valour\222 \(with Middleton\) act 3, sc. 3, song)Tj
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( Are you at ease now? Is your heart at rest?)Tj
T*
( Now you have got a shadow, an umbrella)Tj
T*
( To keep the scorching world\222s opinion)Tj
T*
( From your fair credit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.42047 Tm
(\221Rule a Wife and Have a Wife\222 \(performed 1624\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.50456 Tm
( Daisies smell-less, yet most quaint,)Tj
T*
( And sweet thyme true,)Tj
T*
( Primrose first born child of Ver,)Tj
T*
( Merry Springtime\222s Harbinger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.67047 Tm
(\221Two Noble Kinsmen\222 \(with Shakespeare\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Brother to Death.)Tj
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(\221Valentinian\222 \(performed c.1610-14\) act 5, sc. 7 \221Song\222)Tj
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( Come sing now, sing; for I know ye sing well,)Tj
T*
( I see ye have a singing face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.17047 Tm
(\221The Wild-Goose Chase\222 \(performed 1621\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( Whistle and she\222ll come to you.)Tj
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(\221Wit Without Money\222 act 4, sc. 4.)Tj
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( Charity and beating begins at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.67047 Tm
(\221Wit Without Money\222 act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 566.75456 Tm
( See also Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher \(2.58\))Tj
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( 6.46 Phineas Fletcher 1582-1650)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Drop, drop, slow tears,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Which brought from Heaven)Tj
T*
( The news and Prince of Peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 442.17047 Tm
(\221Poetical Miscellanies\222 \(1633\) \221An Hymn\222)Tj
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( In your deep floods)Tj
T*
( Drown all my faults and fears;)Tj
T*
( Not let His eye)Tj
T*
( See sin, but through my tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.42047 Tm
(\221Poetical Miscellanies\222 \(1633\) \221An Hymn\222)Tj
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( Love\222s tongue is in the eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.67047 Tm
(\221Piscatory Eclogues\222 \(1633\) no. 5, st. 13)Tj
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( Poorly \(poor man\) he lived; poorly \(poor man\) he died.)Tj
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(\221The Purple Island\222 \(1633\) canto 1, st. 19)Tj
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( His little son into his bosom creeps,)Tj
T*
( The lively picture of his father\222s face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.17047 Tm
(\221The Purple Island\222 \(1633\) canto 12, st. 6)Tj
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( Love is like linen often changed, the sweeter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.42047 Tm
(\221Sicelides\222 \(performed 1614\) act 3, sc. 5)Tj
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( The coward\222s weapon, poison.)Tj
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(\221Sicelides\222 \(performed 1614\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
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( Plaisir d\222amour ne dure qu\222un moment,)Tj
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( Love\222s pleasure lasts but a moment; love\222s sorrow lasts all th\
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(\221Celestine.\222)Tj
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( 6.48 John Florio c.1553-1625)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( England is the paradise of women, the purgatory of men, and the hell\
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(\221Second Frutes\222 \(1591\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 6.49 Marshal Ferdinand Foch 1851-1929)Tj
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( Mon centre c\351de, ma droite recule, situation excellente, j\222att\
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( My centre is giving way, my right is retreating, situation excellent\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Message sent during the first Battle of the Marne, September 1914, in R.\
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( Ce n\222est pas un trait\350 de paix, c\222est un armistice de vingt\
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( This is not a peace treaty, it is an armistice for twenty years.)Tj
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(At the signing of the Treaty of Versailles, 1919, in Paul Reynaud \221M\350\
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15 0 0 15 10 518.2124 Tm
( 6.50 J. Foley)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Old soldiers never die,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They simply fade away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Old Soldiers Never Die\222 \(1920 song\); copyrighted by Foley but p\
ossibly a World War I \221folk-song\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 430.4624 Tm
( 6.51 Jos\350 Da Fonseca and Pedro Carolino fl. 1855)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The walls have hearsay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221O Novo Guia da Conversa\347\341o em Portuguez e Inglez\222 \(1855\) \
\221Idiotisms and Proverbs\222; selections from this )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(book were first published in England by James Millington as English as s\
he is spoke: or a Jest in sober earnest )Tj
T*
(\(1883\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.00456 Tm
( Por dinheiro baila o perro.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nothing some money nothing of Swiss.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221O Novo Guia da Conversa\347\341o em Portuguez e Inglez\222 \(1855\) \
\221Idiotisms and Proverbs\222. A literal translation )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the Portuguese proverb would be The dog dances for money: it is suspe\
cted that the \221Novo Guia\222 was )Tj
T*
(prepared with the help of a French-English dictionary.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 242.2124 Tm
( 6.52 Michael Foot 1913\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A speech from Ernest Bevin on a major occasion had all the horrific \
fascination of a public )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(execution. If the mind was left immune, eyes and ears and emotions were \
riveted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221Aneurin Bevan\222 \(1962\) vol. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.75456 Tm
( Think of it! A second Chamber selected by the Whips. A seraglio of e\
unuchs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 3 February 1969, col. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.00456 Tm
( It is not necessary that every time he rises he should give his famo\
us imitation of a semi-house-)Tj
T*
(trained polecat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(On Norman Tebbit, \221Hansard\222 2 March 1978, col. 668)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.9624 Tm
( 6.53 Samuel Foote 1720-77)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Born in a cellar...and living in a garret.)Tj
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(\221The Author\222 \(1757\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( So she went into the garden to cut a cabbage-leaf, to make an apple-\
pie; and at the same time a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(great she-bear, coming up the street, pops its head into the shop. \221W\
hat! no soap?\222 So he died, )Tj
T*
(and she very imprudently married the barber; and there were present the \
Picninnies, and the )Tj
T*
(Joblillies, and the Garyalies, and the grand Panjandrum himself, with th\
e little round button at )Tj
T*
(top, and they all fell to playing the game of catch as catch can, till t\
he gun powder ran out at the )Tj
T*
(heels of their boots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Nonsense composed by Foote to test the vaunted memory of the actor Charl\
es Macklin, in \221Quarterly )Tj
T*
(Review\222 \(1854\) vol. 95, p. 516)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( Between the muse and the magistrate there is a natural confederacy; \
what the last cannot )Tj
T*
(punish the first often corrects.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(Letter to the Lord Chamberlain, 1775)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( He is not only dull in himself, but the cause of dullness in others.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(On a dull law lord, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \
\(1934 ed.\) vol. 4, p. 178.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( God\222s revenge against vanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(To David Garrick, who had asked him what he thought of a heavy shower of\
rain falling on the day of the )Tj
T*
(Shakespeare Jubilee, organised by and chiefly starring Garrick; in W. Co\
oke \221Memoirs of Samuel Foote\222 vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. ??)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 422.9624 Tm
( 6.54 Miss C. F. Forbes 1817-1911)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The sense of being well-dressed gives a feeling of inward tranquilli\
ty which religion is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(powerless to bestow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(In R. W. Emerson \221Letters and Social Aims\222 \(1876\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.2124 Tm
( 6.55 Gerald Ford 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am a Ford, not a Lincoln.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(Speech on taking the vice-presidential oath, 6 December 1973, in \221Was\
hington Post\222 7 December 1973)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( Our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works; our gre\
at)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Republic is a Government of laws and not of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(On being sworn in as President, 9 August 1974: G. J. Lankevich \221Gera\
ld R. Ford\222 \(1977\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( If the Government is big enough to give you everything you want, it \
is big enough to take )Tj
T*
(away everything you have.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(In John F. Parker \221If Elected\222 \(1960\) p. 193)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 155.9624 Tm
( 6.56 Henry Ford 1863-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History is more or less bunk. It\222s tradition. We don\222t want tr\
adition. We want to live in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(present and the only history that is worth a tinker\222s damn is the his\
tory we make today.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(Interview with Charles N. Wheeler in \221Chicago Tribune\222 25 May 1916\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Any colour\227so long as it\222s black.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(On the colour choice for the Model T Ford, in Allan Nevins \221Ford\222 \
\(1957\) vol. 2, ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( What we call evil is simply ignorance bumping its head in the dark.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 16 March 1930)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 6.57 John Ford 1586-after 1639)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tempt not the stars, young man, thou canst not play)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With the severity of fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221The Broken Heart\222 \(1633\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( I am...a mushroom)Tj
T*
( On whom the dew of heaven drops now and then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221The Broken Heart\222 \(1633\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( The joys of marriage are the heaven on earth,)Tj
T*
( Life\222s paradise, great princess, the soul\222s quiet,)Tj
T*
( Sinews of concord, earthly immortality,)Tj
T*
( Eternity of pleasures; no restoratives)Tj
T*
( Like to a constant woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Broken Heart\222 \(1633\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( There\222s not a hair)Tj
T*
( Sticks on my head but, like a leaden plummet,)Tj
T*
( It sinks me to the grave: I must creep thither;)Tj
T*
( The journey is not long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221The Broken Heart\222 \(1633\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( He hath shook hands with time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221The Broken Heart\222 \(1633\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( Tell us, pray, what devil)Tj
T*
( This melancholy is, which can transform)Tj
T*
( Men into monsters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221The Lady\222s Trial\222 \(1639\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( Brother, even by our mother\222s dust, I charge you,)Tj
T*
( Do not betray me to your mirth or hate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221\222Tis Pity She\222s a Whore\222 \(1633\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Why, I hold fate)Tj
T*
( Clasped in my fist, and could command the course)Tj
T*
( Of time\222s eternal motion, hadst thou been)Tj
T*
( One thought more steady than an ebbing sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(\221\222Tis Pity She\222s a Whore\222 \(1633\) act 5, sc. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 125.9624 Tm
( 6.58 Lena Guilbert Ford 1870-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Keep the Home-fires burning,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( While your hearts are yearning,)Tj
T*
( Though your lads are far away)Tj
T*
( They dream of Home.)Tj
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( There\222s a silver lining)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Through the dark cloud shining;)Tj
T*
( Turn the dark cloud inside out,)Tj
T*
( Till the boys come Home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221\221Till the Boys Come Home!\222 \(1914 song; music by Ivor Novello\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.9624 Tm
( 6.59 Thomas Ford d. 1648)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I did but see her passing by,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And yet I love her till I die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221Music of Sundry Kinds\222 \(1607\) \221There is a Lady sweet and kin\
d\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 563.2124 Tm
( 6.60 Howell Forgy 1908-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(Said at Pearl Harbour, 7 December 1941, as Forgy, a naval chaplain, move\
d along a line of sailors passing )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ammunition by hand to the deck, in \221New York Times\222 1 November 194\
2. The words became the title of a )Tj
T*
(song \(1942\) by Frank Loesser)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 463.4624 Tm
( 6.61 E. M. Forster 1879-1970)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Everything must be like something, so what is this like?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Abinger Harvest\222 \(1936\) \221Doll Souse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( American women shoot the hippopotamus with eyebrows made of platinum\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Abinger Harvest\222 \(1936\) \221Mickey and Minnie\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( [Public schoolboys] go forth into a world that is not entirely compo\
sed of public-school men or )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(even of Anglo-Saxons, but of men who are as various as the sands of the \
sea; into a world of )Tj
T*
(whose richness and subtlety they have no conception. They go forth into \
it with well-developed )Tj
T*
(bodies, fairly developed minds, and undeveloped hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Abinger Harvest\222 \(1936\) \221Notes on English Character\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( It is not that the Englishman can\222t feel\227it is that he is afra\
id to feel. He has been taught at his )Tj
T*
(public school that feeling is bad form. He must not express great joy or\
sorrow, or even open his )Tj
T*
(mouth too wide when he talks\227his pipe might fall out if he did.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Abinger Harvest\222 \(1936\) \221Notes on English Character\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Yes\227oh dear yes\227the novel tells a story.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Aspects of the Novel\222 \(1927\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( A dogged attempt to cover the universe with mud, an inverted Victori\
anism, an attempt to )Tj
T*
(make crossness and dirt succeed where sweetness and light failed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Aspects of the Novel\222 \(1927\) ch. 6 \(on James Joyce\222s \221Ul\
ysses\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Railway termini. They are our gates to the glorious and the unknown.\
)Tj
T*
( Through them we pass out into adventure and sunshine, to them, alas!\
we return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( To trust people is a luxury in which only the wealthy can indulge; t\
he poor cannot afford it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 5)Tj
ET
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( She felt that those who prepared for all the emergencies of life bef\
orehand may equip )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(themselves at the expense of joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( The poor cannot always reach those whom they want to love, and they \
can hardly even escape )Tj
T*
(from those whom they no longer love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( Certainly London fascinates...It lies beyond everything: Nature, wit\
h all her cruelty, comes )Tj
T*
(nearer to us than do those crowds of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( Personal relations are the important thing for ever and ever, and no\
t this outer life of telegrams )Tj
T*
(and anger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( Only connect!...Only connect the prose and the passion, and both wil\
l be exalted, and human )Tj
T*
(love will be seen at its height.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( Death destroys a man: the idea of death saves him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.17047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.25456 Tm
( Of all means to regeneration Remorse is surely the most wasteful. It\
cuts away healthy tissue )Tj
T*
(with the poisoned. It is a knife that probes far deeper than the evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.42047 Tm
(\221Howards End\222 \(1910\) ch. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( It\222s the worse thing that can ever happen to you in all your life\
, and you\222ve got to mind it...)Tj
T*
(They\222ll come saying, \221Bear up\227trust to time.\222 No, no; they\222\
re wrong. Mind it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.67047 Tm
(\221The Longest Journey\222 \(1907\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.75456 Tm
( There is much good luck in the world, but it is luck. We are none of\
us safe. We are children, )Tj
T*
(playing or quarrelling on the line.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221The Longest Journey\222 \(1907\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( Very notable was his distinction between coarseness and vulgarity \(\
coarseness, revealing )Tj
T*
(something; vulgarity, concealing something\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(\221The Longest Journey\222 \(1907\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.25456 Tm
( The so-called white races are really pinko-grey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.42047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.50456 Tm
( Nothing in India is identifiable, the mere asking of a question caus\
es it to disappear or to )Tj
T*
(merge in something else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( Hope, politeness, the blowing of a nose, the squeak of a boot, all p\
roduce \221boum\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( Most of life is so dull that there is nothing to be said about it, a\
nd the books and talk that would )Tj
T*
(describe it as interesting are obliged to exaggerate, in the hope of jus\
tifying their own existence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.17047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.25456 Tm
( Pathos, piety, courage\227they exist, but are identical, and so is f\
ilth. Everything exists, nothing )Tj
ET
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(has value.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.42047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.50456 Tm
( Where there is officialism every human relationship suffers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.67047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.75456 Tm
( Like all gossip\227it\222s merely one of those half-alive things tha\
t try to crowd out real life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.92047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.00456 Tm
( God si Love. Is this the final message of India?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.17047 Tm
(\221A Passage to India\222 \(1924\) ch. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.25456 Tm
( Think before you speak is criticism\222s motto; speak before you thi\
nk creation\222s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.42047 Tm
(\221Two Cheers for Democracy\222 \(1951\) \221Raison d\222\352tre of Cri\
ticism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.50456 Tm
( If I had to choose between betraying my country and betraying my fri\
end, I hope I should have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the guts to betray my country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.67047 Tm
(\221Two Cheers for Democracy\222 \(1951\) \221What I Believe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 512.75456 Tm
( So Two cheers for Democracy: one because it admits variety and two b\
ecause it permits )Tj
T*
(criticism. Two cheers are quite enough: there is no occasion to give thr\
ee. Only Love the Beloved )Tj
T*
(Republic deserves that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.92047 Tm
(\221Two Cheers for Democracy\222 \(1951\) \221What I Believe\222; \221Lo\
ve, the beloved republic\222 is borrowed from )Tj
T*
(Swinburne\222s poem \221Hertha\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 413.7124 Tm
( 6.62 Harry Emerson Fosdick 1878-1969)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I renounce war for its consequences, for the lies it lives on and pr\
opagates, for the undying )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hatred it arouses, for the dictatorships it puts in the place of democra\
cy, for the starvation that )Tj
T*
(stalks after it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.17047 Tm
(Sermon in New York on Armistice Day 1933, in \221The Secret of Victoriou\
s Living\222 \(1934\) p. 97)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 307.9624 Tm
( 6.63 Charles Foster 1828-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Isn\222t this a billion dollar country?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.42047 Tm
(At the 51st Congress, responding to a Democratic gibe about a \221millio\
n dollar Congress\222; also attributed to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Thomas B. Reed, who reported the exchange in \221The North American Revi\
ew\222 March 1892, vol. 154, p. 319)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 223.2124 Tm
( 6.64 Sir George Foster 1847-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In these somewhat troublesome days when the great Mother Empire stan\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in Europe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.67047 Tm
(In the Canadian House of Commons, 16 January 1896, in \221Official Repor\
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T*
(Commons of the Dominion of Canada\222 \(1896\) vol. 41, col. 176. On 22 \
January 1896, \221The Times\222 referred to )Tj
T*
(this speech under the heading \221Splendid Isolation\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.65 John Foster 1770-1843)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But the two classes [the educated and the uneducated] so beheld in c\
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0 -1.2 TD
(seem to belong to two different nations?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.92047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Evils of Popular Ignorance\222 \(1820\) p. 277.)Tj
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( An idea cannot well be accompanied by a stronger kind of interest th\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1805\) \221On the Aversion of Men of Taste to Evangelic\
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( They [the wealthy] are in a religious diving-bell; religion is not c\
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T*
(conveyed down into the worldly depth, where they breathe by a sort of ar\
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(\221Journal\222 item 420)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Is not the pleasure of feeling and exhibiting power over other being\
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T*
(gratification of cruelty?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 item 772)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.66 Stephen Collins Foster 1826-64)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Beautiful dreamer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1864\))Tj
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( Gwine to run all night!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Gwine to run all day!)Tj
T*
( I\222ll bet my money on de bobtail nag\227)Tj
T*
( Somebody bet on de bay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221De Camptown Races\222 \(1850\) chorus)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( I dream of Jeanie with the light brown hair,)Tj
T*
( Floating, like a vapour, on the soft summer air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair\222 \(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( Way down upon the Swanee River,)Tj
T*
( Far, far, away,)Tj
T*
( There\222s where my heart is turning ever;)Tj
T*
( There\222s where the old folks stay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221The Old Folks at Home\222 \(1851\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( All the world is sad and dreary)Tj
T*
( Everywhere I roam,)Tj
T*
( Oh! darkies, how my heart grows weary,)Tj
T*
( Far from the old folks at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221The Old Folks at Home\222 \(1851\) chorus)Tj
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( 6.67 Charles Fourier 1772-1837)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222extension des privil\351ges des femmes est le principe g\350n\350\
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( The extension of women\222s rights is the basic principle of all soc\
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(\221Th\350orie des Quatre Mouvements\222 \(1808\) vol. 2, ch. 4)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 89.2124 Tm
( 6.68 Charles James Fox 1749-1806)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No man could be so wise as Thurlow looked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(In Campbell \221Lives of the Lord Chancellors\222 \(1846\) vol. 5, p. 66\
1)Tj
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( He was uniformly of an opinion which, though not a popular one, he w\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(On Pitt\222s scheme of Parliamentary Reform, in J. L. Hammond \221C. J. \
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15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( How much the greatest event it is that ever happened in the world! a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(On the fall of the Bastille, in a letter to Richard Fitzpatrick, 30 July\
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T*
(of C. J. Fox\222 vol. 2, p. 361)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( I die happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(Last words, in Lord John Russell \221Life and Times of C. J. Fox\222 vol\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 598.4624 Tm
( 6.69 George Fox 1624-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(On being offered, in 1651, a captaincy in the army of the Commonwealth, \
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0 -1.2 TD
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( I saw also that there was an ocean of darkness and death, but an inf\
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T*
(love, which flowed over the ocean of darkness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 \(ed. J. L. Nickalls, 1952, p. 19\) 1647)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 470.25456 Tm
( Walk cheerfully over the world, answering that of God in every one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 454.42047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 \(ed. J. L. Nickalls, 1952, p. 263\) 1656)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.50456 Tm
( Be still and cool in thy own mind and spirit from thy own thoughts, \
and then thou wilt feel the )Tj
T*
(principle of God to turn thy mind to the Lord God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 \(ed. J. L. Nickalls, 1952, p. 346\) 1658)Tj
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( All bloody principles and practices, we, as to our own particulars, \
do utterly deny, with all )Tj
T*
(outward wars and strife and fightings with outward weapons, for any end \
or under any pretence )Tj
T*
(whatsoever. And this is our testimony to the whole world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 \(ed. J. L. Nickalls, 1952, p. 399\) 1661)Tj
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( 6.70 Henry Fox)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See 1st Lord Holland \(8.119\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.71 Henry Richard Vassall Fox)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( See 3rd Lord Holland \(8.120\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.72 Henry Stephen Fox 1791-1846)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am so changed that my oldest creditors would hardly know me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(After an illness; quoted by Byron in a letter to John Murray, 8 May 1817\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 115.4624 Tm
( 6.73 Anatole France \(Jacques-Anatole-Fran\347ois Thibault\) 1844-1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Dans tout \310tat polic\350, la richesse est chose sacr\350e; dans l\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
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(\221L\222Ile des pingouins\222 \(1908\) pt. 6, ch. 2)Tj
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( Ils [les pauvres] y doivent travailler devant la majestueuse \350gal\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Le Lys rouge\222 \(1894\) ch. 7)Tj
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( Le bon critique est celui qui raconte les aventures de son \342me au\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The good critic is he who relates the adventures of his soul among m\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.17047 Tm
(\221La Vie litt\350raire\222 \(1888\) dedicatory letter)Tj
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( 6.74 Francis I 1494-1547)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Of all I had, only honour and life have been spared.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.67047 Tm
(Letter to his mother after his defeat at Pavia, 1525, in \221Collection \
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 476.4624 Tm
( 6.75 St Francis de Sales 1567-1622)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ce sont les grans feux qui s\222enflamment au vent, mais les petits \
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0 -1.44254 TD
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0 0 0 rg
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(\221Introduction \341 la vie d\350vote\222 \(1609\) pt. 3, ch. 34.)Tj
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( 6.76 Georges Franju 1912\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Jean-Luc Godard \(7.53\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.77 Benjamin Franklin 1706-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Remember that time is money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.67047 Tm
(\221Advice to a Young Tradesman\222 \(1748\))Tj
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( Some are weather-wise, some are otherwise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.92047 Tm
(\221Poor Richard\222s Almanac\222 \(1735\) February)Tj
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( Necessity never made a good bargain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.17047 Tm
(\221Poor Richard\222s Almanac\222 \(1735\) April)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.25456 Tm
( At twenty years of age, the will reigns; at thirty, the wit; and at \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.42047 Tm
(\221Poor Richard\222s Almanac\222 \(1741\) June)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 143.50456 Tm
( A little neglect may breed mischief...for want of a nail, the shoe w\
as lost; for want of a shoe )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the horse was lost; and for want of a horse the rider was lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.67047 Tm
(\221Poor Richard\222s Almanac\222 \(1758\) \221Maxims\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.75456 Tm
( He that lives upon hope will die fasting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 72.92047 Tm
(\221Poor Richard\222s Almanac\222 \(1758\) preface)Tj
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( Here Skugg)Tj
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( Lies snug)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( In a rug.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Letter to Georgiana Shipley on the death of her squirrel, 26 September 1\
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15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( We must indeed all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all h\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(To John Hancock, at the Signing of the Declaration of Independence, 4 Ju\
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15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( There never was a good war, or a bad peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Letter to Josiah Quincy, 11 September 1783)Tj
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( In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and ta\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Letter to Jean Baptiste Le Roy, 13 November 1789)Tj
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( Man is a tool-making animal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 7 April\
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15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( What is the use of a new-born child?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(On being asked what was the use of a new invention, in J. Parton \221Lif\
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T*
(Franklin\222 \(1864\) pt. 4, ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( The body of)Tj
T*
( Benjamin Franklin, printer,)Tj
T*
( \(Like the cover of an old book,)Tj
T*
( Its contents worn out,)Tj
T*
( And stript of its lettering and gilding\))Tj
T*
( Lies here, food for worms!)Tj
T*
( Yet the work itself shall not be lost,)Tj
T*
( For it will, as he believed, appear once more)Tj
T*
( In a new)Tj
T*
( And more beautiful edition,)Tj
T*
( Corrected and amended)Tj
T*
( By its Author!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(Epitaph for himself.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 235.4624 Tm
( 6.78 Oliver Franks \(Baron Franks\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Pentagon, that immense monument to modern man\222s subservience \
to the desk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 30 November 1952)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.00456 Tm
( A secret in the Oxford sense: you may tell it to only one person at \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Telegraph\222 30 January 1977)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.79 Sir James George Frazer 1854-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( The awe and dread with which the untutored savage contemplates his m\
other-in-law are )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(\221The Golden Bough\222 \(2nd ed., 1900\) vol. 1, p. 288)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.2124 Tm
( 6.80 Frederick the Great 1712-86)Tj
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( My people and I have come to an agreement which satisfies us both. T\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.67047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 694.75456 Tm
( Ihr Racker, wollt ihr ewig leben?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Rascals, would you live for ever?)Tj
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(Addressed to hesitant Guards at Kolin, 18 June 1757)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.81 Cliff Freeman)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where\222s the beef?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.42047 Tm
(Advertising slogan for Wendy\222s Hamburgers in campaign launched 9 Jan.\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in a televised debate with Gary Hart from Atlanta, 11 March 1984: \221Wh\
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T*
(reminded of that ad, \223Where\222s the beef?\224\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.2124 Tm
( 6.82 E. A. Freeman 1823-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History is past politics, and politics is present history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.67047 Tm
(\221Methods of Historical Study\222 \(1886\) p. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.75456 Tm
( A saying which fell from myself in one of the debates in Congregatio\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Language Statute has been quoted in several places...\222chatter about S\
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T*
(had lately read a review of a book about Shelley in which the critic...p\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.92047 Tm
(\221Literature and Language\222 in Contemporary Review October 1887 \(of\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 364.7124 Tm
( 6.83 John Freeth c.1731-1808)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The loss of America what can repay?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( New colonies seek for at Botany Bay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.17047 Tm
(\221Botany Bay\222 in \221New London Magazine\222 \(1786\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 276.9624 Tm
( 6.84 John Hookham Frere 1769-1846)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The feathered race with pinions skim the air\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not so the mackerel, and still less the bear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.42047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Man\222 l. 34)Tj
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( Ah! who has seen the mailed lobster rise,)Tj
T*
( Clap her broad wings, and soaring claim the skies?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.67047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Man\222 l. 44)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 134.4624 Tm
( 6.85 Sigmund Freud 1856-1939)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
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(Letter to Wilhelm Fliess, 7 July 1898, in \221Aus den Anf\344ngen der Ps\
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( Die Anatomie ist das Schicksal.)Tj
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( Anatomy is destiny.)Tj
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(\221Gesammelte Schriften\222 \(1924\) vol. 5, p. 210)Tj
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( Vergleiche entscheiden nichts, das ist wahr, aber sie k\366nnen mach\
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(\221Neue Folge der Vorlesungen zur Einf\374hrung in die Psychoanalyse\222\
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(Psychoanalysis, 1933\) ch. 31)Tj
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( Wir sind so eingerichtet, dass wir nur den Kontrast intensiv geniess\
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T*
(sehr wenig.)Tj
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( We are so made, that we can only derive intense enjoyment from a con\
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(\221Das Unbehagen in der Kultur\222 \(Civilization and its Discontents, \
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15 0 0 15 10 524.75456 Tm
( The great question that has never been answered and which I have not\
yet been able to answer, )Tj
T*
(despite my thirty years of research into the feminine soul, is \221What \
does a woman want?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.92047 Tm
(Letter to Marie Bonaparte, in Ernest Jones \221Sigmund Freud: Life and W\
ork\222 \(1955\) vol. 2, pt. 3, ch. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.86 Betty Friedan 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The problem that has no name\227which is simply the fact that Americ\
an women are kept from )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(growing to their full human capacities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.17047 Tm
(\221The Feminine Mystique\222 \(1963\) ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 370.9624 Tm
( 6.87 Max Frisch 1911\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Technik...Kniff, die Welt so einzurichten, dass wir sie nicht erlebe\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Technology...the knack of so arranging the world that we need not ex\
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(\221Homo Faber\222 \(1957\) pt. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 279.4624 Tm
( 6.88 Charles Frohman 1860-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Why fear death? It is the most beautiful adventure in life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.92047 Tm
(Last words before drowning in the \221Lusitania\222, 7 May 1915, in I. F\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Frohman\222 \(1916\) ch. 19.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 194.7124 Tm
( 6.89 Erich Fromm 1900-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man\222s main task in life is to give birth to himself, to become wh\
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0 -1.2 TD
(important product of his effort is his own personality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.17047 Tm
(\221Man for Himself\222 \(1947\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.25456 Tm
( In the nineteenth century the problem was that God is dead; in the t\
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T*
(problem is that man is dead. In the nineteenth century inhumanity meant \
cruelty; in the twentieth )Tj
T*
(century it means schizoid self-alienation. The danger of the past was th\
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T*
(danger of the future is that men may become robots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.42047 Tm
(\221The Sane Society\222 \(1955\) ch. 9)Tj
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( I have been one acquainted with the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 708.67047 Tm
(\221Acquainted with the Night\222 \(1928\))Tj
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( I\222d like to get away from earth awhile)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( May no fate wilfully misunderstand me)Tj
T*
( And half grant what I wish and snatch me away)Tj
T*
( Not to return. Earth\222s the right place for love:)Tj
T*
( I don\222t know where it\222s likely to go better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.92047 Tm
(\221Birches\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 561.00456 Tm
( Most of the change we think we see in life)Tj
T*
( Is due to truths being in and out of favour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 527.17047 Tm
(\221The Black Cottage\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 506.25456 Tm
( Forgive, O Lord, my little jokes on Thee)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll forgive Thy great big one on me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 472.42047 Tm
(\221Cluster of Faith\222 \(1962\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 451.50456 Tm
( And nothing to look backward to with pride,)Tj
T*
( And nothing to look forward to with hope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(\221The Death of the Hired Man\222 \(1914\))Tj
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( \221Home is the place where, when you have to go there,)Tj
T*
( They have to take you in.\222)Tj
T*
( \221I should have called it)Tj
T*
( Something you somehow haven\222t to deserve.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(\221The Death of the Hired Man\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.00456 Tm
( They cannot scare me with their empty spaces)Tj
T*
( Between stars\227on stars where no human race is.)Tj
T*
( I have it in me so much nearer home)Tj
T*
( To scare myself with my own desert places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221Desert Places\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.25456 Tm
( Some say the world will end in fire,)Tj
T*
( Some say in ice.)Tj
T*
( From what I\222ve tasted of desire)Tj
T*
( I hold with those who favour fire.)Tj
T*
( But if it had to perish twice,)Tj
T*
( I think I know enough of hate)Tj
T*
( To say that for destruction ice)Tj
T*
( Is also great)Tj
T*
( And would suffice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.42047 Tm
(\221Fire and Ice\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( The land was ours before we were the land\222s.)Tj
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T*
( Before we were her people.)Tj
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(\221The Gift Outright\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Happiness makes up in height for what it lacks in length.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Title of poem \(1942)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Never ask of money spent)Tj
T*
( Where the spender thinks it went.)Tj
T*
( Nobody was ever meant)Tj
T*
( To remember or invent)Tj
T*
( What he did with every cent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Hardship of Accounting\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( And were an epitaph to be my story)Tj
T*
( I\222d have a short one ready for my own.)Tj
T*
( I would have written of me on my stone:)Tj
T*
( I had a lover\222s quarrel with the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Lesson for Today\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Something there is that doesn\222t love a wall,)Tj
T*
( That sends the frozen-ground-swell under it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Mending Wall\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( My apple trees will never get across)Tj
T*
( And eat the cones under his pines, I tell him.)Tj
T*
( He only says, \221Good fences make good neighbours.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Mending Wall\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Before I built a wall I\222d ask to know)Tj
T*
( What I was walling in or walling out,)Tj
T*
( And to whom I was like to give offence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Mending Wall\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( I\222m going out to clean the pasture spring;)Tj
T*
( I\222ll only stop to rake the leaves away)Tj
T*
( \(And wait to watch the water clear, I may\):)Tj
T*
( I shan\222t be gone long.\227You come too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221The Pasture\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( I never dared be radical when young)Tj
T*
( For fear it would make me conservative when old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Precaution\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( I shall be telling this with a sigh)Tj
T*
( Somewhere ages and ages hence:)Tj
T*
( Two roads diverged in a wood, and I\227)Tj
T*
( I took the one less travelled by,)Tj
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( And that has made all the difference.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Road Not Taken\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( We dance round in a ring and suppose,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But the Secret sits in the middle and knows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Secret Sits\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I\222ve broken Anne of gathering bouquets.)Tj
T*
( It\222s not fair to the child. It can\222t be helped though:)Tj
T*
( Pressed into service means pressed out of shape.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Self-Seeker\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Len says one steady pull more ought to do it.)Tj
T*
( He says the best way out is always through.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221A Servant to Servants\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The woods are lovely, dark and deep.)Tj
T*
( But I have promises to keep,)Tj
T*
( And miles to go before I sleep,)Tj
T*
( And miles to go before I sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( It should be of the pleasure of a poem itself to tell how it can. Th\
e figure a poem makes. It )Tj
T*
(begins in delight and ends in wisdom. The figure is the same as for love\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Collected Poems\222 \(1939\) \221The Figure a Poem Makes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise for the \
writer, no surprise for the )Tj
T*
(reader.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Collected Poems\222 \(1939\) \221The Figure a Poem Makes\222)Tj
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( Like a piece of ice on a hot stove the poem must ride on its own mel\
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T*
(worked over once it is in being, but may not be worried into being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Collected Poems\222 \(1939\) \221The Figure a Poem Makes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( I\222d as soon write free verse as play tennis with the net down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(In Edward Lathem \221Interviews with Robert Frost\222 \(1966\) p. 203)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Poetry is a way of taking life by the throat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(In Elizabeth S. Sergeant \221Robert Frost: the Trial by Existence\222 \(\
1960\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Poetry is what is lost in translation. It is also what is lost in in\
terpretation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(In Louis Untermeyer \221Robert Frost: a Backward Look\222 \(1964\) p. 18\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.4624 Tm
( 6.91 Christopher Fry 1907\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The dark is light enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(Title of play \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( What after all)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is a halo? It\222s only one more thing to keep clean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady\222s not for Burning\222 \(1949\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( What is official)Tj
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( Is incontestable. It undercuts)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The problematical world and sells us life)Tj
T*
( At a discount.)Tj
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(\221The Lady\222s not for Burning\222 \(1949\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Where in this small-talking world can I find)Tj
T*
( A longitude with no platitude?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Lady\222s not for Burning\222 \(1949\) act 3)Tj
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( The best)Tj
T*
( Thing we can do is to make wherever we\222re lost in)Tj
T*
( Look as much like home as we can.)Tj
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(\221The Lady\222s not for Burning\222 \(1949\) act 3)Tj
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( I hope)Tj
T*
( I\222ve done nothing so monosyllabic as to cheat,)Tj
T*
( A spade is never so merely a spade as the word)Tj
T*
( Spade would imply.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Venus Observed\222 \(1950\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 450.7124 Tm
( 6.92 Roger Fry 1866-1934)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Art is significant deformity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(In Virginia Woolf \221Roger Fry\222 \(1940\) ch. 8)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 380.9624 Tm
( 6.93 R. Buckminster Fuller 1895-1983)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Either war is obsolete or men are.)Tj
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(In \221New Yorker\222 8 January 1966, p. 93)Tj
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( God, to me, it seems,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( is a verb)Tj
T*
( not a noun,)Tj
T*
( proper or improper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221No More Secondhand God\222 \(1963\) p. 28, poem written in 1940.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.75456 Tm
( Now there is one outstandingly important fact regarding Spaceship Ea\
rth, and that is that no )Tj
T*
(instruction book came with it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(\221Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth\222 \(1969\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 165.7124 Tm
( 6.94 Sam Fuller)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you\222re in the battlefield, survival is all there is. Death i\
s the only great emotion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(In \221Guardian\222 26 February 1991)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 95.9624 Tm
( 6.95 Thomas Fuller 1608-61)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( But our captain counts the Image of God nevertheless his image, cut \
in ebony as if done in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ivory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(\221The Holy State and the Profane State\222 \(1642\) bk. 2 \221The Good\
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( Know most of the rooms of thy native country before thou goest over \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.67047 Tm
(\221The Holy State and the Profane State\222 \(1642\) bk. 2 \221Of Trave\
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( Anger is one of the sinews of the soul.)Tj
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(\221The Holy State and the Profane State\222 \(1642\) bk. 3 \221Of Anger\
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( Light \(God\222s eldest daughter\) is a principal beauty in building\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.17047 Tm
(\221The Holy State and the Profane State\222 \(1642\) bk. 3 \221Of Build\
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( He was one of a lean body and visage, as if his eager soul, biting f\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.42047 Tm
(\221The Holy State and the Profane State\222 \(1642\) bk. 5 \221Life of \
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 573.2124 Tm
( 6.96 Thomas Fuller 1654-1734)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are all Adam\222s children but silk makes the difference.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.67047 Tm
(\221Gnomologia\222 \(1732\) no. 5425)Tj
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( 6.97 Alfred Funke b. 1869)Tj
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( Gott strafe England!)Tj
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( God punish England!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.17047 Tm
(\221Schwert und Myrte\222 \(1914\) p. 78)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 411.9624 Tm
( 6.98 Douglas Furber, Noel Gay, and Arthur Rose)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Doin\222 the Lambeth walk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1937\) from \221Me and My Girl\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 342.2124 Tm
(6.99 Sir David Maxwell Fyfe 1900-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See Lord Kilmuir \(11.31\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.100 Rose Fyleman 1877-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are fairies at the bottom of our garden!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.92047 Tm
(\221The Fairies\222)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 215.53038 Tm
( 7.0 G)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 193.00456 Tm
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.1 Zsa Zsa Gabor \(Sari Gabor\) 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man in love is incomplete until he has married. Then he\222s finis\
hed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.42047 Tm
(In \221Newsweek\222 28 March 1960, p. 89)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 90.2124 Tm
( 7.2 Thomas Gainsborough 1727-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Recollect that painting and punctuality mix like oil and vinegar, an\
d that genius and regularity )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(are utter enemies, and must be to the end of time.)Tj
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(Letter to a patron, in John Hayes \221Thomas Gainsborough\222 \(1980\) p\
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( We are all going to Heaven, and Vandyke is of the company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Attributed last words in William B. Boulton \221Thomas Gainsborough\222 \
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( 7.3 Thomas Gaisford 1779-1855)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nor can I do better, in conclusion, than impress upon you the study \
of Greek literature, which )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(not only elevates above the vulgar herd, but leads not infrequently to p\
ositions of considerable )Tj
T*
(emolument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(Christmas Day Sermon in the Cathedral, Oxford, in W. Tuckwell \221Remini\
scences of Oxford\222 \(2nd ed., 1907\) )Tj
T*
(p. 124)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 565.4624 Tm
( 7.4 Hugh Gaitskell 1906-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are some of us...who will fight and fight and fight again to s\
ave the Party we love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 527.92047 Tm
(Speech at Labour Party Conference, 5 October 1960, in \221Report of 59th\
Annual Conference\222 p. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 507.00456 Tm
( It means the end of a thousand years of history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(On a European federation, in Speech at Labour Party Conference, 3 Octobe\
r 1962: \221Report of 61st Annual )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Conference\222 p. 159)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 443.9624 Tm
( 7.5 Gaius 2nd century A.D.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Damnosa hereditas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ruinous inheritance.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(\221The Institutes\222 bk. 2, ch. 163)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 352.4624 Tm
( 7.6 J. K. Galbraith 1908\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( These are the days when men of all social disciplines and all politi\
cal faiths seek the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(comfortable and the accepted; when the man of controversy is looked upon\
as a disturbing )Tj
T*
(influence; when originality is taken to be a mark of instability; and wh\
en, in minor modification )Tj
T*
(of the scriptural parable, the bland lead the bland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(\221The Affluent Society\222 \(1958\) ch. 1, sect. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( It is a far, far better thing to have a firm anchor in nonsense than\
to put out on the troubled seas )Tj
T*
(of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221The Affluent Society\222 \(1958\) ch. 11, sect. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( The greater the wealth, the thicker will be the dirt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221The Affluent Society\222 \(1958\) ch. 18, sect. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( In the affluent society no useful distinction can be made between lu\
xuries and necessaries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(\221The Affluent Society\222 \(1958\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.75456 Tm
( Politics is not the art of the possible. It consists in choosing bet\
ween the disastrous and the )Tj
T*
(unpalatable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.92047 Tm
(Letter to President Kennedy, 2 March 1962, in \221Ambassador\222s Journa\
l\222 \(1969\) p. 312.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 45.7124 Tm
( 7.7 Galileo Galilei 1564-1642)Tj
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( Eppur si muove.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( But it does move.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Attributed to Galileo after his recantation, that the earth moves around\
the sun, in 1632. The earliest )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(appearance of the phrase is perhaps in Baretti \221Italian Library\222 \(\
1757\) p. 52)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 7.8 John Galsworthy 1867-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He was afflicted by the thought that where Beauty was, nothing ever \
ran quite straight, which, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(no doubt, was why so many people looked on it as immoral.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221In Chancery\222 \(1920\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( A man of action forced into a state of thought is unhappy until he c\
an get out of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Maid in Waiting\222 \(1931\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 543.7124 Tm
( 7.9 John Galt 1779-1839)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From the lone shieling of the misty island)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mountains divide us, and the waste of seas\227)Tj
T*
( Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland,)Tj
T*
( And we in dreams behold the Hebrides!)Tj
T*
( Fair these broad meads, these hoary woods are grand;)Tj
T*
( But we are exiles from our fathers\222 land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Canadian Boat Song\222 translated from the Gaelic in \221Blackwoods \
Edinburgh Magazine\222 September 1829 )Tj
T*
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 46; attributed to Galt)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 368.9624 Tm
( 7.10 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi 1869-1948)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans and the homele\
ss, whether the mad )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy nam\
e of liberty or )Tj
T*
(democracy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 295.42047 Tm
(\221Non-Violence in Peace and War\222 \(1942\) vol. 1, ch. 142)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 274.50456 Tm
( The moment the slave resolves that he will no longer be a slave, his\
fetters fall. He frees )Tj
T*
(himself and shows the way to others. Freedom and slavery are mental stat\
es.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.67047 Tm
(\221Non-Violence in Peace and War\222 \(1949\) vol. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.75456 Tm
( Non-violence is the first article of my faith. It is also the last a\
rticle of my creed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.92047 Tm
(Speech at Shahi Bag, 18 March 1922, on a charge of sedition, in \221Youn\
g India\222 23 March 1922)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 171.7124 Tm
( 7.11 Greta Garbo \(Greta Lovisa Gustafsson\) 1905-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I want to be alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Grand Hotel\222 \(1932 film; script by William A. Drake\), the phras\
e already being associated with Garbo)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 101.9624 Tm
( 7.12 Federico Garc\355a Lorca 1899-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( A las cinco de la tarde.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Eran las cinco en punto de la tarde.)Tj
T*
( Un ni\361o trajo la blanca s bana)Tj
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( a las cinco de la tarde)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( At five in the afternoon.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It was exactly five in the afternoon.)Tj
T*
( A boy brought the white sheet)Tj
T*
( at five in the afternoon.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Llanto por Ignacio S nchez Mej\355as\222 \(1935\) \221La Cogida y la\
muerte\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.50456 Tm
( Verde que te quiero verde,)Tj
T*
( Verde viento. Verde ramas.)Tj
T*
( Verde ramas.)Tj
T*
( El barco sobre la mar)Tj
T*
( y el caballo en la monta\361a.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Green how I love you green.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Green wind.)Tj
T*
( Green boughs.)Tj
T*
( The ship on the sea)Tj
T*
( and the horse on the mountain.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221Romance son mbulo\222 \(1924-7\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 426.7124 Tm
( 7.13 Richard Gardiner b. c.1533)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sowe Carrets in your Gardens, and humbly praise God for them, as for\
a singular and great )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(blessing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Profitable Instructions for the Manuring, Sowing and Planting of Kit\
chen Gardens\222 \(1599\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 338.9624 Tm
( 7.14 Ed Gardner 1905-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Opera is when a guy gets stabbed in the back and, instead of bleedin\
g, he sings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(In \221Duffy\222s Tavern\222 \(1940s American radio programme\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.2124 Tm
( 7.15 James A. Garfield 1831-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Fellow-citizens: God reigns, and the Government at Washington lives!\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(Speech on the assassination of President Lincoln, 1865)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 199.4624 Tm
( 7.16 Giuseppe Garibaldi 1807-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Soldati, io esco da Roma. Chi vuole continuare la guerra contro lo s\
traniero venga con me. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Non posso offrirgli n\350 onori n\350 stipendi; gli offro fame, sete, ma\
rcie forzate, battaglie e morte. )Tj
T*
(Chi ama la patria mi segua.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Men, I\222m getting out of Rome. Anyone who wants to carry on the wa\
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0 -1.2 TD
(come with me. I can\222t offer you either honours or wages; I offer you \
hunger, thirst, forced )Tj
T*
(marches, battles and death. Anyone who loves his country, follow me.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(Guiseppe Guerzoni \221Garibaldi\222 \(1882\) vol. 1, p. 331. \(The speec\
h was not recorded verbatim.\))Tj
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( 7.17 John Nance Garner 1868-1967)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The vice-presidency isn\222t worth a pitcher of warm piss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(In O. C. Fisher \221Cactus Jack\222 \(1978\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 683.2124 Tm
( 7.18 David Garrick 1717-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Farewell, great painter of mankind!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who reached the noblest point of art,)Tj
T*
( Whose pictured morals charm the mind)Tj
T*
( And through the eye correct the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
( Epitaph on Hogarth\222s monument in Chiswick churchyard)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Heart of oak are our ships, heart of oak are our men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Harlequin\222s Invasion\222 \(1759\) \221Heart of Oak\222 \(song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Here lies Nolly Goldsmith, for shortness called Noll,)Tj
T*
( Who wrote like an angel, but talked like poor Poll.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Impromptu Epitaph\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( A fellow-feeling makes one wond\222rous kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221An Occasional Prologue on Quitting the Theatre\222 10 June 1776)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Are these the choice dishes the Doctor has sent us?)Tj
T*
( Is this the great poet whose works so content us?)Tj
T*
( This Goldsmith\222s fine feast, who has written fine books?)Tj
T*
( Heaven sends us good meat, but the Devil sends cooks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221On Doctor Goldsmith\222s Characteristical Cookery\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Prologues precede the piece\227in mournful verse;)Tj
T*
( As undertakers\227walk before the hearse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(Prologue to Arthur Murphy\222s \221The Apprentice\222 \(1756\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( I\222ve that within\227for which there are no plaisters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(Prologue to Oliver Goldsmith\222s She Stoops to Conquer \(1773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Kitty, a fair, but frozen maid,)Tj
T*
( Kindled a flame I still deplore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221A Riddle\222 \(1762\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( See also George Colman and David Garrick \(3.149\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.19 William Lloyd Garrison 1805-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am in earnest\227I will not equivocate\227I will not excuse\227I w\
ill not retreat a single inch\227and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(I will be heard!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221The Liberator\222 1 January 1831 Salutatory Address)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Our country is the world\227our countrymen are all mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221The Liberator\222 15 December 1837 Prospectus)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( The compact which exists between the North and the South is \221a co\
venant with death and an )Tj
T*
(agreement with hell\222.)Tj
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(Resolution adopted by the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, 27 January\
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0 -1.2 TD
(\221William Lloyd Garrison: The Abolitionist\222 \(1891\) ch. 16.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 7.20 Sir Samuel Garth 1661-1719)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hard was their lodging, homely was their food;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For all their luxury was doing good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 652.42047 Tm
(\221Claremont\222 \(1715\) l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 631.50456 Tm
( A barren superfluity of words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(\221The Dispensary\222 \(1699\) canto 2, l. 82)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 583.4624 Tm
( 7.21 Elizabeth Gaskell 1810-65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man...is so in the way in the house!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(\221Cranford\222 \(1853\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 525.00456 Tm
( \221It is very pleasant dining with a bachelor,\222 said Miss Matty,\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the counting-house. \221I only hope it is not improper; so many pleasant\
things are!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(\221Cranford\222 \(1853\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 470.25456 Tm
( Bombazine would have shown a deeper sense of her loss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 454.42047 Tm
(\221Cranford\222 \(1853\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.50456 Tm
( We donnot want dainties, we want belly-fulls; we donnot want gimcrac\
k coats and waistcoats, )Tj
T*
(we want warm clothes; and so that we get\222em, we\222d not quarrel wi\222\
what they\222re made on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(\221Mary Barton\222 \(1848\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.75456 Tm
( That kind of patriotism which consists in hating all other nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(\221Sylvia\222s Lovers\222 \(1863\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 330.7124 Tm
( 7.22 Gavarni \(Guillaume Sulpice Chevallier\) 1804-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Les enfants terribles.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The embarrassing young.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(Title of a series of prints \(1842\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 239.2124 Tm
( 7.23 John Gay 1685-1732)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O ruddier than the cherry,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O sweeter than the berry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(\221Acis and Galatea\222 \(performed 1718, published 1732\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.75456 Tm
( How, like a moth, the simple maid)Tj
T*
( Still plays about the flame!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.92047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 4, air 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.00456 Tm
( Our Polly is a sad slut! nor heeds what we have taught her.)Tj
T*
( I wonder any man alive will ever rear a daughter!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 8, air 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.25456 Tm
( Do you think your mother and I should have lived comfortably so long\
together, if ever we had )Tj
ET
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Can Love be controlled by advice?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 8, air 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( polly: Then all my sorrows are at an end.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( mrs peachum: A mighty likely speech, in troth, for a wench who is j\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Money, wife, is the true fuller\222s earth for reputations, there is\
not a spot or a stain but what it )Tj
T*
(can take out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The comfortable estate of widowhood, is the only hope that keeps up \
a wife\222s spirits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( If with me you\222d fondly stray.)Tj
T*
( Over the hills and far away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 13, air 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( We retrench the superfluities of mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Fill ev\222ry glass, for wine inspires us,)Tj
T*
( And fires us)Tj
T*
( With courage, love and joy.)Tj
T*
( Women and wine should life employ.)Tj
T*
( Is there ought else on earth desirous?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 1, air 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( If the heart of a man is deprest with cares,)Tj
T*
( The mist is dispelled when a woman appears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 3, air 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( I must have women. There is nothing unbends the mind like them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Youth\222s the season made for joys;)Tj
T*
( Love is then our duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 4, air 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( To cheat a man is nothing; but the woman must have fine parts indeed\
who cheats a woman!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( I am ready, my dear Lucy, to give you satisfaction\227if you think t\
here is any in marriage?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( In one respect indeed, our employment may be reckoned dishonest, bec\
ause, like great )Tj
T*
(Statesmen, we encourage those who betray their friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( How happy could I be with either,)Tj
T*
( Were t\222 other dear charmer away!)Tj
ET
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 754.67047 Tm
(\221The Beggar\222s Opera\222 \(1728\) act 2, sc. 13, air 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( She who has never loved, has never lived.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Captives\222 \(1724\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( She who trifles with all)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is less likely to fall)Tj
T*
( Than she who but trifles with one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221The Coquet Mother and the Coquet Daughter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Behold the victim of Parthenia\222s pride!)Tj
T*
( He saw, he sighed, he loved, was scorned and died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221Dione\222 \(1720\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( A woman\222s friendship ever ends in love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221Dione\222 \(1720\) act 4, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil)Tj
T*
( O\222er books consumed the midnight oil?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) introduction, l. 15.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( Envy\222s a sharper spur than pay,)Tj
T*
( No author ever spared a brother,)Tj
T*
( Wits are gamecocks to one another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) \221The Elephant and the Bookseller\222 l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( And when a lady\222s in the case,)Tj
T*
( You know, all other things give place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) \221The Hare and Many Friends\222 l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( Those who in quarrels interpose,)Tj
T*
( Must often wipe a bloody nose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) \221The Mastiffs\222 l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.75456 Tm
( Where yet was ever found a mother,)Tj
T*
( Who\222d give her booby for another?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) \221The Mother, the Nurse, and the Fairy\222 l. \
33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.00456 Tm
( An open foe may prove a curse,)Tj
T*
( But a pretended friend is worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.17047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1727\) \221The Shepherd\222s Dog and the Wolf\222 l. 33\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.25456 Tm
( I know you lawyers can, with ease,)Tj
T*
( Twist words and meanings as you please;)Tj
T*
( That language, by your skill made pliant,)Tj
T*
( Will bend to favour ev\222ry client.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.42047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1738\) \221The Dog and the Fox\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.50456 Tm
( Studious of elegance and ease,)Tj
T*
( Myself alone I seek to please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.67047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1738\) \221The Man, the Cat, the Dog, and the Fly\222 l\
. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.75456 Tm
( That politician tops his part,)Tj
ET
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
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0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.75456 Tm
( Who readily can lie with art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.92047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1738\) \221The Squire and his Cur\222 l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.00456 Tm
( Give me, kind heaven, a private station,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A mind serene for contemplation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.17047 Tm
(\221Fables\222 \(1738\) \221The Vulture, the Sparrow, and Other Birds\222\
l. 69)Tj
T*
(Behold the bright original appear. \221A Letter to a Lady\222 l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.25456 Tm
( Praising all alike, is praising none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.42047 Tm
(\221A Letter to a Lady\222 l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.50456 Tm
( Life is a jest; and all things show it.)Tj
T*
( I thought so once; but now I know it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.67047 Tm
(\221My Own Epitaph\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.75456 Tm
( Whether we can afford it or no, we must have superfluities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.92047 Tm
(\221Polly\222 \(1729\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.00456 Tm
( No, sir, tho\222 I was born and bred in England, I can dare to be po\
or, which is the only thing now-)Tj
T*
(a-days men are ashamed of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.17047 Tm
(\221Polly\222 \(1729\) act 1, sc. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.25456 Tm
( An inconstant woman, tho\222 she has no chance to be very happy, can\
never be very unhappy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.42047 Tm
(\221Polly\222 \(1729\) act 1, sc. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.50456 Tm
( All in the Downs the fleet was moored,)Tj
T*
( The streamers waving in the wind,)Tj
T*
( When black-eyed Susan came aboard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.67047 Tm
(\221Sweet William\222s Farewell to Black-Eyed Susan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.75456 Tm
( They\222ll tell thee, sailors, when away,)Tj
T*
( In ev\222ry port a mistress find.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.92047 Tm
(\221Sweet William\222s Farewell to Black-Eyed Susan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.00456 Tm
( Adieu, she cries! and waved her lily hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.17047 Tm
(\221Sweet William\222s Farewell to Black-Eyed Susan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.25456 Tm
( A miss for pleasure, and a wife for breed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.42047 Tm
(\221The Toilette\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 214.2124 Tm
( 7.24 Noel Gay \(Richard Moxon Armitage\) 1898-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m leaning on a lamp-post at the corner of the street,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In case a certain little lady comes by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.67047 Tm
(\221Leaning on a Lamp-Post\222 \(1937\), sung by George Formby in the fi\
lm \221Father Knew Best\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 126.4624 Tm
( 7.25 Sir Eric Geddes 1875-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Germans, if this Government is returned, are going to pay every \
penny; they are going to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be squeezed as a lemon is squeezed\227until the pips squeak.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.92047 Tm
(Speech at Cambridge, 10 December 1918, in \221Cambridge Daily News\222 1\
1 December 1918)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 38.7124 Tm
( 7.26 George I 1660-1727)Tj
ET
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q
0 0 612 792 re
W* n
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0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 747.00456 Tm
( I hate all Boets and Bainters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 731.17047 Tm
(In John Campbell \221The Lives of the Chief Justices\222 \(1849\) ch. 30\
\221Lord Mansfield\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 698.9624 Tm
( 7.27 George II 1683-1760)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Non, j\222aurai des ma\356tresses.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( No, I shall have mistresses.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 639.67047 Tm
(To Queen Caroline when, on her death bed, she urged him to marry again; \
in John Hervey \221Memoirs of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Reign of George II\222 \(1848\) vol. 2. The Queen replied: \221Ah! mon \
dieu! cela n\222emp\352che pas [Oh, my God! )Tj
T*
(That won\222t prevent you]\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( We are come for your good, for all your goods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Speech at Portsmouth, probably 1716, in Joseph Spence \221Anecdotes\222 \
\(ed. J. M. Osborn, 1966\) no. 903)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Mad, is he? Then I hope he will bite some of my other generals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(Replying to the Duke of Newcastle, who had complained that General Wolfe\
was a madman, in Henry )Tj
T*
(Beckles Willson \221The Life and Letters of James Wolfe\222 \(1909\) ch.\
17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 488.9624 Tm
( 7.28 George III 1738-1820)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Born and educated in this country, I glory in the name of Briton.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221The King\222s Speech on Opening the Session\222 in \221Hansard\222 1\
8 November 1760, col. 942)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.50456 Tm
( Was there ever such stuff as great part of Shakespeare? Only one mus\
t not say so! But what )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(think you?\227what?\227Is there not sad stuff? what?\227what?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(To Fanny Burney, in her Diary 19 December 1785)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 364.4624 Tm
( 7.29 George IV 1762-1830)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Harris, I am not well; pray get me a glass of brandy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(On first seeing Caroline of Brunswick, his future wife; in Earl of Malme\
sbury \221Diaries\222 5 April 1795)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.7124 Tm
( 7.30 George V 1865-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I venture to allude to the impression which seemed generally to prev\
ail among their brethren )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(across the seas, that the Old Country must wake up if she intends to mai\
ntain her old position of )Tj
T*
(pre-eminence in her Colonial trade against foreign competitors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(Speech at Guildhall, 5 December 1901, in Harold Nicolson \221King George\
V\222 \(1952\) p. 73 \(the speech was )Tj
T*
(reprinted in 1911 with the title \221Wake up, England\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( I have many times asked myself whether there can be more potent advo\
cates of peace upon )Tj
T*
(earth through the years to come than this massed multitude of silent wit\
nesses to the desolation of )Tj
T*
(war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.42047 Tm
(Message read at Terlincthun Cemetery, Boulogne, 13 May 1922, in \221The \
Times\222 15 May 1922)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.50456 Tm
( I said to your predecessor: \221You know what they\222re all saying,\
no more coals to Newcastle, no )Tj
T*
(more Hoares to Paris.\222 The fellow didn\222t even laugh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(In conversation with Anthony Eden, 23 December 1935, following Samuel Ho\
are\222s resignation as Foreign )Tj
T*
(Secretary on 18 December 1935, in Earl of Avon \221Facing the Dictators\222\
\(1962\) pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( After I am dead, the boy will ruin himself in twelve months.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(On his son, the future Edward VIII, in Keith Middlemas and John Barnes \221\
Baldwin\222 \(1969\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Bugger Bognor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Comment believed to have been made either in 1929, when it was proposed \
that the town be named Bognor )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Regis on account of his convalescence there after a serious illness; or \
on his death-bed in 1936, when )Tj
T*
(someone remarked \221Cheer up, your Majesty, you will soon be at Bognor \
again.\222 Kenneth Rose \221King George )Tj
T*
(V\222 \(1983\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 652.50456 Tm
( How\222s the Empire?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 636.67047 Tm
(To his private secretary on the morning of his death, probably prompted \
by an article in \221The Times\222, which )Tj
T*
(he held open at the imperial and foreign page. Kenneth Rose \221King Geo\
rge V\222 \(1983\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 589.4624 Tm
( 7.31 George VI 1895-1952)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Personally I feel happier now that we have no allies to be polite to\
and to pamper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.92047 Tm
(To Queen Mary, 27 June 1940, in John Wheeler-Bennett \221King George VI\222\
\(1958\) pt. 3, ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 519.7124 Tm
( 7.32 Daniel George \(Daniel George Bunting\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( O Freedom, what liberties are taken in thy name!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Perpetual Pessimist\222 \(1963\) p. 58.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 449.9624 Tm
( 7.33 Lloyd George)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See David Lloyd George \(12.109\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.34 George Gershwin 1898-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Ira Gershwin \(7.35\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.35 Ira Gershwin 1896-1983)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A foggy day in London Town)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Had me low and had me down.)Tj
T*
( I viewed the morning with alarm,)Tj
T*
( The British Museum had lost its charm.)Tj
T*
( How long, I wondered, could this thing last?)Tj
T*
( But the age of miracles hadn\222t passed,)Tj
T*
( For, suddenly, I saw you there)Tj
T*
( And through foggy London town the sun was shining everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221A Foggy Day\222 \(1937 song; music by George Gershwin\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( Let\222s call the whole thing off!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( Holding hands at midnight)Tj
T*
( \221Neath a starry sky,)Tj
T*
( Nice work if you can get it,)Tj
T*
( And you can get it if you try.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(\221Nice Work If You Can Get It\222 \(1937 song; music by George Gershwi\
n\))Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 747.2124 Tm
( 7.36 Edward Gibbon 1737-94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, we\
re all considered by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the people as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by\
the magistrate, as equally )Tj
T*
(useful. And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but eve\
n religious concord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 673.67047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 652.75456 Tm
( The principles of a free constitution are irrecoverably lost, when t\
he legislative power is )Tj
T*
(nominated by the executive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 618.92047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 598.00456 Tm
( History...is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, f\
ollies, and misfortunes of )Tj
T*
(mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.17047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 543.25456 Tm
( In every age and country, the wiser, or at least the stronger, of th\
e two sexes, has usurped the )Tj
T*
(powers of the state, and confined the other to the cares and pleasures o\
f domestic life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.42047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 488.50456 Tm
( Corruption, the most infallible symptom of constitutional liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 472.67047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 451.75456 Tm
( In every deed of mischief he had a heart to resolve, a head to contr\
ive, and a hand to execute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.92047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 48 \(on\
Comenus\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 415.00456 Tm
( Our sympathy is cold to the relation of distant misery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.17047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.25456 Tm
( Persuasion is the resource of the feeble; and the feeble can seldom \
persuade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.42047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.50456 Tm
( All that is human must retrograde if it does not advance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.67047 Tm
(\221The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire\222 \(1776-88\) ch. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 304.75456 Tm
( The satirist may laugh, the philosopher may preach, but Reason herse\
lf will respect the )Tj
T*
(prejudices and habits which have been consecrated by the experience of m\
ankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.92047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 250.00456 Tm
( To the University of Oxford I acknowledge no obligation; and she wil\
l as cheerfully renounce )Tj
T*
(me for a son, as I am willing to disclaim her for a mother. I spent four\
teen months at Magdalen )Tj
T*
(College: they proved the fourteen months the most idle and unprofitable \
of my whole life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.17047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.25456 Tm
( Their dull and deep potations excused the brisk intemperance of yout\
h.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 3 \(on the dons at Oxford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.50456 Tm
( Dr\227well remembered that he had a salary to receive, and only forg\
ot that he had a duty to )Tj
T*
(perform.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.67047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.75456 Tm
( It was here that I suspended my religious inquiries \(aged 17\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.92047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 4)Tj
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( I saw and loved.)Tj
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(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 4)Tj
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( I sighed as a lover, I obeyed as a son.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 4 n.)Tj
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( Crowds without company, and dissipation without pleasure.)Tj
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(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 5)Tj
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( The captain of the Hampshire grenadiers...has not been useless to th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(empire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 5 \(on his own army service\))Tj
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( It was at Rome, on the fifteenth of October, 1764, as I sat musing a\
midst the ruins of the )Tj
T*
(Capitol, while the barefoot friars were singing vespers in the Temple of\
Jupiter, that the idea of )Tj
T*
(writing the decline and fall of the city first started to my mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( I will not dissemble the first emotions of joy on the recovery of my\
freedom, and, perhaps, the )Tj
T*
(establishment of my fame. But my pride was soon humbled, and a sober mel\
ancholy was spread )Tj
T*
(over my mind, by the idea that I had taken an everlasting leave of an ol\
d and agreeable )Tj
T*
(companion, and that whatsoever might be the future date of my History, t\
he life of the historian )Tj
T*
(must be short and precarious.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 8 \(on the completion of \221Dec\
line and Fall\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( My English text is chaste, and all licentious passages are left in t\
he obscurity of a learned )Tj
T*
(language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 8 \(parodied as \221decent obscu\
rity\222 in the Anti-Jacobin, 1797-8\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( The abbreviation of time, and the failure of hope, will always tinge\
with a browner shade the )Tj
T*
(evening of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of My Life\222 \(1796\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 303.7124 Tm
( 7.37 Orlando Gibbons 1583-1625)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The silver swan, who, living had no note,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When death approached unlocked her silent throat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The First Set of Madrigals and Motets of Five Parts\222 \(1612\) \221\
The Silver Swan\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.9624 Tm
( 7.38 Stella Gibbons 1902-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every year, in the fulness o\222 summer, when the sukebind hangs hea\
vy from the wains...\222tes the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(same. And when the spring comes her hour is upon her again. \221Tes the \
hand of Nature and we )Tj
T*
(women cannot escape it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221Cold Comfort Farm\222 \(1932\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( Something nasty in the woodshed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221Cold Comfort Farm\222 \(1932\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.75456 Tm
( By god, D. H. Lawrence was right when he had said there must be a du\
mb, dark, dull, bitter )Tj
T*
(belly-tension between a man and a woman, and how else could this be achi\
eved save in the long )Tj
T*
(monotony of marriage?)Tj
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(\221Cold Comfort Farm\222 \(1932\) ch. 20)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 7.39 Wolcott Gibbs 1902-58)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Backward ran sentences until reeled the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(\221New Yorker\222 28 November 1936 \221Time...Fortune...Life...Luce\222\
\(satirizing the style of \221Time\222 magazine\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 653.2124 Tm
( 7.40 Kahlil Gibran 1883-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Your children are not your children.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They are the sons and daughters of Life\222s longing for itself.)Tj
T*
( They came through you but not from you)Tj
T*
( And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.)Tj
T*
( You may give them your love but not your thoughts,)Tj
T*
( For they have their own thoughts.)Tj
T*
( You may house their bodies but not their souls,)Tj
T*
( For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot vis\
it, not even in your )Tj
T*
(dreams.)Tj
T*
( You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you,)Tj
T*
( For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.)Tj
T*
( You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent \
forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(\221The Prophet\222 \(1923\) \221On Children\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.75456 Tm
( Work is love made visible. And if you cannot work with love but only\
with distaste, it is better )Tj
T*
(that you should leave your work and sit at the gate of the temple and ta\
ke alms of those who work )Tj
T*
(with joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.92047 Tm
(\221The Prophet\222 \(1923\) \221On Work\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 324.00456 Tm
( An exaggeration is a truth that has lost its temper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.17047 Tm
(\221Sand and Foam\222 \(1926\) p. 59)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.41 Wilfrid Wilson Gibson 1878-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But we, how shall we turn to little things)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And listen to the birds and winds and streams)Tj
T*
( Made holy by their dreams,)Tj
T*
( Nor feel the heart-break in the heart of things?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(\221Lament\222 \(1918\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 152.2124 Tm
( 7.42 Andr\350 Gide 1869-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( M\222est avis...que le profit n\222est pas toujours ce qui m\351ne l\
\222homme; qu\222il y a des actions )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(d\350sint\350ress\350es...Par d\350sint\350ress\350 j\222entends: gratui\
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T*
(\352tre aussi gratuit que le bien.)Tj
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( I believe...that profit is not always what motivates man; that there\
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(\221Les Caves du Vatican\222 \(1914\) bk. 4, ch. 7)Tj
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( Hugo\227h\350las!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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( Hugo\227alas!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.67047 Tm
(When asked who was the greatest 19th-century poet, in Claude Martin \221\
La Maturit\350 d\222Andr\350 Gide\222 \(1977\) p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(502)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Not enough dirt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(His comment on Switzerland \(attributed\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.7124 Tm
( 7.43 Sir Humphrey Gilbert c.1539-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are as near to heaven by sea as by land!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(In Richard Hakluyt \221The Third and Last Volume of the Voyages...of the\
English Nation\222 \(1600\) p. 159.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.9624 Tm
( 7.44 W. S. Gilbert 1836-1911)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Then they began to sing That extremely lovely thing, \221Scherzando!\
ma non troppo ppp.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221The \221Bab\222 Ballads\222 \(1869\) \221Story of Prince Agib\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( That celebrated,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cultivated,)Tj
T*
( Underrated)Tj
T*
( Nobleman,)Tj
T*
( The Duke of Plaza Toro!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Of that there is no manner of doubt\227)Tj
T*
( No probable, possible shadow of doubt\227)Tj
T*
( No possible doubt whatever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( All shall equal be.)Tj
T*
( The Earl, the Marquis, and the Dook,)Tj
T*
( The Groom, the Butler, and the Cook,)Tj
T*
( The Aristocrat who banks with Coutts,)Tj
T*
( The Aristocrat who cleans the boots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( But the privilege and pleasure)Tj
T*
( That we treasure beyond measure)Tj
T*
( Is to run on little errands for the Ministers of State.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.42047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.50456 Tm
( Take a pair of sparkling eyes,)Tj
T*
( Hidden, ever and anon,)Tj
T*
( In a merciful eclipse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 2)Tj
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( Ambassadors cropped up like hay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Prime Ministers and such as they)Tj
T*
( Grew like asparagus in May,)Tj
T*
( And dukes were three a penny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( When every one is somebodee,)Tj
T*
( Then no one\222s anybody.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Gondoliers\222 \(1889\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Bow, bow, ye lower middle classes!)Tj
T*
( Bow, bow, ye tradesmen, bow, ye masses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The Law is the true embodiment)Tj
T*
( Of everything that\222s excellent.)Tj
T*
( It has no kind of fault or flaw,)Tj
T*
( And I, my Lords, embody the Law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Spurn not the nobly born)Tj
T*
( With love affected,)Tj
T*
( Nor treat with virtuous scorn)Tj
T*
( The well-connected.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Hearts just as pure and fair)Tj
T*
( May beat in Belgrave Square)Tj
T*
( As in the lowly air)Tj
T*
( Of Seven Dials.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( I often think it\222s comical)Tj
T*
( How Nature always does contrive)Tj
T*
( That every boy and every gal,)Tj
T*
( That\222s born into the world alive,)Tj
T*
( Is either a little Liberal,)Tj
T*
( Or else a little Conservative!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( When in that House MPs divide,)Tj
T*
( If they\222ve a brain and cerebellum too,)Tj
T*
( They have to leave that brain outside,)Tj
T*
( And vote just as their leaders tell \222em to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( The prospect of a lot)Tj
T*
( Of dull MPs in close proximity,)Tj
ET
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( All thinking for themselves is what)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No man can face with equanimity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
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( The House of Peers, throughout the war,)Tj
T*
( Did nothing in particular,)Tj
T*
( And did it very well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( When you\222re lying awake with a dismal headache, and repose is tab\
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T*
( I conceive you may use any language you choose to indulge in, withou\
t impropriety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( For you dream you are crossing the Channel, and tossing about in a s\
teamer from Harwich\227)Tj
T*
( Which is something between a large bathing machine and a very small \
second class carriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( And bound on that journey you find your attorney \(who started that \
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T*
( He\222s a bit undersized, and you don\222t feel surprised when he te\
lls you he\222s only eleven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( In your shirt and your socks \(the black silk with gold clocks\), cr\
ossing Salisbury)Tj
T*
( Plain on a bicycle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( The shares are a penny, and ever so many are taken by Rothschild and\
Baring,)Tj
T*
( And just as a few are allotted to you, you awake with a shudder desp\
airing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Iolanthe\222 \(1882\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( A wandering minstrel I\227)Tj
T*
( A thing of shreds and patches.)Tj
T*
( Of ballads, songs and snatches,)Tj
T*
( And dreamy lullaby!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( I can trace my ancestry back to a protoplasmal primordial atomic glo\
bule.)Tj
T*
( Consequently, my family pride is something in-conceivable. I can\222\
t help it. I was born sneering.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( As some day it may happen that a victim must be found,)Tj
T*
( I\222ve got a little list\227I\222ve got a little list)Tj
T*
( Of society offenders who might well be under ground)Tj
T*
( And who never would be missed\227who never would be missed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( The idiot who praises, with enthusiastic tone,)Tj
T*
( All centuries but this, and every country but his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Three little maids from school are we,)Tj
T*
( Pert as a schoolgirl well can be,)Tj
ET
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( Filled to the brim with girlish glee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Life is a joke that\222s just begun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Three little maids who, all unwary,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come from a ladies\222 seminary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Modified rapture!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Awaiting the sensation of a short, sharp shock,)Tj
T*
( From a cheap and chippy chopper on a big black block.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Here\222s a how-de-doo!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Here\222s a state of things!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( Matrimonial devotion)Tj
T*
( Doesn\222t seem to suit her notion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( My object all sublime)Tj
T*
( I shall achieve in time\227)Tj
T*
( To let the punishment fit the crime\227)Tj
T*
( The punishment fit the crime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( The music-hall singer attends a series)Tj
T*
( Of masses and fugues and \222ops\222)Tj
T*
( By Bach, interwoven)Tj
T*
( With Spohr and Beethoven,)Tj
T*
( At classical Monday Pops.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( The billiard sharp whom any one catches,)Tj
T*
( His doom\222s extremely hard\227)Tj
T*
( He\222s made to dwell\227)Tj
T*
( In a dungeon cell)Tj
T*
( On a spot that\222s always barred.)Tj
T*
( And there he plays extravagant matches)Tj
T*
( In fitless finger-stalls)Tj
T*
( On a cloth untrue)Tj
T*
( With a twisted cue)Tj
T*
( And elliptical billiard balls.)Tj
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(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Something lingering, with boiling oil in it, I fancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The flowers that bloom in the spring,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tra la,)Tj
T*
( Have nothing to do with the case.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( I\222ve got to take under my wing,)Tj
T*
( Tra la,)Tj
T*
( A most unattractive old thing,)Tj
T*
( Tra la,)Tj
T*
( With a caricature of a face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( On a tree by a river a little tom-tit)Tj
T*
( Sang \221Willow, titwillow, titwillow!\222)Tj
T*
( And I said to him, \221Dicky-bird, why do you sit)Tj
T*
( Singing Willow, titwillow, titwillow?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( \221Is it weakness of intellect, birdie?\222 I cried,)Tj
T*
( \221Or a rather tough worm in your little inside?\222)Tj
T*
( With a shake of his poor little head he replied,)Tj
T*
( \221Oh, willow, titwillow, titwillow!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( He sobbed and he sighed, and a gurgle he gave,)Tj
T*
( Then he plunged himself into the billowy wave,)Tj
T*
( And an echo arose from the suicide\222s grave\227)Tj
T*
( \221Oh willow, titwillow, titwillow!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( There\222s a fascination frantic)Tj
T*
( In a ruin that\222s romantic;)Tj
T*
( Do you think you are sufficiently decayed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Mikado\222 \(1885\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( If you\222re anxious for to shine in the high aesthetic line as a ma\
n of culture rare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( You must lie upon the daisies and discourse in novel phrases of your\
complicated state of mind,)Tj
T*
( The meaning doesn\222t matter if it\222s only idle chatter of a tran\
scendental kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Then a sentimental passion of a vegetable fashion must excite your l\
anguid spleen,)Tj
T*
( An attachment \341 la Plato for a bashful young potato, or a not too\
French French bean!)Tj
T*
( Though the Philistines may jostle, you will rank as an apostle in th\
e high aesthetic band,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( If you walk down Piccadilly with a poppy or a lily in your medieval \
hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( While this magnetic,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Peripatetic)Tj
T*
( Lover, he lived to learn,)Tj
T*
( By no endeavour)Tj
T*
( Can magnet ever)Tj
T*
( Attract a Silver Churn!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( \221High diddle diddle\222)Tj
T*
( Will rank as an idyll,)Tj
T*
( If I pronounce it chaste!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Francesca di Rimini, miminy, piminy,)Tj
T*
( Je-ne-sais-quoi young man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( A greenery-yallery, Grosvenor Galley,)Tj
T*
( Foot-in-the-grave young man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Patience\222 \(1881\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( I\222m called Little Buttercup\227dear Little Buttercup,)Tj
T*
( Though I could never tell why.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Though \221Bother it\222 I may)Tj
T*
( Occasionally say,)Tj
T*
( I never use a big, big D\227)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( And so do his sisters, and his cousins and his aunts!)Tj
T*
( His sisters and his cousins,)Tj
T*
( Whom he reckons up by dozens,)Tj
T*
( And his aunts!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( When I was a lad I served a term)Tj
T*
( As office boy to an Attorney\222s firm.)Tj
T*
( I cleaned the windows and I swept the floor,)Tj
T*
( And I polished up the handle of the big front door.)Tj
T*
( I polished up that handle so carefullee)Tj
T*
( That now I am the Ruler of the Queen\222s Navee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( I always voted at my party\222s call,)Tj
T*
( And I never thought of thinking for myself at all.)Tj
ET
EMC
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(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Stick close to your desks and never go to sea,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And you all may be Rulers of the Queen\222s Navee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Things are seldom what they seem,)Tj
T*
( Skim milk masquerades as cream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( He is an Englishman!)Tj
T*
( For he himself has said it,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s greatly to his credit,)Tj
T*
( That he is an Englishman!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( For he might have been a Roosian,)Tj
T*
( A French, or Turk, or Proosian,)Tj
T*
( Or perhaps Ital-ian!)Tj
T*
( But in spite of all temptations)Tj
T*
( To belong to other nations,)Tj
T*
( He remains an Englishman!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( The other, upper crust,)Tj
T*
( A regular patrician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221H. M. S. Pinafore\222 \(1878\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( It is, it is a glorious thing)Tj
T*
( To be a Pirate King.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( The question is, had he not been)Tj
T*
( A thing of beauty,)Tj
T*
( Would she be swayed by quite as keen)Tj
T*
( A sense of duty?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( I\222m very good at integral and differential calculus,)Tj
T*
( I know the scientific names of beings animalculous;)Tj
T*
( In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,)Tj
T*
( I am the very model of a modern Major-General.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( About binomial theorem I\222m teeming with a lot of news,)Tj
T*
( With many cheerful facts about the square on the hypotenuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( When constabulary duty\222s to be done,)Tj
T*
( A policeman\222s lot is not a happy one.)Tj
ET
EMC
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(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( They are no members of the common throng;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They are all noblemen who have gone wrong!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( No Englishman unmoved that statement hears,)Tj
T*
( Because, with all our faults, we love our House of Peers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Pirates of Penzance\222 \(1879\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( To everybody\222s prejudice I know a thing or two;)Tj
T*
( I can tell a woman\222s age in half a minute\227and I do!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Princess Ida\222 \(1884\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Man is Nature\222s sole mistake!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Princess Ida\222 \(1884\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( You must stir it and stump it,)Tj
T*
( And blow your own trumpet,)Tj
T*
( Or trust me, you haven\222t a chance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Ruddigore\222 \(1887\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( He combines the manners of a Marquis with the morals of a Methodist.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Ruddigore\222 \(1887\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( If a man can\222t forge his own will, whose will can he forge?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Ruddigore\222 \(1887\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Some word that teems with hidden meaning\227like Basingstoke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Ruddigore\222 \(1887\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( This particularly rapid, unintelligible patter)Tj
T*
( Isn\222t generally heard, and if it is it doesn\222t matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Ruddigore\222 \(1887\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( I was a pale young curate then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221The Sorcerer\222 \(1877\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( So I fell in love with a rich attorney\222s)Tj
T*
( Elderly ugly daughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221Trial by Jury\222 \(1875\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( She may very well pass for forty-three)Tj
T*
( In the dusk with a light behind her!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Trial by Jury\222 \(1875\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( It\222s a song of a merryman, moping mum,)Tj
T*
( Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,)Tj
T*
( Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,)Tj
T*
( As he sighed for the love of a ladye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221The Yeoman of the Guard\222 \(1888\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( \222Tis ever thus with simple folk\227an accepted wit has but to say\
\221Pass the mustard\222, and they )Tj
T*
(roar their ribs out!)Tj
ET
EMC
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 754.67047 Tm
(\221The Yeoman of the Guard\222 \(1888\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.4624 Tm
( 7.45 Eric Gill 1882-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That state is a state of slavery in which a man does what he likes t\
o do in his spare time and in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(his working time that which is required of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 666.92047 Tm
(\221Art-nonsense and Other Essays\222 \(1929\) \221Slavery and Freedom\222\
.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 634.7124 Tm
( 7.46 Terry Gilliam 1940\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Graham Chapman et al. \(3.74\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.47 Allen Ginsberg 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What if someone gave a war & Nobody came?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Life would ring the bells of Ecstasy and Forever be Itself again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.42047 Tm
(\221Graffiti\222 \(1972\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.50456 Tm
( I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving\
hysterical naked, )Tj
T*
(dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an ang\
ry fix, angelheaded )Tj
T*
(hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynam\
o in the machinery of the )Tj
T*
(night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.67047 Tm
(\221Howl\222 \(1956\) p. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 401.4624 Tm
( 7.48 George Gipp d. 1920)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Win just one for the Gipper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.92047 Tm
(Catch-phrase associated with Ronald Reagan, who uttered the immortal wor\
ds in the 1940 film \221Knute )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Rockne, All American\222. Knut Rockne \221Gipp the Great\222 in \221Coll\
ier\222s\222 22 November 1930)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 316.7124 Tm
( 7.49 Jean Giraudoux 1882-1944)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As soon as war is declared it will be impossible to hold the poets b\
ack. Rhyme is still the most )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(effective drum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.17047 Tm
(\221La Guerre de Troie n\222aura pas lieu\222 \(1935; translated as \221\
Tiger at the Gates\222 by Christopher Fry, 1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.25456 Tm
( Nous savons tous ici que le droit est la plus puissante des \350cole\
s de l\222imagination. Jamais po\351te )Tj
T*
(n\222a interpr\350t\350 la nature aussi librement qu\222un juriste la r\350\
alit\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We all know here that the law is the most powerful of schools for th\
e imagination. No poet )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ever interpreted nature as freely as a lawyer interprets the truth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.67047 Tm
(\221La Guerre de Troie n\222aura pas lieu\222 \(1935; translated as \221\
Tiger at the Gates\222 by Christopher Fry, 1955\) act 2, )Tj
T*
(sc. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 119.4624 Tm
( 7.50 W. E. Gladstone 1809-98)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You cannot fight against the future. Time is on our side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.92047 Tm
(Speech on the Reform Bill, 1866)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.00456 Tm
( [The Turks] one and all, bag and baggage, shall, I hope, clear out f\
rom the province they have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(desolated and profaned.)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(House of Commons, 7 May 1877)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The resources of civilization are not yet exhausted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Speech on the state of Ireland, at Leeds, 7 October 1881, in Henry W. Lu\
cy \(ed.\) \221Speeches of the Right Hon. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(W. E. Gladstone\222 \(1885\) p. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 682.50456 Tm
( It is perfectly true that these gentlemen wish to march through rapi\
ne to disintegration and )Tj
T*
(dismemberment of the Empire, and, I am sorry to say, even to the placing\
of different parts of the )Tj
T*
(Empire in direct hostility one with the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(Referring to the Irish Land League in a speech at Knowsley, 27 October 1\
881, in \221The Times\222, 28 October )Tj
T*
(1881)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 594.75456 Tm
( I would tell them of my own intention to keep my own counsel...and I\
will venture to )Tj
T*
(recommend them, as an old Parliamentary hand, to do the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(House of Commons, 21 January 1886)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( All the world over, I will back the masses against the classes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(Speech at Liverpool, 28 June 1886, in \221The Times\222 29 June, 1886)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( This is the negation of God erected into a system of Government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221A Letter to the Earl of Aberdeen on the State Prosecutions of the Ne\
apolitan Government\222 \(1851\) p. 9n.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( We are bound to lose Ireland in consequence of years of cruelty, stu\
pidity and misgovernment )Tj
T*
(and I would rather lose her as a friend than as a foe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.67047 Tm
(In Margot Asquith \221More Memories\222 \(1933\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.75456 Tm
( It is not a life at all. It is a Reticence, in three volumes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(On J. W. Cross\222s \221Life of George Eliot\222 in E. F. Benson \221As \
We Were\222 \(1930\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( I absorb the vapour and return it as a flood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(In Lord Riddell \221Some Things That Matter\222 \(1927 ed.\) p. 69 \(on \
public speaking\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.9624 Tm
( 7.51 Hannah Glasse fl. 1747)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Take your hare when it is cased...)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy\222 \(1747\) ch. 1 \(Cased sk\
inned\), the proverbial \221First catch your )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hare\222, recorded since c.1300, has frequently been misattributed to Ha\
nnah Glasse)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 242.2124 Tm
( 7.52 Duke of Gloucester 1743-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Another damned, thick, square book! Always scribble, scribble, scrib\
ble! Eh! Mr Gibbon?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(In Henry Best \221Personal and Literary Memorials\222 \(1829\) p. 68; al\
so attributed to the Duke of Cumberland and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(King George III; see D. M. Low \221Edward Gibbon\222 \(1937\) p. 315)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.4624 Tm
( 7.53 Jean-Luc Godard 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La photographie, c\222est la v\350rit\350. Le cin\350ma: la v\350ri\
t\350 vingt-quatre fois par seconde.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Photography is truth. The cinema is truth 24 times per second.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Le Petit Soldat\222 \(1960 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
(\221Movies should have a beginning, a middle and an end,\222 harrumphed \
French film maker Georges )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Franju...\222Certainly,\222 replied Jean-Luc Godard. \221But not necessa\
rily in that order.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221Time\222 14 September 1981)Tj
ET
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(\221The Megalopsychiad\222)Tj
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( What is this that roareth thus?)Tj
T*
( Can it be a Motor Bus?)Tj
T*
( Yes, the smell and hideous hum)Tj
T*
( Indicat Motorem Bum!...)Tj
T*
( How shall wretches live like us)Tj
T*
( Cincti Bis Motoribus?)Tj
T*
( Domine, defende nos)Tj
T*
( Contra hos Motores Bos!)Tj
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( Either take all, or all restore,)Tj
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( Bind me at least, or set me free.)Tj
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(\221Song\222)Tj
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( Perfectibility is one of the most unequivocal characteristics of the\
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(\221An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Political Justice\222 \(1793\
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( The illustrious bishop of Cambrai was of more worth than his chamber\
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T*
(them could be preserved, which of the two ought to be preferred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.67047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Political Justice\222 \(1793\
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( Love of our country is another of those specious illusions, which ha\
ve been invented by )Tj
T*
(impostors in order to render the multitude the blind instruments of thei\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.92047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Political Justice\222 \(1793\
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15 0 0 15 10 181.00456 Tm
( It is a most mistaken way of teaching men to feel they are brothers,\
by imbuing their mind with )Tj
T*
(perpetual hatred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.17047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Political Justice\222 \(1793\
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( What...can be more shameless than for society to make an example of \
those whom she has )Tj
T*
(goaded to the breach of order, instead of amending her own institutions \
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T*
(into tyranny, produced the mischief?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.42047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Political Justice\222 \(1793\
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( 7.57 Joseph Goebbels 1897-1945)Tj
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(Speech in Berlin, 17 January 1936, in \221Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung\222\
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( 7.58 Hermann Goering 1893-1946)Tj
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(Speech at Hamburg, 1936, in W. Frischauer \221Goering\222 \(1951\) ch. 1\
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( I herewith commission you to carry out all preparations with regard \
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T*
(Jewish question in those territories of Europe which are under German in\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.42047 Tm
(Instructions to Heydrich, 31 July 1941, in W. L. Shirer \221The Rise and\
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( Shoot first and inquire afterwards, and if you make mistakes, I will\
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(xxx)Tj
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( 7.59 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 1749-1832)Tj
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( Es irrt der Mensch, so lang er strebt.)Tj
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( Man is in error throughout his strife.)Tj
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(\221Faust\222 pt. 1 \(1808\) \221Prolog im Himmel\222)Tj
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( Zwei Seelen wohnen, ach! in meiner Brust.)Tj
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( Two souls dwell, alas! in my breast.)Tj
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(\221Faust\222 pt. 1 \(1808\) \221Vor dem Thor\222)Tj
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( Ich bin der Geist der stets verneint.)Tj
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( I am the spirit that always denies.)Tj
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(\221Faust\222 pt. 1 \(1808\) \221Studierzimmer\222)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Das ist der ewige Gesang.)Tj
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(\221Faust\222 pt. 1 \(1808\) \221Studierzimmer\222)Tj
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( Und gr\374n des Lebens goldner Baum.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( My heart is heavy.)Tj
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( Die Tat ist alles, nichts der Ruhm.)Tj
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( The deed is all, and not the glory.)Tj
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(\221Faust\222 pt. 2 \(1832\) \221Hochgebirg\222)Tj
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( Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan.)Tj
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( Eternal Woman draws us upward.)Tj
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( Du musst herrschen und gewinnen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Oder dienen und verlieren,)Tj
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( Leiden oder triumphieren)Tj
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( Amboss oder Hammer sein.)Tj
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(\221Der Gross-Cophta\222 \(1791\) act 2)Tj
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( Wenn es eine Freude ist das Gute zu geniessen, so ist es eine gr\366\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Bessere zu empfinden, und in der Kunst ist das Beste gut genug.)Tj
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( Since it is a joy to have the benefit of what is good, it is a great\
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(better, and in art the best is good enough.)Tj
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(\221Italienische Reise\222 \(1816-17\) 3 March 1787)Tj
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( Der Aberglaube ist die Poesie des Lebens.)Tj
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( Superstition is the poetry of life.)Tj
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(\221Spr\374che in Prosa\222 \(1819\) 3)Tj
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(\221Torquato Tasso\222 \(1790\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
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( Die Wahlverwandtschaften.)Tj
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( Elective affinities.)Tj
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( Ist Ruh\222.)Tj
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( Over all the mountain tops is peace.)Tj
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(\221Wanderers Nachtlied\222 \(1821\))Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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( Auf seinem Bette weinend sass,)Tj
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( Der kennt euch nicht, ihr himmlischen M\344chte.)Tj
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( He knows ye not, ye heavenly powers.)Tj
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( Kennst du das Land, wo die Zitronen bl\374hn?)Tj
T*
( Im dunkeln Laub die Gold-Orangen gl\374hn,)Tj
T*
( Ein sanfter Wind vom blauen Himmel weht,)Tj
T*
( Die Myrte still und hoch der Lorbeer steht\227)Tj
T*
( Kennst du es wohl?)Tj
T*
( Dahin! Dahin!)Tj
T*
( M\366cht ich mit dir, o mein Geliebter, ziehn!)Tj
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T*
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(\221Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre\222 \(1795-6\) bk. 3, ch. 1)Tj
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(Johann Peter Eckermann \221Gespr\344che mit Goethe\222 \(Conversations o\
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( Ich kenne mich auch nicht und Gott soll mich auch davor beh\374ten.)Tj
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(Johann Peter Eckermann \221Gespr\344che mit Goethe\222 \(Conversations o\
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(April 1829.)Tj
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( Mehr Licht!)Tj
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( More light!)Tj
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( Ohne Hast, aber ohne Rast.)Tj
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(Motto)Tj
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(\221The Reflex\222 October 1927, p. 77)Tj
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( 7.61 Emma Goldman 1869-1940)Tj
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T*
(shackles and restraints of government.)Tj
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(\221Anarchism and Other Essays\222 \(1910\) p. 68)Tj
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( Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain,)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 1)Tj
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( Where wealth accumulates, and men decay;)Tj
T*
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( A breath can make them, as a breath has made;)Tj
T*
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T*
( When once destroyed, can never be supplied.)Tj
T*
( A time there was, ere England\222s griefs began,)Tj
T*
( When every rood of ground maintained its man;)Tj
T*
( For him light labour spread her wholesome store,)Tj
T*
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T*
( His best companions, innocence and health;)Tj
T*
( And his best riches, ignorance of wealth.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 51)Tj
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( How happy he who crowns in shades like these,)Tj
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( A youth of labour with an age of ease.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 99)Tj
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( The watchdog\222s voice that bayed the whisp\222ring wind,)Tj
T*
( And the loud laugh that spoke the vacant mind.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 121.)Tj
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( A man he was to all the country dear,)Tj
T*
( And passing rich with forty pounds a year;)Tj
T*
( Remote from towns he ran his godly race,)Tj
T*
( Nor e\222er had changed nor wished to change his place.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 141)Tj
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( He chid their wand\222rings, but relieved their pain.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 150)Tj
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( Truth from his lips prevailed with double sway,)Tj
T*
( And fools, who came to scoff, remained to pray.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 179)Tj
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( A man severe he was, and stern to view;)Tj
T*
( I knew him well, and every truant knew;)Tj
T*
( Well had the boding tremblers learned to trace)Tj
T*
( The day\222s disasters in his morning face;)Tj
T*
( Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee,)Tj
T*
( At all his jokes, for many a joke had he.)Tj
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(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 207)Tj
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( In arguing too, the parson owned his skill,)Tj
T*
( For e\222en though vanquished, he could argue still;)Tj
T*
( While words of learned length, and thund\222ring sound)Tj
T*
( Amazed the gazing rustics ranged around,)Tj
T*
( And still they gazed, and still the wonder grew,)Tj
T*
( That one small head could carry all he knew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The white-washed wall, the nicely sanded floor,)Tj
T*
( The varnished clock that clicked behind the door;)Tj
T*
( The chest contrived a double debt to pay,)Tj
T*
( A bed at night, a chest of drawers by day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 227)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( How wide the limits stand)Tj
T*
( Between a splendid and a happy land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( In all the silent manliness of grief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 384)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( I see the rural virtues leave the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 398)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Thou source of all my bliss, and all my woe,)Tj
T*
( That found\222st me poor at first, and keep\222st me so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Deserted Village\222 \(1770\) l. 413 \(on poetry\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Man wants but little here below,)Tj
T*
( Nor wants that little long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Edwin and Angelina, or the Hermit\222 \(1766\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( The doctor found, when she was dead,\227)Tj
T*
( Her last disorder mortal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Elegy on Mrs Mary Blaize\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( The naked every day he clad,)Tj
T*
( When he put on his clothes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( The dog, to gain some private ends,)Tj
T*
( Went mad and bit the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( The man recovered of the bite,)Tj
T*
( The dog it was that died.)Tj
ET
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(\221Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Brutes never meet in bloody fray,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor cut each other\222s throats, for pay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Logicians Refuted\222 l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Our Garrick\222s a salad; for in him we see)Tj
T*
( Oil, vinegar, sugar, and saltness agree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Retaliation\222 \(1774\) l. 11.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Who, too deep for his hearers, still went on refining,)Tj
T*
( And thought of convincing, while they thought of dining;)Tj
T*
( Though equal to all things, for all things unfit,)Tj
T*
( Too nice for a statesman, too proud for a wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Retaliation\222 \(1774\) l. 29 \(on Edmund Burke\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Here lies David Garrick, describe me, who can,)Tj
T*
( An abridgement of all that was pleasant in man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Retaliation\222 \(1774\) l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( On the stage he was natural, simple, affecting;)Tj
T*
( \222Twas only that when he was off he was acting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Retaliation\222 \(1774\) l. 101 \(on Garrick\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( When they talked of their Raphaels, Correggios, and stuff,)Tj
T*
( He shifted his trumpet, and only took snuff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Retaliation\222 \(1774\) l. 145 \(on Reynolds\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Where\222er I roam, whatever realms to see,)Tj
T*
( My heart untravelled fondly turns to thee;)Tj
T*
( Still to my brother turns with ceaseless pain,)Tj
T*
( And drags at each remove a lengthening chain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Such is the patriot\222s boast, where\222er we roam,)Tj
T*
( His first, best country ever is, at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Pride in their port, defiance in their eye,)Tj
T*
( I see the lords of human kind pass by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 327)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Laws grind the poor, and rich men rule the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 386)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( How small, of all that human hearts endure,)Tj
T*
( That part which laws or kings can cause or cure!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 429)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( The true use of speech is not so much to express our wants as to con\
ceal them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 5 \221The Use of Language\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( This same philosophy is a good horse in the stable, but an arrant ja\
de on a journey.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( We must touch his weaknesses with a delicate hand. There are some fa\
ults so nearly allied to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(excellence, that we can scarce weed out the fault without eradicating th\
e virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( All his faults are such that one loves him still the better for them\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Friendship is a disinterested commerce between equals; love, an abje\
ct intercourse between )Tj
T*
(tyrants and slaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Silence is become his mother tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( You, that are going to be married, think things can never be done to\
o fast; but we, that are old, )Tj
T*
(and know what we are about, must elope methodically, madam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Good-Natured Man\222 \(1768\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Let schoolmasters puzzle their brain,)Tj
T*
( With grammar, and nonsense, and learning,)Tj
T*
( Good liquor, I stoutly maintain,)Tj
T*
( Gives genius a better discerning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 1, sc. 1, song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Is it one of my well-looking days, child? Am I in face to-day?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( The very pink of perfection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( I\222ll be with you in the squeezing of a lemon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( It\222s a damned long, dark, boggy, dirty, dangerous way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( This is Liberty-Hall, gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( The first blow is half the battle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( Was there ever such a cross-grained brute?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221She Stoops to Conquer\222 \(1773\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( I was ever of opinion, that the honest man who married and brought u\
p a large family, did )Tj
T*
(more service than he who continued single and only talked of population.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1766\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( I...chose my wife, as she did her wedding gown, not for a fine gloss\
y surface, but such qualities )Tj
T*
(as would wear well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1766\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( All our adventures were by the fire-side, and all our migrations fro\
m the blue bed to the brown.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1766\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.25456 Tm
( The virtue which requires to be ever guarded is scarce worth the sen\
tinel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.42047 Tm
(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1766\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 695.50456 Tm
( It seemed to me pretty plain, that they had more of love than matrim\
ony in them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.67047 Tm
(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1766\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.75456 Tm
( When lovely woman stoops to folly)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And finds too late that men betray,)Tj
T*
( What charm can soothe her melancholy,)Tj
T*
( What art can wash her guilt away?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221The Vicar of Wakefield\222 \(1764\) ch. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( There is no arguing with Johnson; for when his pistol misses fire, h\
e knocks you down with the )Tj
T*
(butt end of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 26 Octo\
ber 1769.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( As I take my shoes from the shoemaker, and my coat from the tailor, \
so I take my religion )Tj
T*
(from the priest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 9 April\
1773)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 447.2124 Tm
( 7.63 Barry Goldwater 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I would remind you that extremism in the defence of liberty is no vi\
ce!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice\
is no virtue!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(Speech accepting the presidential nomination, 16 July 1964, in \221New Y\
ork Times\222 17 July 1964, p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 359.4624 Tm
( 7.64 Sam Goldwyn \(Samuel Goldfish\) 1882-1974)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gentlemen, include me out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.92047 Tm
(Said on resigning from the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of \
America, October 1933, in Michael )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Freedland \221The Goldwyn Touch\222 \(1986\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.00456 Tm
( A verbal contract isn\222t worth the paper it is written on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.17047 Tm
(In Alva Johnston \221The Great Goldwyn\222 \(1937\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.25456 Tm
( That\222s the way with these directors, they\222re always biting the\
hand that lays the golden egg.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.42047 Tm
(In Alva Johnston \221The Great Goldwyn\222 \(1937\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.50456 Tm
( Pictures are for entertainment, messages should be delivered by West\
ern Union.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.67047 Tm
(In Arthur Marx \221Goldwyn\222 \(1976\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.75456 Tm
( Any man who goes to a psychiatrist should have his head examined.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.92047 Tm
(In Norman Zierold \221Moguls\222 \(1969\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.00456 Tm
( Why should people go out and pay to see bad movies when they can sta\
y at home and see bad )Tj
T*
(television for nothing?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 9 September 1956)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.9624 Tm
( 7.65 Adam Lindsay Gordon 1833-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life is mostly froth and bubble,)Tj
ET
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( Two things stand like stone,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kindness in another\222s trouble,)Tj
T*
( Courage in your own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Ye Wearie Wayfarer\222 \221Fytte 8\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 7.66 Mack Gordon 1904-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pardon me boy is that the Chattanooga Choo-choo,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Track twenty nine,)Tj
T*
( Boy you can gimme a shine.)Tj
T*
( I can afford to board a Chattanooga Choo-choo,)Tj
T*
( I\222ve got my fare and just a trifle to spare.)Tj
T*
( You leave the Pennsylvania station \222bout a quarter to four,)Tj
T*
( Read a magazine and then you\222re in Baltimore,)Tj
T*
( Dinner in the diner nothing could be finer)Tj
T*
( Than to have your ham\222n eggs in Carolina.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221Chattanooga Choo-choo\222 \(1941 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 455.2124 Tm
( 7.67 Stuart Gorrell 1902-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Georgia, Georgia, no peace I find,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Just an old sweet song keeps Georgia on my mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(\221Georgia on my Mind\222 \(1930 song; music by Hoagy Carmichael\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 367.4624 Tm
( 7.68 Lord Goschen 1831-1907)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have the courage of my opinions, but I have not the temerity to gi\
ve a political blank cheque )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to Lord Salisbury.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 19 February 1884, col. 1420)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 279.7124 Tm
( 7.69 Sir Edmund Gosse 1849-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A sheep in sheep\222s clothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(Of the \221woolly-bearded poet\222 Sturge Moore, in F. Greenslet \221Und\
er the Bridge\222 \(1943\) ch. 10.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 209.9624 Tm
( 7.70 Dean Goulburn 1818-97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Let the scintillations of your wit be like the coruscations of summe\
r lightning, lambent but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(innocuous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(Sermon at Rugby School, in W. Tuckwell \221Reminiscences of Oxford\222 \(\
2nd ed., 1907\) p. 272)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 122.2124 Tm
( 7.71 John Gower c.1330-1408)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It hath and schal ben evermor)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That love is maister wher he wile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Confessio Amantis\222 \(1386-90\) prologue, l. 34)Tj
ET
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( 7.72 Sir Ernest Gowers 1880-1966)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is not easy nowadays to remember anything so contrary to all appe\
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0 -1.2 TD
(are the servants of the public; and the official must try not to foster \
the illusion that it is the other )Tj
T*
(way round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Plain Words\222 ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.50456 Tm
( We are all esquires now, and we are none of us gentlemen any more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(In \221Fowler\222s Dictionary of Modern English Usage\222 \(2nd ed., 196\
5\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 610.4624 Tm
( 7.73 Francisco Jos\350 de Goya y Lucientes 1746-1828)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( El sue\361o de la raz\363n produce monstruos.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The dream of reason produces monsters.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.21028 TD
( 7.74 Clementina Stirling Graham 1782-1877)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The best way to get the better of temptation is just to yield to it.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 496.42047 Tm
(\221Mystifications\222 \(1859\) \221Soir\350e at Mrs Russel\222s\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 464.2124 Tm
( 7.75 D. M. Graham 1911\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( That this House will in no circumstances fight for its King and Coun\
try.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(Motion worded by Graham for debate at the Oxford Union, of which he was \
Librarian, 9 February 1933 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\(passed by 275 votes to 153\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 379.4624 Tm
( 7.76 Harry Graham 1874-1936)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Weep not for little L\350onie)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Abducted by a French Marquis!)Tj
T*
( Though loss of honour was a wrench)Tj
T*
( Just think how it\222s improved her French.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221More Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes\222 \(1930\) \221Compensati\
on\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( O\222er the rugged mountain\222s brow)Tj
T*
( Clara threw the twins she nursed,)Tj
T*
( And remarked, \221I wonder now)Tj
T*
( Which will reach the bottom first?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes\222 \(1899\) \221Calculating Cla\
ra\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( Aunt Jane observed, the second time)Tj
T*
( She tumbled off a bus,)Tj
T*
( \221The step is short from the Sublime)Tj
T*
( To the Ridiculous.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(\221Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes\222 \(1899\) \221Equanimity\222.\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.50456 Tm
( \221There\222s been an accident,\222 they said,)Tj
T*
( \221Your servant\222s cut in half; he\222s dead!\222)Tj
T*
( \221Indeed!\222 said Mr Jones, \221and please,)Tj
ET
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( Send me the half that\222s got my keys.\222)Tj
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(\221Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes\222 \(1899\) \221Mr Jones\222 \(\
poem attributed to \221G.W.\222\))Tj
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( Billy, in one of his nice new sashes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fell in the fire and was burnt to ashes;)Tj
T*
( Now, although the room grows chilly,)Tj
T*
( I haven\222t the heart to poke poor Billy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes\222 \(1899\) \221Tender-Heartedn\
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( 7.77 James Graham, Marquis of Montrose 1612-50)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Epitaph on King Charles I\222)Tj
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( Let them bestow on every airth a limb;)Tj
T*
( Then open all my veins, that I may swim)Tj
T*
( To thee, my Maker! in that crimson lake;)Tj
T*
( Then place my parboiled head upon a stake\227)Tj
T*
( Scatter my ashes\227strew them in the air;\227)Tj
T*
( Lord! since thou know\222st where all these atoms are,)Tj
T*
( I\222m hopeful thou\222lt recover once my dust,)Tj
T*
( And confident thou\222lt raise me with the just.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(\221Lines written on the Window of his Jail the Night before his Executi\
on\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( He either fears his fate too much,)Tj
T*
( Or his deserts are small,)Tj
T*
( That puts it not unto the touch)Tj
T*
( To win or lose it all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.17047 Tm
(\221My Dear and Only Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 284.25456 Tm
( But if thou wilt be constant then,)Tj
T*
( And faithful of thy word,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll make thee glorious by my pen,)Tj
T*
( And famous by my sword.)Tj
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(\221My Dear and Only Love\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.78 Kenneth Grahame 1859-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The curate faced the laurels\227hesitatingly. But Aunt Maria flung h\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Hodgitts!\222 I heard her cry, \221you are brave! for my sake do not be \
rash!\222 He was not rash.)Tj
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(\221The Golden Age\222 \(1895\) \221The Burglars\222)Tj
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( Monkeys...very sensibly refrain from speech, lest they should be set\
to earn their livings.)Tj
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(\221The Golden Age\222 \(1895\) \221Lusisti Satis\222)Tj
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s simply messing about in )Tj
T*
(boats.)Tj
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( What is fame? an empty bubble;)Tj
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( Gold? a transient, shining trouble.)Tj
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(\221Solitude\222 l. 96)Tj
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( Knock off the chains)Tj
T*
( Of heart-debasing slavery; give to man,)Tj
T*
( Of every colour and of every clime,)Tj
T*
( Freedom, which stamps him image of his God.)Tj
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(\221The Sugar Cane\222 \(1764\) bk. 4)Tj
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(immediately upon your works.)Tj
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T*
(\221The Life and Campaigns of General U. S. Grant\222 \(1869\) ch. 6)Tj
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( I purpose to fight it out on this line, if it takes all summer.)Tj
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(Dispatch to Washington, from head-quarters in the field, 11 May 1864, in\
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T*
(Campaigns of General U. S. Grant\222 \(1869\) ch. 23)Tj
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( Let us have peace.)Tj
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(Letter to General Joseph R. Hawkey, 29 May 1868, accepting nomination fo\
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T*
(\221The Life and Campaigns of General U. S. Grant\222 \(1869\) ch. 29)Tj
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( I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so ef\
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T*
(execution.)Tj
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(Inaugural Address, 4 March 1869, in P. C. Headley \221The Life and Campa\
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T*
(ch. 29)Tj
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T*
(way of performing a public duty.)Tj
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(Indorsement of a letter relating to the Whiskey Ring, 29 July 1875)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Adieu l\222Amour\222)Tj
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( Bright as the day, and like the morning, fair,)Tj
T*
( Such Cloe is...and common as the air.)Tj
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(\221The happiest mortals once we were\222)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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T*
( D\222ye ken John Peel when he\222s far far away)Tj
T*
( With his hounds and his horn in the morning?)Tj
T*
( \222Twas the sound of his horn called me from my bed,)Tj
T*
( And the cry of his hounds has me oft-times led;)Tj
T*
( For Peel\222s view-hollo would waken the dead,)Tj
T*
( Or a fox from his lair in the morning.)Tj
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(\221John Peel\222 \(1820\))Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Children are dumb to say how hot the day is,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How hot the scent is of the summer rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(\221The Cool Web\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.00456 Tm
( There\222s a cool web of language winds us in,)Tj
T*
( Retreat from too much joy or too much fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221The Cool Web\222 \(1927\))Tj
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( Counting the beats,)Tj
T*
( Counting the slow heart beats,)Tj
T*
( The bleeding to death of time in slow heart beats,)Tj
T*
( Wakeful they lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Counting the Beats\222 \(1951\))Tj
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( His eyes are quickened so with grief,)Tj
T*
( He can watch a grass or leaf)Tj
T*
( Every instant grow; he can)Tj
T*
( Clearly through a flint wall see,)Tj
T*
( Or watch the startled spirit flee)Tj
T*
( From the throat of a dead man.)Tj
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(\221Lost Love\222 \(1921\))Tj
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( Truth-loving Persians do not dwell upon)Tj
T*
( The trivial skirmish fought near Marathon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.92047 Tm
(\221The Persian Version\222)Tj
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( As you are woman, so be lovely:)Tj
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T*
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(\221Pygmalion to Galatea\222 \(1927\))Tj
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( Far away is close at hand)Tj
T*
( Close joined is far away,)Tj
T*
( Love shall come at your command)Tj
T*
( Yet will not stay.)Tj
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(\221Song of Contrariety\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( To evoke posterity)Tj
T*
( Is to weep on your own grave,)Tj
T*
( Ventriloquizing for the unborn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221To Evoke Posterity\222)Tj
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( Goodbye to all that.)Tj
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(Title of autobiography \(1929\))Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Dirt is only matter out of place; and what is a blot on the escutche\
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0 -1.44719 TD
( A dead woman bites not.)Tj
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(Oral tradition, Gray being said to have advocated the execution of Mary,\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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( 7.86 Thomas Gray 1716-71)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ruin seize thee, ruthless King!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
( They mock the air with idle state.)Tj
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(\221The Bard\222 \(1757\) l. 1)Tj
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( Loose his beard, and hoary hair)Tj
T*
( Stream\222d, like a meteor, to the troubled air.)Tj
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(\221The Bard\222 \(1757\) l. 19.)Tj
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( Weave the warp, and weave the woof,)Tj
T*
( The winding-sheet of Edward\222s race.)Tj
T*
( Give ample room, and verge enough)Tj
T*
( The characters of hell to trace.)Tj
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(\221The Bard\222 \(1757\) l. 49)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( That, hushed in grim repose, expects his evening prey.)Tj
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(\221The Bard\222 \(1757\) l. 71)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard\222 \(1751\) l. 13)Tj
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( Let not ambition mock their useful toil,)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( Nor cast one longing ling\222ring look behind?)Tj
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(\221Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard\222 \(1751\) l. 85)Tj
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(\221Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard\222 \(1751\) l. 93)Tj
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( Here rests his head upon the lap of Earth)Tj
T*
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T*
( Fair Science frowned not on his humble birth,)Tj
T*
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(\221Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard\222 \(1751\) l. 117)Tj
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( He gave to Mis\222ry all he had, a tear,)Tj
T*
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(\221Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard\222 \(1751\) l. 123)Tj
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( Not all that tempts your wand\222ring eyes)Tj
T*
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T*
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(\221Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College\222 \(1747\) l. 1)Tj
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T*
( They hear a voice in every wind,)Tj
T*
( And snatch a fearful joy.)Tj
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(\221Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College\222 \(1747\) l. 38)Tj
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( Alas, regardless of their doom,)Tj
T*
( The little victims play!)Tj
T*
( No sense have they of ills to come,)Tj
T*
( Nor care beyond to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College\222 \(1747\) l. 51)Tj
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( To each his suff\222rings, all are men,)Tj
T*
( Condemned alike to groan;)Tj
T*
( The tender for another\222s pain,)Tj
T*
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And happiness too swiftly flies.)Tj
T*
( Thought would destroy their paradise.)Tj
T*
( No more; where ignorance is bliss,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis folly to be wise.)Tj
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(\221Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College\222 \(1747\) l. 91)Tj
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( The meanest floweret of the vale,)Tj
T*
( The simplest note that swells the gale,)Tj
T*
( The common sun, the air, the skies,)Tj
T*
( To him are opening paradise.)Tj
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(\221Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude\222 \(1754\) l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( The Attic warbler pours her throat,)Tj
T*
( Responsive to the cuckoo\222s note,)Tj
T*
( The untaught harmony of spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Spring\222 \(1748\) l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Far from the sun and summer-gale,)Tj
T*
( In thy green lap was Nature\222s darling laid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221The Progress of Poesy\222 \(1757\) l. 83 \(on Shakespeare\))Tj
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( Nor second he, that rode sublime)Tj
T*
( Upon the seraph-wings of ecstasy,)Tj
T*
( The secrets of th\222abyss to spy.)Tj
T*
( He passed the flaming bounds of place and time:)Tj
ET
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( He saw; but blasted with excess of light,)Tj
T*
( Closed his eyes in endless night.)Tj
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(\221The Progress of Poesy\222 \(1757\) l. 95 \(on Milton\))Tj
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( Thoughts, that breathe, and words, that burn.)Tj
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(\221The Progress of Poesy\222 \(1757\) l. 110)Tj
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T*
( Beneath the good how far\227but far above the great.)Tj
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(\221The Progress of Poesy\222 \(1757\) l. 122)Tj
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( Too poor for a bribe, and too proud to importune,)Tj
T*
( He had not the method of making a fortune.)Tj
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(\221Sketch of his own Character\222)Tj
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( The language of the age is never the language of poetry, except amon\
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T*
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(Letter to West, 8 April 1742, in H. W. Starr \(ed.\) \221Correspondence\
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( It has been usual to catch a mouse or two \(for form\222s sake\) in \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(On refusing the Laureateship, in a letter to William Mason, 19 December \
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T*
( \221Correspondence of Thomas Gray\222 \(1971\) vol. 2, letter 259)Tj
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( I shall be but a shrimp of an author.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(Letter to Horace Walpole, 25 February 1768, in H. W. Starr \(ed.\) \221C\
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T*
(vol. 3, letter 471)Tj
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( Any fool may write a most valuable book by chance, if he will only t\
ell us what he heard and )Tj
T*
(saw with veracity.)Tj
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(Letter to Horace Walpole, 25 February 1768, in H. W. Starr \(ed.\) \221C\
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T*
(vol. 3, letter 471)Tj
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(\221Hints toward Reforms\222 \(1850\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.88 Hannah Green \(Joanne Greenberg\))Tj
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T*
( I never promised you a rose garden.)Tj
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(Title of novel \(1964\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.89 Matthew Green 1696-1737)Tj
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T*
( They politics like ours profess,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The greater prey upon the less.)Tj
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(\221The Grotto\222 \(1732\) l. 69)Tj
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( Fling but a stone, the giant dies.)Tj
T*
( Laugh and be well.)Tj
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( By happy alchemy of mind)Tj
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( They turn to pleasure all they find.)Tj
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(\221The Spleen\222 \(1737\) l. 610)Tj
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T*
(water like Pilate.)Tj
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(\221The Comedians\222 \(1966\) pt. 3, ch. 4)Tj
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( He gave her a bright fake smile; so much of life was a putting-off o\
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T*
(time. Nothing was ever lost by delay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 1, pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( Against the beautiful and the clever and the successful, one can wag\
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T*
(against the unattractive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 1, pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
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( They had been corrupted by money, and he had been corrupted by senti\
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T*
(the more dangerous, because you couldn\222t name its price. A man open t\
o bribes was to be relied )Tj
T*
(upon below a certain figure, but sentiment might uncoil in the heart at \
a name, a photograph, even )Tj
T*
(a smell remembered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 1, pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
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( Despair is the price one pays for setting oneself an impossible aim.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 1, pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
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( Here you could love human beings nearly as God loved them, knowing t\
he worst; you didn\222t )Tj
T*
(love a pose, a pretty dress, a sentiment artfully assumed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 1, pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
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( He felt the loyalty we all feel to unhappiness\227the sense that tha\
t is where we really belong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 2, pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Any victim demands allegiance.)Tj
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(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 3, pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( His hilarity was like a scream from a crevasse.)Tj
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(\221The Heart of the Matter\222 \(1948\) bk. 3, pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( There is always one moment in childhood when the door opens and lets\
the future in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221The Power and the Glory\222 \(1940\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( Innocence always calls mutely for protection, when we would be so mu\
ch wiser to guard )Tj
T*
(ourselves against it: innocence is like a dumb leper who has lost his be\
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T*
(meaning no harm.)Tj
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(\221The Quiet American\222 \(1955\) pt. 1, ch. 3)Tj
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( If only it were possible to love without injury\227fidelity isn\222t\
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T*
(possession: we are too small in mind and body to possess another person \
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(\221The Quiet American\222 \(1955\) pt. 2, ch. 3)Tj
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( Cupid abroad was lated in the night,)Tj
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( His wings were wet with ranging in the rain.)Tj
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(\221Cupid abroad was lated\222 \(c.1590\))Tj
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( Hangs in the uncertain balance of proud time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay\222 \(1594\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
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( Ah! were she pitiful as she is fair,)Tj
T*
( Or but as mild as she is seeming so.)Tj
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(\221Pandosto. The Triumph of Time\222 \(1588\))Tj
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( Ah! what is love! It is a pretty thing,)Tj
T*
( As sweet unto a shepherd as a king,)Tj
T*
( And sweeter too;)Tj
T*
( For kings have cares that wait upon a crown,)Tj
T*
( And cares can make the sweetest love to frown.)Tj
T*
( Ah then, ah then,)Tj
T*
( If country loves such sweet desires do gain,)Tj
T*
( What lady would not love a shepherd swain?)Tj
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(\221The Shepherd\222s Wife\222s Song\222 \(1590\))Tj
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( For there is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that wit\
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T*
(a player\222s hide, supposes he is as well able to bumbast out a blank v\
erse as the best of you; and )Tj
T*
(being an absolute Iohannes fac totum, is in his own conceit the only Sha\
ke-scene in a country.)Tj
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(\221Greenes Groats-Worth of Witte\222 \(1592\) referring to Shakespeare)Tj
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( 7.92 Germaine Greer 1939\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The female eunuch.)Tj
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(Title of book \(1971\))Tj
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( Human beings have an inalienable right to invent themselves; when th\
at right is pre-empted it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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(\221The Times\222 1 February 1986)Tj
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( 7.93 Gregory the Great c.540-604)Tj
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( Non Angli sed Angeli.)Tj
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( Not Angles but Angels.)Tj
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(Bede \221Historia Ecclesiastica\222 bk. 2, sect. 1, recorded: Responsum\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(that they were called Angles. \221It is well,\222 he said, \221for they \
have the faces of angels, and such should be the co-)Tj
T*
(heirs of the angels of heaven.\222)Tj
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( Dilexi iustitiam et odi iniquitatem, propterea morior in exilio.)Tj
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( I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.)Tj
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(Bowden \221Life\222 bk. 3, ch. 20)Tj
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( 7.95 Stephen Grellet 1773-1855)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( I expect to pass through this world but once; any good thing therefo\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(for I shall not pass this way again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(Attributed. John o\222 London \221Treasure Trove\222 \(1925\) p. 48 for \
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 7.96 Joyce Grenfell 1910-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Stately as a galleon, I sail across the floor,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Doing the Military Two-step, as in the days of yore.)Tj
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(\221Stately as a Galleon\222 \(1978\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.4624 Tm
( 7.97 Julian Grenfell 1888-1915)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The naked earth is warm with Spring,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Leans to the sun\222s kiss glorying,)Tj
T*
( And quivers in the sunny breeze;)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And he is dead, who will not fight;)Tj
T*
( And who dies fighting has increase.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The fighting man shall from the sun)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Speed with the light-foot winds to run,)Tj
T*
( And with the trees to newer birth.)Tj
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(\221Into Battle\222 in \221The Times\222 28 May 1915)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 177.2124 Tm
( 7.98 Frances Greville \(n\350e Macartney\) c.1724-89)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Far as distress the soul can wound)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \222Tis pain in each degree;)Tj
T*
( Bliss goes but to a certain bound,)Tj
T*
( Beyond is agony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.67047 Tm
(\221A Prayer for Indifference\222 \(1759\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.75456 Tm
( Half-pleased, contented will I be,)Tj
T*
( Contented, half to please.)Tj
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( Silence augmenteth grief, writing increaseth rage,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Staled are my thoughts, which loved and lost, the wonder of our age,\
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T*
( Yet quickened now with fire, though dead with frost ere now,)Tj
T*
( Enraged I write, I know not what: dead, quick, I know not how.)Tj
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(\221Elegy on the Death of Sir Philip Sidney\222)Tj
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( Oh wearisome condition of humanity!)Tj
T*
( Born under one law, to another bound.)Tj
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(\221Mustapha\222 \(1609\) act 5, sc. 4)Tj
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( Fulke Greville, Servant to Queen Elizabeth, Councillor to King James\
, and Friend to Sir Philip )Tj
T*
(Sidney.)Tj
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(Epitaph written for himself, on his monument in Warwick)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.100 Sir Edward Grey \(Viscount Grey of Fallodon\) 1862-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\22125 Years\222 \(1925\) vol. 2, ch. 18 \(said on the eve of the first \
World War\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.9624 Tm
( 7.101 Mervyn Griffith-Jones 1909-79)Tj
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T*
( Is it a book you would even wish your wife or your servants to read?\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.42047 Tm
(On D. H. Lawrence\222s Lady Chatterly\222s Lover, in Speech for the pros\
ecution at the Central Criminal Court, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Old Bailey, 20 October 1960: \221The Times\222 21 October 1960)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.2124 Tm
( 7.102 Nicholas Grimald 1519-62)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Of all the heavenly gifts that mortal men commend,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What trusty treasure in the world can countervail a friend?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Of Friendship\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 247.4624 Tm
( 7.103 George and Weedon Grossmith 1847-1912 and 1854-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What\222s the good of a home if you are never in it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Diary of a Nobody\222 \(1894\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( I...recognized her as a woman who used to work years ago for my old \
aunt at Clapham. It only )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shows how small the world is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Diary of a Nobody\222 \(1894\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( He suggested we should play \221Cutlets\222, a game we never heard o\
f. He sat on a chair, and asked )Tj
T*
(Carrie to sit on his lap, an invitation which dear Carrie rightly declin\
ed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Diary of a Nobody\222 \(1894\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( I left the room with silent dignity, but caught my foot in the mat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Diary of a Nobody\222 \(1894\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( I am a poor man, but I would gladly give ten shillings to find out w\
ho sent me the insulting )Tj
ET
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(Christmas card I received this morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Diary of a Nobody\222 \(1894\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 7.104 Philip Guedalla 1889-1944)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Any stigma, as the old saying is, will serve to beat a dogma.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Masters and Men\222 \(1923\) \221Ministers of State\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( The little ships, the unforgotten Homeric catalogue of Mary Jane and\
Peggy IV, of Folkestone )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Belle, Boy Billy, and Ethel Maud, of Lady Haig and Skylark...the little \
ships of England brought )Tj
T*
(the Army home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Referring to the evacuation of Dunkirk in \221Mr Churchill\222 \(1941\) \
ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( The cheerful clatter of Sir James Barrie\222s cans as he went round \
with the milk of human )Tj
T*
(kindness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Supers and Supermen\222 \(1920\) \221Some Critics\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( The work of Henry James has always seemed divisible by a simple dyna\
stic arrangement into )Tj
T*
(three reigns: James I, James II, and the Old Pretender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Supers and Supermen\222 \(1920\) \221Some Critics\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( History repeats itself. Historians repeat each other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Supers and Supermen\222 \(1920\) \221Some Historians\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 416.2124 Tm
( 7.105 Texas Guinan \(Mary Louise Cecilia Guinan\) 1884-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fifty million Frenchmen can\222t be wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(In \221New York World-Telegram\222 21 March 1931, p. 25, which asserts t\
hat Guinan used the phrase at least six )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(or seven years previously; also attributed to Jack Osterman and Mae West\
, it was the title of a 1927 song and )Tj
T*
(a film of 1931.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 316.4624 Tm
( 7.106 Nubar Gulbenkian 1896-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The best number for a dinner party is two\227myself and a dam\222 go\
od head waiter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(In \221Daily Telegraph\222 14 January 1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 246.7124 Tm
( 7.107 Dorothy Frances Gurney 1858-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The kiss of the sun for pardon,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The song of the birds for mirth,)Tj
T*
( One is nearer God\222s Heart in a garden)Tj
T*
( Than anywhere else on earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221God\222s Garden\222 \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 122.9624 Tm
( 7.108 Woody Guthrie \(Woodrow Wilson Guthrie\) 1912-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This land is your land, this land is my land,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From California to the New York Island.)Tj
T*
( From the redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters)Tj
T*
( This land was made for you and me.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221This Land is Your Land\222 \(1956 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 7.109 Nell Gwyn 1650-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pray, good people, be civil. I am the Protestant whore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(In Oxford, during the Popish Terror, 1681, in B. Bevan \221Nell Gwyn\222\
\(1969\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 651.03038 Tm
( 8.0 H)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
(8.1 Emperor Hadrian A.D. 76-138)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Animula vagula blandula,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hospes comesque corporis,)Tj
T*
( Quae nunc abibis in loca)Tj
T*
( Pallidula rigida nudula,)Tj
T*
( Nec ut soles dabis iocos!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav\222ring sprite,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Friend and associate of this clay!)Tj
T*
( To what unknown region borne,)Tj
T*
( Wilt thou now wing thy distant flight?)Tj
T*
( No more with wonted humour gay,)Tj
T*
( But pallid, cheerless, and forlorn.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(In J. W. Duff \(ed.\) \221Minor Latin Poets\222 \(1934\) p. 445, transl\
ated by Byron as \221Adrian\222s Address to His Soul )Tj
T*
(When Dying\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 348.7124 Tm
( 8.2 Rider Haggard \(Sir Henry Rider Haggard\) 1856-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( She who must be obeyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.17047 Tm
(\221She\222 \(1887\) passim)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.9624 Tm
( 8.3 C. F. S. Hahnemann 1755-1843)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Similia similibus curantur.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Like cures like.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(Motto of homoeopathic medicine. Hahnemann seems to have used this formul\
a, but with curentur: \221Let )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(similars be treated by similars\222. Paracelsus \(1493-1541\), not ackno\
wledged as an influence by Hahnemann, )Tj
T*
(wrote Simile similis cura: non contrarium in \221Fragmenta Medica\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.4624 Tm
( 8.4 Earl Haig 1861-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A very weak-minded fellow I am afraid, and, like the feather pillow,\
bears the marks of the last )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(person who has sat on him!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(Of the 17th Earl of Derby, in a letter to Lady Haig, 14 January 1918: R\
. Blake \221Private Papers of Douglas )Tj
T*
(Haig\222 \(1952\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.00456 Tm
( Every position must be held to the last man: there must be no retire\
ment. With our backs to the )Tj
T*
(wall, and believing in the justice of our cause, each one of us must fig\
ht on to the end.)Tj
ET
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(Order to British troops, 12 April 1918, in A. Duff Cooper \221Haig\222 \(\
1936\) vol. 2, ch. 23)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 8.5 Lord Hailsham \(Baron Hailsham, Quintin Hogg\) 1907\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A great party is not to be brought down because of a scandal by a wo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(proved liar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Interviewed on the Profumo affair, in \221The Times\222 14 June 1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 8.6 J. B. S. Haldane 1892-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I suspect that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dr\
eamed of, or can be dreamed )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of, in any philosophy. That is the reason why I have no philosophy mysel\
f, and must be my )Tj
T*
(excuse for dreaming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221Possible Worlds and Other Essays\222 \(1927\) \221Possible Worlds\222\
.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( The Creator, if He exists, has a special preference for beetles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(On observing that there are 400,000 species of beetle on this planet, bu\
t only 8,000 species of mammals: )Tj
T*
(report of lecture, 7 April 1951, in \221Journal of the British Interplan\
etary Society\222 \(1951\)vol. 10, p. 156)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 477.7124 Tm
( 8.7 H. R. Haldeman 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Once the toothpaste is out of the tube, it is awfully hard to get it\
back in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(To John Dean on the Watergate affair, 8 April 1973, in \221Hearings Befo\
re the Select Committee on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Presidential Campaign Activities of US Senate: Watergate and Related Act\
ivities\222 \(1973\) vol. 4, p. 1399)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 392.9624 Tm
( 8.8 Edward Everett Hale 1822-1909)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Do you pray for the senators, Dr Hale?\222 \221No, I look at the\
senators and I pray for the country.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(Van Wyck Brooks \221New England Indian Summer\222 \(1940\) p. 418 n.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 323.2124 Tm
( 8.9 Sir Matthew Hale 1609-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Christianity is part of the Common Law of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(In \221Historia Placitorum Coronae\222 \(ed. Sollom Emlyn, 1736\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 253.4624 Tm
( 8.10 Nathan Hale 1755-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(Before being executed as a spy by the British, 22 September 1776, in Hen\
ry Phelps Johnston \221Nathan Hale, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1776\222 \(1914\) ch. 7.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 168.7124 Tm
( 8.11 Sarah Josepha Hale 1788-1879)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mary had a little lamb,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Its fleece was white as snow,)Tj
T*
( And everywhere that Mary went)Tj
T*
( The lamb was sure to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221Poems for Our Children\222 \(1830\) \221Mary\222s Little Lamb\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 44.9624 Tm
( 8.12 T. C. Haliburton 1796-1865)Tj
ET
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( I want you to see Peel, Stanley, Graham, Shiel, Russell, Macaulay, O\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Joe, and so on. These men are all upper crust here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Attach\350 or Sam Slick in England\222 \(1843-4\) ch. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 8.13 George Savile, Marquis of Halifax 1633-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love is a passion that hath friends in the garrison.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Advice to a Daughter\222 \(1688\) \221Behaviour and Conversation\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( The best way to suppose what may come, is to remember what is past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Miscellaneous: Experience\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( Anger is never without an argument, but seldom with a good one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Anger\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( Most men make little other use of their speech than to give evidence\
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0 -1.2 TD
(understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Folly and Fools\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( There is...no fundamental, but that every supreme power must be arbi\
trary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Fundamentals\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( Malice is of a low stature, but it hath very long arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Malice and Envy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( When the people contend for their liberty, they seldom get anything \
by their victory but new )Tj
T*
(masters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Prerogative, Power and Liberty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Power is so apt to be insolent and Liberty to be saucy, that they ar\
e very seldom upon good )Tj
T*
(terms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Prerogative, Power and Liberty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Men are not hanged for stealing horses, but that horses may not be s\
tolen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Political, Moral, and Miscellaneous Thoughts and Reflections\222 \(1\
750\) \221Of Punishment\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( To the question, What shall we do to be saved in this World? there i\
s no other answer but this, )Tj
T*
(Look to your Moat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221A Rough Draft of a New Model at Sea\222 \(1694\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Lord Rochester was made Lord president: which being a post superior \
in rank, but much )Tj
T*
(inferior both in advantage and credit to that he held formerly, drew a j\
est from Lord Halifax...he )Tj
T*
(said, that he had heard of many kicked down stairs, but never of any tha\
t was kicked up stairs )Tj
T*
(before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(Gilbert Burnet \221History of His Own Time\222 \(written 1683-6\) vol. 1\
\(1724\) p. 592)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 123.7124 Tm
( 8.14 Joseph Hall 1574-1656)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I first adventure, follow me who list)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And be the second English satirist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Virgidemiae\222 \(1597\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( Perfection is the child of Time.)Tj
ET
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(\221Works\222 \(1625\) p. 670)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 8.15 Fitz-Greene Halleck 1790-1867)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They love their land because it is their own,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And scorn to give aught other reason why;)Tj
T*
( Would shake hands with a king upon his throne,)Tj
T*
( And think it kindness to his Majesty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Connecticut\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( Green be the turf above thee,)Tj
T*
( Friend of my better days!)Tj
T*
( None knew thee but to love thee,)Tj
T*
( Nor named thee but to praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 508.4624 Tm
( 8.16 Friedrich Halm \(Eligius Francis Joseph, Baron von M\374nch-Bellin\
ghausen\) 1806-71)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mein Herz ich will dich fragen:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Was ist denn Liebe? Sag\222!\227)Tj
T*
( \221Zwei Seelen und ein Gedanke,)Tj
T*
( Zwei Herzen und ein Schlag!\222)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What love is, if thou wouldst be taught,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy heart must teach alone\227)Tj
T*
( Two souls with but a single thought,)Tj
T*
( Two hearts that beat as one.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221Der Sohn der Wildniss\222 \(1842\) act 2 ad fin. \(translated by Mar\
ia Lovell in Ingomar the Barbarian\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 308.9624 Tm
( 8.17 Margaret Halsey 1910\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The English never smash in a face. They merely refrain from asking i\
t to dinner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(\221With Malice Toward Some\222 \(1938\) pt. 3, p. 208)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 239.2124 Tm
( 8.18 Admiral W. F. \(\221Bull\222\) Halsey 1882-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The Third Fleet\222s sunken and damaged ships have been salvaged and\
are retiring at high speed )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(toward the enemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(Report, 14 October 1944, on hearing claims that the Japanese had virtual\
ly annihilated the US fleet, in E. B. )Tj
T*
(Potter \221Bull Halsey\222 \(1985\) ch. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 136.4624 Tm
( 8.19 Alex Hamilton 1936\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Those who stand for nothing fall for anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221Born Old\222 \(radio broadcast\), in \221Listener\222 9 November 197\
8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 66.7124 Tm
( 8.20 Alexander Hamilton c.1755-1804)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( A national debt, if it is not excessive, will be to us a national bl\
essing.)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Letter to Robert Morris, 30 April 1781, in John C. Hamilton \(ed.\) \221\
The Works of Alexander Hamilton\222 vol. 1 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\(1850\) p. 257)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 8.21 Gail Hamilton \(Mary A. Dodge\) 1833-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The total depravity of inanimate things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 670.42047 Tm
(Epigram)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 638.2124 Tm
( 8.22 Sir William Hamilton 1788-1856)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Truth, like a torch, the more it\222s shook it shines.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 600.67047 Tm
(\221Discussions on Philosophy\222 \(1852\) title page, epigram)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 579.75456 Tm
( On earth there is nothing great but man; in man there is nothing gre\
at but mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 563.92047 Tm
(\221Lectures on Metaphysics\222 \(1859-60\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 531.7124 Tm
( 8.23 Oscar Hammerstein II 1895-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The last time I saw Paris)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her heart was warm and gay,)Tj
T*
( I heard the laughter of her heart in ev\222ry street caf\350.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.17047 Tm
(\221The Last Time I saw Paris\222 \(from \221Lady, be Good\222, 1941\); \
music by Jerome Kern)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 437.25456 Tm
( The corn is as high as an elephant\222s eye,)Tj
T*
( An\222 it looks like it\222s climbin\222 clear up to the sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.42047 Tm
(\221Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin\222\222 \(from \221Oklahoma\222, 1943\);\
music by Richard Rodgers)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 382.50456 Tm
( Ol\222 man river, dat ol\222 man river,)Tj
T*
( He must know sumpin\222, but don\222t say nothin\222,)Tj
T*
( He just keeps rollin\222,)Tj
T*
( He keeps on rollin\222 along.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221Ol\222 Man River\222 \(from \221Show Boat\222, 1927\); music by Jero\
me Kern)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.75456 Tm
( Some enchanted evening,)Tj
T*
( You may see a stranger...)Tj
T*
( Across a crowded room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.92047 Tm
(\221Some Enchanted Evening\222 \(from \221South Pacific\222, 1949\); mus\
ic by Richard Rodgers)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.00456 Tm
( You\222ll never walk alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.17047 Tm
(Title of song from \221Carousel\222 \(1945\); music by Richard Rodgers)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 170.9624 Tm
( 8.24 Christopher Hampton 1946\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A definition of capitalism...the process whereby American girls turn\
into)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( American women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Savages\222 \(1974\) sc. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 83.2124 Tm
( 8.25 John Hancock 1737-93)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There, I guess King George will be able to read that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(On signing the Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776)Tj
ET
EMC
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( 8.26 Learned Hand 1872-1961)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A self-made man may prefer a self-made name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 705.92047 Tm
(On Samuel Goldfish changing his name to Samuel Goldwyn, in Bosley Crowth\
er \221Lion\222s Share\222 \(1957\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 673.7124 Tm
( 8.27 Minnie Hanff 1880-1942)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( High o\222er the fence leaps Sunny Jim)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Force\222 is the food that raises him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 618.17047 Tm
(Advertising slogan for breakfast cereal \(1903\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 585.9624 Tm
( 8.28 Brian Hanrahan 1949\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I counted them all out and I counted them all back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.42047 Tm
(On the number of British aeroplanes \(which he was not permitted to disc\
lose\) joining the raid on Port Stanley )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in the Falkland Islands: BBC broadcast report, 1 May 1982, in \221Battl\
e for the Falklands\222 \(1982\) p. 21)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 501.2124 Tm
( 8.29 Edmond Haraucourt 1856-1941)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Partir c\222est mourir un peu,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( C\222est mourir \341 ce qu\222on aime:)Tj
T*
( On laisse un peu de soi-m\352me)Tj
T*
( En toute heure et dans tout lieu.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To go away is to die a little, it is to die to that which one loves:\
everywhere and always, one )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(leaves behind a part of oneself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.92047 Tm
(\221Seul\222 \(1891\) \221Rondel de l\222Adieu\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 337.7124 Tm
( 8.30 Otto Harbach 1873-1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When a lovely flame dies,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Smoke gets in your eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.17047 Tm
(\221Smoke Gets in your Eyes\222 \(1933 song; music by Jerome Kern\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 249.9624 Tm
( 8.31 E. Y. \(\221Yip\222\) Harburg 1898-1981)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Brother can you spare a dime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1932\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.50456 Tm
( Say, it\222s only a paper moon,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sailing over a cardboard sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.67047 Tm
(\221It\222s Only a Paper Moon\222 \(1933 song; music by Harold Arlen\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.75456 Tm
( Somewhere over the rainbow)Tj
T*
( Way up high,)Tj
T*
( There\222s a land that I heard of)Tj
T*
( Once in a lullaby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.92047 Tm
(\221Over the Rainbow\222 \(1939 song; music by Harold Arlen\))Tj
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( 8.32 Keir Hardie 1856-1915)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From his childhood onward this boy [the future Edward VIII] will be \
surrounded by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sycophants and flatterers by the score\227[Cries of \221Oh, oh!\222]\227\
and will be taught to believe )Tj
T*
(himself as of a superior creation. [Cries of \221Oh, oh!\222] A line wil\
l be drawn between him and the )Tj
T*
(people whom he is to be called upon some day to reign over. In due cours\
e, following the )Tj
T*
(precedent which has already been set, he will be sent on a tour round th\
e world, and probably )Tj
T*
(rumours of a morganatic alliance will follow\227[Loud cries of \221Oh, o\
h!\222 and \221Order!\222]\227and the )Tj
T*
(end of it all will be that the country will be called upon to pay the bi\
ll. [Cries of Divide!])Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(Speech, \221Hansard\222 28 June 1894, col. 463)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 575.2124 Tm
( 8.33 Sir William Harcourt 1827-1904)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are all socialists now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(During the passage of the 1894 budget, which equalized death duties on r\
eal and personal property: )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( attributed. G. B. Shaw \(ed.\) \221Essays in Socialism\222 \(1889\) p.\
209)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 490.4624 Tm
( 8.34 Warren G. Harding 1865-1923)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( America\222s present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums \
but normalcy; not revolution, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(but restoration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.92047 Tm
(Speech at Boston, 14 May 1920, in Frederick E. Schortemeier \221Rededica\
ting America\222 \(1920\) ch. 17)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 402.7124 Tm
( 8.35 Philip Yorke, Earl of Hardwicke 1690-1764)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( His doubts are better than most people\222s certainties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.17047 Tm
(On \221Dirleton\222s Doubts\222, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel\
Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) vol. 3, p. 205)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 332.9624 Tm
( 8.36 Godfrey Harold Hardy 1877-1947)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Beauty is the first test: there is no permanent place in the world f\
or ugly mathematics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 295.42047 Tm
(\221A Mathematician\222s Apology\222 \(1940\) p. 25)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 263.2124 Tm
( 8.37 Thomas Hardy 1840-1928)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( A local thing called Christianity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221The Dynasts\222 \(1904\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( War makes rattling good history; but Peace is poor reading.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Dynasts\222 \(1904\) pt. 1, act 2, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is c\
hiefly made by men to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(express theirs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Far from the Madding Crowd\222 \(1874\) ch. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221The Hand of Ethelberta\222 \(1876\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Done because we are too menny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221Jude the Obscure\222 \(1896\) pt. 6, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( One grievous failing of Elizabeth\222s was her occasional pretty and\
picturesque use of dialect )Tj
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(words\227those terrible marks of the beast to the truly genteel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221The Mayor of Casterbridge\222 \(1886\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( She whose youth had seemed to teach that happiness was but the occas\
ional episode in a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(general drama of pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221The Mayor of Casterbridge\222 \(1886\) ch. 45, closing words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.25456 Tm
( It was at present a place perfectly accordant with man\222s nature\227\
neither ghastly, hateful, nor )Tj
T*
(ugly: neither commonplace, unmeaning, nor tame; but, like man, slighted \
and enduring; and )Tj
T*
(withal singularity colossal and mysterious in its swarthy monotony. As w\
ith some persons who )Tj
T*
(have long lived a past, solitude seemed to look out of its countenance. \
It had a lonely face, )Tj
T*
(suggesting tragical possibilities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(\221The Return of the Native\222 \(1878\) bk. 1, ch. 1 \(Egdon Heath\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.50456 Tm
( Human beings, in their generous endeavour to construct a hypothesis \
that shall not degrade a )Tj
T*
(First Cause, have always hesitated to conceive a dominant power of a low\
er moral quality than )Tj
T*
(their own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.67047 Tm
(\221The Return of the Native\222 \(1878\) bk. 6, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.75456 Tm
( A novel is an impression, not an argument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221Tess of the D\222Urbervilles\222 \(5th ed., 189?\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( She had been made to break an accepted social law, but no law known \
to the environment in )Tj
T*
(which she fancied herself such an anomaly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221Tess of the D\222Urbervilles\222 \(1891\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( The two forces were at work here as everywhere, the inherent will to\
enjoy, and the )Tj
T*
(circumstantial will against enjoyment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221Tess of the D\222Urbervilles\222 \(1891\) ch. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( \221Justice\222 was done, and the President of the Immortals \(in Ae\
schylean phrase\) had ended his )Tj
T*
(sport with Tess.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.67047 Tm
(\221Tess of the D\222Urbervilles\222 \(1891\) ch. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.75456 Tm
( Good, but not religious-good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(\221Under the Greenwood Tree\222 \(1872\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.00456 Tm
( It was one of those sequestered spots outside the gates of the world\
...where, from time to time, )Tj
T*
(dramas of a grandeur and unity truly Sophoclean are enacted in the real,\
by virtue of the )Tj
T*
(concentrated passions and closely knit interdependence of the lives ther\
ein.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.17047 Tm
(\221The Woodlanders\222 \(1887\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.25456 Tm
( When the Present has latched its postern behind my tremulous stay,)Tj
T*
( And the May month flaps its glad green leaves like wings,)Tj
T*
( Delicate-filmed as new-spun silk, will the neighbours say,)Tj
T*
( \221He was a man who used to notice such things\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(\221Afterwards\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.50456 Tm
( The bower we shrined to Tennyson,)Tj
T*
( Gentlemen,)Tj
T*
( Is roof-wrecked; damps there drip upon)Tj
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( Sagged seats, the creeper-nails are rust,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The spider is sole denizen;)Tj
T*
( Even she who voiced those rhymes is dust,)Tj
T*
( Gentlemen!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221An Ancient to Ancients\222 \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( \221Peace upon earth!\222 was said. We sing it,)Tj
T*
( And pay a million priests to bring it.)Tj
T*
( After two thousand years of mass)Tj
T*
( We\222ve got as far as poison-gas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Christmas: 1924\222 \(1928\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( In a solitude of the sea)Tj
T*
( Deep from human vanity,)Tj
T*
( And the Pride of Life that planned her, stilly couches she.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Steel chambers, late the pyres)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of her salamandrine fires,)Tj
T*
( Cold currents thrid, and turn to rhythmic tidal lyres.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Over the mirrors meant)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To glass the opulent)Tj
T*
( The sea-worm crawls\227grotesque, slimed, dumb, indifferent.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.17047 Tm
(\221Convergence of the Twain\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.25456 Tm
( The Immanent Will that stirs and urges everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(\221Convergence of the Twain\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.50456 Tm
( At once a voice outburst among)Tj
T*
( The bleak twigs overhead)Tj
T*
( In a full-hearted evensong)Tj
T*
( Of joy illimited;)Tj
T*
( An aged thrush, frail, gaunt, and small,)Tj
T*
( In blast-beruffled plume,)Tj
T*
( Had chosen thus to fling his soul)Tj
T*
( Upon the growing gloom.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So little cause for carollings)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of such ecstatic sound)Tj
T*
( Was written on terrestrial things)Tj
T*
( Afar or nigh around,)Tj
T*
( That I could think there trembled through)Tj
T*
( His happy good-night air)Tj
T*
( Some blessed Hope, whereof he knew)Tj
T*
( And I was unaware.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(\221The Darkling Thrush\222 \(1902\))Tj
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( If way to the Better there be, it exacts a full look at the worst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221De Profundis\222 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Well, World, you have kept faith with me,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kept faith with me;)Tj
T*
( Upon the whole you have proved to be)Tj
T*
( Much as you said you were.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221He Never Expected Much\222 \(1928\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I am the family face;)Tj
T*
( Flesh perishes, I live on,)Tj
T*
( Projecting trait and trace)Tj
T*
( Through time to times anon,)Tj
T*
( And leaping from place to place)Tj
T*
( Over oblivion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Heredity\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( I look into my glass,)Tj
T*
( And viewing wasting skin,)Tj
T*
( And say, \221Would you it came to pass)Tj
T*
( My heart had shrunk as thin!\222)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For then, I, undistrest)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By hearts grown cold to me,)Tj
T*
( Could lonely wait my endless rest)Tj
T*
( With equanimity.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( But Time, to make me grieve,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Part steals, lets part abide;)Tj
T*
( And shakes this fragile frame at eve)Tj
T*
( With throbbings of noontide.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.42047 Tm
(\221I look into my glass\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.50456 Tm
( Only a man harrowing clods)Tj
T*
( In a slow silent walk)Tj
T*
( With an old horse that stumbles and nods)Tj
T*
( Half asleep as they stalk.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Only thin smoke without flame)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the heaps of couch-grass;)Tj
T*
( Yet this will go onward the same)Tj
T*
( Though Dynasties pass.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Yonder a maid and her wight)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come whispering by:)Tj
T*
( War\222s annals will cloud into night)Tj
T*
( Ere their story die.)Tj
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(\221In Time of \223The Breaking of Nations\224\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Let me enjoy the earth no less)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Because the all-enacting Might)Tj
T*
( That fashioned forth its loveliness)Tj
T*
( Had other aims than my delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Let me Enjoy\222 \(1909\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Yes; quaint and curious war is!)Tj
T*
( You shoot a fellow down)Tj
T*
( You\222d treat if met where any bar is,)Tj
T*
( Or help to half-a-crown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Man he Killed\222 \(1909\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( What of the faith and fire within us)Tj
T*
( Men who march away)Tj
T*
( Ere the barn-cocks say)Tj
T*
( Night is growing grey,)Tj
T*
( To hazards whence no tears can win us;)Tj
T*
( What of the faith and fire within us)Tj
T*
( Men who march away?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Men Who March Away\222 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( In the third-class seat sat the journeying boy)Tj
T*
( And the roof-lamp\222s oily flame)Tj
T*
( Played down on his listless form and face,)Tj
T*
( Bewrapt past knowing to what he was going,)Tj
T*
( Or whence he came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Midnight on the Great Western\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( When I set out for Lyonnesse,)Tj
T*
( A hundred miles away,)Tj
T*
( The rime was on the spray,)Tj
T*
( And starlight lit my lonesomeness)Tj
T*
( When I set out for Lyonnesse)Tj
T*
( A hundred miles away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221When I set out for Lyonnesse\222 \(1870\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me,)Tj
T*
( Saying that now you are not as you were)Tj
T*
( When you had changed from the one who was all to me,)Tj
T*
( But as at first, when our day was fair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Voice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( This is the weather the cuckoo likes,)Tj
T*
( And so do I;)Tj
T*
( When showers betumble the chestnut spikes,)Tj
ET
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( And nestlings fly:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the little brown nightingale bills his best,)Tj
T*
( And they sit outside at \221The Travellers\222 Rest\222,)Tj
T*
( And maids come forth sprig-muslin drest,)Tj
T*
( And citizens dream of the south and west,)Tj
T*
( And so do I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Weathers\222 \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( And meadow rivulets overflow,)Tj
T*
( And drops on gate-bars hang in a row,)Tj
T*
( And rooks in families homeward go,)Tj
T*
( And so do I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Weathers\222 \(1922\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.2124 Tm
( 8.38 Julius Hare 1795-1855 and Augustus Hare 1792-1834)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The ancients dreaded death: the Christian can only fear dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(\221Guesses at Truth\222 \(1827\) series 1, p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.75456 Tm
( Half the failures in life arise from pulling in one\222s horse as he\
is leaping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(\221Guesses at Truth\222 \(1827\) series 1, p. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( Truth, when witty, is the wittiest of all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221Guesses at Truth\222 \(3rd ed., 1847\) series 1, p. 339)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.9624 Tm
( 8.39 Maurice Evan Hare 1886-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( There once was an old man who said, \221Damn!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It is borne in upon me I am)Tj
T*
( An engine that moves)Tj
T*
( In determinate grooves,)Tj
T*
( I\222m not even a bus, I\222m a tram.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(\221Limerick\222 \(1905\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 239.2124 Tm
( 8.40 W. F. Hargreaves 1846-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m Burlington Bertie)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I rise at ten thirty and saunter along like a toff,)Tj
T*
( I walk down the Strand with my gloves on my hand,)Tj
T*
( Then I walk down again with them off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Burlington Bertie from Bow\222 \(1915 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( I acted so tragic the house rose like magic,)Tj
T*
( The audience yelled \221You\222re sublime.\222)Tj
T*
( They made me a present of Mornington Crescent)Tj
T*
( They threw it a brick at a time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(\221The Night I Appeared as Macbeth\222 \(1922 song\))Tj
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( 8.41 Sir John Harington 1561-1612)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When I make a feast,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I would my guests should praise it, not the cooks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Epigrams\222 \(1618\) bk. 1, no. 5 \221Against Writers that Carp at \
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15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Treason doth never prosper, what\222s the reason?)Tj
T*
( For if it prosper, none dare call it treason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Epigrams\222 \(1618\) bk. 4, no. 5 \221Of Treason\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 610.4624 Tm
( 8.42 Lord Harlech \(David Ormsby Gore\) 1918-85)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Britain will be honoured by historians more for the way she disposed\
of an empire than for the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(way in which she acquired it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 28 October 1962 sect. 4, p. 11)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 522.7124 Tm
( 8.43 Harold of England 1022-66)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He will give him seven feet of English ground, or as much more as he\
may be taller than other )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(His offer to Harald Sigurdson, invading England: \221King Harald\222s S\
aga\222 sect. 91, in Snorri Sturluson )Tj
T*
(\221Heimskringla\222 \(c.1260, first translated by Samuel Laing as \221H\
istory of the Norse Kings\222, 1844\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.9624 Tm
( 8.44 Jimmy Harper, Will E. Haines, and Tommie Connor)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The biggest aspidistra in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1938; popularized by Gracie Fields\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 350.2124 Tm
( 8.45 Joel Chandler Harris 1848-1908)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( W\222en folks git ole en strucken wid de palsy, dey mus speck ter be\
laff\222d at.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221Nights with Uncle Remus\222 \(1883\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.75456 Tm
( Hit look lak sparrer-grass, hit feel like sparrer-grass, hit tas\222\
e lak sparrer-grass, en I bless ef )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\222taint sparrer-grass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(\221Nights with Uncle Remus\222 \(1883\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.00456 Tm
( All by my own-alone self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(\221Nights with Uncle Remus\222 \(1883\) ch. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.25456 Tm
( We er sorter po\222ly, Sis Tempy, I\222m \222blige ter you. You know\
w\222at de jay-bird say ter der )Tj
T*
(squinch-owl! \221I\222m sickly but sassy.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(\221Nights with Uncle Remus\222 \(1883\) ch. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( Lounjun \222roun\222 en suffer\222n\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus and His Legends of the Old Plantation\222 \(1881\) \221M\
r Wolf tackles Old Man Tarrypin\222\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Tar-baby ain\222t sayin\222 nuthin\222, en Brer Fox, he lay low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus and His Legends of the Old Plantation\222 \(1881\) \221T\
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15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Bred en bawn in a brier-patch!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus and His Legends of the Old Plantation\222 \(1881\) \221T\
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( Licker talks mighty loud w\222en it git loose fum de jug.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings\222 \(1880\) \221Plantation P\
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15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Hongry rooster don\222t cackle w\222en he fine a wum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings\222 \(1880\) \221Plantation P\
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15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Oh, whar shill we go w\222en de great day comes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wid de blowin\222 er de trumpits en de bangin\222 er de drums?)Tj
T*
( How many po\222 sinners\222ll be kotched out late)Tj
T*
( En fine no latch ter de golden gate?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings\222 \(1880\) \221Revival Hymn\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 577.4624 Tm
( 8.46 Lorenz Hart 1895-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Bewitched, bothered and bewildered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1941; music by Richard Rodgers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( When love congeals)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It soon reveals)Tj
T*
( The faint aroma of performing seals,)Tj
T*
( The double crossing of a pair of heels.)Tj
T*
( I wish I were in love again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221I Wish I Were in Love Again\222 \(1937 song; music by Richard Rodger\
s\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( I get too hungry for dinner at eight.)Tj
T*
( I like the theatre, but never come late.)Tj
T*
( I never bother with people I hate.)Tj
T*
( That\222s why the lady is a tramp.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221The Lady is a Tramp\222 \(1937 song; music by Richard Rodgers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( In a mountain greenery)Tj
T*
( Where God paints the scenery\227)Tj
T*
( Just two crazy people together;)Tj
T*
( While you love your lover, let)Tj
T*
( Blue skies be your coverlet\227)Tj
T*
( When it rains we\222ll laugh at the weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(\221Mountain Greenery\222 \(1926 song; music by Richard Rodgers\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 181.4624 Tm
( 8.47 Bret Harte 1836-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And on that grave where English oak and holly)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And laurel wreaths entwine)Tj
T*
( Deem it not all a too presumptuous folly,\227)Tj
T*
( This spray of Western pine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Dickens in Camp\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Thar ain\222t no sense)Tj
T*
( In gittin\222 riled!)Tj
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(\221Jim\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( If, of all words of tongue and pen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The saddest are, \221It might have been,\222)Tj
T*
( More sad are these we daily see:)Tj
T*
( \221It is, but hadn\222t ought to be!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Mrs Judge Jenkins.\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Which I wish to remark,)Tj
T*
( And my language is plain,)Tj
T*
( That for ways that are dark)Tj
T*
( And for tricks that are vain,)Tj
T*
( The heathen Chinee is peculiar,)Tj
T*
( Which the same I would rise to explain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Heathen Chinee: Plain Language from Truthful James\222 \(1870\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James;)Tj
T*
( I am not up to small deceit, or any sinful games.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Society upon the Stanislaus\222 st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( And he smiled a kind of sickly smile, and curled up on the floor,)Tj
T*
( And the subsequent proceedings interested him no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Society upon the Stanislaus\222 st. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 395.9624 Tm
( 8.48 L. P. Hartley 1895-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221The Go-Between\222 \(1953\) prologue.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.2124 Tm
( 8.49 F. W. Harvey b. 1888)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( From troubles of the world)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I turn to ducks)Tj
T*
( Beautiful comical things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221Ducks\222 \(1919\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 220.4624 Tm
( 8.50 Minnie Louise Haskins 1875-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year: \221Give me\
a light that I may tread safely )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(into the unknown.\222 And he replied: \221Go out into the darkness and p\
ut your hand into the Hand of )Tj
T*
(God. That shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way.\222\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.92047 Tm
(\221Desert\222 \(1908\) \221God Knows\222; quoted by King George VI in h\
is Christmas broadcast, 25 December 1939)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 114.7124 Tm
( 8.51 Stephen Hawes d. c.1523)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When the lytle byrdes swetely dyd syng)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Laudes to their maker early in the mornyng.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221The Passetyme of Pleasure\222 \(1509\) ch. 33, st. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.25456 Tm
( For though the day be never so longe,)Tj
ET
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( At last the belles ryngeth to evensonge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221The Passetyme of Pleasure\222 \(1509\) ch. 42, st. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.2124 Tm
( 8.52 Lord Haw-Haw)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See William Joyce \(10.52\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 8.53 R. S. Hawker 1803-75)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And have they fixed the where and when?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And shall Trelawny die?)Tj
T*
( Here\222s twenty thousand Cornish men)Tj
T*
( Will know the reason why!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(\221The Song of the Western Men\222; the last three lines have existed s\
ince the imprisonment by James II, in 1688, )Tj
T*
(of the seven Bishops, including Trelawny, Bishop of Bristol)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 508.7124 Tm
( 8.54 Nathaniel Hawthorne 1804-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dr Johnson\222s morality was as English an article as a beefsteak.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.17047 Tm
(\221Our Old Home\222 \(1863\) \221Lichfield and Uttoxeter\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 438.9624 Tm
( 8.55 Ian Hay \(John Hay Beith\) 1876-1952)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What do you mean, funny? Funny-peculiar or funny ha-ha?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.42047 Tm
(\221The Housemaster\222 \(1938\) act 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.2124 Tm
( 8.56 J. Milton Hayes 1884-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( There\222s a one-eyed yellow idol to the north of Khatmandu,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There\222s a little marble cross below the town,)Tj
T*
( There\222s a broken-hearted woman tends the grave of Mad Carew,)Tj
T*
( And the Yellow God forever gazes down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.67047 Tm
(\221The Green Eye of the Yellow God\222 \(1911\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 245.4624 Tm
( 8.57 Eliza Haywood c.1693-1756)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One has no sooner left off one\222s bib and apron, than people cry\227\
\222Miss will soon be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(married!\222\227and this man, and that man, is presently picked out for \
a husband. Mighty ridiculous! )Tj
T*
(they want to deprive us of all the pleasures of life, just when one begi\
ns to have a relish for them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.92047 Tm
(\221The History of Miss Betty Thoughtless\222 \(1751\) p. 452 in the Pan\
dora ed., 1986)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 139.7124 Tm
( 8.58 William Hazlitt 1778-1830)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( His sayings are generally like women\222s letters; all the pith is i\
n the postscript.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.17047 Tm
(Referring to Charles Lamb in \221Conversations of Northcote.\222 \(Boswe\
ll Redivivus, 1826-27\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.25456 Tm
( He talked on for ever; and you wished him to talk on for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.42047 Tm
(\221Lectures on the English Poets\222 \(1818\) \221On the Living Poets\222\
\(on Coleridge\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.50456 Tm
( So have I loitered my life away, reading books, looking at pictures,\
going to plays, hearing, )Tj
ET
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(thinking, writing on what pleased me best. I have wanted only one thing \
to make me happy, but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wanting that have wanted everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Literary Remains\222 \(1836\) \221My First Acquaintance with Poets\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( No young man believes he shall ever die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Literary Remains\222 \(1836\) \221On the Feeling of Immortality in Y\
outh\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The dupe of friendship, and the fool of love; have I not reason to h\
ate and to despise myself? )Tj
T*
(Indeed I do; and chiefly for not having hated and despised the world eno\
ugh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Plain Speaker\222 \(1826\) \221On the Pleasure of Hating\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The love of liberty is the love of others; the love of power is the \
love of ourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Political Essays\222 \(1819\) \221\223The Times\224 Newspaper\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( There is nothing good to be had in the country, or if there is, they\
will not let you have it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Round Table\222 \(1817\) \221Observations on Mr Wordsworth\222s \
Poem \221The Excursion\222\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( The art of pleasing consists in being pleased.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Round Table\222 \(1817\) \221On Manner\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( But of all footmen the lowest class is literary footmen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Sketches and Essays\222 \(1839\) \221Footmen\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( A nickname is the heaviest stone that the devil can throw at a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Sketches and Essays\222 \(1839\) \221Nicknames\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( The greatest offence against virtue is to speak ill of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Sketches and Essays\222 \(1839\) \221On Cant and Hypocrisy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( There is an unseemly exposure of the mind, as well as of the body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221Sketches and Essays\222 \(1839\) \221On Disagreeable People\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Rules and models destroy genius and art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Sketches and Essays\222 \(1839\) \221On Taste\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( Death cancels everything but truth; and strips a man of everything b\
ut genius and virtue. It is a )Tj
T*
(sort of natural canonization.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221The Spirit of the Age\222 \(1825\) \221Lord Byron\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( The present is an age of talkers, and not of doers; and the reason i\
s, that the world is growing )Tj
T*
(old. We are so far advanced in the Arts and Sciences, that we live in re\
trospect, and doat in past )Tj
T*
(achievement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221The Spirit of the Age\222 \(1825\) \221Mr Coleridge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( He writes as fast as they can read, and he does not write himself do\
wn...His worst is better than )Tj
T*
(any other person\222s best...His works \(taken together\) are almost lik\
e a new edition of human )Tj
T*
(nature. This is indeed to be an author!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.42047 Tm
(\221The Spirit of the Age\222 \(1825\) \221Sir Walter Scott\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.50456 Tm
( Mr Wordsworth\222s genius is a pure emanation of the Spirit of the A\
ge. Had he lived in any )Tj
T*
(other period of the world, he would never have been heard of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221The Spirit of the Age\222 \(1825\) \221Mr Wordsworth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( You will hear more good things on the outside of a stagecoach from L\
ondon to Oxford than if )Tj
T*
(you were to pass a twelvemonth with the undergraduates, or heads of coll\
eges, of that famous )Tj
ET
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(university.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 vol. 1 \(1821\) \221The Ignorance of the Learned\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( We can scarcely hate any one that we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 vol. 2 \(1822\) \221On Criticism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.25456 Tm
( Give me the clear blue sky over my head, and the green turf beneath \
my feet, a winding road )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(before me, and a three hours\222 march to dinner\227and then to thinking\
! It is hard if I cannot start )Tj
T*
(some game on these lone heaths.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 vol. 2 \(1822\) \221On Going a Journey\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( Well, I\222ve had a happy life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(Last words, in W. C. Hazlitt \221Memoirs of William Hazlitt\222 \(1867\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 557.4624 Tm
( 8.59 Denis Healey 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Like being savaged by a dead sheep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.92047 Tm
(On being criticized by Sir Geoffrey Howe in the House of Commons, \221Ha\
nsard\222 14 June 1978, col. 1027)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 487.7124 Tm
( 8.60 Seamus Heaney 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All agog at the plasterer on his ladder)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Skimming our gable and writing our name there)Tj
T*
( With his trowel point, letter by strange letter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.17047 Tm
(\221Alphabets\222 \(1987\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.25456 Tm
( Between my finger and my thumb)Tj
T*
( The squat pen rests.)Tj
T*
( I\222ll dig with it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.42047 Tm
(\221Digging\222 \(1966\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.50456 Tm
( Don\222t be surprised)Tj
T*
( If I demur, for, be advised)Tj
T*
( My passport\222s green.)Tj
T*
( No glass of ours was ever raised)Tj
T*
( To toast The Queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.67047 Tm
(\221Open Letter\222 \(Field Day pamphlet no. 2, 1983\) p. 9, rebuking th\
e editors of \221The Penguin Book of )Tj
T*
(Contemporary British Poetry\222 for including him among its authors)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 196.75456 Tm
( Who would connive)Tj
T*
( in civilised outrage)Tj
T*
( yet understand the exact)Tj
T*
( and tribal, intimate revenge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.92047 Tm
(\221Punishment\222 \(1975\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 106.00456 Tm
( The famous)Tj
T*
( Northern reticence, the tight gag of place)Tj
T*
( And times: yes, yes. Of the \221wee six\222 I sing)Tj
T*
( Where to be saved you only must save face)Tj
ET
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( And whatever you say, you say nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Whatever You Say Say Nothing\222 \(1975\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Is there a life before death? That\222s chalked up)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In Ballymurphy. Competence with pain,)Tj
T*
( Coherent miseries, a bite and sup,)Tj
T*
( We hug our little destiny again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Whatever You Say Say Nothing\222 \(1975\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 614.2124 Tm
( 8.61 Edward Heath 1916\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The unpleasant and unacceptable face of capitalism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 15 May 1973, col. 1243 \(on the Lonrho affair\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 8.62 Reginald Heber 1783-1826)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( From Greenland\222s icy mountains,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From India\222s coral strand,)Tj
T*
( Where Afric\222s sunny fountains)Tj
T*
( Roll down their golden sand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221From Greenland\222s icy mountains\222 \(1821 hymn\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.00456 Tm
( What though the spicy breezes)Tj
T*
( Blow soft o\222er Ceylon\222s isle;)Tj
T*
( Though every prospect pleases,)Tj
T*
( And only man is vile:)Tj
T*
( In vain with lavish kindness)Tj
T*
( The gifts of God are strown;)Tj
T*
( The heathen in his blindness)Tj
T*
( Bows down to wood and stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(\221From Greenland\222s icy mountains\222 \(1821 hymn\). Heber later alt\
ered \221Ceylon\222s isle\222 to \221Java\222s isle\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 269.25456 Tm
( They climbed the steep ascent of Heav\222n)Tj
T*
( Through peril, toil and pain;)Tj
T*
( O God, to us may grace be given)Tj
T*
( To follow in their train.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221The Son of God Goes Forth\222 \(1827 hymn\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.2124 Tm
( 8.63 G. W. F. Hegel 1770-1831)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What experience and history teach is this\227that people and governm\
ents never have learned )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(anything from history, or acted on principles deduced from it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.67047 Tm
(\221Philosophy of History\222 \(1832\) introduction)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 79.4624 Tm
( 8.64 Heinrich Heine 1797-1856)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dort, wo man B\374cher)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Verbrennt, verbrennt man auch am Ende Menschen.)Tj
ET
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( Wherever books are burned, men also, in the end, are burned.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 732.17047 Tm
(\221Almansor\222 \(1823\) l. 245)Tj
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( Auf Fl\374geln des Gesanges.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( On the wings of song.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 673.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1823\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 652.75456 Tm
( Ich weiss nicht, was soll es bedeuten,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dass ich so traurig bin;)Tj
T*
( Ein M\344rchen aus alten Zeiten,)Tj
T*
( Das kommt mir nicht aus dem Sinn.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I know not why I am so sad; I cannot get out of my head a fairy-tale\
of olden times.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.17047 Tm
(\221Die Lorelei\222 \(1826-31\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.25456 Tm
( Sie hatten sich beide so herzlich lieb,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Spitzb\374bin war sie, er war ein Dieb.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( They loved each other beyond belief\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She was a strumpet, he was a thief.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.67047 Tm
(\221Neue Gedichte\222 \(1852\) \221Ein Weib\222 \(translated by Louis Un\
termeyer, 1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.75456 Tm
( H\366rt ihr das Gl\366ckchen klingeln? Kniet nieder\227Man bringt di\
e Sakramente einem sterbenden )Tj
T*
(Gotte.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Do you hear the little bell tinkle? Kneel down. They are bringing th\
e sacraments to a dying god.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.17047 Tm
(\221Zur Geschichte der Religion und Philosophie in Deutschland\222 \(183\
4\) bk. 2, last line)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.25456 Tm
( Dieses merkt Euch, Ihr stolzen M\344nner der Tat. Ihr seid nichts al\
s unbewusste Handlanger der )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Gedankenm\344nner...Maximilian Robespierre war nichts als die Hand von J\
ean Jacques Rousseau, )Tj
T*
(die blutige Hand, die aus dem Schosse der Zeit den Leib hervorzog, desse\
n Seele Rousseau )Tj
T*
(geschaffen.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Note this, you proud men of action. You are nothing but the unconsci\
ous hodmen of the men )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of ideas...Maximilien Robespierre was nothing but the hand of Jean Jacqu\
es Rousseau, the )Tj
T*
(bloody hand that drew from the womb of time the body whose soul Rousseau\
had created.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.67047 Tm
(\221Zur Geschichte der Religion und Philosophie in Deutschland\222 \(183\
4\) bk. 3, para. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.75456 Tm
( Dieu me pardonnera. C\222est son m\350tier.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God will pardon me. It is His trade.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.17047 Tm
(On his deathbed, in Edmond and Jules de Goncourt \221The Goncourt Journa\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 150.9624 Tm
( 8.65 Werner Heisenberg 1901-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ein Fachmann ist ein Mann, der einige der gr\366bsten Fehler kennt, \
die man in dem betreffenden )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Fach machen kann und der sie deshalb zu vermeiden versteht.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( An expert is someone who knows some of the worst mistakes that can b\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.67047 Tm
(\221Der Teil und das Ganze\222 \(1969\) ch. 17 \(translated by A. J. Pom\
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ET
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( 8.66 Joseph Heller 1923\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that\
a concern for one\222s own )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the proce\
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T*
(would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn\222t, but if he \
was sane he had to fly them. )Tj
T*
(If he flew them he was crazy and didn\222t have to; but if he didn\222t \
want to he was sane and had to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Catch-22\222 \(1961\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.50456 Tm
( Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some me\
n have mediocrity )Tj
T*
(thrust upon them. With Major Major it had been all three.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221Catch-22\222 \(1961\) ch. 9.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 574.4624 Tm
( 8.67 Lillian Hellman 1905-84)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year\222s fashio\
ns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(Letter to John S. Wood, 19 May 1952, in \221US Congress Committee Hearin\
g on Un-American )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Activities\222 \(1952\) pt. 8, p. 3546)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 8.68 Helv\350tius \(Claude Arien Helv\350tius\) 1715-71)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222\350ducation nous faisait ce que nous sommes. Education made us\
what we are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221De l\222esprit\222 \(1758\) \221Discours 3\222 ch. 30)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.9624 Tm
( 8.69 Felicia Hemans 1793-1835)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The boy stood on the burning deck)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whence all but he had fled;)Tj
T*
( The flame that lit the battle\222s wreck)Tj
T*
( Shone round him o\222er the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.42047 Tm
(\221Casabianca\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 307.50456 Tm
( The stately homes of England,)Tj
T*
( How beautiful they stand!)Tj
T*
( Amidst their tall ancestral trees,)Tj
T*
( O\222er all the pleasant land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.67047 Tm
(\221The Homes of England\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 205.4624 Tm
( 8.70 John Heming 1556-1630 and Henry Condell d. 1627)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Well! it is now public, and you will stand for your privileges we kn\
ow: to read, and censure. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Do so, but buy it first. That doth best commend a book, the stationer sa\
ys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
(First Folio Shakespeare \(1623\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.00456 Tm
( Who, as he was a happy imitator of Nature, was a most gentle express\
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T*
(hand went together: And what he thought, he uttered with that easiness, \
that we have scarce )Tj
T*
(received from him a blot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(First Folio Shakespeare \(1623\) preface)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 44.9624 Tm
( 8.71 Ernest Hemingway 1899-1961)Tj
ET
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( Where do the noses go? I always wondered where the noses would go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221For Whom the Bell Tolls\222 \(1940\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( But did thee feel the earth move?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221For Whom the Bell Tolls\222 \(1940\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Paris is a movable feast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221A Movable Feast\222 \(1964\) epigraph)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( The sun also rises.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Grace under pressure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(When asked what he meant by \221guts\222 in an interview with Dorothy Pa\
rker: \221New Yorker\222 30 November 1929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Switzerland is a small, steep country, much more up and down than si\
deways, and is all stuck )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Toronto Star Weekly\222 4 March 1922)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( See also F. Scott Fitzgerald \(6.34\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 8.72 Arthur W. D. Henley)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nobody loves a fairy when she\222s forty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 411.7124 Tm
( 8.73 W. E. Henley 1849-1903)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Out of the night that covers me,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Black as the Pit from pole to pole,)Tj
T*
( I thank whatever gods may be)Tj
T*
( For my unconquerable soul.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( In the fell clutch of circumstance,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I have not winced nor cried aloud:)Tj
T*
( Under the bludgeonings of chance)Tj
T*
( My head is bloody, but unbowed.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Invictus. In Memoriam R.T.H.B.\222 \(1888\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( It matters not how strait the gate,)Tj
T*
( How charged with punishments the scroll,)Tj
T*
( I am the master of my fate:)Tj
T*
( I am the captain of my soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Invictus. In Memoriam R.T.H.B.\222 \(1888\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( So be my passing!)Tj
T*
( My task accomplished and the long day done,)Tj
T*
( My wages taken, and in my heart)Tj
T*
( Some late lark singing,)Tj
T*
( Let me be gathered to the quiet west,)Tj
T*
( The sundown splendid and serene,)Tj
ET
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BT
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( Death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Margaritae Sororis\222 \(1888\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( What have I done for you,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( England, my England?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Pro Rege Nostro\222 \(1900\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 8.74 Henri IV 1553-1610)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Je veux qu\222il n\222y ait si pauvre paysan en mon royaume qu\222il\
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0 -1.2 TD
(au pot.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(In Hardouin de P\350r\350fixe \221Histoire de Henry le Grand\222 \(1681\)\
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15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Pends-toi, brave Crillon; nous avons combattu \341 Arques et tu n\222\
y \350tais pas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hang yourself, brave Crillon; we fought at Arques and you were not t\
here.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 496.42047 Tm
(Traditional form given by Voltaire to a letter from Henri to Crillon, 20\
September 1597, in Lettres missives de )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Henri IV, Collection des documents in\351dits de l\222histoire de France\
vol. 4 \(1847\) p. 848. Henri\222s actual words )Tj
T*
(were )Tj
T*
(Brave Crillon, pendez-vous de n\222avoir \350t\350 ici pr\351s de moi lu\
ndi dernier \341 la plus belle occasion qui se soit )Tj
T*
(jamais vue et qui peut-\352tre se verra jamais.)Tj
T*
(Brave Crillon, hang yourself for not having been at my side last Monday \
on the finest occasion which ever )Tj
T*
(has been or which perhaps ever will be.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( Paris vaut bien une messe.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Paris is well worth a mass.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.92047 Tm
(Attributed either to Henri IV, or to his minister Sully in conversation \
with Henri)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 327.00456 Tm
( The wisest fool in Christendom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.17047 Tm
(Referring to James I of England, attributed both to Henri IV and Sully. \
The French original is not known.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.9624 Tm
( 8.75 Henry II 1133-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Will no one revenge me of the injuries I have sustained from one tur\
bulent priest?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.42047 Tm
(Of St Thomas Becket \(December 1170\), as in oral tradition. G. Lyttelto\
n \221History of the Life of King Henry )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the Second\222 \(1769\) pt. 4, p. 353; also Herbert of Bosham \221Vita S\
ancti Thomae\222 bk. 5, ch. 11 in \221The Rolls )Tj
T*
(Series\222 67 \221Materials for the History of Thomas Becket\222 3 \(188\
7\) p. 487)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 179.2124 Tm
( 8.76 Henry VIII 1491-1547)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The King found her [Anne of Cleves] so different from her picture...\
that...he swore they had )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(brought him a Flanders mare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(Tobias Smollett \221Complete History of England\222 \(3rd ed., 1759\) vo\
l. 6, p. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( This man hath the right sow by the ear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.92047 Tm
(Attributed \(of Thomas Cranmer\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 54.7124 Tm
( 8.77 Matthew Henry 1662-1714)Tj
ET
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( The better day, the worse deed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221An Exposition on the Old and New Testament\222 \(1710\) Genesis ch. \
3, v. 6, gloss 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He rolls it under his tongue as a sweet morsel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221An Exposition of the Old and New Testament\222 \(1710\) Psalm 36, v.\
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15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( They that die by famine die by inches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221An Exposition of the Old and New Testament\222 \(1710\) Psalm 59, v.\
15, gloss 5 \(referring incorrectly to v. 13\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( All this and heaven too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.7124 Tm
( 8.78 O. Henry \(William Sydney Porter\) 1862-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life is made up of sobs, sniffles, and smiles, with sniffles predomi\
nating.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(\221Four Million\222 \(1906\) \221Gift of the Magi\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( It was beautiful and simple as all truly great swindles are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Gentle Grafter\222 \(1908\) \221Octopus Marooned\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( Turn up the lights; I don\222t want to go home in the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(Last words, quoting 1907 song by Harry Williams, in Charles Alphonso Smi\
th \221O. Henry Biography\222 \(1916\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ch. 9.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 436.4624 Tm
( 8.79 Patrick Henry 1736-99)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Caesar had his Brutus\227Charles the First, his Cromwell\227and Geor\
ge the)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Third\227\(\221Treason,\222 cried the Speaker\)...may profit by thei\
r example. If this be treason, make )Tj
T*
(the most of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(Speech in the Virginia assembly, May 1765, in William Wirt \221Patrick H\
enry\222 \(1818\) sect. 2, p. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.00456 Tm
( I am not a Virginian, but an American.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.17047 Tm
(In [John Adams\222s] Notes of Debates in the Continental Congress, Phila\
delphia, 6 September 1774: L. H. )Tj
T*
(Butterfield \(ed.\) \221Diary and Autobiography of John Adams\222 \(196\
1\) vol. 2, p. 125)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.25456 Tm
( I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liber\
ty, or give me death!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.42047 Tm
(Speech in Virginia Convention, 23 March 1775, in William Wirt \221Patric\
k Henry\222 \(1818\) sect. 4, p. 123)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 242.2124 Tm
( 8.80 Joseph Henshaw 1603-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One doth but breakfast here, another dines, he that liveth longest d\
oth but sup; we must all go )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to bed in another world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221Horae Succisivae\222 \(1631\) pt. 1, p. 80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 154.4624 Tm
( 8.81 Heraclitus fl. 513 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Everything flows and nothing stays.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(In Plato \221Cratylus\222 402a)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( You can\222t step twice into the same river.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(In Plato \221Cratylus\222 402a)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( A man\222s character is his fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221On the Universe\222 Fragment 121 \(translated for Loeb Classical Lib\
rary by W. H. S. Jones\).)Tj
ET
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( The road up and the road down are one and the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(In H. Diels and W. Krauz \221Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker\222 \(7th e\
d., 1954\) fragment 60)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.4624 Tm
( 8.82 A. P. Herbert 1890-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Don\222t let\222s go to the dogs tonight, For mother will be there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 666.92047 Tm
(\221Don\222t Let\222s Go to the Dogs Tonight\222 \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.00456 Tm
( Don\222t tell my mother I\222m living in sin, Don\222t let the old f\
olks know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(\221Don\222t Tell My Mother I\222m Living in Sin\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( The Farmer will never be happy again;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He carries his heart in his boots;)Tj
T*
( For either the rain is destroying his grain)Tj
T*
( Or the drought is destroying his roots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.42047 Tm
(\221The Farmer\222 \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.50456 Tm
( As my poor father used to say)Tj
T*
( In 1863,)Tj
T*
( Once people start on all this Art)Tj
T*
( Goodbye, moralitee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.67047 Tm
(\221Lines for a Worthy Person\222 \(1930\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.75456 Tm
( Other people\222s babies\227)Tj
T*
( That\222s my life!)Tj
T*
( Mother to dozens,)Tj
T*
( And nobody\222s wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.92047 Tm
(\221Other People\222s Babies\222 \(1930\) \(also a 1934 song, with music\
by Vivian Ellis\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.00456 Tm
( This high official, all allow,)Tj
T*
( Is grossly overpaid;)Tj
T*
( There wasn\222t any Board, and now)Tj
T*
( There isn\222t any Trade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.17047 Tm
(\221The President of the Board of Trade\222 \(1922\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.25456 Tm
( Nothing is wasted, nothing is in vain:)Tj
T*
( The seas roll over but the rocks remain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.42047 Tm
(\221Tough at the Top\222 \(operetta c.1949\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.50456 Tm
( Holy deadlock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1934\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.75456 Tm
( People must not do things for fun. We are not here for fun. There is\
no reference to fun in any )Tj
T*
(Act of Parliament.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.92047 Tm
(\221Uncommon Law\222 \(1935\) \221Is it a Free Country?\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.00456 Tm
( The critical period in matrimony is breakfast-time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.17047 Tm
(\221Uncommon Law\222 \(1935\) \221Is Marriage Lawful?\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.25456 Tm
( \221Was the cow crossed?\222 \221No, your worship, it was an open co\
w.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.42047 Tm
(\221Uncommon Law\222 \(1935\) \221The Negotiable Cow\222 \(in which an a\
ttempt is made to write a cheque on a cow\))Tj
ET
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( The Common Law of England has been laboriously built about a mythica\
l figure\227the figure )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of \221The Reasonable Man\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Uncommon Law\222 \(1935\) \221The Reasonable Man\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 8.83 Lord Herbert of Cherbury 1583-1648)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now that the April of your youth adorns)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The garden of your face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Ditty: Now that the April\222 \(1665\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 8.84 George Herbert 1593-1633)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whereas my birth and spirit rather took)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The way that takes the town;)Tj
T*
( Thou didst betray me to a lingering book,)Tj
T*
( And wrap me in a gown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 507.67047 Tm
(\221Affliction \(1\)\222 \(1633\) l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 486.75456 Tm
( Now I am here, what thou wilt do with me)Tj
T*
( None of my books will show:)Tj
T*
( I read, and sigh, and wish I were a tree;)Tj
T*
( For then I should grow)Tj
T*
( To fruit or shade: at least some bird would trust)Tj
T*
( Her household to me, and I should be just.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(\221Affliction \(1\)\222 \(1633\) l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( Ah, my dear God! though I am clean forgot,)Tj
T*
( Let me not love Thee, if I love Thee not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.17047 Tm
(\221Affliction \(1\)\222 \(1633\) l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.25456 Tm
( Love is that liquor sweet and most divine,)Tj
T*
( Which my God feels as blood; but I, as wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(\221The Agonie\222 \(1633\) l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 250.50456 Tm
( Let all the world in ev\222ry corner sing)Tj
T*
( My God and King.)Tj
T*
( The heavens are not too high,)Tj
T*
( His praise may thither fly;)Tj
T*
( The earth is not too low,)Tj
T*
( His praises there may grow.)Tj
T*
( Let all the world in ev\222ry corner sing)Tj
T*
( My God and King.)Tj
T*
( The Church with psalms must shout,)Tj
T*
( No door can keep them out:)Tj
T*
( But above all, the heart)Tj
T*
( Must bear the longest part.)Tj
ET
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(\221Antiphon: Let all the world in ev\222ry corner sing\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Hearken unto a Verser, who may chance)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Rhyme thee to good, and make a bait of pleasure.)Tj
T*
( A verse may find him, who a sermon flies,)Tj
T*
( And turn delight into a sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Church Porch\222 \(1633\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O England! full of sin, but most of sloth;)Tj
T*
( Spit out thy phlegm, and fill thy breast with glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Church Porch\222 \(1633\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Judge not the preacher, for he is thy Judge:)Tj
T*
( If thou mislike him, thou conceiv\222st him not.)Tj
T*
( God calleth preaching folly. Do not grudge)Tj
T*
( To pick out treasures from an earthen pot.)Tj
T*
( The worst speaks something good: if all want sense,)Tj
T*
( God takes a text, and preacheth patience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Church Porch\222 \(1633\) st. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( I struck the board, and cried, \221No more.)Tj
T*
( I will abroad.\222)Tj
T*
( What? shall I ever sigh and pine?)Tj
T*
( My lines and life are free; free as the road,)Tj
T*
( Loose as the wind, as large as store.)Tj
T*
( Shall I be still in suit?)Tj
T*
( Have I no harvest but a thorn)Tj
T*
( To let me blood, and not restore)Tj
T*
( What I have lost with cordial fruit?)Tj
T*
( Sure there was wine)Tj
T*
( Before my sighs did dry it; there was corn)Tj
T*
( Before my tears did drown it;)Tj
T*
( Is the year only lost to me?)Tj
T*
( Have I no bays to crown it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221The Collar\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( Away; take heed:)Tj
T*
( I will abroad.)Tj
T*
( Call in thy death\222s-head there: tie up thy fears.)Tj
T*
( He that forbears)Tj
T*
( To suit and serve his need,)Tj
T*
( Deserves his load.)Tj
T*
( But as I raved and grew more fierce and wild)Tj
T*
( At every word,)Tj
T*
( Methought I heard one calling, \221Child\222;)Tj
ET
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( And I replied, \221My Lord.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Collar\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O that thou shouldst give dust a tongue)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To cry to thee,)Tj
T*
( And then not hear it crying!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Denial\222 \(1633\) l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Love is swift of foot;)Tj
T*
( Love\222s a man of war,)Tj
T*
( And can shoot,)Tj
T*
( And can hit from far.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Discipline\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( I got me flowers to strew Thy way;)Tj
T*
( I got me boughs off many a tree:)Tj
T*
( But Thou wast up by break of day,)Tj
T*
( And brought\222st Thy sweets along with Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Easter\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Teach me, my God and King,)Tj
T*
( In all things Thee to see,)Tj
T*
( And what I do in any thing)Tj
T*
( To do it as for Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Elixir\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( A man that looks on glass,)Tj
T*
( On it may stay his eye;)Tj
T*
( Or if he pleaseth, through it pass,)Tj
T*
( And then the heaven espy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Elixir\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( A servant with this clause)Tj
T*
( Makes drudgery divine:)Tj
T*
( Who sweeps a room as for Thy laws)Tj
T*
( Makes that and th\222 action fine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221The Elixir\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Oh that I were an orange-tree,)Tj
T*
( That busy plant!)Tj
T*
( Then I should ever laden be,)Tj
T*
( And never want)Tj
T*
( Some fruit for Him that dressed me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Employment: He that is weary, let him sit\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( Who would have thought my shrivelled heart)Tj
T*
( Could have recovered greenness?)Tj
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(\221The Flower\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( And now in age I bud again,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( After so many deaths I live and write;)Tj
T*
( I once more smell the dew and rain,)Tj
T*
( And relish versing: O my only Light,)Tj
T*
( It cannot be)Tj
T*
( That I am he)Tj
T*
( On whom Thy tempests fell all night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221The Flower\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( Lovely enchanting language, sugar-cane,)Tj
T*
( Honey of roses!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Forerunners\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Death is still working like a mole,)Tj
T*
( And digs my grave at each remove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Grace\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( I made a posy while the day ran by:)Tj
T*
( Here will I smell my remnant out, and tie)Tj
T*
( My life within this band.)Tj
T*
( But Time did beckon to the flowers, and they)Tj
T*
( By noon most cunningly did steal away,)Tj
T*
( And withered in my hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Life\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Love bade me welcome: yet my soul drew back,)Tj
T*
( Guilty of dust and sin.)Tj
T*
( But quick-eyed Love, observing me grow slack)Tj
T*
( From my first entrance in,)Tj
T*
( Drew nearer to me, sweetly questioning,)Tj
T*
( If I lacked any thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Love: Love bade me welcome\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( \221You must sit down,\222 says Love, \221and taste my meat.\222)Tj
T*
( So I did sit and eat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Love: Love bade me welcome\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( For us the winds do blow,)Tj
T*
( The earth doth rest, heaven move, and fountains flow.)Tj
T*
( Nothing we see, but means our good,)Tj
T*
( As our delight or as our treasure:)Tj
T*
( The whole is either our cupboard of food,)Tj
T*
( Or cabinet of pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Man\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Oh mighty love! Man is one world, and hath)Tj
T*
( Another to attend him.)Tj
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(\221Man\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( When boys go first to bed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They step into their voluntary graves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Mortification\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( Exalted manna, gladness of the best,)Tj
T*
( Heaven in ordinary, man well drest,)Tj
T*
( The Milky Way, the bird of Paradise,)Tj
T*
( Church-bells beyond the stars heard, the soul\222s blood,)Tj
T*
( The land of spices; something understood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Prayer: Prayer the Church\222s banquet\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( When God at first made man,)Tj
T*
( Having a glass of blessings standing by;)Tj
T*
( Let us \(said he\) pour on him all we can:)Tj
T*
( Let the world\222s riches, which dispersed lie,)Tj
T*
( Contract into a span.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Pulley\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( He would adore my gifts instead of Me,)Tj
T*
( And rest in Nature, not the God of Nature:)Tj
T*
( So both should losers be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Pulley\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Yet let him keep the rest,)Tj
T*
( But keep them with repining restlessness:)Tj
T*
( Let him be rich and weary, that at least,)Tj
T*
( If goodness lead him not, yet weariness)Tj
T*
( May toss him to My breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Pulley\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( But who does hawk at eagles with a dove?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Sacrifice\222 \(1633\) l. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Man stole the fruit, but I must climb the tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Sacrifice\222 \(1633\) l. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Lord, with what care Thou hast begirt us round!)Tj
T*
( Parents first season us: then schoolmasters)Tj
T*
( Deliver us to laws; they send us bound)Tj
T*
( To rules of reason, holy messengers,)Tj
T*
( Pulpits and Sundays, sorrow dogging sin,)Tj
T*
( Afflictions sorted, anguish of all sizes,)Tj
T*
( Fine nets and stratagems to catch us in,)Tj
T*
( Bibles laid open, millions of surprises.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Sin: Lord, with what care Thou hast begirt us round!\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Yet all these fences and their whole array)Tj
ET
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( One cunning bosom\227sin blows quite away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Sin: Lord, with what care Thou hast begirt us round!\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( Grasp not at much, for fear thou losest all.)Tj
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(\221The Size\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( The God of love my Shepherd is,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And He that doth me feed:)Tj
T*
( While He is mine, and I am His,)Tj
T*
( What can I want or need?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The 23rd Psalm\222 \(1633\).)Tj
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( Lord, make me coy and tender to offend:)Tj
T*
( In friendship, first I think, if that agree)Tj
T*
( Which I intend,)Tj
T*
( Unto my friend\222s intent and end.)Tj
T*
( I would not use a friend, as I use Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Unkindness\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( My friend may spit upon my curious floor:)Tj
T*
( Would he have gold? I lend it instantly;)Tj
T*
( But let the poor,)Tj
T*
( And Thou within them, starve at door.)Tj
T*
( I cannot use a friend, as I use Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Unkindness\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright,)Tj
T*
( The bridal of the earth and sky,)Tj
T*
( The dew shall weep thy fall to-night;)Tj
T*
( For thou must die.)Tj
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( Sweet rose, whose hue angry and brave)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Bids the rash gazer wipe his eye:)Tj
T*
( Thy root is ever in its grave,)Tj
T*
( And thou must die.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Sweet spring, full of sweet days and roses,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A box where sweets compacted lie;)Tj
T*
( My music shows ye have your closes,)Tj
T*
( And all must die.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
(\221Virtue\222 \(1633\))Tj
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( Only a sweet and virtuous soul,)Tj
T*
( Like seasoned timber, never gives;)Tj
T*
( But though the whole world turn to coal,)Tj
T*
( Then chiefly lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221Virtue\222 \(1633\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.25456 Tm
( He that makes a good war makes a good peace.)Tj
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(\221Outlandish Proverbs\222 \(1640\) no. 420)Tj
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( He that lives in hope danceth without music.)Tj
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(\221Outlandish Proverbs\222 \(1640\) no. 1006)Tj
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( 8.85 Robert Herrick 1591-1674)Tj
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( Here a little child I stand,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Heaving up my either hand;)Tj
T*
( Cold as paddocks though they be,)Tj
T*
( Here I lift them up to Thee,)Tj
T*
( For a benison to fall)Tj
T*
( On our meat, and on us all. Amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(\221Another Grace for a Child\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.00456 Tm
( I sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds, and bowers:)Tj
T*
( Of April, May, of June, and July-flowers.)Tj
T*
( I sing of May-poles, Hock-carts, wassails, wakes,)Tj
T*
( Of bride-grooms, brides, and of their bridal-cakes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.17047 Tm
(\221The Argument of his Book\222 from \221Hesperides\222 \(1648\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.25456 Tm
( And once more yet \(ere I am laid out dead\))Tj
T*
( Knock at a star with my exalted head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.42047 Tm
(\221The Bad Season Makes the Poet Sad\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.50456 Tm
( Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry,)Tj
T*
( Full and fair ones; come and buy:)Tj
T*
( If so be, you ask me where)Tj
T*
( They do grow? I answer, there,)Tj
T*
( Where my Julia\222s lips do smile;)Tj
T*
( There\222s the land, or cherry-isle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.67047 Tm
(\221Cherry-Ripe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.75456 Tm
( Get up, get up for shame, the blooming morn)Tj
T*
( Upon her wings presents the god unshorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.92047 Tm
(\221Corinna\222s Going a-Maying\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.00456 Tm
( Get up, sweet Slug-a-bed, and see)Tj
T*
( The dew bespangling herb and tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.17047 Tm
(\221Corinna\222s Going a-Maying\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.25456 Tm
( So when or you or I are made)Tj
T*
( A fable, song, or fleeting shade;)Tj
T*
( All love, all liking, all delight)Tj
T*
( Lies drowned with us in endless night.)Tj
T*
( Then while time serves, and we are but decaying;)Tj
T*
( Come, my Corinna, come, let\222s go a-Maying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.42047 Tm
(\221Corinna\222s Going a-Maying\222)Tj
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( A sweet disorder in the dress)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kindles in clothes a wantonness:)Tj
T*
( A lawn about the shoulders thrown)Tj
T*
( Into a fine distraction...)Tj
T*
( A careless shoe-string, in whose tie)Tj
T*
( I see a wild civility:)Tj
T*
( Do more bewitch me, than when Art)Tj
T*
( Is too precise in every part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Delight in Disorder\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( It is the end that crowns us, not the fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The End\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( In prayer the lips ne\222er act the winning part,)Tj
T*
( Without the sweet concurrence of the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Heart\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( When the artless doctor sees)Tj
T*
( No one hope, but of his fees,)Tj
T*
( And his skill runs on the lees;)Tj
T*
( Sweet Spirit, comfort me!)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( When his potion and his pill,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Has, or none, or little skill,)Tj
T*
( Meet for nothing, but to kill;)Tj
T*
( Sweet Spirit, comfort me!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221His Litany to the Holy Spirit\222)Tj
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( Only a little more)Tj
T*
( I have to write,)Tj
T*
( Then I\222ll give o\222er,)Tj
T*
( And bid the world Good-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221His Poetry his Pillar\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( Love is a circle that doth restless move)Tj
T*
( In the same sweet eternity of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Love What It Is\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee,)Tj
T*
( The shooting-stars attend thee;)Tj
T*
( And the elves also,)Tj
T*
( Whose little eyes glow,)Tj
T*
( Like the sparks of fire, befriend thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Night-Piece, to Julia\222)Tj
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( Night makes no difference \222twixt the Priest and Clerk;)Tj
T*
( Joan as my Lady is as good i\222 th\222 dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221No Difference i\222 th\222 Dark\222)Tj
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( Made us nobly wild, not mad.)Tj
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(\221An Ode for him [Ben Jonson]\222)Tj
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( And yet each verse of thine)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Out-did the meat, out-did the frolic wine.)Tj
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(\221An Ode for him [Ben Jonson]\222)Tj
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( Fain would I kiss my Julia\222s dainty leg,)Tj
T*
( Which is as white and hairless as an egg.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221On Julia\222s Legs\222)Tj
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( Praise they that will times past, I joy to see)Tj
T*
( My self now live: this age best pleaseth me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Present Time Best Pleaseth\222)Tj
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( But, for Man\222s fault, then was the thorn,)Tj
T*
( Without the fragrant rose-bud, born;)Tj
T*
( But ne\222er the rose without the thorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Rose\222)Tj
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( A little saint best fits a little shrine,)Tj
T*
( A little prop best fits a little vine,)Tj
T*
( As my small cruse best fits my little wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221A Ternary of Littles, upon a Pipkin of Jelly sent to a Lady\222)Tj
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( For my Embalming \(Sweetest\) there will be)Tj
T*
( No Spices wanting, when I\222m laid by thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221To Anthea: Now is the Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Bid me to live, and I will live)Tj
T*
( Thy Protestant to be:)Tj
T*
( Or bid me love, and I will give)Tj
T*
( A loving heart to thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221To Anthea, Who May Command Him Anything\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Bid me despair, and I\222ll despair,)Tj
T*
( Under that cypress tree:)Tj
T*
( Or bid me die, and I will dare)Tj
T*
( E\222en Death, to die for thee.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Thou art my life, my love, my heart,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The very eyes of me:)Tj
T*
( And hast command of every part,)Tj
T*
( To live and die for thee.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221To Anthea, Who May Command Him Anything\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Fair daffodils, we weep to see)Tj
T*
( You haste away so soon:)Tj
T*
( As yet the early-rising sun)Tj
T*
( Has not attained his noon.)Tj
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( Stay, stay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Until the hasting day)Tj
T*
( Has run)Tj
T*
( But to the even-song;)Tj
T*
( And, having prayed together, we)Tj
T*
( Will go with you along.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We have short time to stay, as you,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We have as short a Spring;)Tj
T*
( As quick a growth to meet decay,)Tj
T*
( As you or any thing.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.92047 Tm
(\221To Daffodils\222)Tj
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( If any thing delight me for to print)Tj
T*
( My book, \222tis this; that Thou, my God, art in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.17047 Tm
(\221To God\222)Tj
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( He loves his bonds, who when the first are broke,)Tj
T*
( Submits his neck unto a second yoke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(\221To Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,)Tj
T*
( Old Time is still a-flying:)Tj
T*
( And this same flower that smiles to-day,)Tj
T*
( To-morrow will be dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.67047 Tm
(\221To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.75456 Tm
( Then be not coy, but use your time;)Tj
T*
( And while ye may, go marry:)Tj
T*
( For having lost but once your prime,)Tj
T*
( You may for ever tarry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.92047 Tm
(\221To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.00456 Tm
( Whenas in silks my Julia goes,)Tj
T*
( Then, then \(methinks\) how sweetly flows)Tj
T*
( That liquefaction of her clothes.)Tj
T*
( Next, when I cast mine eyes and see)Tj
T*
( That brave vibration each way free;)Tj
T*
( O how that glittering taketh me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.17047 Tm
(\221Upon Julia\222s Clothes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.25456 Tm
( So smooth, so sweet, so silvery is thy voice,)Tj
T*
( As, could they hear, the damned would make no noise,)Tj
T*
( But listen to thee \(walking in thy chamber\))Tj
T*
( Melting melodious words, to lutes of amber.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.42047 Tm
(\221Upon Julia\222s Voice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.50456 Tm
( To work a wonder, God would have her shown,)Tj
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( At once, a bud, and yet a rose full-blown.)Tj
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(\221The Virgin Mary\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.86 Lord Hervey 1696-1743)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whoever would lie usefully should lie seldom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of the Reign of George II\222 \(1848\) vol. 1, ch. 19)Tj
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( I am fit for nothing but to carry candles and set chairs all my life\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(Letter to Sir Robert Walpole, 1737, in \221Memoirs of the Reign of Georg\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 598.4624 Tm
( 8.87 Hesiod c.700 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The half is greater than the whole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221Works and Days\222 l. 40)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 528.7124 Tm
( 8.88 Hermann Hesse 1877-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Wenn wir einen Menschen hassen, so hassen wir in seinem Bild etwas, \
was in uns selber sisst. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Was nicht in uns selber ist, das regt uns nicht auf.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If you hate a person, you hate something in him that is part of your\
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0 -1.2 TD
(ourselves doesn\222t disturb us.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Demian\222 \(1919\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( Auf Kosten der Intensit\344t also erreicht er [der B\374rger] Erhalt\
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T*
(Gottbesessenheit erntet er Gewissensruhe, statt Lust Behagen, statt Frei\
heit Bequemlichkeit, statt )Tj
T*
(t\366dlicher Glut eine angenehme Temperatur.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The bourgeois prefers comfort to pleasure, convenience to liberty, a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(to the deathly inner consuming fire.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Der Steppenwolf\222 \(1927\) \221Tractat vom Steppenwolf\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.89 Gordon Hewart \(Viscount Hewart\) 1870-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A long line of cases shows that it is not merely of some importance,\
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0 -1.2 TD
(importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly a\
nd undoubtedly be seen )Tj
T*
(to be done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(Rex v Sussex Justices, 9 November 1923, in \221Law Reports King\222s Ben\
ch Division\222 \(1924\) vol. 1, p. 259)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 182.9624 Tm
( 8.90 Du Bose Heyward 1885-1940 and Ira Gershwin 1896-1983)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It ain\222t necessarily so\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The things that you\222re liable)Tj
T*
( To read in the Bible\227)Tj
T*
( It ain\222t necessarily so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 91.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1935; music by George Gershwin\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 70.50456 Tm
( Summer time an\222 the livin\222 is easy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.67047 Tm
(\221Summer Time\222 \(1935 song; music by George Gershwin\))Tj
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( 8.91 John Heywood c.1497-c.1580)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All a green willow, willow;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All a green willow is my garland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.92047 Tm
(\221The Green Willow\222.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 8.92 Thomas Heywood c.1574-1641)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Seven cities warred for Homer, being dead,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who, living, had no roof to shroud his head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.17047 Tm
(\221The Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels\222 \(1635\).)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.9624 Tm
( 8.93 Sir Seymour Hicks 1871-1949)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The first sign of old age: it is when you go out into the streets of\
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0 -1.2 TD
(first time how young the policemen look.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.42047 Tm
(In C. R. D. Pulling \221They Were Singing\222 \(1952\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.2124 Tm
( 8.94 Aaron Hill 1685-1750)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tender-handed stroke a nettle,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And it stings you for your pains;)Tj
T*
( Grasp it like a man of mettle,)Tj
T*
( And it soft as silk remains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.67047 Tm
(\221Verses Written on a Window in Scotland\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.4624 Tm
( 8.95 Joe Hill 1879-1915)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I will die like a true-blue rebel. Don\222t waste any time in mourni\
ng\227organize.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.92047 Tm
(Farewell telegram to Bill Haywood, 18 November 1915, before his death by\
firing squad, in \221Salt Lake \(Utah\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Tribune\222 19 November 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.00456 Tm
( You will eat, bye and bye,)Tj
T*
( In that glorious land above the sky;)Tj
T*
( Work and pray, live on hay,)Tj
T*
( You\222ll get pie in the sky when you die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.17047 Tm
(\221Preacher and the Slave\222 in \221Songs of the Workers\222 \(Industr\
ial Workers of the World, 1911\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 189.9624 Tm
( 8.96 Pattie S. Hill 1868-1946)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Happy birthday to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1935; music by Mildred J. Hill\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 120.2124 Tm
( 8.97 Rowland Hill 1744-1833)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( He did not see any reason why the devil should have all the good tun\
es.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(In E. W. Broomre \221The Rev. Rowland Hill\222 \(1881\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.4624 Tm
( 8.98 Sir Edmund Hillary 1919\227)Tj
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( Well, we knocked the bastard off!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On climbing Mount Everest, in \221Nothing Venture, Nothing Win\222 \(197\
5\) ch. 10.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 8.99 Fred Hillebrand 1893\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Home James, and don\222t spare the horses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 8.100 Hillel \221The Elder\222 c.70 B.C.-c. A.D. 10)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( A name made great is a name destroyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(\221Pirque Aboth\222 ch. 1, no. 14, in C. Taylor \(ed.\) \221Sayings of\
the Jewish Fathers\222 \(1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( If I am not for myself who is for me; and being for my own self what\
am I? If not now when?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221Pirque Aboth\222 ch. 1, no. 15, in C. Taylor \(ed.\) \221Sayings of\
the Jewish Fathers\222 \(1877\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 528.7124 Tm
( 8.101 Lady Hillingdon 1857-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I am happy now that Charles calls on my bedchamber less frequently t\
han of old. As it is, I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(now endure but two calls a week and when I hear his steps outside my doo\
r I lie down on my bed, )Tj
T*
(close my eyes, open my legs and think of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 1912, in J. Gathorne-Hardy \221Rise and Fall of the Brit\
ish Nanny\222 \(1972\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 422.9624 Tm
( 8.102 James Hilton 1900-54)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nothing really wrong with him\227only anno domini, but that\222s the\
most fatal complaint of all, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in the end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(\221Goodbye, Mr Chips\222 \(1934\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.2124 Tm
( 8.103 Hippocleides 6th century B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hippocleides doesn\222t care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(In Herodotus \221Histories\222 bk. 6, sect. 129)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 265.4624 Tm
( 8.104 Hippocrates c.460-357 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The life so short, the craft so long to learn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Aphorisms\222 sect. 1, para. 1 \(translation by Chaucer\). Often quo\
ted in Latin as Ars longa, vita brevis; see )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Seneca \221De Brevitae Vitae\222 sect. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( Healing is a matter of time, but it is sometimes also a matter of op\
portunity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Precepts\222 ch. 1 \(translated by W. H. S. Jones\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( Time is that wherein there is opportunity, and opportunity is that w\
herein there is no great time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Precepts\222 ch. 1 \(translated by W. H. S. Jones\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 107.2124 Tm
( 8.105 Alfred Hitchcock 1899-1980)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Television has brought back murder into the home\227where it belongs\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 19 December 1965)Tj
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( 8.106 Adolf Hitler 1889-1945)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Die Nacht der langen Messer.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The night of the long knives.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 693.67047 Tm
(Phrase given to the massacre of Ernst Roehm and his associates by Hitler\
on 29-30 June 1934, though taken )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(from an early Nazi marching song. S. H. Roberts \221The House Hitler Bui\
lt\222 \(1937\) pt. 2, ch. 3; subsequently )Tj
T*
(associated also with Harold Macmillan\222s large-scale dismissals from h\
is Cabinet on 13 July 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Ich gehe mit traumwandlerischer Sicherheit den Weg, den mich die Vor\
sehung gehen heisst.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I go the way that Providence dictates with the assurance of a sleepw\
alker.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.17047 Tm
(Speech in Munich, 15 March 1936, in Max Domarus \(ed.\) \221Hitler: Red\
en und Proklamationen 1932-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1945\222 \(1962\) p. 606)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Es ist die letzte territoriale Forderung, die ich Europa zu stellen \
habe, aber es ist die Forderung, )Tj
T*
(von der ich nicht abgehe, und die ich, so Gott will, erf\374llen werde.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is the last territorial claim which I have to make in Europe, but\
it is the claim from which I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(will not recede and which, God-willing, I will make good.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(On the Sudetenland, in Speech at Berlin Sportpalast, 26 September 1938: \
Max Domarus \(ed.\) \221Hitler: Reden )Tj
T*
(und Proklamationen 1932-1945\222 \(1962\) p. 927)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( In bezug auf das sudetendeutsche Problem meine Geduld jetzt zu Ende \
ist!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( With regard to the problem of the Sudeten Germans, my patience is no\
w at an end!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.17047 Tm
(Speech at Berlin Sportpalast, 26 September 1938, in Max Domarus \(ed.\) \
\221Hitler: Reden und Proklamationen )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1932-1945\222 \(1962\) p. 932)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( Die breite Masse eines Volkes...einer grossen L\374ge leichter zum O\
pfer f\344llt als einer kleinen.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The broad mass of a nation...will more easily fall victim to a big l\
ie than to a small one.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.67047 Tm
(\221Mein Kampf\222 \(1925\) vol. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 327.75456 Tm
( Brennt Paris?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Is Paris burning?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(25 August 1944, in Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre \221Is Paris Bur\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 257.9624 Tm
( 8.107 Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Laughter is nothing else but sudden glory arising from some sudden c\
onception of some )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(eminency in ourselves, by comparison with the infirmity of others, or wi\
th our own formerly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.42047 Tm
(\221Human Nature\222 \(1650\) ch. 9, sect. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.50456 Tm
( True and False are attributes of speech, not of things. And where sp\
eech is not, there is neither )Tj
T*
(Truth nor Falsehood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( In Geometry \(which is the only science that it hath pleased God hit\
herto to bestow on )Tj
T*
(mankind\) men begin at settling the significations of their words; which\
...they call Definitions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Words are wise men\222s counters, they do but reckon by them: but th\
ey are the money of fools, )Tj
T*
(that value them by the authority of an Aristotle, a Cicero, or a Thomas,\
or any other doctor )Tj
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(whatsoever, if but a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The power of a man, to take it universally, is his present means, to\
obtain some future apparent )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(good; and is either original or instrumental.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I put for a general inclination of all mankind, a perpetual and rest\
less desire of power after )Tj
T*
(power, that ceaseth only in death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( They that approve a private opinion, call it opinion; but they that \
mislike it, heresy: and yet )Tj
T*
(heresy signifies no more than private opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( During the time men live without a common power to keep them all in \
awe, they are in that )Tj
T*
(condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against\
every man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( For as the nature of foul weather, lieth not in a shower or two of r\
ain; but in an inclination )Tj
T*
(thereto of many days together: so the nature of war consisteth not in ac\
tual fighting, but in the )Tj
T*
(known disposition thereto during all the time there is no assurance to t\
he contrary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( No arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all, continua\
l fear and danger of violent )Tj
T*
(death; and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Force, and fraud, are in war the two cardinal virtues.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( They that are discontented under monarchy, call it tyranny; and they\
that are displeased with )Tj
T*
(aristocracy, call it oligarchy: so also, they which find themselves grie\
ved under a democracy, call )Tj
T*
(it anarchy, which signifies the want of government; and yet I think no m\
an believes, that want of )Tj
T*
(government, is any new kind of government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 2, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Whereas some have attributed the dominion [of the family] to the man\
only, as being of the )Tj
T*
(more excellent Sex; they misreckon in it. For there is not always that d\
ifference of strength, or )Tj
T*
(prudence between the man and the woman, as that the right can be determi\
ned without War.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 2, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( For it is with the mysteries of our religion, as with wholesome pill\
s for the sick, which )Tj
T*
(swallowed whole, have the virtue to cure; but chewed, are for the most p\
art cast up again without )Tj
T*
(effect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 3, ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( The Papacy is not other than the Ghost of the deceased Roman Empire,\
sitting crowned upon )Tj
T*
(the grave thereof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) pt. 4, ch. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( The praise of ancient authors proceeds not from the reverence of the\
dead, but from the )Tj
ET
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(competition, and mutual envy of the living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Leviathan\222 \(1651\) \221A Review and Conclusion\222)Tj
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( I am about to take my last voyage, a great leap in the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Last words, in John Watkins \221Anecdotes of Men of Learning\222 \(1808)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.108 John Cam Hobhouse \(Baron Broughton\) 1786-1869)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( When I invented the phrase \221His Majesty\222s Opposition\222 [Cann\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the fortunate hit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Recollections of a Long Life\222 \(1865\) vol. 2, ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.109 Ralph Hodgson 1871-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \222Twould ring the bells of Heaven)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The wildest peal for years,)Tj
T*
( If Parson lost his senses)Tj
T*
( And people came to theirs,)Tj
T*
( And he and they together)Tj
T*
( Knelt down with angry prayers)Tj
T*
( For tamed and shabby tigers)Tj
T*
( And dancing dogs and bears,)Tj
T*
( And wretched, blind, pit ponies,)Tj
T*
( And little hunted hares.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(\221Bells of Heaven\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( Reason has moons, but moons not hers,)Tj
T*
( Lie mirrored on her sea,)Tj
T*
( Confounding her astronomers,)Tj
T*
( But, O! delighting me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.17047 Tm
(\221Reason Has Moons\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 269.25456 Tm
( When stately ships are twirled and spun)Tj
T*
( Like whipping tops and help there\222s none)Tj
T*
( And mighty ships ten thousand ton)Tj
T*
( Go down like lumps of lead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Honour\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( Time, you old gipsy man,)Tj
T*
( Will you not stay,)Tj
T*
( Put up your caravan)Tj
T*
( Just for one day?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(\221Time, You Old Gipsy Man\222 \(1917\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 76.4624 Tm
( 8.110 Eric Hoffer 1902-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When people are free to do as they please, they usually imitate each\
other. Originality is )Tj
ET
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(deliberate and forced, and partakes of the nature of a protest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Passionate State of Mind\222 \(1955\) p. 21)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.111 Heinrich Hoffmann 1809-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Augustus was a chubby lad;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fat ruddy cheeks Augustus had:)Tj
T*
( And everybody saw with joy)Tj
T*
( The plump and hearty, healthy boy.)Tj
T*
( He ate and drank as he was told,)Tj
T*
( And never let his soup get cold.)Tj
T*
( But one day, one cold winter\222s day,)Tj
T*
( He screamed out, \221Take the soup away!)Tj
T*
( O take the nasty soup away!)Tj
T*
( I won\222t have any soup today.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Augustus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( Let me see if Philip can)Tj
T*
( Be a little gentleman;)Tj
T*
( Let me see, if he is able)Tj
T*
( To sit still for once at table.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Fidgety Philip\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( But fidgety Phil,)Tj
T*
( He won\222t sit still;)Tj
T*
( He wriggles)Tj
T*
( And giggles,)Tj
T*
( And then, I declare,)Tj
T*
( Swings backwards and forwards,)Tj
T*
( And tilts up his chair,)Tj
T*
( Just like any rocking-horse\227)Tj
T*
( \221Philip! I am getting cross!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Fidgety Philip\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.00456 Tm
( Look at little Johnny there,)Tj
T*
( Little Johnny Head-In-Air!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.17047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Johnny Head-In-Air\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 158.25456 Tm
( Silly little Johnny, look,)Tj
T*
( You have lost your writing-book!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.42047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Johnny Head-In-Air\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.50456 Tm
( The door flew open, in he ran,)Tj
T*
( The great, long, red-legged scissor-man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221The Little Suck-a-Thumb\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( Snip! Snap! Snip! They go so fast.)Tj
ET
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( That both his thumbs are off at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221The Little Suck-a-Thumb\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He finds it hard, without a pair)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of spectacles, to shoot the hare.)Tj
T*
( The hare sits snug in leaves and grass,)Tj
T*
( And laughs to see the green man pass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221The Man Who Went Out Shooting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( And now she\222s trying all she can,)Tj
T*
( To shoot the sleepy, green-coat man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221The Man Who Went Out Shooting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The hare\222s own child, the little hare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221The Man Who Went Out Shooting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Anything to me is sweeter)Tj
T*
( Than to see Shock-headed Peter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Struwwelpeter\222 \(1848\) \221Shock-Headed Peter\222 \(title poem\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.9624 Tm
( 8.112 Max Hoffman)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Lions led by donkeys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(Of the English soldiers, during World War I, in Alan Clark \221The Donke\
ys\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.2124 Tm
( 8.113 Gerard Hoffnung 1925-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Standing among savage scenery, the hotel offers stupendous revelatio\
ns. There is a French )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(widow in every bedroom, affording delightful prospects.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(Supposedly quoting a letter from a Tyrolean landlord in a speech at the \
Oxford Union, 4 December 1958)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 310.4624 Tm
( 8.114 Lancelot Hogben 1895-1975)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This is not the age of pamphleteers. It is the age of the engineers.\
The spark-gap is mightier )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than the pen. Democracy will not be salvaged by men who talk fluently, d\
ebate forcefully and )Tj
T*
(quote aptly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221Science for the Citizen\222 \(1938\) epilogue)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 204.7124 Tm
( 8.115 James Hogg 1770-1835)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where the pools are bright and deep)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where the gray trout lies asleep,)Tj
T*
( Up the river and o\222er the lea)Tj
T*
( That\222s the way for Billy and me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(\221A Boy\222s Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.25456 Tm
( God bless our lord the king!)Tj
T*
( God save our lord the king!)Tj
T*
( God save the king!)Tj
T*
( Make him victorious,)Tj
ET
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( Happy, and glorious,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Long to reign over us:)Tj
T*
( God save the king!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(\221The King\222s Anthem\222 in \221Jacobite Relics of Scotland\222 Seco\
nd Series \(1821\) p. 50.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.50456 Tm
( We\222ll o\222er the water, we\222ll o\222er the sea,)Tj
T*
( We\222ll o\222er the water to Charlie;)Tj
T*
( Come weel, come wo, we\222ll gather and go,)Tj
T*
( And live or die wi\222 Charlie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221O\222er the Water to Charlie\222 in \221Jacobite Relics of Scotland\222\
Second Series \(1821\) p. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( Cock up your beaver, and cock it fu\222 sprush;)Tj
T*
( We\222ll over the Border and gi\222e them a brush;)Tj
T*
( There\222s somebody there we\222ll teach better behaviour.)Tj
T*
( Hey, Johnnie lad, cock up your beaver!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221Cock Up Your Beaver\222 in \221Jacobite Relics of Scotland\222 Secon\
d Series \(1821\) p. 127)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 484.7124 Tm
( 8.116 Paul Henri, Baron d\222Holbach 1723-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Si l\222ignorance de la nature donna la naissance aux dieux, la conn\
aissance de la nature est faite )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pour les d\350truire.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If ignorance of nature gave rise to the Gods, knowledge of nature is\
destined to destroy them.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.42047 Tm
(\221Syst\351me de la Nature\222 \(1770\), in P. B. Shelley \221Queen Mab\
\222 \(1813\) canto 7, l. 13, note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( L\222art n\222est que la Nature agissante \341 l\222aide des instrum\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Art is only Nature operating with the aid of the instruments she has\
made.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.92047 Tm
(\221Syst\351me de la Nature\222 \(1780 ed.\) vol. 1, p. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 316.7124 Tm
( 8.117 Billie Holiday 1915-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When my parents were married, my father was 18, my mother was 16, an\
d I was 3.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.17047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222, opening sentence)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 246.9624 Tm
( 8.118 Billie Holiday 1915-59 and Arthur Herzog Jr. 1901-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Them that\222s got shall get,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Them that\222s not shall lose,)Tj
T*
( So the Bible said,)Tj
T*
( And it still is news;)Tj
T*
( Mama may have, papa may have,)Tj
T*
( But God bless the child that\222s got his own!)Tj
T*
( That\222s got his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.42047 Tm
(\221God Bless the Child\222 \(1941 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 69.2124 Tm
( 8.119 1st Lord Holland 1705-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If Mr Selwyn calls again, shew him up: if I am alive I shall be deli\
ghted to see him; and if I am )Tj
ET
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(dead he would like to see me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(During his last illness, in J.H. Jesse \221George Selwyn and his Contemp\
oraries\222 \(1844\) vol. 3, p. 50)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 8.120 3rd Lord Holland 1733-1840)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nephew of Fox, and friend of Grey,\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Enough my meed of fame)Tj
T*
( If those who deign\222d to observe me say)Tj
T*
( I injur\222d neither name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Lady Holland, \221Memoir of Rev.Sydney Smith\222 \(1855\), i.334)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 581.2124 Tm
( 8.121 Stanley Holloway 1890-1982)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sam, Sam, pick up tha\222 musket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221Pick Up Tha\222 Musket\222 \(1930 recorded monologue\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 511.4624 Tm
( 8.122 John H. Holmes 1879-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( This, now, is the judgement of our scientific age\227the third react\
ion of man upon the universe! )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(This universe is not hostile, nor yet is it friendly. It is simply indif\
ferent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.92047 Tm
(\221The Sensible Man\222s View of Religion\222 \(1932\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 423.7124 Tm
( 8.123 Oliver Wendell Holmes 1809-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The axis of the earth sticks out visibly through the centre of each \
and every town or city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.17047 Tm
(\221The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table\222 \(1858\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 365.25456 Tm
( His humid front the cive, anheling, wipes.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And dreams of erring on ventiferous ripes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.42047 Tm
(\221The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table\222 \(1858\) ch. 11 \221Aestivat\
ion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.50456 Tm
( Depart,\227be off,\227excede,\227evade,\227erump!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.67047 Tm
(\221The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table\222 \(1858\) ch. 11 \221Aestivat\
ion\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 273.75456 Tm
( It is the province of knowledge to speak and it is the privilege of \
wisdom to listen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(\221The Poet at the Breakfast Table\222 \(1872\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.00456 Tm
( Sweet is the scene where genial friendship plays)Tj
T*
( The pleasing game of interchanging praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.17047 Tm
(\221An After-Dinner Poem\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.25456 Tm
( Fate tried to conceal him by naming him Smith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(\221The Boys\222 \(on Samuel Francis Smith\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( A general flavour of mild decay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221The Deacon\222s Masterpiece\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Lean, hungry, savage anti-everythings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221A Modest Request\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Wisdom has taught us to be calm and meek,)Tj
T*
( To take one blow, and turn the other cheek;)Tj
ET
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( It is not written what a man shall do)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If the rude caitiff smite the other too!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Non-Resistance\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( And, when you stick on conversation\222s burrs,)Tj
T*
( Don\222t strew your pathway with those dreadful urs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Rhymed Lesson\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Man wants but little drink below,)Tj
T*
( But wants that little strong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221A Song of other Days\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Blank cheques of intellectual bankruptcy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Definition of catch-phrases \(attributed\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.7124 Tm
( 8.124 John Home 1722-1808)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My name is Norval; on the Grampian hills)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( My father feeds his flocks; a frugal swain,)Tj
T*
( Whose constant cares were to increase his store)Tj
T*
( And keep his only son, myself, at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Douglas\222 \(1756\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( Like Douglas conquer, or like Douglas die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221Douglas\222 \(1756\) act 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.2124 Tm
( 8.125 Lord Home \(fourteenth Earl of Home, formerly Sir Alec Douglas-Ho\
me\) 1903\2271963-4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As far as the fourteenth earl is concerned, I suppose Mr Wilson, whe\
n you come to think of it, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is the fourteenth Mr Wilson.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(Referring to Harold Wilson in a television interview, 21 October 1963, w\
hen asked how he would defend his )Tj
T*
(position as a \221fourteenth Earl, a reactionary, and an out-of-date fig\
ure\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 277.4624 Tm
( 8.126 Homer 8th century B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Achilles\222 cursed anger sing, O goddess, that son of Peleus, which\
started a myriad sufferings )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for the Achaeans.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.92047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 1, l. 1. In Alexander Pope\222s translation:)Tj
T*
(Achilles\222 wrath, to Greece the direful spring )Tj
T*
(Of woes unnumbered, heavenly goddess, sing.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Winged words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 1, l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( The son of Kronos [Zeus] spoke, and nodded with his darkish brows, a\
nd immortal locks fell )Tj
T*
(forward from the lord\222s deathless head, and he made great Olympus tre\
mble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 1, l. 528)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( It is no cause for anger that the Trojans and the well-greaved Achae\
ans have suffered for so )Tj
T*
(long over such a woman: she is wondrously like the immortal goddesses to\
look upon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 3, l. 156 \(referring to Helen\))Tj
ET
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( Son of Atreus, what manner of speech has escaped the barrier of your\
teeth?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 4, l. 350)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Like that of leaves is a generation of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 6, l. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Always to be best, and to be distinguished above the rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 6, l. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Smiling through her tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 6, l. 484)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Hateful to me as the gates of Hades is that man who hides one thing \
in his heart and speaks )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 9, l. 312)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( This is the one best omen, to fight in defence of one\222s country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 12, l. 243)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( He lay great and greatly fallen, forgetful of his chivalry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221The Iliad\222 bk. 16, l. 776)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( Tell me, Muse, of the man of many tricks, who wandered far and wide \
after he had sacked )Tj
T*
(Troy\222s sacred city, and saw the towns of many men and knew their mind\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(The \221Odyssey\222 bk. 1, l. 1 \(referring to Odysseus\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( Rosy-fingered dawn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(The \221Odyssey\222 bk. 2, l. 1 and elsewhere)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( I would rather be tied to the soil as another man\222s serf, even a \
poor man\222s, who hadn\222t much to )Tj
T*
(live on himself, than be King of all these the dead and destroyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(The \221Odyssey\222 bk. 11, l. 489)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 320.2124 Tm
( 8.127 William Hone 1780-1842)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( John Jones may be described as \221one of the has beens.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Every-Day Book\222 \(1826-27\) vol. 2, pt. 1, col. 820)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 250.4624 Tm
( 8.128 Arthur Honegger 1892-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( La premi\351re qualit\350 d\222un compositeur, c\222est d\222\352tre\
mort.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The first requirement for a composer is to be dead.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Je suis compositeur\222 \(1951\) p. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.9624 Tm
( 8.129 Thomas Hood 1799-1845)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Take her up tenderly,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lift her with care;)Tj
T*
( Fashioned so slenderly,)Tj
T*
( Young, and so fair!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221The Bridge of Sighs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Mad from life\222s history,)Tj
ET
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( Glad to death\222s mystery,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Swift to be hurled\227)Tj
T*
( Anywhere, anywhere,)Tj
T*
( Out of the world!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Bridge of Sighs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Ben Battle was a soldier bold,)Tj
T*
( And used to war\222s alarms:)Tj
T*
( But a cannon-ball took off his legs,)Tj
T*
( So he laid down his arms!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Faithless Nelly Gray\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( For here I leave my second leg,)Tj
T*
( And the Forty-second Foot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Faithless Nelly Gray\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( The love that loves a scarlet coat)Tj
T*
( Should be more uniform.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Faithless Nelly Gray\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( His death, which happened in his berth,)Tj
T*
( At forty-odd befell:)Tj
T*
( They went and told the sexton, and)Tj
T*
( The sexton tolled the bell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Faithless Sally Brown\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I remember, I remember,)Tj
T*
( The house where I was born,)Tj
T*
( The little window where the sun)Tj
T*
( Came peeping in at morn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221I Remember\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( What is a modern poet\222s fate?)Tj
T*
( To write his thoughts upon a slate;)Tj
T*
( The critic spits on what is done,)Tj
T*
( Gives it a wipe\227and all is gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221A Joke\222 in a common-place book of Hallam Tennyson\222s, in Hallam\
Tennyson \221Alfred Lord Tennyson, A )Tj
T*
(Memoir\222 \(1897\) vol. 2, ch. 3 \(not found in Hood\222s Complete Work\
s\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( But evil is wrought by want of thought,)Tj
T*
( As well as want of heart!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221The Lady\222s Dream\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( Home-made dishes that drive one from home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg\222 \(1841-43\) \221Her Misery\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( No sun\227no moon!)Tj
T*
( No morn\227no noon)Tj
T*
( No dawn\227no dusk\227no proper time of day.)Tj
ET
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(\221No!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No comfortable feel in any member\227)Tj
T*
( No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,)Tj
T*
( No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds,\227)Tj
T*
( November!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221No!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I saw old Autumn in the misty morn)Tj
T*
( Stand shadowless like Silence, listening)Tj
T*
( To silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Ode: Autumn\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The bird forlorn,)Tj
T*
( That singeth with her breast against a thorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies\222 \(1827\) st. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( When Eve upon the first of Men)Tj
T*
( The apple pressed with specious cant,)Tj
T*
( Oh! what a thousand pities then)Tj
T*
( That Adam was not Adamant!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221A Reflection\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Sure, I said, heaven did not mean,)Tj
T*
( Where I reap thou shouldst but glean,)Tj
T*
( Lay thy sheaf adown and come,)Tj
T*
( Share my harvest and my home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Ruth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( With fingers weary and worn,)Tj
T*
( With eyelids heavy and red,)Tj
T*
( A woman sat, in unwomanly rags,)Tj
T*
( Plying her needle and thread\227)Tj
T*
( Stitch! stitch! stitch!)Tj
T*
( In poverty, hunger, and dirt.)Tj
T*
( And still with a voice of dolorous pitch)Tj
T*
( She sang the \221Song of the Shirt\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221The Song of the Shirt\222 \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( O! men with sisters dear,)Tj
T*
( O! men with mothers and wives!)Tj
T*
( It is not linen you\222re wearing out,)Tj
T*
( But human creatures\222 lives!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Song of the Shirt\222 \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Oh! God! that bread should be so dear,)Tj
T*
( And flesh and blood so cheap!)Tj
ET
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(\221The Song of the Shirt\222 \(1843\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The sedate, sober, silent, serious, sad-coloured sect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Doves and the Crows\222 \(on Quakers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( \221Extremes meet\222, as the whiting said with its tail in its mout\
h.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221The Doves and the Crows\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Holland...lies so low they\222re only saved by being dammed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221Up the Rhine\222 \(1840\) \221Letter from Martha Penny to Rebecca Pa\
ge\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.7124 Tm
( 8.130 Richard Hooker c.1554-1600)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He that goeth about to persuade a multitude, that they are not so we\
ll governed as they ought to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be, shall never want attentive and favourable hearers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(\221Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity\222 \(1593\) bk. 1, ch. 1, sect\
. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( Of Law there can be no less acknowledged, than that her seat is the \
bosom of God, her voice )Tj
T*
(the harmony of the world: all things in heaven and earth do her homage, \
the very least as feeling )Tj
T*
(her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity\222 \(1593\) bk. 1, ch. 16, sec\
t. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( Alteration though it be from worse to better hath in it inconvenienc\
es, and those weighty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity\222 \(1593\) bk. 4, ch. 14, sec\
t. 1.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 415.4624 Tm
( 8.131 Ellen Sturgis Hooper 1816-41)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I slept, and dreamed that life was beauty;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I woke, and found that life was duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Beauty and Duty\222 \(1840\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 327.7124 Tm
( 8.132 Herbert Hoover 1874-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Our country has deliberately undertaken a great social and economic \
experiment, noble in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(motive and far-reaching in purpose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(On the Eighteenth Amendment enacting Prohibition, in a letter to Senator\
W. H. Borah, 23 February 1928: )Tj
T*
( Claudius O. Johnson \221Borah of Idaho\222 \(1936\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.25456 Tm
( The American system of rugged individualism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.42047 Tm
(Speech in New York City, 22 October 1928, in \221New Day\222 \(1928\) p.\
154)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.50456 Tm
( The grass will grow in the streets of a hundred cities, a thousand t\
owns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(Speech, 31 October 1932, in \221State Papers of Herbert Hoover\222 \(193\
4\) vol. 2, p. 418 \(on proposals \221to reduce )Tj
T*
(the protective tariff to a competitive tariff for revenue\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( Older men declare war. But it is youth who must fight and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(Speech at the Republican National Convention, Chicago, 27 June 1944, in \
\221Addresses upon the American )Tj
T*
(Road\222 \(1946\) p. 254)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 84.7124 Tm
( 8.133 Anthony Hope \(Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins\) 1863-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Economy is going without something you do want in case you should, s\
ome day, want )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(something you probably won\222t want.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Dolly Dialogues\222 \(1894\) no. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \221You oughtn\222t to yield to temptation.\222 \221Well, somebody m\
ust, or the thing becomes absurd,\222 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(said I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Dolly Dialogues\222 \(1894\) no. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Bourgeois...is an epithet which the riff-raff apply to what is respe\
ctable, and the aristocracy to )Tj
T*
(what is decent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Dolly Dialogues\222 \(1894\) no. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( His foe was a folly and his weapon wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Inscription on memorial to W. S. Gilbert on the Victoria Embankment, Lon\
don, 1915. Sydney Dark and )Tj
T*
(Roland Grey \221W. S. Gilbert\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.00456 Tm
( Oh, for an hour of Herod!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(At the first night of J. M. Barrie\222s \221Peter Pan\222 in 1904, in De\
nis Mackail \221The Story of JMB\222 \(1941\) ch. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.9624 Tm
( 8.134 Bob Hope 1903\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you\
don\222t need it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(In Alan Harrington \221Life in the Crystal Palace\222 \(1959\) \221The T\
yranny of Farms\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 455.2124 Tm
( 8.135 Francis Hope 1938-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( And scribbled lines like fallen hopes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( On backs of tattered envelopes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.67047 Tm
(\221Instead of a Poet\222 \(1965\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 367.4624 Tm
( 8.136 Laurence Hope \(Adela Florence Nicolson\) 1865-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pale hands I loved beside the Shalimar,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where are you now? Who lies beneath your spell?...)Tj
T*
( Pale hands, pink tipped, like lotus buds that float)Tj
T*
( On those cool waters where we used to dwell,)Tj
T*
( I would have rather felt you round my throat)Tj
T*
( Crushing out life; than waving me farewell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.92047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Kama\222 \(1901\) \221Kashmiri Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.00456 Tm
( Less than the dust, beneath thy Chariot wheel,)Tj
T*
( Less than the rust, that never stained thy Sword,)Tj
T*
( Less than the trust thou hast in me, Oh, Lord,)Tj
T*
( Even less than these!)Tj
T*
( Less than the weed, that grows beside thy door,)Tj
T*
( Less than the speed, of hours, spent far from thee,)Tj
T*
( Less than the need thou hast in life of me.)Tj
T*
( Even less am I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Kama\222 \(1901\) \221Less than the Dust\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 44.9624 Tm
( 8.137 Gerard Manley Hopkins 1844-89)Tj
ET
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( Wild air, world-mothering air,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nestling me everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Virgin Compared to the Air We Breathe\222 \(written 1883\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Ten or twelve, only ten or twelve)Tj
T*
( Strokes of havoc \371nselve)Tj
T*
( The sweet especial scene,)Tj
T*
( Rural scene, a rural scene,)Tj
T*
( Sweet especial rural scene.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Binsey Poplars\222 \(written 1879\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Not, I\222ll not, carrion comfort, Despair, not feast on thee;)Tj
T*
( Not untwist\227slack they may be\227these last strands of man)Tj
T*
( In me or, most weary, cry I can no more. I can;)Tj
T*
( Can something, hope, wish day come, not choose not to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Carrion Comfort\222 \(written 1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( That night, that year)Tj
T*
( Of now done darkness I wretch lay wrestling with \(my God!\) my God.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Carrion Comfort\222 \(written 1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Towery city and branchy between towers;)Tj
T*
( Cuckoo-echoing, bell-swarm\351d, lark-charm\351d, rook-racked, river\
-rounded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Duns Scotus\222s Oxford\222 \(written 1879\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( The world is charged with the grandeur of God.)Tj
T*
( It will flame out like shining from shook foil...)Tj
T*
( Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;)Tj
T*
( And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;)Tj
T*
( And wears man\222s smudge and shares man\222s smell: the soil)Tj
T*
( Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221God\222s Grandeur\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Because the Holy Ghost over the bent)Tj
T*
( World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221God\222s Grandeur\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Elected Silence, sing to me)Tj
T*
( And beat upon my whorl\351d ear,)Tj
T*
( Pipe me to pastures still and be)Tj
T*
( The music that I care to hear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221The Habit of Perfection\222 \(written 1866\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Palate, the hutch of tasty lust,)Tj
T*
( Desire not to be rinsed with wine:)Tj
T*
( The can must be so sweet, the crust)Tj
T*
( So fresh that come in fasts divine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221The Habit of Perfection\222 \(written 1866\))Tj
ET
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( I have desired to go)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where springs not fail,)Tj
T*
( To fields where flies no sharp and sided hail)Tj
T*
( And a few lilies blow.)Tj
T*
( And I have asked to be)Tj
T*
( Where no storms come,)Tj
T*
( Where the green swell is in the havens dumb,)Tj
T*
( And out of the swing of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Heaven-Haven\222 \(written 1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( What would the world be, once bereft)Tj
T*
( Of wet and wildness? Let them be left,)Tj
T*
( O let them be left, wildness and wet;)Tj
T*
( Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Inversnaid\222 \(written 1881\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief,)Tj
T*
( More pangs will, schooled at forepangs, wilder wring.)Tj
T*
( Comforter, where, where is your comforting?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221No worst, there is none\222 \(written 1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( O the mind, mind has mountains; cliffs of fall)Tj
T*
( Frightful, sheer, no-man-fathomed. Hold them cheap)Tj
T*
( May who ne\222er hung there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221No worst, there is none\222 \(written 1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Here! creep,)Tj
T*
( Wretch, under a comfort serves in a whirlwind: all)Tj
T*
( Life death does end and each day dies with sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221No worst, there is none\222 \(written 1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Glory be to God for dappled things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Pied Beauty\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( All things counter, original, spare, strange;)Tj
T*
( Whatever is fickle, freckled \(who knows how?\))Tj
T*
( With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;)Tj
T*
( He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change:)Tj
T*
( Praise him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Pied Beauty\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( The glassy peartree leaves and blooms, they brush)Tj
T*
( The descending blue; that blue is all in a rush)Tj
T*
( With richness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Spring\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( M\341rgar\351t, \341re you gr\355eving)Tj
T*
( Over Goldengrove unleaving?)Tj
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(\221Spring and Fall: to a young child\222 \(written 1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \301h! \341s the heart grows older)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It will come to such sights colder)Tj
T*
( By and by, not spare a sigh)Tj
T*
( Though worlds of wanwood leafmeal lie;)Tj
T*
( And yet you will weep and know why.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Spring and Fall: to a young child\222 \(written 1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( It \355s the blight man was born for,)Tj
T*
( It is Margaret you mourn for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Spring and Fall: to a young child\222 \(written 1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Look at the stars! look, look up at the skies!)Tj
T*
( O look at all the fire-folk sitting in the air!)Tj
T*
( The bright boroughs, the circle-citadels there!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Starlight Night\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Ah well! it is all a purchase, all is a prize.)Tj
T*
( Buy then! bid then!\227What?\227Prayer, patience, alms, vows.)Tj
T*
( Look, look: a May-mess, like on orchard boughs!)Tj
T*
( Look! March-bloom, like on mealed-with-yellow sallows!)Tj
T*
( These are indeed the barn; withindoors house)Tj
T*
( The shocks. This piece-bright paling shuts the spouse)Tj
T*
( Christ home, Christ and his mother and all his hallows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221The Starlight Night\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( I am all at once what Christ is, since he was what I am, and)Tj
T*
( This Jack, joke, poor potsherd, patch, matchwood, immortal diamond,)Tj
T*
( Is immortal diamond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire\222 \(written 1888\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend)Tj
T*
( With thee; but, sir, so what I plead is just.)Tj
T*
( Why do sinners\222 ways prosper? and why must)Tj
T*
( Disappointment all I endeavour end?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Thou art indeed just, Lord\222 \(written 1889\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Birds build\227but not I build; no, but strain,)Tj
T*
( Time\222s eunuch, and not breed one work that wakes.)Tj
T*
( Mine, O thou lord of life, send my roots rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221Thou art indeed just, Lord\222 \(written 1889\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( I caught this morning morning\222s minion, kingdom of daylight\222s \
dauphin, dapple-dawn-drawn )Tj
T*
(Falcon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Windhover\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( My heart in hiding)Tj
T*
( Stirred for a bird,\227the achieve of, the mastery of the thing!)Tj
ET
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(\221The Windhover\222 \(written 1877\))Tj
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( I did say yes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O at lightning and lashed rod;)Tj
T*
( Thou heardst me truer than tongue confess)Tj
T*
( Thy terror, O Christ, O God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Wreck of the Deutschland\222 \(written 1876\) pt. 1, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( How a lush-kept plush-capped sloe)Tj
T*
( Will, mouthed to flesh-burst,)Tj
T*
( Gush!\227flush the man, the being with it, sour or sweet,)Tj
T*
( Brim, in a flash, full!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Wreck of the Deutschland\222 \(written 1876\) pt. 1, st. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.4624 Tm
( 8.138 Joseph Hopkinson 1770-1842)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hail, Columbia! happy land!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hail, ye heroes! heaven-born band!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221Hail, Columbia!\222 in \221Porcupine\222s Gazette\222 20 April 1798)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.139 Horace 65-8 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ut turpiter atrum)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Desinat in piscem mulier formosa superne.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( So that what is a beautiful woman on top ends in a black and ugly fi\
sh.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 3)Tj
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( \221Pictoribus atque poetis)Tj
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( Quidlibet audendi semper fuit aequa potestas.\222)Tj
T*
( Scimus, et hanc veniam petimusque damusque vicissim.)Tj
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( \221Painters and poets alike have always had licence to dare anythin\
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(both claim and permit others this indulgence.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Inceptis gravibus plerumque et magna professis)Tj
T*
( Purpureus, late qui splendeat, unus et alter)Tj
T*
( Adsuitur pannus.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Works of serious purpose and grand promises often have a purple patc\
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0 -1.2 TD
(shine far and wide.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 14)Tj
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( Brevis esse laboro,)Tj
T*
( Obscurus fio.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I strive to be brief, and I become obscure.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.92047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.00456 Tm
( Dixeris egregie notum si callida verbum)Tj
ET
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( Reddiderit iunctura novum.)Tj
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( You will have written exceptionally well if, by skilful arrangement \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 47)Tj
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( Multa renascentur quae iam cecidere, cadentque)Tj
T*
( Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula, si volet usus,)Tj
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( Quem penes arbitrium est et ius et norma loquendi.)Tj
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( Many terms which have now dropped out of favour will be revived, and\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(and the rule of speech.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 566.92047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 70)Tj
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( Grammatici certant et adhuc sub iudice lis est.)Tj
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( Scholars dispute, and the case is still before the courts.)Tj
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 78)Tj
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( Proicit ampullas et sesquipedalia verba.)Tj
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T*
( Throws aside his paint-pots and his words a foot and a half long.)Tj
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 97)Tj
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( Si vis me flere, dolendum est)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Primum ipsis tibi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( If you want me to weep, you must first feel grief yourself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 102)Tj
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( Difficile est proprie communia dicere.)Tj
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T*
( It is hard to utter common notions in an individual way.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 128)Tj
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( Parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Mountains will go into labour, and a silly little mouse will be born\
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 139)Tj
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( Non fumum ex fulgore, sed ex fumo dare lucem)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cogitat.)Tj
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( His thinking does not produce smoke after the flame, but light after\
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 143)Tj
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( Semper ad eventum festinat et in medias res)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Non secus ac notas auditorem rapit.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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0 -1.2 TD
(though they knew already.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 148)Tj
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( Difficilis, querulus, laudator temporis acti)Tj
T*
( Se puero, castigator censorque minorum.)Tj
ET
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0 -1.2 TD
(the young generation.)Tj
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 173)Tj
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( Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci,)Tj
T*
( Lectorem delectando pariterque monendo.)Tj
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( He has gained every point who has mixed profit with pleasure, by del\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 343)Tj
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( Verum ubi plura nitent in carmine, non ego paucis)Tj
T*
( Offendar maculis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( When many beauties grace a poem, I shall not take offence at a few f\
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 351)Tj
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( Indignor quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus.)Tj
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T*
( I\222m aggrieved when sometimes even excellent Homer nods.)Tj
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(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 359)Tj
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( Ut pictura poesis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( A poem is like a painting.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 361)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( Mediocribus esse poetis)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Non homines, non di, non concessere columnae.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Not gods, nor men, nor even booksellers have put up with poets being\
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0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 l. 372)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Nullius addictus iurare in verba magistri,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quo me cumque rapit tempestas, deferor hospes.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Not bound to swear allegiance to any master, wherever the wind takes\
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 14. Nullius in verba is the motto of t\
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( Condicio dulcis sine pulvere palmae.)Tj
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T*
( The happy state of winning the palm without the dust of racing.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 51)Tj
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( Si possis recte, si non, quocumque modo rem.)Tj
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T*
( If possible honestly, if not, somehow, make money.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 66)Tj
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( Olim quod vulpes aegroto cauta leoni)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Respondit referam: \221quia me vestigia terrent,)Tj
T*
( Omnia te adversum spectantia, nulla retrorsum.\222)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Let me remind you what the wary fox said once upon a time to the sic\
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0 -1.2 TD
(footprints scare me, all directed your way, none coming back.\222)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 73 \(explaining why he did not follow \
popular opinion\))Tj
ET
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( Whatever madness their kings commit, the Greeks take the beating.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 2, l. 14)Tj
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( We are just statistics, born to consume resources.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 2, l. 27)Tj
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T*
( To have begun is half the job: be bold and be sensible.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 2, l. 40)Tj
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( Ira furor brevis est.)Tj
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T*
( Anger is a short madness.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 2, l. 62)Tj
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( Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Grata superveniet quae non sperabitur hora.)Tj
T*
( Me pinguem et nitidum bene curata cute vises)Tj
T*
( Cum ridere voles Epicuri de grege porcum.)Tj
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( Believe each day that has dawned is your last. Some hour to which yo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(forward will prove lovely. As for me, if you want a good laugh, you will\
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T*
(and sleek, in excellent condition, one of Epicurus\222s herd of pigs.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 4, l. 13)Tj
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( Nil admirari prope res est una, Numici,)Tj
T*
( Solaque quae possit facere et servare beatum.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To marvel at nothing is just about the one and only thing, Numicius,\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 6, l. 1)Tj
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( Naturam expellas furca, tamen usque recurret.)Tj
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( You may drive out nature with a pitchfork, yet she\222ll be constant\
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 10, l. 24)Tj
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( Caelum non animum mutant qui trans mare currunt.)Tj
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( Strenua nos exercet inertia: navibus atque)Tj
T*
( Quadrigis petimus bene vivere. Quod petis hic est,)Tj
T*
( Est Ulubris, animus si te non deficit aequus.)Tj
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( They change their clime, not their frame of mind, who rush across th\
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T*
(Ulubrae, so long as peace of mind does not desert you.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 11, l. 27)Tj
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( Concordia discors.)Tj
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( Harmony in discord.)Tj
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( Principibus placuisse viris non ultima laus est.)Tj
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( Non cuivis homini contingit adire Corinthum.)Tj
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(Corinth.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 17, l. 35)Tj
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( And once sent out a word takes wing irrevocably.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 18, l. 71.)Tj
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( Nam tua res agitur, paries cum proximus ardet.)Tj
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( For it is your business, when the wall next door catches fire.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 18, l. 84)Tj
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T*
( The pathway of a life unnoticed.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 18, l. 103)Tj
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( Nulla placere diu nec vivere carmina possunt)Tj
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( Quae scribuntur aquae potoribus.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 19, l. 1)Tj
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( O imitatores, servum pecus.)Tj
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( O imitators, you slavish herd.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 1, no. 19, l. 19)Tj
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( Skilled or unskilled, we all scribble poems.)Tj
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( If he were on earth, Democritus would laugh at the sight.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 2, no. 1, l. 194)Tj
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( Atque inter silvas Academi quaerere verum.)Tj
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( And seek for truth in the groves of Academe.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 2, no. 2, l. 45)Tj
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( Multa fero, ut placem genus irritabile vatum.)Tj
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( I have to put up with a lot, to please the touchy breed of poets.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 2, no. 2, l. 102)Tj
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( Quid te exempta iuvat spinis de pluribus una?)Tj
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( Vivere si recte nescis, decede peritis.)Tj
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( Lusisti satis, edisti satis atque bibisti:)Tj
T*
( Tempus abire tibi est.)Tj
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( What pleasure does it give to be rid of one thorn out of many? If y\
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T*
( time you were off.)Tj
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(\221Epistles\222 bk. 2, no. 2, l. 212)Tj
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( Beatus ille, qui procul negotiis,)Tj
T*
( Ut prisca gens mortalium,)Tj
T*
( Paterna rura bubus exercet suis,)Tj
T*
( Solutus omni faenore.)Tj
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( Untaught to bear poverty.)Tj
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( Sublimi feriam sidera vertice.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 35)Tj
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( Animae dimidium meae.)Tj
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( Half my own soul.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 3, l. 8 \(referring to Virgil\))Tj
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( Illi robur et aes triplex)Tj
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( Circa pectus erat, qui fragilem truci)Tj
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( Commisit pelago ratem)Tj
T*
( Primus.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 3, l. 9)Tj
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T*
( Regumque turris.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 4, l. 13)Tj
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( Vitae summa brevis spem nos vetat incohare longam.)Tj
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( Life\222s short span forbids us to enter on far-reaching hopes.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 4, l. 15)Tj
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( Nil desperandum.)Tj
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T*
( Never despair.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 7, l. 27)Tj
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( Tomorrow we shall sail again on the vast ocean.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 7, l. 32)Tj
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( Appone.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 9, l. 13)Tj
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( Tu ne quaesieris, scire nefas, quem mihi, quem tibi)Tj
T*
( Finem di dederint.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 11, l. 1)Tj
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( Dum loquimur, fugerit invida)Tj
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( Aetas: carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero.)Tj
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( While we\222re talking, envious time is fleeing: seize the day, put \
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( Divulsus querimoniis)Tj
T*
( Suprema citius solvet amor die.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 13, l. 17)Tj
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( Integer vitae scelerisque purus.)Tj
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( Of unblemished life and spotless record.)Tj
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( Dulce ridentem Lalagen amabo,)Tj
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( Dulce loquentem.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 22, l. 23)Tj
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( A grudging and irregular worshipper of the gods.)Tj
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( Nunc est bibendum, nunc pede libero)Tj
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( Pulsanda tellus.)Tj
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( Now for drinks, now for some dancing with a good beat.)Tj
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( Persicos odi, puer, apparatus.)Tj
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( I hate all that Persian gear, boy.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 38, l. 1 Mitte sectari, rosa quo locorum Sera mo\
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( Stop looking for the place where a late rose may yet linger.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 1, no. 38, l. 3)Tj
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( Aequam memento rebus in arduis)Tj
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( Servare mentem.)Tj
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( When the going gets rough, remember to keep calm.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 2, no. 3, l. 1)Tj
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( Auream quisquis mediocritatem)Tj
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( Diligit.)Tj
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( Someone who loves the golden mean.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 2, no. 10, l. 5)Tj
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( Eheu fugaces, Postume, Postume,)Tj
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( Labuntur anni.)Tj
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( Ah me, Postumus, Postumus, the fleeting years are slipping by.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 2, no. 14, l. 1)Tj
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( Nihil est ab omni)Tj
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( Parte beatum.)Tj
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( Nothing is an unmixed blessing.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 2, no. 16, l. 27)Tj
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( Credite posteri.)Tj
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( Believe me, you who come after me!)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 2, no. 19, l. 2)Tj
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( Odi profanum vulgus et arceo;)Tj
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( Audita Musarum sacerdos)Tj
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( Virginibus puerisque canto.)Tj
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( I hate the common herd and keep them off. Hush your tongues; as a pr\
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(songs never heard before to virgin girls and boys.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( The enormous tombola shakes up everyone\222s name.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 1, l. 16)Tj
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( Black Care sits behind the horseman.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 2, l. 13.)Tj
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( Mente quatit solida.)Tj
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T*
(convictions.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 3, l. 1)Tj
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( Si fractus illabatur orbis,)Tj
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( Impavidum ferient ruinae.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 3, l. 7)Tj
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( Fratresque tendentes opaco)Tj
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( Pelion imposuisse Olympo.)Tj
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( To pile Pelion on top of shady Olympus.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 4, l. 52)Tj
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( Vis consili expers mole ruit sua.)Tj
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( Force, unaided by judgement, collapses through its own weight.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 4, l. 65)Tj
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( Damnosa quid non imminuit dies?)Tj
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( Aetas parentum peior avis tulit)Tj
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( Nos nequiores, mox daturos)Tj
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( Progeniem vitiosiorem.)Tj
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( What do the ravages of time not injure? Our parents\222 age \(worse \
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 6, l. 45)Tj
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( Nobilis aevum.)Tj
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( Gloriously deceitful and a virgin renowned for ever.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 11, l. 35 \(referring to the Danaid Hypermestra\)\
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( Magnas inter opes inops.)Tj
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( A beggar amidst great riches.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 3, no. 16, l. 28)Tj
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( Nomen beati, qui deorum)Tj
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(dishonour more than death.)Tj
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( Dulce est desipere in loco.)Tj
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(\221Odes\222 bk. 4, no. 12, l. 27)Tj
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( Qui fit, Maecenas, ut nemo, quam sibi sortem)Tj
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( Contentus vivat, laudet diversa sequentis?)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( Mutato nomine de te)Tj
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( Fabula narratur.)Tj
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( There is measure in everything.)Tj
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( All that tribe.)Tj
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( Credat Iudaeus Apella,)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 bk. 1, no. 5, l. 100)Tj
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( It\222s crazy to carry timber to the forest.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 bk. 1, no. 10, l. 34)Tj
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( The case will be dismissed with a laugh. You will get off scot-free.\
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(\221Satires\222 bk. 2, no. 1, l. 86 \(H. R. Fairclough\222s translation\)\
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( Par nobile fratrum.)Tj
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( A noble pair of brothers.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 bk. 2, no. 3, l. 243 \(referring to notorious villains\)\
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( Hoc erat in votis: modus agri non ita magnus,)Tj
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( Et paulum silvae super his foret.)Tj
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( Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists?)Tj
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( And wherefore is he wearing such a conscience-stricken air?)Tj
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( Oh they\222re taking him to prison for the colour of his hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Collected Poems\222 \(1939\) \221Additional Poems\222 no. 18)Tj
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( Mud\222s sister, not himself, adorns my legs.)Tj
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(\221Fragment of a Greek Tragedy\222 \(\221Bromsgrovian\222 vol. 2, no. 5\
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(Housman Memorial Supplement of the Bromsgrovian \(1936\))Tj
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( The Grizzly Bear is huge and wild;)Tj
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( He has devoured the infant child.)Tj
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( The infant child is not aware)Tj
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( He has been eaten by the bear.)Tj
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(\221Infant Innocence\222 \(1938\))Tj
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( Pass me the can, lad; there\222s an end of May.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 9)Tj
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( May will be fine next year as like as not:)Tj
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( Oh, ay, but then we shall be twenty-four.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 9)Tj
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( The troubles of our proud and angry dust)Tj
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( Are from eternity, and shall not fail.)Tj
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( Bear them we can, and if we can we must.)Tj
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( Shoulder the sky, my lad, and drink your ale.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 9)Tj
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( But men at whiles are sober)Tj
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( And think by fits and starts,)Tj
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( And if they think, they fasten)Tj
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( Their hands upon their hearts.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 10)Tj
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( And how am I to face the odds)Tj
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( Of man\222s bedevilment and God\222s?)Tj
T*
( I, a stranger and afraid)Tj
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( In a world I never made.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 12)Tj
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( The candles burn their sockets,)Tj
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( The blinds let through the day,)Tj
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( The young man feels his pockets)Tj
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( And wonders what\222s to pay.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 21)Tj
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( These, in the day when heaven was falling,)Tj
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( And saved the sum of things for pay.)Tj
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( For nature, heartless, witless nature,)Tj
T*
( Will neither care nor know)Tj
T*
( What stranger\222s feet may find the meadow)Tj
T*
( And trespass there and go,)Tj
T*
( Nor ask amid the dews of morning)Tj
T*
( If they are mine or no.)Tj
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(\221Last Poems\222 \(1922\) no. 40)Tj
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( The rainy Pleiads wester,)Tj
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( Orion plunges prone,)Tj
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( The stroke of midnight ceases,)Tj
T*
( And I lie down alone.)Tj
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(\221More Poems\222 \(1936\) no. 11)Tj
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( Life, to be sure, is nothing much to lose;)Tj
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( But young men think it is, and we were young.)Tj
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(\221More Poems\222 \(1936\) no. 36)Tj
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( Good-night. Ensured release)Tj
T*
( Imperishable peace,)Tj
T*
( Have these for yours,)Tj
T*
( While earth\222s foundations stand)Tj
T*
( And sky and sea and land)Tj
T*
( And heaven endures.)Tj
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(\221More Poems\222 \(1936\) no. 48 \221Alta Quies\222)Tj
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( Loveliest of trees, the cherry now)Tj
T*
( Is hung with bloom along the bough,)Tj
T*
( And stands about the woodland ride)Tj
T*
( Wearing white for Eastertide.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 2)Tj
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( And since to look at things in bloom)Tj
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( Fifty springs are little room,)Tj
T*
( About the woodlands I will go)Tj
T*
( To see the cherry hung with snow.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 2)Tj
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( Up, lad: when the journey\222s over)Tj
T*
( There\222ll be time enough to sleep.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 4)Tj
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( And naked to the hangman\222s noose)Tj
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( The morning clocks will ring)Tj
T*
( A neck God made for other use)Tj
T*
( Than strangling in a string.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 9)Tj
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( When I was one-and-twenty)Tj
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( I heard a wise man say,)Tj
T*
( \221Give crowns and pounds and guineas)Tj
T*
( But not your heart away;)Tj
T*
( Give pearls away and rubies,)Tj
T*
( But keep your fancy free.\222)Tj
T*
( But I was one-and-twenty,)Tj
T*
( No use to talk to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 13)Tj
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( In summertime on Bredon)Tj
T*
( The bells they sound so clear;)Tj
T*
( Round both the shires they ring them)Tj
T*
( In steeples far and near,)Tj
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( And hear the larks so high)Tj
T*
( About us in the sky.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair,)Tj
T*
( There\222s men from the barn and the forge and the mill and the fold\
,)Tj
T*
( The lads for the girls and the lads for the liquor are there,)Tj
T*
( And there with the rest are the lads that will never be old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( On Wenlock Edge the wood\222s in trouble;)Tj
T*
( His forest fleece the Wrekin heaves;)Tj
T*
( The wind it plies the saplings double,)Tj
T*
( And thick on Severn snow the leaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 31)Tj
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( The gale, it plies the saplings double,)Tj
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( It blows so hard, \222twill soon be gone:)Tj
T*
( To-day the Roman and his trouble)Tj
T*
( Are ashes under Uricon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( From far, from eve and morning)Tj
T*
( And yon twelve-winded sky,)Tj
T*
( The stuff of life to knit me)Tj
T*
( Blew hither: here am I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Into my heart an air that kills)Tj
T*
( From yon far country blows:)Tj
T*
( What are those blue remembered hills,)Tj
T*
( What spires, what farms are those?)Tj
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( That is the land of lost content,)Tj
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T*
( And cannot come again.)Tj
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(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( And bound for the same bourn as I,)Tj
T*
( On every road I wandered by,)Tj
T*
( Trod beside me, close and dear,)Tj
T*
( The beautiful and death-struck year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Clunton and Clunbury,)Tj
T*
( Clungunford and Clun,)Tj
T*
( Are the quietest places)Tj
T*
( Under the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 50, epigraph)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( By brooks too broad for leaping)Tj
T*
( The lightfoot boys are laid;)Tj
T*
( The rose-lipt girls are sleeping)Tj
T*
( In fields where roses fade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Say, for what were hop-yards meant,)Tj
T*
( Or why was Burton built on Trent?)Tj
T*
( Oh many a peer of England brews)Tj
T*
( Livelier liquor than the Muse,)Tj
T*
( And malt does more than Milton can)Tj
T*
( To justify God\222s ways to man.)Tj
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( Ale, man, ale\222s the stuff to drink)Tj
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( For fellows whom it hurts to think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 62.)Tj
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( I tell the tale that I heard told.)Tj
T*
( Mithridates, he died old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Shropshire Lad\222 \(1896\) no. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( This great College, of this ancient University, has seen some strang\
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T*
(Wordsworth drunk and Porson sober. And here am I, a better poet than Por\
son, and a better )Tj
T*
(scholar than Wordsworth, betwixt and between.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Speech at Trinity College, Cambridge, in G. K. Chesterton \221Autobiogra\
phy\222 \(1936\) ch. 12)Tj
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( 8.142 Julia Ward Howe 1819-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored\
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(\221Battle Hymn of the Republic\222 \(1862\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 8.143 James Howell c.1593-1666)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some hold translations not unlike to be)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The wrong side of a Turkey tapestry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Familiar Letters\222 \(1645-55\) bk. 1, letter 6)Tj
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( One hair of a woman can draw more than a hundred pair of oxen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Familiar Letters\222 \(1645-55\) bk. 2, letter 4)Tj
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( 8.144 Mary Howitt 1799-1888)Tj
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( Buttercups and daisies,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Oh, the pretty flowers;)Tj
T*
( Coming ere the springtime,)Tj
T*
( To tell of sunny hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(\221Buttercups and Daisies\222 \(1838\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.75456 Tm
( \221Will you walk into my parlour?\222 said a spider to a fly:)Tj
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( \221\222Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy.\222)Tj
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(\221The Spider and the Fly\222 \(1834\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 168.7124 Tm
( 8.145 Edmond Hoyle 1672-1769)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When in doubt, win the trick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(\221Hoyle\222s Games\222 \(c.1756\) \221Whist, Twenty-four Short Rules f\
or Learners\222 rule 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 98.9624 Tm
( 8.146 Elbert Hubbard 1859-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Never explain\227your friends do not need it and your enemies will n\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Motto Book\222 \(1907\) p. 31.)Tj
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( Life is just one damned thing after another.)Tj
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(\221Philistine\222 December 1909, p. 32 \(often attributed to Frank Ward\
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( Editor: a person employed by a newspaper, whose business it is to se\
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(\221The Roycroft Dictionary\222 \(1914\) p. 46)Tj
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( 8.147 Frank McKinney \(\221Kin\222\) Hubbard 1868-1930)Tj
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( Classic music is th\222kind that we keep thinkin\222ll turn into a t\
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(\221Comments of Abe Martin and His Neighbors\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( It\222s no disgrace t\222be poor, but it might as well be.)Tj
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(\221Short Furrows\222 \(1911\) p. 42)Tj
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( 8.148 L. Ron Hubbard 1911-86)Tj
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T*
( If you really want to make a million...the quickest way is to start \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.67047 Tm
(Speaking to the Eastern Science Fiction Association at Newark, New Jerse\
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(Ron Hubbard Jr. \221L. Ron Hubbard\222 \(1987\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.149 Howard Hughes Jr. 1905-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That man\222s ears make him look like a taxi-cab with both doors ope\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 438.92047 Tm
(Describing Clark Gable, in Charles Higham and Joel Greenberg \221Cellulo\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 406.7124 Tm
( 8.150 Jimmy Hughes and Frank Lake)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Bless \222em all! Bless \222em all!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The long and the short and the tall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.17047 Tm
(\221Bless \221Em All\222 \(1940 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.151 Langston Hughes 1902-67)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( I, too, sing America.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I am the darker brother.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They send me to eat in the kitchen)Tj
T*
( When company comes.)Tj
T*
( But I laugh,)Tj
T*
( And eat well,)Tj
T*
( And grow strong.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Tomorrow)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I\222ll sit at the table)Tj
T*
( When company comes)Tj
T*
( Nobody\222ll dare)Tj
T*
( Say to me,)Tj
T*
( \221Eat in the kitchen\222)Tj
T*
( Then.)Tj
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( And be ashamed,\227)Tj
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( I, too, am America.)Tj
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(\221I, Too\222 in \221Survey Graphic\222 March 1925)Tj
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( \221What?\222 )Tj
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( \221That one drop of Negro blood\227because just one drop of black b\
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T*
(One drop\227you are a Negro!\222)Tj
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(\221Simple Takes a Wife\222 \(1953\) p. 85)Tj
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( 8.152 Ted Hughes 1930\227)Tj
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( It took the whole of Creation)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Now I hold Creation in my foot.)Tj
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(\221Hawk Roosting\222 \(1960\))Tj
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Brown\222s Schooldays\222 \(1857\) pt. 1, ch. 3)Tj
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( \221I don\222t care a straw for Greek particles, or the digamma, no \
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T*
(sent to school for?...If he\222ll only turn out a brave, helpful, truth-\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221Tom Brown\222s Schooldays\222 \(1857\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
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( He never wants anything but what\222s right and fair; only when you \
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T*
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T*
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(\221Tom Brown\222s Schooldays\222 \(1857\) pt. 2, ch. 2)Tj
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( It\222s more than a game. It\222s an institution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(\221Tom Brown\222s Schooldays\222 \(1857\) pt. 2, ch. 7 \(on cricket\))Tj
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( 8.154 Victor Hugo 1802-85)Tj
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(\221Contemplations\222 \(1856\) bk. 1, no. 8)Tj
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( If suffer we must, let\222s suffer on the heights.)Tj
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(\221Contemplations\222 \(1856\) bk. 5, no. 26 \221Les Malheureux\222)Tj
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(\221Histoire d\222un Crime\222 \(written 1851-2, published 1877\) pt. 5,\
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( La sym\350trie, c\222est l\222ennui, et l\222ennui est le fond m\352\
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( J\350sus a pleur\350, Voltaire a souri; c\222est de cette larme divi\
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(Transcript of centenary oration on Voltaire, 30 May 1878, \221Centennair\
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( 8.155 David Hume 1711-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Custom, then, is the great guide of human life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 474.67047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1748\) sect. 5, pt. \
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T*
(experimental reasoning, concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Com\
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T*
(flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.92047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1748\) sect. 12, pt.\
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( Their credulity increases his impudence: and his impudence overpower\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.17047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1748\) \221Of Miracl\
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( We soon learn that there is nothing mysterious or supernatural in th\
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T*
(from the usual propensity of mankind towards the marvellous, and that, t\
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T*
(may at intervals receive a check from sense and learning, it can never b\
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T*
(from human nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.42047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1748\) \221Of Miracl\
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15 0 0 15 10 235.50456 Tm
( The Christian religion not only was at first attended with miracles,\
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T*
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T*
(its veracity: and whoever is moved by faith to assent to it, is consciou\
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T*
(his own person, which subverts all the principles of his understanding, \
and gives him a )Tj
T*
(determination to believe what is most contrary to custom and experience.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1748\) \221Of Miracl\
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( Avarice, the spur of industry, is so obstinate a passion, and works \
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T*
(dangers and difficulties, that it is not likely to be scared by an imagi\
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T*
(small that it scarcely admits of calculation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1741-2\) \221Of Civil Liberty\222)Tj
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( It cannot reasonably be doubted, but a little miss, dressed in a new\
gown for a dancing-school )Tj
ET
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(ball, receives as complete enjoyment as the greatest orator, who triumph\
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(\221Essays\222 \(1741-2\) \221The Sceptic\222)Tj
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( Should it be said, that, by living under the dominion of a prince, w\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary\222 \(ed. T. H. Green and T. \
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T*
(Contract\222 \(1748\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( In all ages of the world, priests have been enemies of liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary\222 \(ed. T. H. Green and T. \
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T*
(Britain\222 \(1741-2\))Tj
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( The heart of man is made to reconcile the most glaring contradiction\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(\221Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary\222 \(ed. T. H. Green and T. \
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(Britain\222 \(1741-2\))Tj
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( In all matters of opinion and science...the difference between men i\
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T*
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T*
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T*
(quarrelling, while at bottom they agreed in their judgement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.17047 Tm
(\221Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary\222 \(ed. T. H. Green and T. \
H. Grose, 1875\) \221Of the Standard of )Tj
T*
(Taste\222 \(1757\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.25456 Tm
( Beauty is no quality in things themselves. It exists merely in the m\
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T*
(them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(\221Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary\222 \(ed. T. H. Green and T. \
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T*
(Taste\222 \(1757\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Opposing one species of superstition to another, set them a quarrell\
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T*
(during their fury and contention, happily make our escape into the calm,\
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T*
(of philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
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T*
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(\221My Own Life\222 \(1777\) ch. 1)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
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( Abou Ben Adhem \(may his tribe increase!\))Tj
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( Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,)Tj
T*
( And saw, within the moonlight in his room,)Tj
T*
( Making it rich, and like a lily in bloom,)Tj
T*
( An angel writing in a book of gold:\227)Tj
T*
( Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,)Tj
T*
( And to the presence in the room he said,)Tj
T*
( \221What writest thou?\222\227The vision raised its head,)Tj
T*
( And with a look made of all sweet accord,)Tj
T*
( Answered, \221The names of those who love the Lord.\222)Tj
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(\221Abou Ben Adhem\222 \(1838\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.25456 Tm
( You strange, astonished-looking, angle-faced,)Tj
T*
( Dreary-mouthed, gaping wretches of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221The Fish, the Man, and the Spirit\222 \(1836\))Tj
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( \221By God!\222 said Francis, \221rightly done!\222 and he rose from\
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T*
( \221No love,\222 quoth he, \221but vanity, sets love a task like tha\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Glove and the Lions\222 \(1836\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( The laughing queen that caught the world\222s great hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Nile\222 \(1818\); referring to Cleopatra)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Jenny kissed me when we met,)Tj
T*
( Jumping from the chair she sat in;)Tj
T*
( Time, you thief, who love to get)Tj
T*
( Sweets into your list, put that in:)Tj
T*
( Say I\222m weary, say I\222m sad,)Tj
T*
( Say that health and wealth have missed me,)Tj
T*
( Say I\222m growing old, but add,)Tj
T*
( Jenny kissed me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Rondeau\222 \(1838\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Stolen sweets are always sweeter,)Tj
T*
( Stolen kisses much completer,)Tj
T*
( Stolen looks are nice in chapels,)Tj
T*
( Stolen, stolen, be your apples.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Fairies Robbing an Orchard\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( And all the scene, in short\227sky, earth, and sea,)Tj
T*
( Breathes like a bright-eyed face, that laughs out openly.)Tj
T*
( \222Tis nature, full of spirits, waked and springing:\227)Tj
T*
( The birds to the delicious time are singing,)Tj
T*
( Darting with freaks and snatches up and down,)Tj
T*
( Where the light woods go seaward from the town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221The Story of Rimini\222 \(1816\) canto 1, l. 18)Tj
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(\221The Story of Rimini\222 \(1816\) canto 3, l. 257)Tj
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( A pleasure so exquisite as almost to amount to pain.)Tj
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(Letter to Alexander Ireland, 2 June 1848, on receiving \221a glorious ba\
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T*
(Correspondence of Leigh Hunt\222 \(1862\) vol. 2, p. 122)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Tie up my sleeves with ribbons rare,)Tj
T*
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(\221A Pastoral Song\222 \(1794\))Tj
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( 8.159 William Hunter 1718-83)Tj
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.92047 Tm
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( 8.160 Herman Hupfeld 1894-1951)Tj
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( You must remember this, a kiss is still a kiss,)Tj
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T*
( The fundamental things apply,)Tj
T*
( As time goes by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(\221As Time Goes By\222 \(1931 song\).)Tj
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( 8.162 Saddam Hussein \(Saddam bin Hussein at-Takriti\) 1937\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The mother of battles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(Popular interpretation of his description of the approaching Gulf War in\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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( Wisdom denotes the pursuing of the best ends by the best means.)Tj
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T*
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(\221Brave New World\222 \(1932\) ch. 5)Tj
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( The proper study of mankind is books.)Tj
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T*
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( The end cannot justify the means, for the simple and obvious reason \
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T*
(determine the nature of the ends produced.)Tj
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( So long as men worship the Caesars and Napoleons, Caesars and Napole\
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T*
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(\221Ends and Means\222 \(1937\) ch. 8)Tj
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( Chastity\227the most unnatural of all the sexual perversions.)Tj
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( I can sympathize with people\222s pains, but not with their pleasure\
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T*
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(\221Limbo\222 \(1920\) \221Cynthia\222)Tj
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( Several excuses are always less convincing than one.)Tj
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(\221Point Counter Point\222 \(1928\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Brought up in an epoch when ladies apparently rolled along on wheels\
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T*
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( A million million spermatozoa,)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.42047 Tm
(\221Ninth Philosopher\222s Song\222 \(1920\))Tj
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( Then brim the bowl with atrabilious liquor!)Tj
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( We\222ll pledge our Empire vast across the flood:)Tj
T*
( For Blood, as all men know, than Water\222s thicker,)Tj
T*
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(\221Ninth Philosopher\222s Song\222 \(1920\))Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.17047 Tm
(\221Collected Essays\222 \(1893-94\) \221Agnosticism\222)Tj
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( The great tragedy of Science\227the slaying of a beautiful hypothesi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.42047 Tm
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
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( If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Collected Essays\222 vol. 3 \(1895\) \221On Elementary Instruction i\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Lay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews\222 \(1870\) \221A Liberal Educa\
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( Some experience of popular lecturing had convinced me that the neces\
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Man\222s Place in Nature\222 \(1894 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( It is the customary fate of new truths to begin as heresies and to e\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Science and Culture and Other Essays\222 \(1881\) \221The Coming of \
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( Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Science and Culture and Other Essays\222 \(1881\) \221The Coming of \
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( Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons of \
wise men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Science and Culture and Other Essays\222 \(1881\) \221On the Hypothe\
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( I asserted\227and I repeat\227that a man has no reason to be ashamed\
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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of his hearers from the real )Tj
T*
(point at issue by eloquent digressions and skilled appeals to religious \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(Replying to Bishop Samuel Wilberforce in the debate on Darwin\222s theor\
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T*
(the British Association at Oxford, 30 June 1860. See letter from J. R. G\
reen to Professor Boyd Dawkins in )Tj
T*
(Leonard Huxley \(ed.\) \221The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley\222\
\(1900\). In a letter to Francis Darwin, )Tj
T*
(Huxley agreed that this account was fair if not wholly accurate: there i\
s no reliable verbatim transcript.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 161.25456 Tm
( I am too much of a sceptic to deny the possibility of anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(Letter to Herbert Spencer, 22 March 1886, in Leonard Huxley \221Life and\
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T*
(Huxley\222 \(1900\) vol. 2, ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 98.2124 Tm
( 8.167 Edward Hyde)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Earl of Clarendon \(3.104\))Tj
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17.5 0 0 17.5 10 41.28038 Tm
( 9.0 I)Tj
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( No pasar n.)Tj
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T*
( They shall not pass.)Tj
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(Radio broadcast, Madrid, 19 July 1936, in \221Speeches and Articles 1936\
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( 9.2 Henrik Ibsen 1828-1906)Tj
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(\221Bygmester Solness\222 \(The Master Builder, 1892\) act 3)Tj
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( Flertallet har aldrig retten p\345 sin side. Aldrig, siger jeg! Det \
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(Er det de kloge folk, eller er det d\351 dumme? Jeg taenker, vi f\345r v\
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T*
(mennesker er tilstede i en ganske forskraek kelig overv\222ldende majori\
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T*
(hele vide jord. Men det kan da vel, for fanden, aldrig i evighed vaere r\
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T*
(over de kloge!)Tj
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(wise men or the fools? I think we must agree that the fools are in a ter\
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(majority, all the wide world over.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.67047 Tm
(\221En Folkefiende\222 \(An Enemy of the People, 1882\) act 4)Tj
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(\221En Folkefiende\222 \(An Enemy of the People, 1882\) act 5)Tj
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( The thing is, you see, that the strongest man in the world is the ma\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.67047 Tm
(\221En Folkefiende\222 \(An Enemy of the People, 1882\) act 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.75456 Tm
( Mor, gi\222 mig solen.)Tj
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T*
( Mother, give me the sun.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.17047 Tm
(\221Gengangere\222 \(Ghosts, 1881\) act 3)Tj
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( But good God, people don\222t do such things!)Tj
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(\221Hedda Gabler\222 \(1890\) act 4)Tj
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( What ought a man to be? Well, my short answer is \221himself\222.)Tj
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(\221Peer Gynt\222 \(1867\) act 4)Tj
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( Tar de livsl\355gnen fra et gennemsnitsmenneske, s\345 tar De lykken\
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(\221Vildanden\222 \(The Wild Duck, 1884\) act 5)Tj
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( 9.3 Eric Idle 1943\227)Tj
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( See Graham Chapman et al. \(3.74\))Tj
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(\221Malice Aforethought\222 \(1931\) p. 7)Tj
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( 9.5 Ivan Illich 1926\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( In a consumer society there are inevitably two kinds of slaves: the \
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0 -1.2 TD
(the prisoners of envy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221Tools for Conviviality\222 \(1973\) ch. 3)Tj
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( 9.6 Charles Inge 1868-1957)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( This very remarkable man)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Commends a most practical plan:)Tj
T*
( You can do what you want)Tj
T*
( If you don\222t think you can\222t,)Tj
T*
( So don\222t think you can\222t think you can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221On Monsieur Cou\350\222 \(1928\).)Tj
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( 9.7 William Ralph Inge \(Dean Inge\) 1860-1954)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The enemies of Freedom do not argue; they shout and they shoot.)Tj
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(\221End of an Age\222 \(1948\) ch. 4)Tj
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( The effect of boredom on a large scale in history is underestimated.\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(the Fabians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(\221End of an Age\222 \(1948\) ch. 6)Tj
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( To become a popular religion, it is only necessary for a superstitio\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(\221Idea of Progress\222 \(Romanes Lecture delivered at Oxford, 27 May 1\
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15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( Many people believe that they are attracted by God, or by Nature, wh\
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T*
(by man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221More Lay Thoughts of a Dean\222 \(1931\) pt. 4, ch. 1)Tj
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( It takes in reality only one to make a quarrel. It is useless for th\
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T*
(favour of vegetarianism, while the wolf remains of a different opinion.)Tj
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(\221Philosophy of Plotinus\222 \(1923\) vol. 2, lecture 22 \(quoted by B\
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T*
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( The aim of education is the knowledge not of facts but of values.)Tj
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(\221The Training of the Reason\222 in A. C. Benson \(ed.\) \221Cambridg\
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( Play uppe, play uppe, O Boston bells!)Tj
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(\221The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571\222)Tj
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( Play uppe \221The Brides of Enderby\222.)Tj
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(\221The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571\222)Tj
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( \221Cusha! Cusha! Cusha!\222 calling)Tj
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( E\222er the early dews were falling,)Tj
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( Farre away I heard her song.)Tj
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(\221The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571\222)Tj
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( Come uppe, Whitefoot, come uppe Lightfoot,)Tj
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T*
( Jetty, to the milking shed.)Tj
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(\221The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571\222)Tj
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( But each will mourn her own \(she saith\))Tj
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( And sweeter woman ne\222er drew breath)Tj
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( Than my sonne\222s wife, Elizabeth.)Tj
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(\221The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571\222)Tj
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( An honest God is the noblest work of man.)Tj
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(\221The Gods\222 \(1876\) pt. 1, p. 2.)Tj
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( In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments\227there are con\
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(\221Some Reasons Why\222 \(1881\) pt. 8 \221The New Testament\222 in \221\
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( A civil servant doesn\222t make jokes.)Tj
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(Title of song \(1969\))Tj
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( 9.13 Washington Irving 1783-1859)Tj
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( A woman\222s whole life is a history of the affections.)Tj
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(\221The Sketch Book\222 \(1820\) \221The Broken Heart\222)Tj
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( A tart temper never mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is the only\
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(\221The Sketch Book\222 \(1820\) \221Rip Van Winkle\222)Tj
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( They who drink beer will think beer.)Tj
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(\221The Sketch Book\222 \(1820\) \221Stratford-on-Avon\222)Tj
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(shift one\222s position and be bruised in a new place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.92047 Tm
(\221Tales of a Traveller\222 \(1824\) \221To the Reader\222)Tj
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( The almighty dollar, that great object of universal devotion.)Tj
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(\221Wolfert\222s Roost\222 \(1855\) \221The Creole Village\222)Tj
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( As land untilled a fruitful crop should bring.)Tj
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( Untaught the noble end of glorious truth,)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Mr Pope. Occasioned by his Characters of Women\222 in \
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( You follow the idea, no doubt?)Tj
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( It\222s to keep the lightning out.)Tj
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(\221Goodbye to Berlin\222 \(1939\) \221Berlin Diary\222 Autumn 1930)Tj
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( See also W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood \(1.115\))Tj
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( )Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 402.17047 Tm
(Presidential message vetoing the bill to re-charter the Bank of the Unit\
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T*
(Commager \(ed.\) \221Documents of American History\222 vol. 1 \(1963\) \
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( Our Federal Union: it must be preserved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.42047 Tm
(Toast given on the Jefferson Birthday Celebration, 13 April 1830. In Tho\
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T*
(View\222 \(1856\) vol. 1)Tj
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( You are uneasy; you never sailed with me before, I see.)Tj
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(In James Parton \221Life of Jackson\222 \(1860\) vol. 3, ch. 35)Tj
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( 10.2 Holbrook Jackson 1874-1948)Tj
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( A mother never realizes that her children are no longer children.)Tj
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(\221All Manner of Folk\222 \(1912\) \221On a Certain Arrangement\222)Tj
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( Pedantry is the dotage of knowledge.)Tj
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(\221Anatomy of Bibliomania\222 \(1930\) vol. 1, p. 150)Tj
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( As soon as an idea is accepted it is time to reject it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.42047 Tm
(\221Platitudes in the Making\222 \(1911\) p. 13)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
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( 10.3 Joe Jacobs 1896-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We was robbed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.67047 Tm
(After Jack Sharkey beat Max Schmeling \(of whom Jacobs was manager\) in \
the heavyweight title fight, 21 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(June 1932: Peter Heller \221In This Corner\222 \(1975\) p. 44)Tj
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( I should of stood in bed.)Tj
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(After leaving his sick-bed in October 1935 to attend the World Baseball \
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0 -1.2 TD
(losers, in John Lardner \221Strong Cigars\222 \(1951\) p. 61)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 10.4 Jacopone da Todi c.1230-1306)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Stabat Mater dolorosa,)Tj
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( Dum pendebat filius.)Tj
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( Where he hung, the dying Lord.)Tj
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(\221Stabat Mater dolorosa\222 \(ascribed also to Pope Innocent III and o\
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(Modern\222 based on that of E. Caswall in \221Lyra Catholica\222 \(1849\)\
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15 0 0 15 10 529.4624 Tm
( 10.5 Mick Jagger 1943\227and Keith Richard \(Keith Richards\) 1943\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ev\222rywhere I hear the sound of marching, charging feet, oh, boy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \222Cause summer\222s here and the time is oh, right for fighting in\
the street, boy.)Tj
T*
( But what can a poor boy do)Tj
T*
( Except to sing for a rock \222n\222 roll band,)Tj
T*
( \222Cause in sleepy London town)Tj
T*
( There\222s just no place for street fighting man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.92047 Tm
(\221Street Fighting Man\222 \(1968 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.7124 Tm
( 10.6 Richard Jago 1715-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( With leaden foot time creeps along)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( While Delia is away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(\221Absence\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 281.9624 Tm
( 10.7 James I \(James VI of Scotland\) 1566-1625)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A branch of the sin of drunkenness, which is the root of all sins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221A Counterblast to Tobacco\222 \(1604\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( A custom loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the b\
rain, dangerous to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lungs, and in the black, stinking fume thereof, nearest resembling the h\
orrible Stygian smoke of )Tj
T*
(the pit that is bottomless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221A Counterblast to Tobacco\222 \(1604\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( Herein is not only a great vanity, but a great contempt of God\222s \
good gifts, that the sweetness )Tj
T*
(of man\222s breath, being a good gift of God, should be wilfully corrupt\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221A Counterblast to Tobacco\222 \(1604\))Tj
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( The state of monarchy is the supremest thing upon earth; for kings a\
re not only God\222s )Tj
T*
(lieutenants upon earth, and sit upon God\222s throne, but even by God hi\
mself they are called gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(Speech to Parliament, 21 March 1610, in \221Works\222 \(1616\) p. 529)Tj
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( The king is truly parens patriae, the polite father of his people.)Tj
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( That which concerns the mystery of the king\222s power is not lawful\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(them that sit in the throne of God.)Tj
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(\221A Speech in the Star Chamber\222 [speech to the judges] 20 June 1616\
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( No bishop, no King.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
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T*
(Barlow \221The Sum of the Conference\222 \(1625\) p. 36)Tj
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( I will govern according to the common weal, but not according to the\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.92047 Tm
(December, 1621. In J. R. Green \221History of the English People\222 vol\
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( Dr Donne\222s verses are like the peace of God; they pass all unders\
tanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(Saying recorded by Archdeacon Plume \(1630-1704\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( You cannot name any example in any heathen author but I will better \
it in Scripture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(In \221Crumms Fal\222n From King James\222s Table\222 no. 10, in E. F. R\
imbault \(ed.\) \221The Miscellaneous Works of Sir )Tj
T*
(Thomas Overbury\222 \(1856\) p. 257)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.2124 Tm
( 10.8 James V of Scotland 1512-42)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It cam\222 wi\222 a lass, it will gang wi\222 a lass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.67047 Tm
(Said on his deathbed, of the crown of Scotland. David Hume \221The Histo\
ry of England\222 \(1763\) vol. 4, ch. 33 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(records \221It came with a woman...and it will go with one.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 388.4624 Tm
( 10.9 Henry James 1843-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The ever-importunate murmur, \221Dramatize it, dramatize it!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.92047 Tm
(\221The Altar of the Dead\222 \(1909 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.00456 Tm
( The terrible fluidity of self-revelation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(\221The Ambassadors\222 \(1909 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.25456 Tm
( Live all you can; it\222s a mistake not to. It doesn\222t so much ma\
tter what you do in particular, so )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(long as you have your life. If you haven\222t had that, what have you ha\
d?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(\221The Ambassadors\222 \(1903\) bk. 5, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.50456 Tm
( The deep well of unconscious cerebration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.67047 Tm
(\221The American\222 \(1909 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.75456 Tm
( The historian, essentially, wants more documents than he can really \
use; the dramatist only )Tj
T*
(wants more liberties than he can really take.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221The Aspern Papers\222 \(1909 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( Most English talk is a quadrille in a sentry-box.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(\221The Awkward Age\222 \(1899\) bk. 5, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.25456 Tm
( Vereker\222s secret, my dear man\227the general intention of his boo\
ks: the string the pearls were )Tj
T*
(strung on, the buried treasure, the figure in the carpet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.42047 Tm
(\221The Figure in the Carpet\222 \(1896\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.50456 Tm
( It takes a great deal of history to produce a little literature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.67047 Tm
(\221Hawthorne\222 \(1879\) ch. 1)Tj
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( One might ennumerate the items of high civilization, as it exists in\
other countries, which are )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(absent from the texture of American life, until it should become a wonde\
r to know what was left. )Tj
T*
(No State, in the European sense of the word, and indeed barely a specifi\
c national name. No )Tj
T*
(sovereign, no court, no personal loyalty, no aristocracy, no church, no \
clergy, no army, no )Tj
T*
(diplomatic service, no country gentlemen, no palaces, no castles, nor ma\
nors, nor old country )Tj
T*
(houses, nor parsonages, nor thatched cottages, nor ivied ruins; no cathe\
drals nor abbeys, nor little )Tj
T*
(Norman churches; no great universities nor public schools\227no Oxford, \
nor Eton, nor Harrow; no )Tj
T*
(literature, no novels, no museums, no pictures, no political society, no\
sporting class\227no Epsom )Tj
T*
(nor Ascot!...The natural remark in the almost lurid light of such an ind\
ictment, would be that if )Tj
T*
(these things are left out, everything is left out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.92047 Tm
(\221Hawthorne\222 \(1879\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.00456 Tm
( Whatever question there may be of his talent, there can be none, I t\
hink, of his genius. It was a )Tj
T*
(slim and crooked one; but it was eminently personal. He was imperfect, u\
nfinished, inartistic; he )Tj
T*
(was worse than provincial\227he was parochial.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(\221Hawthorne\222 \(1879\) ch. 4 \(on H. D. Thoreau, q.v.\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( The black and merciless things that are behind the great possessions\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(\221The Ivory Tower\222 \(1917\) notes p. 287)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( Poor Gissing...struck me as quite particularly marked out for what i\
s called in his and my )Tj
T*
(profession an unhappy ending.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(Letter to Sir Sidney Colvin, 1903)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.75456 Tm
( It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance, for our\
consideration and )Tj
T*
(application of these things, and I know of no substitute whatever for th\
e force and beauty of its )Tj
T*
(process.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.92047 Tm
(Letter to H. G. Wells, 10 July 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.00456 Tm
( I could come back to America...to die\227but never, never to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.17047 Tm
(Letter to Alice James)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.25456 Tm
( Cats and monkeys\227monkeys and cats\227all human life is there!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221The Madonna of the Future\222 \(1879\) vol. 1, p. 59 \(\221All human\
life is there\222 became an advertising slogan for )Tj
T*
(the \221News of the World\222 in the late 1950s\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.50456 Tm
( We work in the dark\227we do what we can\227we give what we have. Ou\
r doubt is our passion )Tj
T*
(and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.67047 Tm
(\221The Middle Years\222 \(short story, 1893\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.75456 Tm
( Tennyson was not Tennysonian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.92047 Tm
(\221The Middle Years\222 \(1917 autobiography\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.00456 Tm
( To kill a human being is, after all, the least injury you can do him\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.17047 Tm
(\221My Friend Bingham\222 \(short story, 1867\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.25456 Tm
( Experience is never limited, and it is never complete; it is an imme\
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T*
(huge spider-web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of\
consciousness, and )Tj
T*
(catching every air-borne particle in its tissue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.42047 Tm
(\221Partial Portraits\222 \(1888\) \221The Art of Fiction\222)Tj
ET
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( What is character but the determination of incident? What is inciden\
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0 -1.2 TD
(character?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Partial Portraits\222 \(1888\) \221The Art of Fiction\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I don\222t care anything about reasons, but I know what I like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Portrait of a Lady\222 \(1881\) vol. 2, ch. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The note I wanted; that of the strange and sinister embroidered on t\
he very type of the normal )Tj
T*
(and easy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Prefaces\222 \(1909\) \221The Altar of the Dead\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Really, universally, relations stop nowhere, and the exquisite probl\
em of the artist is eternally )Tj
T*
(but to draw, by a geometry of his own, the circle within which they shal\
l happily appear to do so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Roderick Hudson\222 \(1877\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I didn\222t, of course, stay her hand\227there never is in such case\
s \221time\222; and I had once more the )Tj
T*
(full demonstration of the fatal futility of Fact.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Spoils of Poynton\222 \(1909 ed.\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( We were alone with the quiet day, and his little heart, dispossessed\
, had stopped.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Turn of the Screw\222 \(1898\) p. 169)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Summer afternoon\227summer afternoon...the two most beautiful words \
in the English language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(In Edith Wharton \221A Backward Glance\222 \(1934\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( So here it is at last, the distinguished thing!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(On experiencing his first stroke, in Edith Wharton \221A Backward Glance\
\222 \(1934\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Of course, of course!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(On hearing that Rupert Brooke had died on a Greek island \(attributed\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 338.9624 Tm
( 10.10 William James 1842-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man, biologically considered, and whatever else he may be into the b\
argain, is simply the most )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(formidable of all the beasts of prey, and, indeed, the only one that pre\
ys systematically on its own )Tj
T*
(species.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Atlantic Monthly\222 December 1904, p. 845)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( The moral flabbiness born of the exclusive worship of the bitch-godd\
ess success. That\227with )Tj
T*
(the squalid cash interpretation put on the word success\227is our nation\
al disease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(Letter to H. G. Wells, 11 September 1906, in \221Letters\222 \(1920\) vo\
l. 2, p. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Real culture lives by sympathies and admirations, not by dislikes an\
d disdains\227under all )Tj
T*
(misleading wrappings it pounces unerringly upon the human core.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221McClure\222s Magazine\222 February 1908, p. 422)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( There is no more miserable human being than one in whom nothing is h\
abitual but indecision.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221The Principles of Psychology\222 \(1890\) vol. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Principles of Psychology\222 \(1890\) vol. 2, ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( There is no worse lie than a truth misunderstood by those who hear i\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Varieties of Religious Experience\222 \(1902\) lectures 14 and 1\
5, p. 355)Tj
ET
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( 10.11 Randall Jarrell 1914-65)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To Americans, English manners are far more frightening than none at \
all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 705.92047 Tm
(\221Pictures from an Institution\222 \(1954\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 685.00456 Tm
( It is better to entertain an idea than to take it home to live with \
you for the rest of your life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 669.17047 Tm
(\221Pictures from an Institution\222 \(1954\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 636.9624 Tm
( 10.12 Douglas Jay 1907\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Fair shares for all, is Labour\222s call.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 599.42047 Tm
(\221Change and Fortune\222 \(1980\) ch. 7 \(slogan devised for the North\
Battersea by-election, 1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 578.50456 Tm
( In the case of nutrition and health, just as in the case of educatio\
n, the gentleman in Whitehall )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(really does know better what is good for people than the people know the\
mselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 544.67047 Tm
(\221The Socialist Case\222 \(1939\) ch. 30)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 512.4624 Tm
( 10.13 Jean Paul 1763-1825)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Johann Paul Friedrich Richter \(6.46\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 10.14 Sir James Jeans 1877-1946)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Taking a very gloomy view of the future of the human race, let us su\
ppose that it can only )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(expect to survive for two thousand million years longer, a period about \
equal to the past age of )Tj
T*
(the earth. Then, regarded as a being destined to live for three-score ye\
ars and ten, humanity, )Tj
T*
(although it has been born in a house seventy years old, is itself only t\
hree days old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 366.17047 Tm
(\221Eos\222 \(1928\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 345.25456 Tm
( Life exists in the universe only because the carbon atom possesses c\
ertain exceptional )Tj
T*
(properties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.42047 Tm
(\221The Mysterious Universe\222 \(1930\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.50456 Tm
( From the intrinsic evidence of his creation, the Great Architect of \
the Universe now begins to )Tj
T*
(appear as a pure mathematician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.67047 Tm
(\221The Mysterious Universe\222 \(1930\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 224.4624 Tm
( 10.15 Thomas Jefferson 1743-1826)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one peo\
ple to dissolve the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume am\
ong the powers of the )Tj
T*
(earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of \
Nature\222s God entitle them, )Tj
T*
(a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should de\
clare the causes which )Tj
T*
(impel them to the separation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776; preamble)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( We hold these truths to be sacred and undeniable; that all men are c\
reated equal and )Tj
T*
(independent, that from that equal creation they derive rights inherent a\
nd inalienable, among )Tj
T*
(which are the preservation of life, and liberty, and the pursuit of happ\
iness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.17047 Tm
(Original draft for the Declaration of Independence.)Tj
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( All, too, will bear in mind this sacred principle, that though the w\
ill of the majority is in all )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(cases to prevail, that will to be rightful must be reasonable; that the \
minority possess their equal )Tj
T*
(rights, which equal law must protect, and to violate would be oppression\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.42047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1801)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.50456 Tm
( Would the honest patriot, in the full tide of successful experiment,\
abandon a government )Tj
T*
(which has so far kept us free and firm?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.67047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1801)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.75456 Tm
( Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations\227entanglin\
g alliances with none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.92047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1801)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.00456 Tm
( Freedom of religion; freedom of the press, and freedom of person und\
er the protection of )Tj
T*
(habeas corpus, and trial by juries impartially selected. These principle\
s form the bright )Tj
T*
(constellation which has gone before us, and guided our steps through an \
age of revolution and )Tj
T*
(reformation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.17047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1801)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.25456 Tm
( Experience declares that man is the only animal which devours its ow\
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T*
(milder term to the governments of Europe, and to the general prey of the\
rich on the poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.42047 Tm
(Letter to Colonel Edward Carrington, 16 January 1787)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.50456 Tm
( A little rebellion now and then is a good thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.67047 Tm
(Letter to James Madison, 30 January 1787, in Thomas Jefferson Randolph \(\
ed.\) \221Memoirs, Correspondence )Tj
T*
(and Private Papers of Thomas Jefferson\222 \(1829\) vol. 2, p. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.75456 Tm
( The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blo\
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T*
(is its natural manure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.92047 Tm
(Letter to W. S. Smith, 13 November 1787, in Thomas Jefferson Randolph \(\
ed.\) \221Memoirs, Correspondence )Tj
T*
(and Private Papers of Thomas Jefferson\222 \(1829\) vol. 2, p. 269)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.00456 Tm
( Whenever a man has cast a longing eye on them, a rottenness begins i\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.17047 Tm
(Letter to Tench Coxe, 1799 \(on official positions\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.25456 Tm
( If the principle were to prevail of a common law [i.e a single gover\
nment] being in force in the )Tj
T*
(United States...it would become the most corrupt government on the earth\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.42047 Tm
(Letter to Gideon Granger, 13 August 1800, in Thomas Jefferson Randolph \(\
ed.\) \221Memoirs, Correspondence )Tj
T*
(and Private Papers of Thomas Jefferson\222 \(1829\) vol. 3, p. 445)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.50456 Tm
( I agree with you that there is a natural aristocracy among men. The \
grounds of this are virtue )Tj
T*
(and talents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Adams, 28 October 1813)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 158.75456 Tm
( If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilizat\
ion, it expects what never was )Tj
T*
(and never will be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.92047 Tm
(Letter to Colonel Charles Yancey, 6 January 1816)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.00456 Tm
( I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but \
the people themselves; and )Tj
T*
(if we think of them not enlightened enough to exercise their control wit\
h a wholesome discretion, )Tj
T*
(the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.17047 Tm
(Letter to William Charles Jarvis, 28 September 1816)Tj
ET
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( We are not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to toler\
ate any error so long as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reason is left free to combat it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Letter to William Roscoe, 27 December 1820)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( To attain all this [universal republicanism], however, rivers of blo\
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T*
(of desolation pass over; yet the object is worth rivers of blood, and ye\
ars of desolation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Letter to John Adams, 4 September 1823, in Thomas Jefferson Randolph \(e\
d.\) \221Memoirs, Correspondence and )Tj
T*
(Private Papers of Thomas Jefferson\222 \(1829\) vol. 4, p. 387)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( If a due participation of office is a matter of right, how are vacan\
cies to be obtained? Those by )Tj
T*
(death are few; by resignation none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Adams, 4 September 1823 \(usually quoted, \221Few die and\
none resign\222\), in Thomas Jefferson )Tj
T*
(Randolph \(ed.\) \221Memoirs, Correspondence and Private Papers of Thom\
as Jefferson\222 \(1829\) vol. 4, p. 387)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.75456 Tm
( Millions of innocent men, women, and children, since the introductio\
n of Christianity, have )Tj
T*
(been burnt, tortured, fined, imprisoned; yet we have not advanced one in\
ch towards uniformity )Tj
T*
([of opinion]. What has been the effect of coercion? To make one half the\
world fools, and the )Tj
T*
(other half hypocrites.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221Notes on the State of Virginia\222 \(1781-5\) Query 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.00456 Tm
( Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221Notes on the State of Virginia\222 \(1781-5\) Query 18 \221Manners\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( No duty the Executive had to perform was so trying as to put the rig\
ht man in the right place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(In J. B. MacMaster \221History of the People of the U.S.\222 \(1883-1913\
\) vol. 2, ch. 13, p. 586)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.50456 Tm
( We have the wolf by the ears; and we can neither hold him, nor safel\
y let him go. Justice is in )Tj
T*
(one scale, and self-preservation in the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(On slavery in the United States, 1820, in J. C. Miller \221The Wolf by t\
he Ears\222 \(1977\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.75456 Tm
( When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as pub\
lic property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(Remark to Baron von Humboldt, 1807, in Rayner \221Life of Jefferson\222 \
\(1834\) p. 356)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 291.7124 Tm
( 10.16 Francis, Lord Jeffrey 1773-1850)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This will never do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.17047 Tm
(On Wordsworth\222s \221The Excursion\222 \(1814\), in \221Edinburgh Revi\
ew\222 November 1814, p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.9624 Tm
( 10.17 David Jenkins 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The withdrawal of an imported, elderly American to leave a reconcili\
ng opportunity for some )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(local product is surely neither dishonourable nor improper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(Referring to Ian MacGregor, Chairman of the Coal Board, in \221The Times\
\222 22 September 1984)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( A conjuring trick with bones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(On the Resurrection)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.4624 Tm
( 10.18 Roy Jenkins \(Baron Jenkins of Hillhead\) 1920\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The politics of the left and centre of this country are frozen in an\
out-of-date mould which is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(bad for the political and economic health of Britain and increasingly in\
hibiting for those who live )Tj
T*
(within the mould. Can it be broken?)Tj
ET
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(Speech to Parliamentary Press Gallery, 9 June 1980, in \221The Times\222\
10 June 1980)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 721.7124 Tm
( 10.19 Paul Jennings 1918-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Resistentialism is concerned with what Things think about men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 684.17047 Tm
(\221Even Oddlier\222 \221Developments in Resistentialism\222)Tj
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( In this concept of Activated Sludge, two perfectly opposite forces a\
re held in perfect )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(equilibrium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.42047 Tm
(\221The Jenguin Pennings\222 \221Activated Sludge\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 597.2124 Tm
( 10.20 Soame Jenyns 1704-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Omnipotence cannot work contradictions; it can only effect all possi\
ble things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.67047 Tm
(\221A Free Enquiry into the Nature and Origin of Evil\222 \(1757\) Lette\
r 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 538.75456 Tm
( Those who profess outrageous zeal for the liberty and prosperity of \
their country, and at the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(same time infringe her laws, affront her religion and debauch her people\
, are but despicable )Tj
T*
(quacks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.92047 Tm
(\221A Free Enquiry into the Nature and Origin of Evil\222 \(1757\) Lette\
r 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.00456 Tm
( Thousands are collected from the idle and the extravagant for seeing\
dogs, horses, men and )Tj
T*
(monkeys perform feats of activity, and, in some places, for the privileg\
e only of seeing one )Tj
T*
(another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.17047 Tm
(\221Works\222 vol. 2, p. 291)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 381.9624 Tm
( 10.21 St Jerome c.342-420)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Venerationi mihi semper fuit non verbosa rusticitas, sed sancta simp\
licitas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I have revered always not crude verbosity, but holy simplicity.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 322.67047 Tm
(Letter \221Ad Pammachium\222 in \221Patrologiae Latinae\222 vol. 22 \(18\
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15 0 0 15 10 301.75456 Tm
( Hooly writ is the scripture of puples, for it is maad, that alle pup\
lis schulden knowe it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.92047 Tm
(Attributed in the Prologue \(itself attributed to John Purvey\). J. Fors\
hall and F. Madden \(eds.\) \221The Holy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Bible...in the Earliest English Versions\222 \(1850\) vol. 1 \221The Pro\
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T*
(Bible \(c.1378/80\) ch. 15)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 223.7124 Tm
( 10.22 Jerome K. Jerome 1859-1927)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of\
work to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(\221Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow\222 \(1886\) \221On Being Idle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( The passing of the third floor back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.42047 Tm
(Title of story \(1907\) and play \(1910\))Tj
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( I want a house that has got over all its troubles; I don\222t want t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(bringing up a young and inexperienced house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.67047 Tm
(\221They and I\222 \(1909\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.75456 Tm
( But there, everything has its drawbacks, as the man said when his mo\
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T*
(came down upon him for the funeral expenses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.92047 Tm
(\221Three Men in a Boat\222 \(1889\) ch. 3)Tj
ET
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( 10.23 William Jerome 1865-1932)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( Any old place I can hang my hat is home sweet home to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1901\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.25456 Tm
( You needn\222t try to reason,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Your excuse is out of season,)Tj
T*
( Just kiss yourself goodbye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.42047 Tm
(\221Just Kiss Yourself Goodbye\222 \(1902 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.2124 Tm
( 10.24 Douglas Jerrold 1803-57)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Religion\222s in the heart, not in the knees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.67047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Ducat\222 \(1830\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.75456 Tm
( The best thing I know between France and England is\227the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.92047 Tm
(\221The Wit and Opinions of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1859\) \221The Anglo-F\
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15 0 0 15 10 500.00456 Tm
( Earth is here so kind, that just tickle her with a hoe and she laugh\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.17047 Tm
(\221The Wit and Opinions of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1859\) \221A Land of P\
lenty\222 \(Australia\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.25456 Tm
( Love\222s like the measles\227all the worse when it comes late in li\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.42047 Tm
(\221The Wit and Opinions of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1859\) \221Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.50456 Tm
( Some people are so fond of ill-luck that they run half-way to meet i\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.67047 Tm
(\221The Wit and Opinions of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1859\) \221Meeting Tro\
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15 0 0 15 10 389.75456 Tm
( We love peace, as we abhor pusillanimity; but not peace at any price\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(worse than bayonets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.92047 Tm
(\221The Wit and Opinions of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1859\) \221Peace\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.00456 Tm
( If an earthquake were to engulf England to-morrow, the English would\
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T*
(dine somewhere among the rubbish, just to celebrate the event.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.17047 Tm
(In Blanchard Jerrold \221The Life and Remains of Douglas Jerrold\222 \(1\
859\) ch. 14)Tj
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( 10.25 John Jewel 1522-71)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In old time we had treen chalices and golden priests, but now we hav\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.42047 Tm
(\221Certain Sermons Preached Before the Queen\222s Majesty\222 \(1609\) \
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 10.26 C. E. M. Joad 1891-1953)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It all depends what you mean by...)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.67047 Tm
(Answering questions on \221The Brains Trust\222 \(formerly \221Any Quest\
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( My life is spent in a perpetual alternation between two rhythms, the\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.92047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 12 December 1948, p. 2)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Muero porque no muero.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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( I die because I do not die.)Tj
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(\221Coplas del alma que pena por ver a dios\222)Tj
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( Con un no saber sabiendo.)Tj
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( With a knowing ignorance.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 632.92047 Tm
(\221Coplas hechas sobre un \350xtasis de alta contemplaci\363n\222)Tj
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( 10.28 John of Salisbury c.1115-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Siquidem uita breuis, sensus hebes, neglegentiae torpor, inutilis oc\
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0 -1.2 TD
(permittunt, et eadem iugiter excutit et auellit ab animo fraudatrix scie\
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T*
(semper memoriae nouerca, obliuio.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( The brevity of our life, the dullness of our senses, the torpor of o\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221Prologue to the Policraticus\222 \(C. C. J. Webb\222s edition, 1909\)\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 437.2124 Tm
( 10.29 Pope John XXIII \(Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli\) 1881-1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If civil authorities legislate for or allow anything that is contrar\
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0 -1.2 TD
(contrary to the will of God, neither the laws made or the authorizations\
granted can be binding on )Tj
T*
(the consciences of the citizens, since God has more right to be obeyed t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221Pacem in Terris\222 \(1963\) p. 142)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.75456 Tm
( The social progress, order, security and peace of each country are n\
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T*
(the social progress, order, security and peace of all other countries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221Pacem in Terris\222 \(1963\) p. 150)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( In the universal Declaration of Human Rights \(December, 1948\), in \
most solemn form, the )Tj
T*
(dignity of a person is acknowledged to all human beings; and as a conseq\
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T*
(proclaimed, as a fundamental right, the right of free movement in search\
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T*
(attainment of moral good and of justice, and also the right to a dignifi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221Pacem in Terris\222 \(1963\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 185.9624 Tm
( 10.30 Linton Kwesi Johnson b. 1952)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Brothers and sisters rocking,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( a dread beat pulsing fire, burning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221Dread Beat an Blood\222 \(1975\))Tj
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( Cold lights hurting, breaking, hurting;)Tj
T*
( fire in the head and a dread beat bleeding, beating fire: dread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(\221Dread Beat an Blood\222 \(1975\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 10.31 Lionel Johnson 1867-1902)Tj
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( The saddest of all Kings)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Crowned, and again discrowned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221By the Statue of King Charles I at Charing Cross\222)Tj
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( Alone he rides, alone,)Tj
T*
( The fair and fatal king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221By the Statue of King Charles I at Charing Cross\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( There Shelley dreamed his white Platonic dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221Oxford\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( In her ears the chime)Tj
T*
( Of full, sad bells brings back her old springtide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.67047 Tm
(\221Oxford\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.75456 Tm
( I know you: solitary griefs,)Tj
T*
( Desolate passions, aching hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221The Precept of Silence\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 484.7124 Tm
( 10.32 Lyndon Baines Johnson 1908-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All I have I would have given gladly not to be standing here today.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.17047 Tm
(First speech to Congress as President, 27 November 1963, following the a\
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0 -1.2 TD
(\221Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Lyndon B. John\
son 1963-64\222 vol. 1, p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.25456 Tm
( We have talked long enough in this country about equal rights. We ha\
ve talked for a hundred )Tj
T*
(years or more. It is time now to write the next chapter, and to write it\
in the books of law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.42047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 27 November 1963, in \221Public Papers of the Presid\
ents of the United States: Lyndon B. )Tj
T*
(Johnson 1963-64\222 vol. 1, p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.50456 Tm
( We hope that the world will not narrow into a neighbourhood before i\
t has broadened into a )Tj
T*
(brotherhood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.67047 Tm
(Speech at lighting of the Nation\222s Christmas Tree, 22 December 1963, \
in \221Public Papers of the Presidents of )Tj
T*
(the United States: Lyndon B. Johnson 1963-64\222 vol. 1, item 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.75456 Tm
( In your time we have the opportunity to move not only toward the ric\
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T*
(powerful society, but upward to the Great Society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.92047 Tm
(Speech at University of Michigan, 22 May 1964, in \221Public Papers of t\
he Presidents of the United States: )Tj
T*
(Lyndon B. Johnson 1963-64\222 vol. 1, p. 704)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.00456 Tm
( We Americans know, although others appear to forget, the risks of sp\
reading conflict. We still )Tj
T*
(seek no wider war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.17047 Tm
(Speech on radio and television, 4 August 1964, in \221Public Papers of t\
he Presidents of the United States: )Tj
T*
(Lyndon B. Johnson 1963-64\222 vol. 2, p. 927)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.25456 Tm
( We are not about to send American boys 9 or 10,000 miles away from h\
ome to do what Asian )Tj
T*
(boys ought to be doing for themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(Speech at Akron University, 21 October 1964, in \221Public Papers of the\
Presidents of the United States: )Tj
T*
(Lyndon B. Johnson 1963-64\222 vol. 2, p. 1391)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.50456 Tm
( I am a free man, an American, a United States Senator, and a Democra\
t, in that order.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.67047 Tm
(\221Texas Quarterly\222 Winter 1958)Tj
ET
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( I don\222t want loyalty. I want loyalty. I want him to kiss my ass i\
n Macy\222s window at high noon )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and tell me it smells like roses. I want his pecker in my pocket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In David Halberstam \221The Best and the Brightest\222 \(1972\) ch. 20 \(\
discussing a potential assistant\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside pissing\
in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(In David Halberstam \221The Best and the Brightest\222 \(1972\) ch. 20 \(\
on J. Edgar Hoover\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( So dumb he can\222t fart and chew gum at the same time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(In Richard Reeves \221A Ford, not a Lincoln\222 \(1975\) ch. 2 \(on Gera\
ld Ford\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 613.4624 Tm
( 10.33 Paul Johnson)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A monstrous piece of work, the crude sexism, the disgusting sex, the\
very second-rate )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(snobbery, not even the snobbery of a proper snob, but the snobbery of an\
expense-account man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221New Statesman\222 1958 \(on the \221James Bond\222 film \221Dr No\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( Tories...are atrophied Englishmen, lacking certain moral and intelle\
ctual reflexes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221New Statesman\222 1958)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 488.9624 Tm
( 10.34 Philander Chase Johnson 1866-1939)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cheer up! the worst is yet to come!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221Everybody\222s Magazine\222 May 1920)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.2124 Tm
( 10.35 Philip Johnson 1906\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Architecture is the art of how to waste space.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 27 December 1964, p. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 349.4624 Tm
( 10.36 Samuel Johnson 1709-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( In all pointed sentences, some degree of accuracy must be sacrificed\
to conciseness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(\221The Bravery of the English Common Soldier\222 in \221The British Mag\
azine\222 January 1760 \(Yale ed., vol. 10, p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(281\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( Liberty is, to the lowest rank of every nation, little more than the\
choice of working or starving.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221The Bravery of the English Common Soldier\222 in \221The British Mag\
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T*
(283\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Change is not made without inconvenience, even from worse to better.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) preface.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( I am not yet so lost in lexicography as to forget that words are the\
daughters of earth, and that )Tj
T*
(things are the sons of heaven. Language is only the instrument of scienc\
e, and words are but the )Tj
T*
(signs of ideas: I wish, however, that the instrument might be less apt t\
o decay, and that signs )Tj
T*
(might be permanent, like the things which they denote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) preface.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Every quotation contributes something to the stability or enlargemen\
t of the language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) preface \(on citat\
ions of usage in a dictionary\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( But these were the dreams of a poet doomed at last to wake a lexicog\
rapher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) preface)Tj
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( If the changes we fear be thus irresistible, what remains but to acq\
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0 -1.2 TD
(other insurmountable distresses of humanity? It remains that we retard w\
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T*
(we palliate what we cannot cure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) preface)Tj
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( Dull. To make dictionaries is dull work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\) 8th definition)Tj
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( Excise. A hateful tax levied upon commodities.)Tj
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(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\))Tj
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( Net. Anything reticulated or decussated at equal distances, with int\
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T*
(intersections.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\))Tj
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( Oats. A grain, which in England is generally given to horses, but in\
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T*
(people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Patron. Commonly a wretch who supports with insolence, and is paid w\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1755\))Tj
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( Pension. Pay given to a state hireling for treason to his country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221A Dictionary of the English Language\222 \(1775\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( The only end of writing is to enable the readers better to enjoy lif\
e, or better to endure it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221A Free Enquiry\222 \(1757, ed. D. Greene, 1984\) reviewing Soame Jen\
yns)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( When two Englishmen meet, their first talk is of the weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221The Idler\222 no. 11 \(24 June 1758\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Promise, large promise, is the soul of an advertisement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221The Idler\222 no. 40 \(20 January 1759\))Tj
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( Nothing is more hopeless than a scheme of merriment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(\221The Idler\222 no. 58 \(26 May 1759\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( I directed them to bring a bundle [of hay] into the room, and slept \
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T*
(Boswell, being more delicate, laid himself sheets with hay over and unde\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland\222 \(1775\) \221Glenel\
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15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( A Scotchman must be a very sturdy moralist, who does not love Scotla\
nd better than truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland\222 \(1775\) \221Ostig \
in Sky\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( At seventy-seven it is time to be in earnest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(\221A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland\222 \(1775\) \221Col\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses; whatever makes t\
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T*
(the future predominate over the present, advances us in the dignity of t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland\222 \(1775\) \221Inch K\
enneth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( Grief is a species of idleness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(Letter to Mrs Thrale, 17 March 1773, in R. W. Chapman \(ed.\) \221The L\
etters of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1952\) vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( He is gone, and we are going.)Tj
ET
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(Letter to Mrs Thrale on the death of her son, Harry, 25 March 1776, in R\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Samuel Johnson\222 \(1952\) vol. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 717.25456 Tm
( A hardened and shameless tea-drinker, who has for twenty years dilut\
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T*
(the infusion of this fascinating plant; whose kettle has scarcely time t\
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T*
(the evening, with tea solaces the midnight, and with tea welcomes the mo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.42047 Tm
(Review in the \221Literary Magazine\222 vol. 2, no. 13 \(1757\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.50456 Tm
( About things on which the public thinks long it commonly attains to \
think right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.67047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Addison\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.75456 Tm
( Whoever wishes to attain an English style, familiar but not coarse, \
and elegant but not )Tj
T*
(ostentatious, must give his days and nights to the volumes of Addison.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.92047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Addison\222)Tj
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( The great source of pleasure is variety. Uniformity must tire at las\
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T*
(excellence. We love to expect; and, when expectation is disappointed or \
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T*
(again expecting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Butler\222)Tj
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( A man, doubtful of his dinner, or trembling at a creditor, is not mu\
ch disposed to abstracted )Tj
T*
(meditation, or remote enquiries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.42047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Collins\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.50456 Tm
( The true genius is a mind of large general powers, accidentally dete\
rmined to some particular )Tj
T*
(direction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Cowley\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.75456 Tm
( Language is the dress of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.92047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Cowley\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.00456 Tm
( The father of English criticism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.17047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Dryden\222)Tj
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( This play...was first offered to Cibber and his brethren at Drury-La\
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T*
(then carried to Rich had the effect, as was ludicrously said, of making \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.42047 Tm
(Referring to \221The Beggar\222s Opera\222, \221The Lives of the English\
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15 0 0 15 10 242.50456 Tm
( In the character of his Elegy I rejoice to concur with the common re\
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T*
(sense of readers uncorrupted with literary prejudices...must be finally \
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T*
(poetical honours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.67047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Gray\222)Tj
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( An exotic and irrational entertainment, which has been always combat\
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T*
(prevailed. [Italian opera])Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.92047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Hughes\222)Tj
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( We are perpetually moralists, but we are geometricians only by chanc\
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T*
(intellectual nature is necessary; our speculations upon matter are volun\
tary and at leisure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.17047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Milton\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.25456 Tm
( An acrimonious and surly republican.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.42047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Milton\222)Tj
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( I am disappointed by that stroke of death, which has eclipsed the ga\
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0 -1.2 TD
(impoverished the public stock of harmless pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Edmund Smith\222 \
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15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( He washed himself with oriental scrupulosity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221Swift\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Friendship is not always the sequel of obligation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Lives of the English Poets\222 \(1779-81\) \221James Thomson\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Nothing can please many, and please long, but just representations o\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( He that tries to recommend him [Shakespeare] by select quotations, w\
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T*
(pedant in Hierocles, who, when he offered his house to sale, carried a b\
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T*
(specimen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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( Love is only one of many passions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Shakespeare has united the powers of exciting laughter and sorrow no\
t only in one mind but in )Tj
T*
(one composition...That this is a practice contrary to the rules of criti\
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T*
(but there is always an appeal open from criticism to nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( A quibble is to Shakespeare, what luminous vapours are to the travel\
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T*
(adventures, it is sure to lead him out of his way and sure to engulf him\
in the mire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( It must be at last confessed, that as we owe everything to him [Shak\
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T*
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T*
(likewise given by custom and veneration. We fix our eyes upon his graces\
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T*
(his deformities, and endure in him what we should in another loathe or d\
espise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( I have always suspected that the reading is right, which requires ma\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Notes are often necessary, but they are necessary evils.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221The Plays of William Shakespeare, with Notes\222 \(1765\) preface \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( This world where much is to be done and little to be known.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Meditations\222 \(1785\) no. 170 \221Against inquisitive\
and perplexing Thoughts\222 12 August 1784)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( There are minds so impatient of inferiority, that their gratitude is\
a species of revenge, and they )Tj
T*
(return benefits, not because recompense is a pleasure, but because oblig\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221The Rambler\222 no. 87 \(15 January 1751\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human h\
opes, than a public library.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Rambler\222 no. 106 \(23 March 1751\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( I have laboured to refine our language to grammatical purity, and to\
clear it from colloquial )Tj
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(barbarisms, licentious idioms, and irregular combinations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221The Rambler\222 no. 208 \(14 March 1752\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Ye who listen with credulity to the whispers of fancy, and pursue wi\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.00456 Tm
( The business of a poet, said Imlac, is to examine, not the individua\
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T*
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T*
(different shades in the verdure of the forest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.25456 Tm
( He [the poet] must write as the interpreter of nature, and the legis\
lator of mankind, and )Tj
T*
(consider himself as presiding over the thoughts and manners of future ge\
nerations; as a being )Tj
T*
(superior to time and place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.42047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 10.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.50456 Tm
( Human life is everwhere a state in which much is to be endured, and \
little to be enjoyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.75456 Tm
( Marriage has many pains, but celibacy has no pleasures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Example is always more efficacious than precept.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( It [the Pyramids] seems to have been erected only in compliance with\
that hunger of )Tj
T*
(imagination which preys incessantly upon life, and must be always appeas\
ed by some )Tj
T*
(employment...I consider this mighty structure as a monument of the insuf\
ficiency of human )Tj
T*
(enjoyments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.50456 Tm
( Integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge witho\
ut integrity is )Tj
T*
(dangerous and dreadful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.67047 Tm
(\221Rasselas\222 \(1759\) ch. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.75456 Tm
( There is perhaps no class of men, to whom the precept given by the A\
postle to his converts )Tj
T*
(against too great confidence in their understandings, may be more proper\
ly inculcated, than those )Tj
T*
(who are dedicated to the profession of literature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.92047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 \(1788\) no. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.00456 Tm
( In this state of temporary honour, a proud man is too willing to exe\
rt his prerogative; and too )Tj
T*
(ready to forget that he is dictating to those, who may one day dictate t\
o him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.17047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 \(1788\) no. 8 \(on schoolmasters\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.25456 Tm
( He [God] will not leave his promises unfulfilled, nor his threats un\
executed...Neither can he )Tj
T*
(want power to execute his purposes; he who spoke, and the world was made\
, can speak again, )Tj
T*
(and it will perish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.42047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 \(1788\) no. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.50456 Tm
( How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drive\
rs of negroes?)Tj
ET
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(\221Taxation No Tyranny\222 \(1775 \(Yale ed., vol. 10, p. 454\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A generous and elevated mind is distinguished by nothing more certai\
nly than an eminent )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(degree of curiosity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Dedication of his English translation of Fr. J. Lobo\222s \221Voyage to \
Abyssinia\222 \(1735\), signed \221the editor\222 but )Tj
T*
(attributed to Johnson in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 1, p. 89 \(1734\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Unmoved though witlings sneer and rivals rail;)Tj
T*
( Studious to please, yet not ashamed to fail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(\221Irene\222 \(1749\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( There Poetry shall tune her sacred voice,)Tj
T*
( And wake from ignorance the Western World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Irene\222 \(1749\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 122 \(Demetrius forecasting the \
Renaissance\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( How small of all that human hearts endure,)Tj
T*
( That part which laws or kings can cause or cure.)Tj
T*
( Still to ourselves in every place consigned,)Tj
T*
( Our own felicity we make or find.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(Lines added to Oliver Goldsmith\222s \221The Traveller\222 \(1764\) l. 4\
29.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( Here falling houses thunder on your head,)Tj
T*
( And here a female atheist talks you dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221London\222 \(1738\) l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( Of all the griefs that harrass the distressed,)Tj
T*
( Sure the most bitter is a scornful jest;)Tj
T*
( Fate never wounds more deep the gen\222rous heart,)Tj
T*
( Than when a blockhead\222s insult points the dart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221London\222 \(1738\) l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.75456 Tm
( This mournful truth is ev\222rywhere confessed,)Tj
T*
( Slow rises worth, by poverty depressed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221London\222 \(1738\) l. 176)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( Condemned to hope\222s delusive mine,)Tj
T*
( As on we toil from day to day,)Tj
T*
( By sudden blasts, or slow decline,)Tj
T*
( Our social comforts drop away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221On the Death of Dr Robert Levet\222 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( When learning\222s triumph o\222er her barb\222rous foes)Tj
T*
( First reared the stage, immortal Shakespeare rose;)Tj
T*
( Each change of many-coloured life he drew,)Tj
T*
( Exhausted worlds, and then imagined new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Prologue spoken at the Opening of the Theatre in Drury Lane\222 \(17\
47\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( The stage but echoes back the public voice.)Tj
T*
( The drama\222s laws the drama\222s patrons give,)Tj
T*
( For we that live to please, must please to live.)Tj
ET
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(\221Prologue spoken at the Opening of the Theatre in Drury Lane\222 \(17\
47\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Let observation with extensive view,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Survey mankind, from China to Peru.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Deign on the passing world to turn thine eyes,)Tj
T*
( And pause awhile from letters, to be wise;)Tj
T*
( There mark what ills the scholar\222s life assail,)Tj
T*
( Toil, envy, want, the patron, and the jail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( A frame of adamant, a soul of fire,)Tj
T*
( No dangers fright him, and no labours tire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 193 \(on Charles XII of S\
weden\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( His fall was destined to a barren strand,)Tj
T*
( A petty fortress, and a dubious hand;)Tj
T*
( He left the name, at which the world grew pale,)Tj
T*
( To point a moral, or adorn a tale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 219 \(on Charles XII of S\
weden\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Enlarge my life with multitude of days,)Tj
T*
( In health, in sickness, thus the suppliant prays;)Tj
T*
( Hides from himself his state, and shuns to know,)Tj
T*
( That life protracted is protracted woe.)Tj
T*
( Time hovers o\222er, impatient to destroy,)Tj
T*
( And shuts up all the passages of joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 255)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Superfluous lags the vet\222ran on the stage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 308)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( In life\222s last scene what prodigies surprise,)Tj
T*
( Fears of the brave, and follies of the wise?)Tj
T*
( From Marlb\222rough\222s eyes the streams of dotage flow,)Tj
T*
( And Swift expires a driv\222ler and a show.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 315)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate,)Tj
T*
( Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 345)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Still raise for good the supplicating voice,)Tj
T*
( But leave to heaven the measure and the choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Vanity of Human Wishes\222 \(1749\) l. 351 Page references to Ja\
mes Boswell The Life of Samuel Johnson )Tj
T*
(are to L. F. Powell\222s revision of G. B. Hill\222s edition \(1934-50; \
1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Johnson: I had no notion that I was wrong or irreverent to my tutor\
.)Tj
T*
( [Boswell:] That, Sir, was great fortitude of mind.)Tj
ET
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( [Johnson:] No, Sir; stark insensibility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
60 \(31 October 1728\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Sir, we are a nest of singing birds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Of Pembroke College, Oxford, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Joh\
nson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 75 \(1730\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( He was a vicious man, but very kind to me. If you call a dog Hervey,\
I shall love him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
106 \(1737\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( My old friend, Mrs Carter, could make a pudding, as well as translat\
e Epictetus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
122, n. 4 \(Spring 1738\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Tom Birch is as brisk as a bee in conversation; but no sooner does h\
e take a pen in his hand, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than it becomes a torpedo to him, and benumbs all his faculties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
159 \(1743\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( I\222ll come no more behind your scenes, David; for the silk stockin\
gs and white bosoms of your )Tj
T*
(actresses excite my amorous propensities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(To Garrick, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\)\
vol. 1, p. 201 \(1750\). John Wilkes )Tj
T*
(\(Appendix G, p. 539\) recalls the remark in the form: \221the silk stoc\
kings and white bosoms of your actresses do )Tj
T*
(make my genitals to quiver\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( A man may write at any time, if he will set himself doggedly to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
203 \(March 1750\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( Thy body is all vice, and thy mind all virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(To Beauclerk, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\
\) vol. 1, p. 250 \(March 1752\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( I had done all that I could; and no man is well pleased to have his \
all neglected, be it ever so )Tj
T*
(little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Chesterfield, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Joh\
nson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 261 \(7 February )Tj
T*
(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( The shepherd in Virgil grew at last acquainted with Love, and found \
him a native of the rocks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Chesterfield, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Joh\
nson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 262 \(7 February )Tj
T*
(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.50456 Tm
( Is not a Patron, my Lord, one who looks with unconcern on a man stru\
ggling for life in the )Tj
T*
(water, and, when he has reached ground, encumbers him with help? The not\
ice which you have )Tj
T*
(been pleased to take of my labours, had it been early, had been kind; bu\
t it has been delayed till I )Tj
T*
(am indifferent, and cannot enjoy it; till I am solitary, and cannot impa\
rt it; till I am known, and do )Tj
T*
(not want it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Chesterfield, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Joh\
nson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 262 \(7 February )Tj
T*
(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( A fly, Sir, may sting a stately horse and make him wince; but one is\
but an insect, and the other )Tj
T*
(is a horse still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
263, n. 3 \(1754\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( This man I thought had been a Lord among wits; but, I find, he is on\
ly a wit among Lords.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(Of Lord Chesterfield, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 1, p. 266 \(1754\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( They teach the morals of a whore, and the manners of a dancing maste\
r.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(Of Lord Chesterfield\222s \221Letters\222, in James Boswell \221The Life\
of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 266 \(1754\))Tj
ET
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( There are two things which I am confident I can do very well: one is\
an introduction to any )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(literary work, stating what it is to contain, and how it should be execu\
ted in the most perfect )Tj
T*
(manner; the other is a conclusion, shewing from various causes why the e\
xecution has not been )Tj
T*
(equal to what the author promised to himself and to the public.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
292 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.75456 Tm
( Dictionaries are like watches, the worst is better than none, and th\
e best cannot be expected to )Tj
T*
(go quite true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.92047 Tm
(Letter to Francesco Sastres, 21 August 1784, in James Boswell \221The Li\
fe of Samuel Johnson\222 vol. 1, p. 293, n. )Tj
T*
(3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.00456 Tm
( Ignorance, madam, pure ignorance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.17047 Tm
(When asked why he had defined pastern as the \221knee\222 of a horse, in\
James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel )Tj
T*
(Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 293 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.25456 Tm
( Lexicographer, a writer of dictionaries, a harmless drudge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
296 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.50456 Tm
( I have protracted my work till most of those whom I wished to please\
have sunk into the grave; )Tj
T*
(and success and miscarriage are empty sounds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
297 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.75456 Tm
( If a man does not make new acquaintance as he advances through life,\
he will soon find )Tj
T*
(himself left alone. A man, Sir, should keep his friendship in constant r\
epair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
300 \(1755\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.00456 Tm
( The worst of Warburton is, that he has a rage for saying something, \
when there\222s nothing to be )Tj
T*
(said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
329 \(1758\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.25456 Tm
( No man will be a sailor who has contrivance enough to get himself in\
to a jail; for being in a )Tj
T*
(ship is being in a jail, with the chance of being drowned...A man in a j\
ail has more room, better )Tj
T*
(food, and commonly better company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
348 \(16 March 1759\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.50456 Tm
( No, Sir, I am not a botanist; and \(alluding, no doubt, to his near \
sightedness\) should I wish to )Tj
T*
(become a botanist, I must first turn myself into a reptile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
377 n. 2 \(20 July 1762\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.75456 Tm
( [Boswell:] I do indeed come from Scotland, but I cannot help it...)Tj
T*
( [Johnson:] That, Sir, I find, is what a very great many of your cou\
ntrymen cannot help.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
392 \(16 May 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.00456 Tm
( The notion of liberty amuses the people of England, and helps to kee\
p off the taedium vitae. )Tj
T*
(When a butcher tells you that his heart bleeds for his country he has, i\
n fact, no uneasy feeling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
394 \(16 May 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.25456 Tm
( Yes, Sir, many men, many women, and many children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.42047 Tm
(On Dr Blair\222s asking whether any man of a modern age could have writt\
en Ossian, in James Boswell \221The )Tj
T*
(Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 396 \(24 May 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.50456 Tm
( I did not think he ought to be shut up. His infirmities were not nox\
ious to society. He insisted )Tj
ET
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(on people praying with him; and I\222d as lief pray with Kit Smart as an\
y one else. Another charge )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(was, that he did not love clean linen; and I have no passion for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
397 \(24 May 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( You may abuse a tragedy, though you cannot write one. You may scold \
a carpenter who has )Tj
T*
(made you a bad table, though you cannot make a table. It is not your tra\
de to make tables.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(On literary criticism, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 1, p. 409 \(25 June 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I am afraid he has not been in the inside of a church for many years\
; but he never passes a )Tj
T*
(church without pulling off his hat. This shows that he has good principl\
es.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Referring to Dr John Campbell, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel J\
ohnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 418 \(1 July )Tj
T*
(1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( The richest author that ever grazed the common of literature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(Dr John Campbell, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(\
1791\) vol. 1, p. 418 n. 1 \(1 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( Great abilities are not requisite for an historian...imagination is \
not required in any high degree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
424 \(6 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( Norway, too, has noble wild prospects; and Lapland is remarkable for\
prodigious noble wild )Tj
T*
(prospects. But, Sir, let me tell you, the noblest prospect which a Scotc\
hman ever sees, is the high )Tj
T*
(road that leads him to England!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
425 \(6 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( A man ought to read just as inclination leads him; for what he reads\
as a task will do him little )Tj
T*
(good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
428 \(14 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( But if he does really think that there is no distinction between vir\
tue and vice, why, Sir, when )Tj
T*
(he leaves our houses, let us count our spoons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
432 \(14 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( All the arguments which are brought to represent poverty as no evil,\
show it to be evidently a )Tj
T*
(great evil. You never find people labouring to convince you that you may\
live very happily upon )Tj
T*
(a plentiful fortune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
441 \(20July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Truth, Sir, is a cow that will yield such people [sceptics] no more \
milk, and so they are gone to )Tj
T*
(milk the bull.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
444 \(21 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Young men have more virtue than old men; they have more generous sen\
timents in every )Tj
T*
(respect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
445 \(21 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( In my early years I read very hard. It is a sad reflection, but a tr\
ue one, that I knew almost as )Tj
T*
(much at eighteen as I do now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
445 \(21 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( Your levellers wish to level down as far as themselves; but they can\
not bear levelling up to )Tj
T*
(themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
448 \(21 July 1763\))Tj
ET
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( It is no matter what you teach them [children] first, any more than \
what leg you shall put into )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(your breeches first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
452 \(26 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Why, Sir, Sherry is dull, naturally dull; but it must have taken him\
a great deal of pains to )Tj
T*
(become what we now see him. Such an excess of stupidity, Sir, is not in \
Nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(On Thomas Sheridan, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \
\(1791\) vol. 1, p. 453 \(28 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( It is burning a farthing candle at Dover, to shew light at Calais.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(On Thomas Sheridan\222s influence on the English language, in James Bosw\
ell \221The Life of Samuel )Tj
T*
(Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. 454 \(28 July 1763\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( A woman\222s preaching is like a dog\222s walking on his hinder legs\
. It is not done well; but you )Tj
T*
(are surprised to find it done at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
463 \(31 July 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( I look upon it, that he who does not mind his belly will hardly mind\
anything else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
467 \(5 August 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( We could not have had a better dinner had there been a Synod of Cook\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
470 \(5 August 1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( Don\222t, Sir, accustom yourself to use big words for little matters\
. It would not be terrible, )Tj
T*
(though I were to be detained some time here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 1, p. \
471 \(6 August 1763, when Boswell said it )Tj
T*
(would be \221terrible\222 if Johnson should not be able to return speedi\
ly from Harwich\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( I refute it thus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(Boswell observed of Bishop Berkeley\222s theory of the non-existence of \
matter that though they were satisfied )Tj
T*
(it was not true, they were unable to refute it. Johnson struck his foot \
against a large stone, till he rebounded )Tj
T*
(from it, saying the above, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johns\
on\222 \(1791\)vol. 1, p. 471 \(6 August )Tj
T*
(1763\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.00456 Tm
( Sir John, Sir, is a very unclubbable man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.17047 Tm
(On Sir John Hawkins, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 1, p. 480 n. 1 \(Spring 1764\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.25456 Tm
( That all who are happy, are equally happy, is not true. A peasant an\
d a philosopher may be )Tj
T*
(equally satisfied, but not equally happy. Happiness consists in the mult\
iplicity of agreeable )Tj
T*
(consciousness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
9 \(February 1766\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.50456 Tm
( It is our first duty to serve society, and, after we have done that,\
we may attend wholly to the )Tj
T*
(salvation of our own souls. A youthful passion for abstracted devotion s\
hould not be encouraged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
10 \(February 1766\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( Our tastes greatly alter. The lad does not care for the child\222s r\
attle, and the old man does not )Tj
T*
(care for the young man\222s whore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
14 \(Spring 1766\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( It was not for me to bandy civilities with my Sovereign.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
35 \(February 1767\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( There was as great a difference between them as between a man who kn\
ew how a watch was )Tj
T*
(made, and a man who could tell the hour by looking on the dial-plate.)Tj
ET
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(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
49 \(Spring 1768\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 731.50456 Tm
( I love Robertson, and I won\222t talk of his book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.67047 Tm
(On William Robertson\222s \221History of Scotland\222, in James Boswell \
\221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(p. 53 \(Spring 1768\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.75456 Tm
( Let me smile with the wise, and feed with the rich.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
79 \(6 October 1769\); responding to a line )Tj
T*
(from Garrick\222s \221Florizel and Perdita\222 act 2, sc. 1: \221They sm\
ile with the simple, and feed with the poor\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.00456 Tm
( We know our will is free, and there\222s an end on\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
82 \(16 October 1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.25456 Tm
( In the description of night in Macbeth, the beetle and the bat detra\
ct from the general idea of )Tj
T*
(darkness,\227inspissated gloom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
90 \(16 October 1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.50456 Tm
( I do not know, Sir, that the fellow is an infidel; but if he be an i\
nfidel, he is an infidel as a dog )Tj
T*
(is an infidel; that is to say, he has never thought upon the subject.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
95 \(19 October 1769\); referring to Samuel )Tj
T*
(Foote q.v.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.75456 Tm
( [Boswell:] So, Sir, you laugh at schemes of political improvement.)Tj
T*
( [Johnson:] Why, Sir, most schemes of political improvement are very\
laughable things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
102 \(26 October 1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.00456 Tm
( It matters not how a man dies, but how he lives. The act of dying is\
not of importance, it lasts )Tj
T*
(so short a time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
106 \(26 October 1769\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.25456 Tm
( Burton\222s Anatomy of Melancholy, he said, was the only book that e\
ver took him out of bed )Tj
T*
(two hours sooner than he wished to rise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
121 \(1770\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.50456 Tm
( Want of tenderness, he always alleged, was want of parts, and wass n\
o less a proof of stupidity )Tj
T*
(than depravity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
122 \(1770\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 247.75456 Tm
( That fellow seems to me to possess but one idea, and that is a wrong\
one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
126 \(1770\); of \221a dull tiresome fellow, )Tj
T*
(whom he chanced to meet\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 196.00456 Tm
( Johnson observed, that \221he did not care to speak ill of any man b\
ehind his back, but he believed )Tj
T*
(the gentleman was an attorney.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
126 \(1770\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.25456 Tm
( The triumph of hope over experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.42047 Tm
(Of a man who remarried immediately after the death of a wife with whom h\
e had been very unhappy, in )Tj
T*
(James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. 128\
\(1770\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.50456 Tm
( Every man has a lurking wish to appear considerable in his native pl\
ace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.67047 Tm
(Letter to Sir Joshua Reynolds, 17 July 1771, in James Boswell \221The Li\
fe of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. )Tj
T*
(141)Tj
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( It is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a sta\
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0 -1.2 TD
(all the motives which they have for remaining in that connection, and th\
e restraints which )Tj
T*
(civilized society imposes to prevent separation, are hardly sufficient t\
o keep them together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
165 \(31 March 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Nobody can write the life of a man, but those who have eat and drunk\
and lived in social )Tj
T*
(intercourse with him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
166 \(31 March 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I would not give half a guinea to live under one form of government \
rather than another. It is of )Tj
T*
(no moment to the happiness of an individual.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
170 \(31 March 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( If a sovereign oppresses his people to a great degree, they will ris\
e and cut off his head. There )Tj
T*
(is a remedy in human nature against tyranny, that will keep us safe unde\
r every form of )Tj
T*
(government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
170 \(31 March 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( A man who is good enough to go to heaven, is good enough to be a cle\
rgyman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
171 \(5 April 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Why, Sir, if you were to read Richardson for the story, your impatie\
nce would be so much )Tj
T*
(fretted that you would hang yourself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
175 \(6 April 1772\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( He has, indeed, done it very well; but it is a foolish thing well do\
ne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(On Goldsmith\222s apology in the London Chronicle for beating Evans the \
bookseller, in James Boswell \221The )Tj
T*
(Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. 210 \(3 April 1773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( All intellectual improvement arises from leisure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
219 \(13 April 1773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( [Elphinston:] What, have you not read it through?...)Tj
T*
( [Johnson:] No, Sir, do you read books through?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
226 \(19 April 1773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( Read over your compositions, and where ever you meet with a passage \
which you think is )Tj
T*
(particularly fine, strike it out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(Quoting a college tutor, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\
\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. 237 \(30 April 1773\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( I hope I shall never be deterred from detecting what I think a cheat\
, by the menaces of a ruffian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(Referring to \221Ossian\222 in a letter to James Macpherson, 20 January \
1775: James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel )Tj
T*
(Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. 298)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( There are few ways in which a man can be more innocently employed th\
an in getting money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
323 \(27 March 1775\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( He was dull in a new way, and that made many people think him great.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(On Thomas Gray, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(17\
91\) vol. 2, p. 327 \(28 March 1775\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( I never think I have hit hard, unless it rebounds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
335 \(2 April 1775\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Fleet-street has a very animated appearance; but I think the full ti\
de of human existence is at )Tj
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(Charing-Cross.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( George the First knew nothing: and desired to know nothing; did noth\
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T*
(hereditary successor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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( It is wonderful, when a calculation is made, how little the mind is \
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T*
(discharge of any profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The greatest part of a writer\222s time is spent in reading, in orde\
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T*
(half a library to make one book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Their learning is like bread in a besieged town: every man gets a li\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(On the Scots, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\
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( Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know w\
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T*
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(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Politics are now nothing more than means of rising in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( Players, Sir! I look upon them as no better than creatures set upon \
tables and joint-stools to )Tj
T*
(make faces and produce laughter, like dancing dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( In lapidary inscriptions a man is not upon oath.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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( There is now less flogging in our great schools than formerly, but t\
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T*
(that what the boys get at one end they lose at the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
407 \(1775\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Nothing odd will do long. Tristram Shandy did not last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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( There is nothing which has yet been contrived by man, by which so mu\
ch happiness is )Tj
T*
(produced as by a good tavern or inn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
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15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Marriages would in general be as happy, and often more so, if they w\
ere all made by the Lord )Tj
T*
(Chancellor, upon a due consideration of characters and circumstances, wi\
thout the parties having )Tj
T*
(any choice in the matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
461 \(22 March 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Fine clothes are good only as they supply the want of other means of\
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(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 2, p. \
475 \(27 March 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( If a madman were to come into this room with a stick in his hand, no\
doubt we should pity the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(state of his mind; but our primary consideration would be to take care o\
f ourselves. We should )Tj
T*
(knock him down first, and pity him afterwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
11 \(3 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.00456 Tm
( We would all be idle if we could.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
13 \(3 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( No man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
19 \(5 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( It is better that some should be unhappy than that none should be ha\
ppy, which would be the )Tj
T*
(case in a general state of equality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
26 \(7 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( A man who has not been in Italy, is always conscious of an inferiori\
ty, from his not having )Tj
T*
(seen what it is expected a man should see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
36 \(11 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( [Boswell:] Sir, what is poetry?)Tj
T*
( [Johnson:] Why Sir, it is much easier to say what it is not. We all\
know what light is; but it is )Tj
T*
(not easy to tell what it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
38 \(12 April 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( Every man of any education would rather be called a rascal, than acc\
used of deficiency in the )Tj
T*
(graces.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
54 \(May 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( Sir, you have but two topics, yourself and me. I am sick of both.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
57 \(May 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( Olivarii Goldsmith,)Tj
T*
( Poetae, Physici, Historici,)Tj
T*
( Qui nullum fere scribendi genus)Tj
T*
( Non tetigit,)Tj
T*
( Nullum quod tetigit non ornavit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To Oliver Goldsmith, A Poet, Naturalist, and Historian, who left sca\
rcely any style of writing )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(untouched, and touched none that he did not adorn.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(Epitaph on Goldsmith, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 3, p. 82 \(22 June 1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( If I had no duties, and no reference to futurity, I would spend my l\
ife in driving briskly in a )Tj
T*
(post-chaise with a pretty woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
162 \(19 September 1777\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.50456 Tm
( Depend upon it, Sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortni\
ght, it concentrates his )Tj
T*
(mind wonderfully.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(On the execution of Dr Dodd, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Joh\
nson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 167 \(19 )Tj
T*
(September 1777\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.75456 Tm
( When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in \
London all that life can afford.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 754.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
178 \(20 September 1777\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.00456 Tm
( All argument is against it; but all belief is for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.17047 Tm
(On ghosts, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) \
vol. 3, p. 230 \(31 March 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.25456 Tm
( John Wesley\222s conversation is good, but he is never at leisure. H\
e is always obliged to go at a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(certain hour. This is very disagreeable to a man who loves to fold his l\
egs and have out his talk, )Tj
T*
(as I do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
230 \(31 March 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.50456 Tm
( Though we cannot out-vote them we will out-argue them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.67047 Tm
(On the practical value of speeches in the House of Commons, in James Bos\
well \221The Life of Samuel )Tj
T*
(Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 234 \(3 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.75456 Tm
( Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier, or\
not having been at sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
265 \(10 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.00456 Tm
( A mere antiquarian is a rugged being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.17047 Tm
(Letter to Boswell, 23 April 1778, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samue\
l Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 278)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.25456 Tm
( The more contracted that power is, the more easily it is destroyed. \
A country governed by a )Tj
T*
(despot is an inverted cone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
283 \(14 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.50456 Tm
( So it is in travelling; a man must carry knowledge with him, if he w\
ould bring home )Tj
T*
(knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
302 \(17 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.75456 Tm
( Sir, the insolence of wealth will creep out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
316 \(18 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.00456 Tm
( All censure of a man\222s self is oblique praise. It is in order to \
shew how much he can spare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
323 \(25 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.25456 Tm
( I have always said, the first Whig was the Devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
326 \(28 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.50456 Tm
( It is thus that mutual cowardice keeps us in peace. Were one half of\
mankind brave and one )Tj
T*
(half cowards, the brave would be always beating the cowards. Were all br\
ave, they would lead a )Tj
T*
(very uneasy life; all would be continually fighting: but being all cowar\
ds, we go on very well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
326 \(28 April 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.75456 Tm
( Were it not for imagination, Sir, a man would be as happy in the arm\
s of a chambermaid as of )Tj
T*
(a Duchess.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
341 \(9 May 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.00456 Tm
( Claret is the liquor for boys; port, for men; but he who aspires to \
be a hero \(smiling\) must )Tj
T*
(drink brandy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
381 \(7 April 1779\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.25456 Tm
( A man who exposes himself when he is intoxicated, has not the art of\
getting drunk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. \
389 \(24 April 1779\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.50456 Tm
( Remember that all tricks are either knavish or childish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.67047 Tm
(Letter to Boswell, 9 September 1779, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sa\
muel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 396)Tj
ET
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( Worth seeing, yes; but not worth going to see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On the Giant\222s Causeway, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel John\
son\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 410 \(12 October )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1779\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( If you are idle, be not solitary; if you are solitary, be not idle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Letter to Boswell, 27 October 1779, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sam\
uel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 3, p. 415.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Among the anfractuosities of the human mind, I know not if it may no\
t be one, that there is a )Tj
T*
(superstitious reluctance to sit for a picture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
4 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( Every man has a right to utter what he thinks truth, and every other\
man has a right to knock )Tj
T*
(him down for it. Martyrdom is the test.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
12 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( They are forced plants, raised in a hot-bed; and they are poor plant\
s; they are but cucumbers )Tj
T*
(after all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(On Thomas Gray\222s \221Odes\222, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samue\
l Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 13 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( A Frenchman must be always talking, whether he knows anything of the\
matter or not; an )Tj
T*
(Englishman is content to say nothing, when he has nothing to say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
15 \(1780\))Tj
T*
(Sir, your wife, under pretence of keeping a bawdy-house, is a receiver o\
f stolen goods. )Tj
T*
(During an exchange of coarse raillery customary among people travelling \
upon the Thames, in James Boswell )Tj
T*
(\221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 26 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( No man was more foolish when he had not a pen in his hand, or more w\
ise when he had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(On Oliver Goldsmith, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 4, p. 29 \(1780\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.75456 Tm
( Depend upon it, said he, that if a man talks of his misfortunes ther\
e is something in them that is )Tj
T*
(not disagreeable to him; for where there is nothing but pure misery ther\
e never is any recourse to )Tj
T*
(the mention of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
31 \(1780\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.00456 Tm
( I believe that is true. The dogs don\222t know how to write trifles \
with dignity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.17047 Tm
(Reply to Fowke, who had observed that in writing biography Johnson infin\
itely exceeded his contemporaries, )Tj
T*
(in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
34, n. 5 \(1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( Mrs Montagu has dropt me. Now, Sir, there are people whom one should\
like very well to )Tj
T*
(drop, but would not wish to be dropped by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
73 \(March 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.50456 Tm
( This merriment of parsons is mighty offensive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 76 \
\(March 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( Mr Long\222s character is very short. It is nothing. He fills a chai\
r. He is a man of genteel )Tj
T*
(appearance, and that is all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(On Mr Dudley Long, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(\
1791\) vol. 4, p. 81 \(1 April 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( We are not here to sell a parcel of boilers and vats, but the potent\
iality of growing rich, beyond )Tj
T*
(the dreams of avarice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(At the sale of Thrale\222s brewery, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sam\
uel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 87 \(6 April )Tj
T*
(1781\).)Tj
ET
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( Classical quotation is the parole of literary men all over the world\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
102 \(8 May 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Why, that is, because, dearest, you\222re a dunce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(To Miss Monckton, later Lady Corke, who said that Sterne\222s writings a\
ffected her, in James Boswell \221The )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 109 \(May 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( Sir, I have two very cogent reasons for not printing any list of sub\
scribers;\227one, that I have )Tj
T*
(lost all the names,\227the other, that I have spent all the money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
111 \(May 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( Always, Sir, set a high value on spontaneous kindness. He whose incl\
ination prompts him to )Tj
T*
(cultivate your friendship of his own accord, will love you more than one\
whom you have been at )Tj
T*
(pains to attach to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
115 \(May 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( A wise Tory and a wise Whig, I believe, will agree. Their principles\
are the same, though their )Tj
T*
(modes of thinking are different.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(Written statement given to Boswell, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sam\
uel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 117 )Tj
T*
(\(May 1781\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( Officious, innocent, sincere,)Tj
T*
( Of every friendless name the friend.)Tj
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( Yet still he fills affection\222s eye,)Tj
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( Obscurely wise, and coarsely kind.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(On the death of Mr Levett, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johns\
on\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 137 \(20 January )Tj
T*
(1782\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Then, with no throbs of fiery pain,)Tj
T*
( No cold gradations of decay,)Tj
T*
( Death broke at once the vital chain,)Tj
T*
( And freed his soul the nearest way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(On the death of Mr Levett, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johns\
on\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 139 \(20 January )Tj
T*
(1782\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.00456 Tm
( Resolve not to be poor: whatever you have, spend less. Poverty is a \
great enemy to human )Tj
T*
(happiness; it certainly destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues impr\
acticable, and others )Tj
T*
(extremely difficult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(Letter to Boswell, 7 December 1782, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sam\
uel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( I hate a fellow whom pride, or cowardice, or laziness drives into a \
corner, and who does )Tj
T*
(nothing when he is there but sit and growl; let him come out as I do, an\
d bark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(On Jeremiah Markland, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 4, p. 161, n. 3 \(10 )Tj
T*
(October 1782\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.50456 Tm
( How few of his friends\222 houses would a man choose to be at when h\
e is sick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
181 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.75456 Tm
( There is a wicked inclination in most people to suppose an old man d\
ecayed in his intellects. If )Tj
T*
(a young or middle-aged man, when leaving a company, does not recollect w\
here he laid his hat, it )Tj
ET
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(is nothing; but if the same inattention is discovered in an old man, peo\
ple will shrug up their )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shoulders, and say, \221His memory is going.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
181 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A man might write such stuff for ever, if he would abandon his mind \
to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Referring to Ossian, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 4, p. 183 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Sir, there is no settling the point of precedency between a louse an\
d a flea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(On the relative merits of two minor poets, in James Boswell \221The Life\
of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. )Tj
T*
(192 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
(When I observed he was a fine cat, saying, \221Why yes, Sir, but I have \
had cats whom I liked better )Tj
T*
(than this\222; and then as if perceiving Hodge to be out of countenance,\
adding, \221but he is a very fine )Tj
T*
(cat, a very fine cat indeed.\222 )Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
197 \(1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( My dear friend, clear your mind of cant...You may talk in this manne\
r; it is a mode of talking )Tj
T*
(in Society: but don\222t think foolishly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
221 \(15 May 1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( As I know more of mankind I expect less of them, and am ready now to\
call a man a good )Tj
T*
(man, upon easier terms than I was formerly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
239 \(September 1783\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( If a man were to go by chance at the same time with Burke under a sh\
ed, to shun a shower, he )Tj
T*
(would say\227\222this is an extraordinary man.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(On Edmund Burke, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1\
791\) vol. 4, p. 275 \(15 May 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( It is as bad as bad can be: it is ill-fed, ill-killed, ill-kept, and\
ill-drest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(On the roast mutton he had been served at an inn, in James Boswell \221T\
he Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. )Tj
T*
(4, p. 284 \(3 June 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.00456 Tm
( [Johnson:] As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions\
on which salvation is )Tj
T*
(granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who shall be damned \(looking\
dismally\).)Tj
T*
( [Dr Adams:] What do you mean by damned?)Tj
T*
( [Johnson:] \(passionately and loudly\) Sent to Hell, Sir, and punis\
hed everlastingly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
299 \(12 June 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( Milton, Madam, was a genius that could cut a Colossus from a rock; b\
ut could not carve heads )Tj
T*
(upon cherry-stones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(To Hannah More, who had expressed a wonder that the poet who had written\
\221Paradise Lost\222 should write )Tj
T*
(such poor Sonnets, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(\
1791\) vol. 4, p. 305 \(13 June 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.50456 Tm
( It might as well be said \221Who drives fat oxen should himself be f\
at.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.67047 Tm
(Parodying Henry Brooke, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 4, p. 313 \(June 1784\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.75456 Tm
( Sir, I have found you an argument; but I am not obliged to find you \
an understanding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
313 \(June 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.00456 Tm
( No man is a hypocrite in his pleasures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
316 \(June 1784\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.25456 Tm
( Talking of the Comedy of \221The Rehearsal,\222 he said, \221It has \
not wit enough to keep it sweet.\222 )Tj
ET
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(This was easy;\227he therefore caught himself, and pronounced a more rou\
nded sentence; \221It has )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(not vitality enough to preserve it from putrefaction.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
320)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Who can run the race with Death?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Letter to Dr Burney, 2 August 1784, in James Boswell \221The Life of Sam\
uel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. 360)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Sir, I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not make a new \
acquaintance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
374 \(November 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( I will be conquered; I will not capitulate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Talking of his illness, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222\
\(1791\) vol. 4, p. 374 \(November 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Long-expected one-and-twenty,)Tj
T*
( Ling\222ring year, at length is flown;)Tj
T*
( Pride and pleasure, pomp and plenty,)Tj
T*
( Great [Sir John], are now your own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
413 \(December 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( An odd thought strikes me:\227we shall receive no letters in the gra\
ve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1791\) vol. 4, p. \
413 \(December 1784\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( A lawyer has no business with the justice or injustice of the cause \
which he undertakes, unless )Tj
T*
(his client asks his opinion, and then he is bound to give it honestly. T\
he justice or injustice of the )Tj
T*
(cause is to be decided by the judge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 15 A\
ugust 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Let him go abroad to a distant country; let him go to some place whe\
re he is not known. Don\222t )Tj
T*
(let him go to the devil where he is known!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 18 A\
ugust 1773 \(Boswell having asked if )Tj
T*
(someone should commit suicide to avoid certain disgrace\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( I have, all my life long, been lying till noon; yet I tell all young\
men, and tell them with great )Tj
T*
(sincerity, that nobody who does not rise early will ever do any good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 14 S\
eptember 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( I inherited a vile melancholy from my father, which has made me mad \
all my life, at least not )Tj
T*
(sober.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 16 S\
eptember 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( I am always sorry when any language is lost, because languages are t\
he pedigree of nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 18 S\
eptember 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( I do not much like to see a Whig in any dress; but I hate to see a W\
hig in a parson\222s gown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 24 S\
eptember 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( A cucumber should be well sliced, and dressed with pepper and vinega\
r, and then thrown out, )Tj
T*
(as good for nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 5 Oc\
tober 1773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( I am sorry I have not learned to play at cards. It is very useful in\
life: it generates kindness and )Tj
T*
(consolidates society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides\222 \(1785\) 21 N\
ovember 1773)Tj
ET
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( Madam, before you flatter a man so grossly to his face, you should c\
onsider whether or not )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(your flattery is worth his having.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Remark to Hannah More, in \221Diary and Letters of Madame D\222Arblay\222\
[Fanny Burney] \(1842\) vol. 1, pt. 2, p. )Tj
T*
(55 \(August 1778\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 683.25456 Tm
( Every man has, some time in his life, an ambition to be a wag.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(In \221Diary and Letters of Madame D\222Arblay\222 [Fanny Burney] \(1842\
\) vol. 5, pt. 7, p. 307 \(1 June 1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( Love is the wisdom of the fool and the folly of the wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(In William Cooke \221Life of Samuel Foote\222 \(1805\) vol. 2, p. 154)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( As with my hat upon my head)Tj
T*
( I walked along the Strand,)Tj
T*
( I there did meet another man)Tj
T*
( With his hat in his hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(In \221European Magazine\222 January 1785 \221Anecdotes by George Steeve\
ns\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( Of music Dr Johnson used to say that it was the only sensual pleasur\
e without vice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(In \221European Magazine\222 \(1795\) p. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( Fly fishing may be a very pleasant amusement; but angling or float f\
ishing I can only compare )Tj
T*
(to a stick and a string, with a worm at one end and a fool at the other.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(Attributed, in Hawker \221Instructions to Young Sportsmen\222 \(1859\) p\
. 197, though not found in Johnson\222s )Tj
T*
(works. \221Notes and Queries\222 11 December 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( I dogmatise and am contradicted, and in this conflict of opinions an\
d sentiments I find delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(Of his conversation in taverns, in John Hawkins \221The Life of Samuel J\
ohnson\222 \(1787\) p. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( Corneille is to Shakespeare...as a clipped hedge is to a forest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(In Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson\222 \(17\
86\) p. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( If the man who turnips cries,)Tj
T*
( Cry not when his father dies,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis a proof that he had rather)Tj
T*
( Have a turnip than his father.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(Burlesque of Lope de Vega\222s lines \221Si a quien los leones vence...\222\
, in Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the )Tj
T*
(Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(1786\) p. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 233.25456 Tm
( Dear Bathurst \(said he to me one day\) was a man to my very heart\222\
s content: he hated a fool, )Tj
T*
(and he hated a rogue, and he hated a whig; he was a very good hater.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(1786\)\
p. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( One day at Streatham...a young gentleman called to him suddenly, and\
I suppose he thought )Tj
T*
(disrespectfully, in these words: \221Mr Johnson, would you advise me to \
marry?\222 \221I would advise no )Tj
T*
(man to marry, Sir,\222 returns for answer in a very angry tone Dr Johnso\
n, \221who is not likely to )Tj
T*
(propagate understanding.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(1786\)\
p. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.75456 Tm
( [Goldsmith] seeming to repine at the success of Beattie\222s Essay o\
n Truth\227\222Here\222s such a stir )Tj
T*
(\(said he\) about a fellow that has written one book, and I have written\
many.\222 Ah, Doctor \(says his )Tj
T*
(friend [Johnson]\), there go two-and-forty sixpences you know to one gui\
nea.)Tj
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(Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(1786\)\
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15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( It is very strange, and very melancholy, that the paucity of human p\
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0 -1.2 TD
(ever to call hunting one of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(In Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(17\
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15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Was there ever yet anything written by mere man that was wished long\
er by its readers, )Tj
T*
(excepting Don Quixote, Robinson Crusoe, and the Pilgrim\222s Progress?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(In Hester Lynch Piozzi \221Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson\222 \(17\
86\) p. 281)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Abstinence is as easy to me, as temperance would be difficult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(In William Roberts \(ed.\) \221Memoirs of the Life and Correspondence o\
f Mrs Hannah More\222 \(1834\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(251)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.00456 Tm
( What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(In William Seward \221Biographia\222 \(1799\) p. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( Difficult do you call it, Sir? I wish it were impossible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(On the performance of a celebrated violinist, in William Seward \221Supp\
lement to the Anecdotes of )Tj
T*
(Distinguished Persons\222 \(1797\) p. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( Iam moriturus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I who am about to die.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(To Francesco Sastres, shortly before his death on 13 December 1784. W. J\
ackson Bate \221Samuel )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Johnson\222 \(1978\): \221The words echo the ancient Roman salutation of\
the gladiators to Caesar\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 10.37 John Benn Johnstone 1803-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I want you to assist me in forcing her on board the lugger; once the\
re, I\222ll frighten her into )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221The Gipsy Farmer\222 \(performed 1845\); since quoted: \221Once aboa\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.9624 Tm
( 10.38 Hanns Johst 1890-1978)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Wenn ich Kultur h\366re...entsichere ich meinen Browning!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Whenever I hear the word culture...I release the safety-catch of my \
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221Schlageter\222 \(1933\) act 1, sc. 1 \(often attributed to Hermann G\
oering, and quoted: \221Whenever I hear the word )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(culture, I reach for my pistol!\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 205.4624 Tm
( 10.39 Al Jolson 1886-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You think that\222s noise\227you ain\222t heard nuttin\222 yet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(In a caf\350 prior to an encore, the applause for his previous rendering\
having been obliterated by the din from a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(neighbouring building site: in Martin Abramson \221The Real Story of Al \
Jolson\222 \(1950\) p. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 120.7124 Tm
( 10.40 Henry Arthur Jones 1851-1929 and Henry Herman 1832-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O God! Put back Thy universe and give me yesterday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Silver King\222 \(1907\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.9624 Tm
( 10.41 John Paul Jones 1747-92)Tj
ET
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( I have not yet begun to fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On being hailed to know whether he had struck his flag, as his ship was \
sinking, 23 September 1779, in Mrs )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Reginald De Koven \221The Life and Letters of John Paul Jones\222 \(1914\
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15 0 0 15 10 689.9624 Tm
( 10.42 LeRoi Jones)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Imamu Amiri Baraka \(2.23\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 10.43 Sir William Jones 1746-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My opinion is, that power should always be distrusted, in whatever h\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Althorpe, 5 October 1782, in Lord Teignmouth \221Life of \
Sir W. Jones\222 \(1835\) vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( Seven hours to law, to soothing slumber seven,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ten to the world allot, and all to Heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(Lines in substitution for Sir Edward Coke\222s lines: \221Six hours in s\
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T*
(Jones\222 \(1835\) vol. 2.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 495.7124 Tm
( 10.44 Erica Jong 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The zipless fuck is absolutely pure. It is free of ulterior motives.\
There is no power game. The )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(man is not \221taking\222 and the woman is not \221giving\222...The zipl\
ess fuck is the purest thing there is. )Tj
T*
(And it is rarer than the unicorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.17047 Tm
(\221Fear of Flying\222 \(1973\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.9624 Tm
( 10.45 Ben Jonson c.1573-1637)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fortune, that favours fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221The Alchemist\222 \(1610\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Neither do thou lust after that tawney weed tobacco.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Bartholomew Fair\222 \(1614\) act 2, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( People: The Voice of Cato is the voice of Rome.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cato: The voice of Rome is the consent of heaven!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(\221Catiline his Conspiracy\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( Where it concerns himself,)Tj
T*
( Who\222s angry at a slander makes it true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Catiline his Conspiracy\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( Slow, slow, fresh fount, keep time with my salt tears:)Tj
T*
( Yet, slower, yet; O faintly, gentle springs:)Tj
T*
( List to the heavy part the music bears,)Tj
T*
( Woe weeps out her division, when she sings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Cynthia\222s Revels\222 \(1600\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( So they be ill men,)Tj
T*
( If they spake worse, \222twere better: for of such)Tj
T*
( To be dispraised, is the most perfect praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Cynthia\222s Revels\222 \(1600\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
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( True happiness)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Consists not in the multitude of friends,)Tj
T*
( But in the worth and choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221Cynthia\222s Revels\222 \(1600\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( Queen and huntress, chaste and fair,)Tj
T*
( Now the sun is laid to sleep,)Tj
T*
( Seated in thy silver chair,)Tj
T*
( State in wonted manner keep:)Tj
T*
( Hesperus entreats thy light,)Tj
T*
( Goddess, excellently bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.17047 Tm
(\221Cynthia\222s Revels\222 \(1600\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.25456 Tm
( If he were)Tj
T*
( To be made honest by an act of parliament,)Tj
T*
( I should not alter in my faith of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221The Devil is an Ass\222 \(1616\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( This is Mab, the Mistress-Fairy)Tj
T*
( That doth nightly rob the dairy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(\221The Entertainment at Althorpe\222 \(1603\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( Still to be neat, still to be drest,)Tj
T*
( As you were going to a feast;)Tj
T*
( Still to be powdered, still perfumed,)Tj
T*
( Lady, it is to be presumed,)Tj
T*
( Though art\222s hid causes are not found,)Tj
T*
( All is not sweet, all is not sound.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Give me a look, give me a face,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That makes simplicity a grace;)Tj
T*
( Robes loosely flowing, hair as free:)Tj
T*
( Such sweet neglect more taketh me,)Tj
T*
( Than all the adulteries of art;)Tj
T*
( They strike mine eyes, but not my heart.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.17047 Tm
(\221Epicoene\222 \(1609\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.25456 Tm
( Helter skelter, hang sorrow, care\222ll kill a cat, up-tails all, an\
d a louse for the hangman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.42047 Tm
(\221Every Man in His Humour\222 \(1598\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.50456 Tm
( Ods me, I marvel what pleasure or felicity they have in taking their\
roguish tobacco. It is good )Tj
T*
(for nothing but to choke a man, and fill him full of smoke and embers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.67047 Tm
(\221Every Man in His Humour\222 \(1598\) act 3, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.75456 Tm
( I do honour the very flea of his dog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.92047 Tm
(\221Every Man in His Humour\222 \(1598\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
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( Blind Fortune still)Tj
T*
( Bestows her gifts on such as cannot use them.)Tj
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(\221Every Man out of His Humour\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.25456 Tm
( Ramp up my genius, be not retrograde;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But boldly nominate a spade a spade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.42047 Tm
(\221The Poetaster\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
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( Detraction is but baseness\222 varlet;)Tj
T*
( And apes are apes, though clothed in scarlet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.67047 Tm
(\221The Poetaster\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.75456 Tm
( Tell proud Jove,)Tj
T*
( Between his power and thine there is no odds:)Tj
T*
( \222Twas only fear first in the world made gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.92047 Tm
(\221Sejanus\222 \(1603\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.00456 Tm
( Calumnies are answered best with silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.17047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( Come, my Celia, let us prove,)Tj
T*
( While we can, the sports of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.42047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 3, sc. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.50456 Tm
( Suns, that set, may rise again;)Tj
T*
( But if once we lose this light,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis with us perpetual night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.67047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 3, sc. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.75456 Tm
( Our drink shall be prepared gold and amber;)Tj
T*
( Which we will take, until my roof whirl around)Tj
T*
( With the vertigo: and my dwarf shall dance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.92047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 3, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.00456 Tm
( You have a gift, sir, \(thank your education\),)Tj
T*
( Will never let you want, while there are men,)Tj
T*
( And malice, to breed causes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.17047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 5, sc. 1 \(to a lawyer\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.25456 Tm
( Mischiefs feed)Tj
T*
( Like beasts, till they be fat, and then they bleed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.42047 Tm
(\221Volpone\222 \(1605\) act 5, sc. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.50456 Tm
( Have you seen but a bright lily grow,)Tj
T*
( Before rude hands have touched it?)Tj
T*
( Have you marked but the fall o\222 the snow)Tj
T*
( Before the soil hath smutched it?...)Tj
T*
( O so white! O so soft! O so sweet is she!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.67047 Tm
(\221A Celebration of Charis\222 \(1640\) no. 4 \221Her Triumph\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.75456 Tm
( She is Venus, when she smiles;)Tj
T*
( But she\222s Juno, when she walks,)Tj
T*
( And Minerva, when she talks.)Tj
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( What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221An Elegy on the Lady Jane Paulet, Marchion [ess] of Winton\222 \(164\
0\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Weep with me, all you that read)Tj
T*
( This little story,)Tj
T*
( And know, for whom a tear you shed,)Tj
T*
( Death\222s self is sorry.)Tj
T*
( \222Twas a child that so did thrive)Tj
T*
( In grace and feature,)Tj
T*
( As heaven and nature seemed to strive)Tj
T*
( Which owned the creature.)Tj
T*
( Years he numbered scarce thirteen)Tj
T*
( When Fates turned cruel,)Tj
T*
( Yet three filled zodiacs had he been)Tj
T*
( The stage\222s jewel,)Tj
T*
( And did act \(what now we moan\))Tj
T*
( Old men so duly,)Tj
T*
( As, sooth, the Parcae thought him one,)Tj
T*
( He played so truly.)Tj
T*
( So, by error, to his fate)Tj
T*
( They all consented,)Tj
T*
( But viewing him since \(alas, too late\))Tj
T*
( They have repented;)Tj
T*
( And have sought, to give new birth,)Tj
T*
( In baths to steep him;)Tj
T*
( But being so much too good for earth,)Tj
T*
( Heaven vows to keep him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on Salomon Pavy, a Child of Queen Elizabeth\222s Chapel\222 \
\(1616\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.75456 Tm
( Underneath this stone doth lie)Tj
T*
( As much beauty as could die;)Tj
T*
( Which in life did harbour give)Tj
T*
( To more virtue than doth live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on Elizabeth, L. H.\222 \(1616\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( The voice so sweet, the words so fair,)Tj
T*
( As some soft chime had stroked the air;)Tj
T*
( And though the sound were parted thence,)Tj
T*
( Still left an echo in the sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Eupheme\222 \(1640\) no. 4 \221The Mind\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( Greek was free from rhyme\222s infection,)Tj
ET
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( Happy Greek by this protection,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Was not spoiled.)Tj
T*
( Whilst the Latin, queen of tongues,)Tj
T*
( Is not yet free from rhyme\222s wrongs,)Tj
T*
( But rests foiled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221A Fit of Rhyme against Rhyme\222 \(1640\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( But that which most doth take my muse and me)Tj
T*
( Is a pure cup of rich Canary wine,)Tj
T*
( Which is the Mermaid\222s now, but shall be mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Inviting a Friend to Supper\222 \(1616\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( England\222s high Chancellor: the destined heir,)Tj
T*
( In his soft cradle, to his father\222s chair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221On Lord Bacon\222s [Sixtieth] Birthday\222 \(1640\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Rest in soft peace, and, asked, say here doth lie)Tj
T*
( Ben Jonson his best piece of poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221On My First Son\222 \(1616\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( This figure that thou here seest put,)Tj
T*
( It was for gentle Shakespeare cut,)Tj
T*
( Wherein the graver had a strife)Tj
T*
( With Nature, to out-do the life:)Tj
T*
( O could he but have drawn his wit)Tj
T*
( As well in brass, as he has hit)Tj
T*
( His face; the print would then surpass)Tj
T*
( All that was ever writ in brass:)Tj
T*
( But since he cannot, reader, look)Tj
T*
( Not on his picture, but his book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(On the Portrait of Shakespeare, from \221Mr William Shakespeare\222s Com\
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T*
(\221To the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( Follow a shadow, it still flies you;)Tj
T*
( Seem to fly it, it will pursue:)Tj
T*
( So court a mistress, she denies you;)Tj
T*
( Let her alone, she will court you.)Tj
T*
( Say, are not women truly then)Tj
T*
( Styled but the shadows of us men?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221That Women are but Men\222s Shadows\222 \(1616\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( Drink to me only with thine eyes,)Tj
T*
( And I will pledge with mine;)Tj
T*
( Or leave a kiss but in the cup,)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll not look for wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221To Celia\222 \(1616\))Tj
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( It is not growing like a tree)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In bulk, doth make men better be;)Tj
T*
( Or standing long an oak, three hundred year,)Tj
T*
( To fall a log at last, dry, bald, and sere:)Tj
T*
( A lily of a day)Tj
T*
( Is fairer far, in May,)Tj
T*
( Although it fall and die that night;)Tj
T*
( It was the plant and flower of light.)Tj
T*
( In small proportions we just beauty see,)Tj
T*
( And in short measures life may perfect be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(\221To the Immortal Memory...of...Sir Lucius Carey and Sir H. Morison\222\
\(1640\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.25456 Tm
( Soul of the Age!)Tj
T*
( The applause, delight, the wonder of our stage!)Tj
T*
( My Shakespeare...)Tj
T*
( Thou art a monument, without a tomb,)Tj
T*
( And art alive still while thy book doth live,)Tj
T*
( And we have wits to read, and praise to give.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
\(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( For if I thought my judgement were of years)Tj
T*
( I should commit thee surely with thy peers:)Tj
T*
( And tell how far thou didst our Lyly outshine,)Tj
T*
( Or sporting Kyd, or Marlowe\222s mighty line.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
\(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( And though thou hadst small Latin, and less Greek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
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15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( To hear thy buskin tread)Tj
T*
( And shake a stage; or, when thy socks were on,)Tj
T*
( Leave thee alone, for the comparison)Tj
T*
( Of all that insolent Greece or haughty Rome)Tj
T*
( Sent forth, or since did from their ashes come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
\(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( He was not of an age, but for all time!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
\(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Sweet Swan of Avon! What a sight it were)Tj
T*
( To see thee in our waters yet appear,)Tj
T*
( And make those flights upon the banks of Thames)Tj
T*
( That so did take Eliza, and our James!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of My Beloved, The Author, Mr William Shakespeare\222 \
\(1623\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Thou art not, Penshurst, built to envious show)Tj
T*
( Of touch or marble, nor canst boast a row)Tj
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( Of polished pillars, or a roof of gold;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou hast no lantern whereof tales are told,)Tj
T*
( Or stair, or courts; but standst an ancient pile,)Tj
T*
( And these grudged at, art reverenced the while.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221To Penshurst\222 \(1616\) l. 1)Tj
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( The blushing apricot and woolly peach)Tj
T*
( Hang on thy walls, that every child may reach.)Tj
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(\221To Penshurst\222 \(1616\) l. 43)Tj
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( His censure of the English poets was this...That Donne, for not keep\
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T*
(hanging. That Shakespeare wanted art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(In \221Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden\222 \(written \
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( The players have often mentioned it as an honour to Shakespeare that\
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T*
(whatsoever he penned, he never blotted out a line. My answer hath been \221\
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T*
(thousand\222; which they thought a malevolent speech. I had not told pos\
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T*
(ignorance, who chose that circumstance to commend their friend by wherei\
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T*
(wit was in his own power; would the rule of it had been so too...But he \
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T*
(his virtues. There was ever more in him to be praised than to be pardone\
d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Timber, or Discoveries made upon Men and Matter\222 \(1641\) l. 658 \
\221De Shakespeare Nostrati\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( The fear of every man that heard him was, lest he should make an end\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Timber, or Discoveries made upon Men and Matter\222 \(1641\) l. 906 \
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15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Talking and eloquence are not the same: to speak, and to speak well,\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Timber, or Discoveries made upon Men and Matter\222 \(1641\) l. 1882\
\221Praecept [a]. Element [aria])Tj
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( 10.46 Janis Joplin 1943-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Fourteen heart attacks and he had to die in my week. In my week.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(When Eisenhower\222s death prevented her photograph appearing on the cov\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Express\222 12 April 1969)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 256.4624 Tm
( 10.47 Thomas Jordan c.1612-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They plucked communion tables down)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And broke our painted glasses;)Tj
T*
( They threw our altars to the ground)Tj
T*
( And tumbled down the crosses.)Tj
T*
( They set up Cromwell and his heir\227)Tj
T*
( The Lord and Lady Claypole\227)Tj
T*
( Because they hated Common Prayer,)Tj
T*
( The organ and the maypole.)Tj
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(\221How the War began\222 \(1664\))Tj
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( 10.48 John Jortin 1698-1770)Tj
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( Palmam qui meruit, ferat.)Tj
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(\221Lusus Poetici\222 \(3rd ed. 1748\) \221Ad Ventos\222 \(adopted by Lo\
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( 10.49 Sir Keith Joseph 1918\227)Tj
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( Problems reproduce themselves from generation to generation...I refe\
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0 -1.2 TD
(deprivation\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(Speech in London to the Pre-School Playgroups Association, 29 June 1972,\
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15 0 0 15 10 622.75456 Tm
( Hard to avoid the feeling that somehow the lean and tight-lipped muf\
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T*
(dole queue were at least partly our fault.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(In Peter Jenkins \221Mrs Thatcher\222s Revolution\222 \(1987\) p. 63)Tj
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( 10.50 Benjamin Jowett 1817-93)Tj
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( One man is as good as another until he has written a book.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 498.25456 Tm
( Nowhere probably is there more true feeling, and nowhere worse taste\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.42047 Tm
(In Evelyn Abbott and Lewis Campbell \(eds.\) \221The Letters of Benjami\
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15 0 0 15 10 461.50456 Tm
( The lie in the soul is a true lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(Introduction to his translation \(1871\) of Plato\222s \221Republic\222 \
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 413.4624 Tm
( 10.51 James Joyce 1882-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Yes, the newspapers were right: snow was general all over Ireland. I\
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0 -1.2 TD
(of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon th\
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T*
(westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was fa\
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T*
(part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furey lay buried\
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T*
(the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on\
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T*
(swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe\
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T*
(the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.)Tj
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(\221Dubliners\222 \(1914\) \221The Dead\222)Tj
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( riverrun, past Eve and Adam\222s, from swerve of shore to bend of ba\
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T*
(commodious vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.17047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, p. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.25456 Tm
( That ideal reader suffering from an ideal insomnia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.42047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, p. 120)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.50456 Tm
( The flushpots of Euston and the hanging garments of Marylebone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.67047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, p. 192)Tj
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( O)Tj
T*
( tell me all about)Tj
T*
( Anna Livia! I want to hear all about Anna Livia. Well, y\
ou know Anna Livia?)Tj
T*
( Yes, of course, we all know Anna Livia. Tell me all. Tell me now\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.92047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, p. 196)Tj
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( Tell me, tell me, tell me, elm! Night night! Telmetale of stem or st\
one.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beside the rivering waters of hitherandthithering waters of. Night!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, p. 216)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( All moanday, tearsday, wailsday, thumpsday, frightday, shatterday ti\
ll the fear of the Law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 2, p. 301)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Three quarks for Muster Mark!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 2, p. 383)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( The Gracehoper was always jigging ajog, hoppy on akkant of his joyic\
ity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 3, p. 414)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( If I seen him bearing down on me now under whitespread wings like he\
\222d come from )Tj
T*
(Arkangels, I sink I\222d die down over his feet, humbly dumbly, only to \
washup. Yes, tid. There\222s )Tj
T*
(where. First. We pass through grass behush the bush to. Whish! A gull. G\
ulls. Far calls. Coming, )Tj
T*
(far! End here. Us then. Finn, again! Take. Bussoftlhee, mememormee! Till\
thousendsthee. Lps. )Tj
T*
(The keys to. Given! A way a lone a last a loved a long the)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Finnegans Wake\222 \(1939\) pt. 4, p. 627)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was a moocow comi\
ng down along the )Tj
T*
(road and this moocow that was down along the road met a nicens little bo\
y named baby tuckoo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( When the soul of a man is born in this country, there are nets flung\
at it to hold it back from )Tj
T*
(flight. You talk to me of nationality, language, religion. I shall try t\
o fly by those nets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Ireland is the old sow that eats her farrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Pity is the feeling which arrests the mind in the presence of whatso\
ever is grave and constant in )Tj
T*
(human sufferings and unites it with the human sufferer. Terror is the fe\
eling which arrests the )Tj
T*
(mind in the presence of whatsoever is grave and constant in human suffer\
ings and unites it with )Tj
T*
(the secret cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( The artist, like the God of the creation, remains within or behind o\
r beyond or above his )Tj
T*
(handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his \
fingernails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( I will not serve that in which I no longer believe whether it call i\
tself my home, my fatherland )Tj
T*
(or my church: and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or a\
rt as freely as I can and as )Tj
T*
(wholly as I can, using for my defence the only arms I allow myself to us\
e, silence, exile, and )Tj
T*
(cunning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Welcome, O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the realit\
y of experience and to forge )Tj
T*
(in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race...Old fathe\
r, old artificer, stand me )Tj
T*
(now and ever in good stead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222 \(1916\) ch. 5)Tj
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( By an epiphany he meant a sudden spiritual manifestation, whether in\
vulgarity of speech or of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gesture or in a memorable phase of the mind itself. He believed that it \
was for the man of letters )Tj
T*
(to recover these epiphanies with extreme care, seeing that they themselv\
es are the most delicate )Tj
T*
(and evanescent of moments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Stephen Hero\222 \(1944\) ch. 25 \(part of a first draft of \221A Po\
rtrait of the Artist as a Young Man\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl\
of lather on which a )Tj
T*
(mirror and a razor lay crossed. A yellow dressinggown, ungirdled, was su\
stained gently behind )Tj
T*
(him on the mild morning air. He held the bowl aloft and intoned:\227Intr\
oibo ad altare Dei.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 1 \(ch. 1, l. 1 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed., \
1986\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( The snotgreen sea. The scrotumtightening sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 5 \(ch. 1, l. 78 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed.,\
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( It is a symbol of Irish art. The cracked lookingglass of a servant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 7 \(pt. 1, ch. 1, l. 146 in H. W. Gabler et \
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( When I makes tea I makes tea, as old mother Grogan said. And when I \
makes water I makes )Tj
T*
(water...Begob, ma\222am, says Mrs Cahill, God send you don\222t make the\
m in the one pot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 12 \(ch. 1, l. 357 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed\
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( I fear those big words, Stephen said, which make us so unhappy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 31 \(ch. 2, l. 264 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed\
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( History, Stephen said, is a nightmare from which I am trying to awak\
e.)Tj
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(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 34 \(ch. 2, l. 377 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed\
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( Lawn Tennyson, gentleman poet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 50 \(ch. 3, l. 492 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed\
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( Mr Leopold Bloom ate with relish the inner organs of beasts and fowl\
s. He liked thick giblet )Tj
T*
(soup, nutty gizzards, a stuffed roast heart, liverslices fried with crus\
tcrumbs, fried hencods\222 roes. )Tj
T*
(Most of all he liked grilled mutton kidneys which gave to his palate a f\
ine tang of faintly scented )Tj
T*
(urine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 53 \(ch. 4, l. 1 in H. W. Gabler et al. ed.,\
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( Come forth, Lazarus! And he came fifth and lost the job.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 102 \(ch. 6, l. 678 in H. W. Gabler et al. e\
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( Plenty to see and hear and feel yet. Feel live warm beings near you.\
They aren\222t going to get )Tj
T*
(me this innings. Warm beds: warm full blooded life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 107 \(ch. 6, l. 1003 in H. W. Gabler et al. \
ed., 1986\))Tj
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( She used to say Ben Dollard had a base barreltone voice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 147 \(ch. 8, l. 117 in H. W. Gabler et al. e\
d., 1986\))Tj
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( A man of genius makes no mistakes. His errors are volitional and are\
the portals of discovery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 182 \(ch. 9, l. 228 in H. W. Gabler et al. e\
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( But it\222s no use, says he. Force, hatred, history, all that. That\222\
s not life for men and women, )Tj
T*
(insult and hatred. And everybody knows that it\222s the very opposite of\
that that is really life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 317 \(ch. 12, l. 1481 in H. W. Gabler et al.\
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( Greater love than this, he said, no man hath that a man lay down his\
wife for his friend. Go )Tj
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(thou and do likewise. Thus, or words to that effect, saith Zarathustra, \
sometime regius professor )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of French letters to the university of Oxtail.)Tj
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(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 375 \(ch. 14, l. 360 in H. W. Gabler et al. \
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( The heaventree of stars hung with humid nightblue fruit.)Tj
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(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 651 \(ch. 17, l. 1039 in H. W. Gabler et al.\
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( He kissed me under the Moorish wall and I thought well as well him a\
s another and then I )Tj
T*
(asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I yes\
to say yes my )Tj
T*
(mountain flower and first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down\
to me so he could )Tj
T*
(feel my breasts all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes\
I said yes I will Yes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\) p. 732 \(ch. 18, l. 1604 in H. W. Gabler et al.\
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( Ben Bloom Elijah...at an angle of forty-five degrees over Donohoe\222\
s in Little Green Street like )Tj
T*
(a shot off a shovel.)Tj
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(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\))Tj
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( Limp father of thousands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.67047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1922\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 10.52 William Joyce \(Lord Haw-Haw\) 1906-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Germany calling! Germany calling!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.92047 Tm
(Habitual introduction to propaganda broadcasts to Britain during the Sec\
ond World War)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.7124 Tm
( 10.53 Jack Judge 1878-1938 and Harry Williams 1874-1924)Tj
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( It\222s a long way to Tipperary,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It\222s a long way to go;)Tj
T*
( It\222s a long way to Tipperary,)Tj
T*
( To the sweetest girl I know!)Tj
T*
( Goodbye, Piccadilly,)Tj
T*
( Farewell, Leicester Square,)Tj
T*
( It\222s a long, long way to Tipperary,)Tj
T*
( But my heart\222s right there!)Tj
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(\221It\222s a Long Way to Tipperary\222 \(1912 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 10.54 Emperor Julian the Apostate c.332-363)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Vicisti, Galilaee.)Tj
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( You have won, Galilean.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.67047 Tm
(Supposed dying words; but a late embellishment of Theodoret \221Ecclesia\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 110.4624 Tm
( 10.55 Julian of Norwich 1343-1443)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sin is behovely, but all shall be well and all shall be well and all\
manner of thing shall be well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 72.92047 Tm
(\221Revelations of Divine Love\222, the long text, ch. 27, revelation 13\
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( Wouldest thou wit thy Lord\222s meaning in this thing? Wit it well: \
Love was his meaning. Who )Tj
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(shewed it thee? Love. What shewed He thee? Love. Wherefore shewed it He\
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0 -1.2 TD
(was I learned that Love is our Lord\222s meaning.)Tj
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(\221Revelations of Divine Love\222, the long text, ch. 86, revelation 16\
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( 10.56 Carl Gustav Jung 1875-1961)Tj
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( Eine gewissermassen oberfl\344chliche Schicht des Unbewussten ist zw\
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T*
(mehr pers\366nlicher Erfahrung und Erwerbung entstammt, sondern angebore\
n ist. Diese tiefere )Tj
T*
(Schicht ist das sogenannte kollektive Unbewusste...Die Inhalte des pers\366\
nlichen Unbewussten )Tj
T*
(sind in der Hauptsache die sogenannten gef\374hlsbetonten Komplexe...Die\
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T*
(Unbewussten dagegen sind die sogenannten Archetypen.)Tj
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( A more or less superficial layer of the unconscious is undoubtedly p\
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layer, which does not )Tj
T*
(derive from personal experience and is not a personal acquisition but is\
inborn. This deeper layer )Tj
T*
(I call the collective unconscious...The contents of the personal unconsc\
ious are chiefly the feeling-)Tj
T*
(toned complexes...The contents of the collective unconscious, on the oth\
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T*
(archetypes.)Tj
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(\221Eranos Jahrbuch\222 \(1934\) p. 180)Tj
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( Ein Mensch, der nicht durch die H\366lle seiner Leidenschaften gegan\
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T*
(\374berwunden.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( A man who has not passed through the inferno of his passions has nev\
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(\221Errinerungen, Tr\344ume, Gedanken\222 \(1962\) ch. 9)Tj
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( Soweit wir zu erkennen verm\366gen, ist es die einzige Sinn der mens\
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0 -1.2 TD
(anz\374nden in der Finsternis des blossen Seins.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to \
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0 -1.2 TD
(darkness of mere being.)Tj
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(\221Errinerungen, Tr\344ume, Gedanken\222 \(1962\) ch. 11)Tj
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( Jede Form von S\374chtigkeit ist von \374bel, gleichg\374ltig, ob es\
sich um Alkohol oder Morphium )Tj
T*
(oder Idealismus handelt.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Every form of addiction is bad, no matter whether the narcotic be al\
cohol or morphine or )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(idealism.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(\221Erinnerungen, Tr\344ume, Gedanken\222 \(1962\) ch. 12)Tj
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( Wo die Liebe herrscht, da gibt es keinen Machtwillen, und wo die Mac\
ht den Vorrang hat, da )Tj
T*
(fehlt die Liebe. Das eine ist der Schatten des andern.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Where love rules, there is no will to power, and where power predomi\
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0 -1.2 TD
(The one is the shadow of the other.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Gesammelte Werke\222 vol. 7 \(1964\) p. 58 \221\334ber die Psycholog\
ie des Unbewussten\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( Alles, was wir an den Kindern \344ndern wollen, sollten wir zun\344c\
hst wohl aufmerksam pr\374fen, )Tj
T*
(ob es nicht etwas sei, was besser an uns zu \344ndern w\344re.)Tj
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( If there is anything that we wish to change in the child, we should \
first examine it and see )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(whether it is not something that could better be changed in ourselves.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Gesammelte Werke\222 vol. 17 \(1972\) p. 194 \221Vom Werden der Pers\
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( Pers\366nlichkeit ist h\366chste Verwirklichung der eingeborenen Eig\
enart des besonderen lebenden )Tj
T*
(Wesens. Pers\366nlichkeit ist der Tat des h\366chsten Lebensmutes, der a\
bsoluten Bejahung des )Tj
T*
(individuell Seienden und der erfolgreichsten Anpassung an das universal \
Gegetene bei )Tj
T*
(gr\366sstm\366glicher Freiheit der eigenen Entscheidung.)Tj
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( Personality is the supreme realization of the innate individuality o\
f a particular living being. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Personality is an act of the greatest courage in the face of life, the a\
bsolute affirmation of all that )Tj
T*
(constitutes the individual, and the most successful adaptation to the un\
iversal conditions of )Tj
T*
(existence coupled with the greatest possible freedom of personal decisio\
n.)Tj
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(\221Gesammelte Werke\222 vol. 17 \(1972\) p. 195 \221Vom Werden der Pers\
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( 10.57 \221Junius\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The liberty of the press is the Palladium of all the civil, politica\
l, and religious rights of an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Englishman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Letters of Junius\222 \(1772 ed.\) \221Dedication to the English\
Nation\222)Tj
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( The right of election is the very essence of the constitution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Public Advertiser\222 24 April 1769, Letter 11)Tj
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( Is this the wisdom of a great minister? or is it the ominous vibrati\
on of a pendulum?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Public Advertiser\222 30 May 1769, Letter 12)Tj
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( There is a holy mistaken zeal in politics as well as in religion. By\
persuading others, we )Tj
T*
(convince ourselves.)Tj
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(\221Public Advertiser\222 19 December 1769, Letter 35)Tj
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( However distinguished by rank or property, in the rights of freedom \
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(\221Public Advertiser\222 19 March 1770, Letter 37)Tj
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( The injustice done to an individual is sometimes of service to the p\
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(\221Public Advertiser\222 14 November 1770, Letter 41)Tj
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( As for Mr Wedderburne, there is something about him, which even trea\
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(\221Public Advertiser\222 22 June 1771, Letter 49)Tj
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( 10.58 Sir John Junor)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pass the sick bag, Alice.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Such a graceful exit. And then he had to go and do this on the doors\
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(On Harold Wilson\222s \221Lavender List\222\227the honours list he drew \
up on resigning the British premiership in 1976)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 10.59 Emperor Justinian c.482-565)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Justice is the constant and perpetual wish to render to every one hi\
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(\221Institutes\222 bk. 1, ch. 1, para. 1)Tj
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( Difficile est saturam non scribere.)Tj
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( It\222s hard not to write satire.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 1, l. 30)Tj
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( Honesty is praised and left to shiver.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 1, l. 74 \(translation by G. G. Ramsay\))Tj
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T*
( Even if nature says no, indignation makes me write verse.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 1, l. 79)Tj
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( Quidquid agunt homines, votum timor ira voluptas)Tj
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( Gaudia discursus nostri farrago libelli est.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything mankind does, their hope, fear, rage, pleasure, joys, bus\
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0 -1.2 TD
(of my little book.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
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(\221Satires\222 no. 1, l. 85)Tj
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( Quis tulerit Gracchos de seditione querentes?)Tj
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( Who would put up with the Gracchi complaining about subversion?)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 2, l. 24)Tj
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( Nemo repente fuit turpissimus.)Tj
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T*
( No one ever suddenly became depraved.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 2, l. 83)Tj
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( Iam pridem Syrus in Tiberim defluxit Orontes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et linguam et mores.)Tj
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( The Syrian Orontes has now for long been pouring into the Tiber, wit\
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(ways of behaving.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 62)Tj
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( Grammaticus, rhetor, geometres, pictor, aliptes,)Tj
T*
( Augur, schoenobates, medicus, magus, omnia novit)Tj
T*
( Graeculus esuriens: in caelum iusseris ibit.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Scholar, public speaker, geometrician, painter, physical training in\
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0 -1.2 TD
(future, rope-dancer, doctor, magician, the hungry little Greek can do ev\
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T*
(heaven \(and he\222ll go there\).)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( Nil habet infelix paupertas durius in se)Tj
T*
( Quam quod ridiculos homines facit.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The misfortunes of poverty carry with them nothing harder to bear th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(ridicule.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 152)Tj
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( Haud facile emergunt quorum virtutibus obstat)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Res angusta domi.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It\222s not easy for people to rise out of obscurity when they have \
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(at home.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 164)Tj
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( Omnia Romae)Tj
T*
( Cum pretio.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything in Rome has its price.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 183)Tj
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( Rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cycno.)Tj
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( A rare bird on this earth, like nothing so much as a black swan.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 6, l. 165)Tj
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( Hoc volo, sic iubeo, sit pro ratione voluntas.)Tj
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T*
( I will have this done, so I order it done; let my will replace reaso\
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(\221Satires\222 no. 6, l. 223)Tj
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( \221Pone seram, cohibe.\222 Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? Cauta\
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( \221Bolt her in, keep her indoors.\222 But who is to guard the guard\
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(accordingly and begins with them.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Satires\222 no. 6, l. 347)Tj
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( Tenet insanabile multos)Tj
T*
( Scribendi cacoethes et aegro in corde senescit.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Many suffer from the incurable disease of writing, and it becomes ch\
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(\221Satires\222 no. 7, l. 51)Tj
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( Summum crede nefas animam praeferre pudori)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et propter vitam vivendi perdere causas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Count it the greatest sin to prefer mere existence to honour, and fo\
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(reasons for living.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.42047 Tm
(\221Satires\222 no. 8, l. 83)Tj
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( Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator.)Tj
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( Travel light and you can sing in the robber\222s face.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 22)Tj
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( Verbosa et grandis epistula venit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A Capreis.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( A huge wordy letter came from Capri.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(On the Emperor Tiberius\222s letter to the Senate, which caused the down\
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0 -1.2 TD
(10, l. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.50456 Tm
( Duas tantum res anxius optat,)Tj
T*
( Panem et circenses.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 80 \(on the modern citizen; commonly quoted \221\
bread and circuses\222\))Tj
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( Expende Hannibalem: quot libras in duce summo)Tj
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( Invenies?)Tj
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( Weigh Hannibal: how many pounds will you find in that great general?\
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(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 147)Tj
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( I, demens, et saevas curre per Alpes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ut pueris placeas et declamatio fias.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Off you go, madman, and hurry across the horrible Alps, duly to deli\
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0 -1.2 TD
(become a subject for practising speech-making.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 166 \(on Hannibal\))Tj
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( Mors sola fatetur)Tj
T*
( Quantula sint hominum corpuscula.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Death alone reveals how small are men\222s poor bodies.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 172 \(on Hannibal\))Tj
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( Orandum est ut sit mens sana in corpore sano.)Tj
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T*
( You should pray to have a sound mind in a sound body.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Satires\222 no. 10, l. 356)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( Prima est haec ultio, quod se)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Iudice nemo nocens absolvitur.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( This is the first of punishments, that no guilty man is acquitted if\
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(\221Satires\222 no. 13, l. 2)Tj
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( Quippe minuti)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Semper et infirmi est animi exiguique voluptas)Tj
T*
( Ultio.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Indeed, it\222s always a paltry, feeble, tiny mind that takes pleasu\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Satires\222 no. 13, l. 189)Tj
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( Maxima debetur puero reverentia, siquid)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Turpe paras, nec tu pueri contempseris annos.)Tj
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( A child deserves the maximum respect; if you ever have something dis\
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0 -1.2 TD
(ignore your son\222s tender years.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 14, l. 47)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 131.28038 Tm
( 11.0 K)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.4624 Tm
( 11.1 Franz Kafka 1883-1924)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Jemand musste Josef K. verleumdet haben, denn ohne dass er etwas B\366\
ses getan h\344tte, wurde )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(er eines Morgens verhaftet.)Tj
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( Someone must have traduced Joseph K., for without having done anythi\
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(\221Der Prozess\222 \(The Trial, 1925\) opening words)Tj
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( Sie k\366nnen einwenden, dass es ja \374berhaupt kein Verfahren ist,\
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T*
(ist ja nur ein Verfahren, wenn ich es als solches anerkenne.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( You may object that it is not a trial at all; you are quite right, f\
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(\221Der Prozess\222 \(The Trial, 1925\) ch. 2)Tj
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( Es ist oft besser, in Ketten, als frei zu sein.)Tj
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( It\222s often better to be in chains than to be free.)Tj
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(\221Der Prozess\222 \(The Trial, 1925\) ch. 8)Tj
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( Als Gregor Samsa eines Morgens aus unruhigen Tr\344ume erwachte, fan\
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(zu einem ungeheueren Ungeziefer verwandelt.)Tj
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( As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himsel\
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(\221Die Verwandlung\222 \(The Metamorphosis, 1915\) opening words)Tj
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( 11.2 Gus Kahn 1886-1941 and Raymond B. Egan 1890-1952)Tj
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( There\222s nothing surer,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The rich get rich and the poor get children.)Tj
T*
( In the meantime, in between time,)Tj
T*
( Ain\222t we got fun.)Tj
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(\221Ain\222t We Got Fun\222 \(1921 song\))Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(\221Duck Soup\222 \(1933 film\); spoken by Groucho Marx)Tj
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( If you can\222t leave in a taxi you can leave in a huff. If that\222\
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T*
(and a huff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(\221Duck Soup\222 \(1933 film\); spoken by Groucho Marx)Tj
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( 11.4 Henry Home, Lord Kames 1696-1782)Tj
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( Avoid as much as possible abstract and general terms...Images, which\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Elements of Criticism\222 \(1762\) vol. 1, ch. 4)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Critique of Practical Reason\222 \(1788\) p. 2)Tj
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(\221Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics\222 \(1785, tran\
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T*
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(Dieser Imperativ ist categorisch...Dieser Imperativ mag der der Sittlich\
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(\221Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics\222 \(1785, tran\
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( Wer den Zweck will, will \(so fern die Vernunft auf seine Handlungen\
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T*
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(\221Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics\222 \(1785, tran\
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( Gl\374ckseligkeit nicht ein Ideal der Vernunft, sondern der Einbildu\
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( Happiness is not an ideal of reason but of imagination.)Tj
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(\221Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics\222 \(1785, tran\
slation by T. K. Abbott\) sect. 2)Tj
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( Handle so, dass du die Menschheit, so wohl in deiner Person, als in \
der Person eines jeden )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(andern, jederzeit zugleich als Zweck, niemals blos als Mittel brauchest.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So act as to treat humanity, whether in thine own person or in that \
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0 -1.2 TD
(as an end withal, never as means only.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics\222 \(1785, tran\
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15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Aus so krummem Holze, als woraus der Mensch gemacht ist, kann nichts\
ganz gerades )Tj
T*
(gezimmert werden.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Out of the crooked timber of humanity no straight thing can ever be \
made.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.42047 Tm
(\221Idee zu einer allgemeinen Geschichte in weltb\374rgerlicher Absicht\222\
\(1784\) proposition 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 80.2124 Tm
( 11.6 Alphonse Karr 1808-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Plus \347a change, plus c\222est la m\352me chose.)Tj
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( The more things change, the more they are the same.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Les Gu\352pes\222 January 1849)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Si l\222on veut abolir la peine de mort en ce cas, que MM les assass\
ins commencent.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If we are to abolish the death penalty, I should like to see the fir\
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(murderers.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Les Gu\352pes\222 January 1849)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.4624 Tm
( 11.7 George S. Kaufman 1889-1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Satire is what closes Saturday night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(In Scott Meredith \221George S. Kaufman and his Friends\222 \(1974\) ch.\
6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 11.8 Gerald Kaufman 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The longest suicide note in history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(Describing the Labour Party\222s \221New Hope for Britain\222 \(1983\), \
in Denis Healey \221The Time of My Life\222 \(1989\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ch. 23)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.9624 Tm
( 11.9 Paul Kaufman and Mike Anthony)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Poetry in motion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1960\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 404.2124 Tm
( 11.10 Christoph Kaufmann 1753-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Sturm und Drang.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Storm and stress.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.92047 Tm
(Title suggested by Kaufman for a romantic drama of the American War of I\
ndependence by the German )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(playwright, F. M. Klinger \(1775\) and thereafter given to a period of l\
iterary ferment which prevailed in )Tj
T*
(Germany during the latter part of the 18th century)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 282.7124 Tm
( 11.11 Patrick Kavanagh 1905-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cassiopeia was over)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cassidy\222s hanging hill,)Tj
T*
( I looked and three whin bushes rode across)Tj
T*
( The horizon\227the Three Wise Kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221A Christmas Childhood\222 \(1947\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Clay is the word and clay is the flesh)Tj
T*
( Where the potato-gatherers like mechanized scarecrows move)Tj
T*
( Along the side-fall of the hill\227Maguire and his men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221The Great Hunger\222 \(1947\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( That was how his life happened.)Tj
T*
( No mad hooves galloping in the sky,)Tj
T*
( But the weak, washy way of true tragedy\227)Tj
T*
( A sick horse nosing around the meadow for a clean place to die.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Great Hunger\222 \(1947\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I hate what every poet hates in spite)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of all the solemn talk of contemplation.)Tj
T*
( Oh, Alexander Selkirk knew the plight)Tj
T*
( Of being king and government and nation.)Tj
T*
( A road, a mile of kingdom, I am king)Tj
T*
( Of banks and stones and every blooming thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Inniskeen Road: July Evening\222 \(1936\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.2124 Tm
( 11.12 Ted Kavanagh 1892-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Can I do you now, sir?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221Mrs Mopp\222 in \221ITMA\222 \(BBC radio programme, 1939-49\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( I go\227I come back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221Ali Oop\222 in \221ITMA\222 \(BBC radio programme, 1939-49\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( It\222s being so cheerful as keeps me going.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Mona Lott\222 in \221ITMA\222 \(BBC radio programme, 1939-49\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.9624 Tm
( 11.13 Denis Kearney 1847-1907)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Horny-handed sons of toil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(Speaking in San Francisco, c.1878.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 383.2124 Tm
( 11.14 John Keats 1795-1821)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Other spirits there are standing apart)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Upon the forehead of the age to come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221Addressed to [Haydon]\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.75456 Tm
( Bards of Passion and of Mirth,)Tj
T*
( Ye have left your souls on earth!)Tj
T*
( Have ye souls in heaven too,)Tj
T*
( Double-lived in regions new?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221Bards of Passion and of Mirth\222 \(1820\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.00456 Tm
( Where the nightingale doth sing)Tj
T*
( Not a senseless, tranc\351d thing,)Tj
T*
( But divine melodious truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(\221Bards of Passion and of Mirth\222 \(1820\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 143.25456 Tm
( Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art\227)Tj
T*
( Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night,)Tj
T*
( And watching, with eternal lids apart,)Tj
T*
( Like nature\222s patient, sleepless Eremite,)Tj
T*
( The moving waters at their priestlike task)Tj
T*
( Of pure ablution round earth\222s human shores.)Tj
ET
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(\221Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Still, still to hear her tender-taken breath,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And so live ever\227or else swoon to death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone!)Tj
T*
( Sweet voice, sweet lips, soft hand, and softer breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone\222 \(written 1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( The imagination of a boy is healthy, and the mature imagination of a\
man is healthy; but there )Tj
T*
(is a space of life between, in which the soul is in a ferment, the chara\
cter undecided, the way of )Tj
T*
(life uncertain, the ambition thick-sighted: thence proceeds mawkishness.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:)Tj
T*
( Its loveliness increases; it will never)Tj
T*
( Pass into nothingness; but still will keep)Tj
T*
( A bower quiet for us, and a sleep)Tj
T*
( Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( The grandeur of the dooms)Tj
T*
( We have imagined for the mighty dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 1, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( They alway must be with us, or we die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 1, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Who, of men, can tell)Tj
T*
( That flowers would bloom, or that green fruit would swell)Tj
T*
( To melting pulp, that fish would have bright mail,)Tj
T*
( The earth its dower of river, wood, and vale,)Tj
T*
( The meadows runnels, runnels pebble-stones,)Tj
T*
( The seed its harvest, or the lute its tones,)Tj
T*
( Tones ravishment, or ravishment its sweet,)Tj
T*
( If human souls did never kiss and greet?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 1, l. 835)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Here is wine,)Tj
T*
( Alive with sparkles\227never, I aver,)Tj
T*
( Since Ariadne was a vintager,)Tj
T*
( So cool a purple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 2, l. 441)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( To Sorrow,)Tj
T*
( I bade good-morrow,)Tj
T*
( And thought to leave her far away behind;)Tj
T*
( But cheerly, cheerly,)Tj
ET
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( She loves me dearly;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She is so constant to me, and so kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 4, l. 173)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Their smiles,)Tj
T*
( Wan as primroses gathered at midnight)Tj
T*
( By chilly fingered spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Endymion\222 \(1818\) bk. 4, l. 969)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( St Agnes\222 Eve\227Ah, bitter chill it was!)Tj
T*
( The owl, for all his feathers, was a-cold;)Tj
T*
( The hare limped trembling through the frozen grass,)Tj
T*
( And silent was the flock in woolly fold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The sculptured dead, on each side, seem to freeze,)Tj
T*
( Emprisoned in black, purgatorial rails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( The silver, snarling trumpets \222gan to chide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( And soft adorings from their loves receive)Tj
T*
( Upon the honeyed middle of the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( The music, yearning like a God in pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( A poor, weak, palsy-stricken, churchyard thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Out went the taper as she hurried in;)Tj
T*
( Its little smoke, in pallid moonshine, died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( A casement high and triple-arched there was,)Tj
T*
( All garlanded with carven imag\222ries)Tj
T*
( Of fruits, and flowers, and bunches of knot-grass,)Tj
T*
( And diamonded with panes of quaint device,)Tj
T*
( Innumerable of stains and splendid dyes,)Tj
T*
( As are the tiger-moth\222s deep-damasked wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( By degrees)Tj
T*
( Her rich attire creeps rustling to her knees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Trembling in her soft and chilly nest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( As though a rose should shut, and be a bud again.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( And still she slept an azure-lidded sleep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In blanch\351d linen, smooth, and lavendered,)Tj
T*
( While he from forth the closet brought a heap)Tj
T*
( Of candied apple, quince, and plum, and gourd;)Tj
T*
( With jellies soother than the creamy curd,)Tj
T*
( And lucent syrops, tinct with cinnamon;)Tj
T*
( Manna and dates, in argosy transferred)Tj
T*
( From Fez; and spiced dainties, every one,)Tj
T*
( From silken Samarcand to cedared Lebanon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( He played an ancient ditty, long since mute,)Tj
T*
( In Provence called, \221La belle dame sans mercy.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( And the long carpets rose along the gusty floor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( And they are gone: aye, ages long ago)Tj
T*
( These lovers fled away into the storm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( The Beadsman, after thousand aves told,)Tj
T*
( For aye unsought for slept among his ashes cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Eve of St Agnes\222 \(1820\) st. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Fanatics have their dreams, wherewith they weave)Tj
T*
( A paradise for a sect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Fall of Hyperion\222 \(written 1819\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( \221None can usurp this height,\222 returned that shade, )Tj
T*
( \221But those to whom the miseries of the world )Tj
T*
( Are misery, and will not let them rest.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Fall of Hyperion\222 \(written 1819\) l. 147)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( The poet and the dreamer are distinct,)Tj
T*
( Diverse, sheer opposite, antipodes.)Tj
T*
( The one pours out a balm upon the world,)Tj
T*
( The other vexes it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Fall of Hyperion\222 \(written 1819\) l. 199)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Ever let the fancy roam,)Tj
T*
( Pleasure never is at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Fancy\222 \(1820\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( O sweet Fancy! let her loose;)Tj
T*
( Summer\222s joys are spoilt by use.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Fancy\222 \(1820\) l. 9)Tj
ET
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( Where\222s the cheek that doth not fade,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Too much gazed at? Where\222s the maid)Tj
T*
( Whose lip mature is ever new?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Fancy\222 \(1820\) l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Where\222s the face)Tj
T*
( One would meet in every place?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Fancy\222 \(1820\) l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Four seasons fill the measure of the year;)Tj
T*
( There are four seasons in the mind of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Human Seasons\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Deep in the shady sadness of a vale)Tj
T*
( Far sunken from the healthy breath of morn,)Tj
T*
( Far from the fiery noon, and eve\222s one star,)Tj
T*
( Sat grey-haired Saturn, quiet as a stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( No stir of air was there,)Tj
T*
( Not so much life as on a summer\222s day)Tj
T*
( Robs not one light seed from the feathered grass,)Tj
T*
( But where the dead leaf fell, there did it rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( The Naiad \222mid her reeds)Tj
T*
( Pressed her cold finger closer to her lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( That large utterance of the early gods!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( O aching time! O moments big as years!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( As when, upon a tranc\351d summer-night,)Tj
T*
( Those green-robed senators of mighty woods,)Tj
T*
( Tall oaks, branch-charm\351d by the earnest stars,)Tj
T*
( Dream, and so dream all night without a stir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Sometimes eagle\222s wings,)Tj
T*
( Unseen before by gods or wondering men,)Tj
T*
( Darkened the place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 182)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( And still they were the same bright, patient stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 1, l. 353)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Knowledge enormous makes a god of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Hyperion: A Fragment\222 \(1820\) bk. 3, l. 113)Tj
ET
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( I had a dove and the sweet dove died;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And I have thought it died of grieving:)Tj
T*
( O, what could it grieve for? Its feet were tied,)Tj
T*
( With a silken thread of my own hand\222s weaving.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221I had a dove and the sweet dove died\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( In drear nighted December)Tj
T*
( Too happy, happy tree)Tj
T*
( Thy branches ne\222er remember)Tj
T*
( Their green felicity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221In drear nighted December\222 \(written 1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( But were there ever any)Tj
T*
( Writhed not of pass\351d joy:)Tj
T*
( To know the change and feel it)Tj
T*
( When there is none to heal it)Tj
T*
( Nor numbed sense to steel it)Tj
T*
( Was never said in rhyme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221In drear nighted December\222 \(written 1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Why were they proud? again we ask aloud,)Tj
T*
( Why in the name of Glory were they proud?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil\222 \(1820\) st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( So the two brothers and their murdered man)Tj
T*
( Rode past fair Florence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil\222 \(1820\) st. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( And she forgot the stars, the moon,and sun,)Tj
T*
( And she forgot the blue above the trees,)Tj
T*
( And she forgot the dells where waters run,)Tj
T*
( And she forgot the chilly autumn breeze;)Tj
T*
( She had no knowledge when the day was done,)Tj
T*
( And the new morn she saw not: but in peace)Tj
T*
( Hung over her sweet Basil evermore,)Tj
T*
( And moistened it with tears unto the core.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil\222 \(1820\) st. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( \221For cruel \222tis,\222 said she, )Tj
T*
( \221To steal my Basil-pot away from me.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil\222 \(1820\) st. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( And then there crept)Tj
T*
( A little noiseless noise among the leaves,)Tj
T*
( Born of the very sigh that silence heaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221I stood tip-toe upon a little hill\222 \(1817\) l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Here are sweet peas, on tip-toe for a flight.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221I stood tip-toe upon a little hill\222 \(1817\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Oh, what can ail thee knight at arms)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Alone and palely loitering?)Tj
T*
( The sedge has withered from the lake)Tj
T*
( And no birds sing!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I see a lily on thy brow)Tj
T*
( With anguish moist and fever dew,)Tj
T*
( And on thy cheeks a fading rose)Tj
T*
( Fast withereth too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( I met a lady in the meads)Tj
T*
( Full beautiful, a faery\222s child)Tj
T*
( Her hair was long, her foot was light)Tj
T*
( And her eyes were wild.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( She looked at me as she did love)Tj
T*
( And made sweet moan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( I set her on my pacing steed)Tj
T*
( And nothing else saw all day long)Tj
T*
( For sidelong would she bend and sing)Tj
T*
( A faery\222s song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( \221La belle dame sans merci)Tj
T*
( Thee hath in thrall.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( I saw their starved lips in the gloam)Tj
T*
( With horrid warning gap\351d wide)Tj
T*
( And I awoke and found me here)Tj
T*
( On the cold hill\222s side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221La belle dame sans merci\222 \(1820\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( She was a gordian shape of dazzling hue,)Tj
T*
( Vermilion-spotted, golden, green, and blue;)Tj
T*
( Striped like a zebra, freckled like a pard,)Tj
T*
( Eyed like a peacock, and all crimson barred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 1, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Real are the dreams of Gods, and smoothly pass)Tj
T*
( Their pleasures in a long immortal dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 1, l. 127)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Love in a hut, with water and a crust,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is\227Love, forgive us!\227cinders, ashes, dust;)Tj
T*
( Love in a palace is perhaps at last)Tj
T*
( More grievous torment than a hermit\222s fast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( That purple-lin\351d palace of sweet sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 2, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( In pale contented sort of discontent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 2, l. 135)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Do not all charms fly)Tj
T*
( At the mere touch of cold philosophy?)Tj
T*
( There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:)Tj
T*
( We know her woof, her texture; she is given)Tj
T*
( In the dull catalogue of common things.)Tj
T*
( Philosophy will clip an Angel\222s wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Lamia\222 \(1820\) pt. 2, l. 229)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Souls of poets dead and gone,)Tj
T*
( \\What Elysium have ye known,)Tj
T*
( Happy field or mossy cavern,)Tj
T*
( Choicer than the Mermaid Tavern?)Tj
T*
( Have ye tippled drink more fine)Tj
T*
( Than mine host\222s Canary wine?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Lines on the Mermaid Tavern\222 \(1820\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Pledging with contented smack)Tj
T*
( The Mermaid in the Zodiac.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Lines on the Mermaid Tavern\222 \(1820\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Rich in the simple worship of a day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Mother of Hermes! and still youthful Maia!\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Thou still unravished bride of quietness,)Tj
T*
( Thou foster-child of silence and slow time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( What men or gods are these? What maidens loth?)Tj
T*
( What mad pursuit? What struggle to escape?)Tj
T*
( What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard)Tj
T*
( Are sweeter; therefore, ye soft pipes, play on;)Tj
T*
( Not to the sensual ear, but, more endeared,)Tj
T*
( Pipe to the spirit ditties of no tone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( For ever wilt thou love, and she be fair!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( For ever piping songs for ever new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( For ever warm and still to be enjoyed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For ever panting, and for ever young;)Tj
T*
( All breathing human passion far above,)Tj
T*
( That leaves a heart high-sorrowful and cloyed,)Tj
T*
( A burning forehead, and a parching tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Who are these coming to the sacrifice?)Tj
T*
( To what green altar, O mysterious priest,)Tj
T*
( Lead\222st thou that heifer lowing at the skies,)Tj
T*
( And all her silken flanks with garlands dressed?)Tj
T*
( What little town by river or sea shore,)Tj
T*
( Or mountain-built with peaceful citadel,)Tj
T*
( Is emptied of this folk, this pious morn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( O Attic shape! Fair attitude!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thought)Tj
T*
( As doth eternity: Cold Pastoral!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( \221Beauty is truth, truth beauty,\222\227that is all )Tj
T*
( Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Ode on a Grecian Urn\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( No, no, go not to Lethe, neither twist)Tj
T*
( Wolf\222s-bane, tight-rooted, for its poisonous wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on Melancholy\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Nor let the beetle, nor the death-moth be)Tj
T*
( Your mournful Psyche.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on Melancholy\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( But when the melancholy fit shall fall)Tj
T*
( Sudden from heaven like a weeping cloud,)Tj
T*
( That fosters the droop-headed flowers all,)Tj
T*
( And hides the green hill in an April shroud;)Tj
T*
( Then glut thy sorrow on a morning rose,)Tj
T*
( Or on the rainbow of the salt sand-wave,)Tj
T*
( Or on the wealth of glob\351d peonies;)Tj
T*
( Or if thy mistress some rich anger shows,)Tj
ET
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( Emprison her soft hand, and let her rave,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And feed deep, deep upon her peerless eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on Melancholy\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( She dwells with Beauty\227Beauty that must die;)Tj
T*
( And Joy, whose hand is ever at his lips)Tj
T*
( Bidding adieu; and aching Pleasure nigh,)Tj
T*
( Turning to poison while the bee-mouth sips:)Tj
T*
( Ay, in the very temple of Delight)Tj
T*
( Veiled Melancholy has her sovran shrine,)Tj
T*
( Though seen of none save him whose strenuous tongue)Tj
T*
( Can burst Joy\222s grape against his palate fine;)Tj
T*
( His soul shall taste the sadness of her might,)Tj
T*
( And be among her cloudy trophies hung.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on Melancholy\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains)Tj
T*
( My sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,)Tj
T*
( Or emptied some dull opiate to the drains)Tj
T*
( One minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:)Tj
T*
( \222Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,)Tj
T*
( But being too happy in thine happiness,\227)Tj
T*
( That thou, light-wing\351d Dryad of the trees,)Tj
T*
( In some melodious plot)Tj
T*
( Of beechen green, and shadows numberless,)Tj
T*
( Singest of summer in full-throated ease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( O, for a draught of vintage! that hath been)Tj
T*
( Cooled a long age in the deep-delv\351d earth,)Tj
T*
( Tasting of Flora and the country green,)Tj
T*
( Dance, and Proven\347al song, and sunburnt mirth!)Tj
T*
( O for a beaker full of the warm South,)Tj
T*
( Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,)Tj
T*
( With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,)Tj
T*
( And purple-stain\351d mouth;)Tj
T*
( That I might drink, and leave the world unseen,)Tj
T*
( And with thee fade away into the forest dim.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forget)Tj
T*
( What thou among the leaves hast never known,)Tj
T*
( The weariness, the fever, and the fret)Tj
T*
( Here, where men sit and hear each other groan;)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last grey hairs,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where youth grows pale, and spectre-thin, and dies;)Tj
T*
( Where but to think is to be full of sorrow)Tj
T*
( And leaden-eyed despairs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Away! away! for I will fly to thee,)Tj
T*
( Not charioted by Bacchus and his pards,)Tj
T*
( But on the viewless wings of Poesy,)Tj
T*
( Though the dull brain perplexes and retards:)Tj
T*
( Already with thee! tender is the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( I cannot see what flowers are at my feet,)Tj
T*
( Nor what soft incense hangs upon the boughs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Fast fading violets covered up in leaves;)Tj
T*
( And mid-May\222s eldest child,)Tj
T*
( The coming musk-rose, full of dewy wine,)Tj
T*
( The murmurous haunt of flies on summer eves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Darkling I listen; and, for many a time)Tj
T*
( I have been half in love with easeful Death,)Tj
T*
( Called him soft names in many a mus\351d rhyme,)Tj
T*
( To take into the air my quiet breath;)Tj
T*
( Now more than ever seems it rich to die,)Tj
T*
( To cease upon the midnight with no pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird!)Tj
T*
( No hungry generations tread thee down;)Tj
T*
( The voice I hear this passing night was heard)Tj
T*
( In ancient days by emperor and clown:)Tj
T*
( Perhaps the self-same song that found a path)Tj
T*
( Through the sad heart of Ruth, when, sick for home,)Tj
T*
( She stood in tears amid the alien corn;)Tj
T*
( The same that oft-times hath)Tj
T*
( Charmed magic casements, opening on the foam)Tj
T*
( Of perilous seas, in faery lands forlorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( Forlorn! the very word is like a bell)Tj
T*
( To toll me back from thee to my sole self!)Tj
T*
( Adieu! the fancy cannot cheat so well)Tj
ET
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( As she is famed to do, deceiving elf.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Was it a vision, or a waking dream?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fled is that music:\227do I wake or sleep?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to a Nightingale\222 \(1820\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( \221Mid hushed, cool-rooted flowers, fragrant-eyed, )Tj
T*
( Blue, silver-white, and budded Tyrian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to Psyche\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Nor virgin-choir to make delicious moan)Tj
T*
( Upon the midnight hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to Psyche\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Yes, I will be thy priest, and build a fane)Tj
T*
( In some untrodden region of my mind,)Tj
T*
( Where branch\351d thoughts, new grown with pleasant pain,)Tj
T*
( Instead of pines shall murmur in the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to Psyche\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( A bright torch, and a casement ope at night,)Tj
T*
( To let the warm Love in!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to Psyche\222 \(1820\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Much have I travelled in the realms of gold,)Tj
T*
( And many goodly states and kingdoms seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221On First Looking into Chapman\222s Homer\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Then felt I like some watcher of the skies)Tj
T*
( When a new planet swims into his ken;)Tj
T*
( Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes)Tj
T*
( He stared at the Pacific\227and all his men)Tj
T*
( Looked at each other with a wild surmise\227)Tj
T*
( Silent, upon a peak in Darien.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221On First Looking into Chapman\222s Homer\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Mortality)Tj
T*
( Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221On Seeing the Elgin Marbles\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( The poetry of earth is never dead:)Tj
T*
( When all the birds are faint with the hot sun,)Tj
T*
( And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run)Tj
T*
( From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221On the Grasshopper and Cricket\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( It keeps eternal whisperings around)Tj
T*
( Desolate shores,\227and with its mighty swell)Tj
T*
( Gluts twice ten thousand Caverns.)Tj
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(\221On the Sea\222 \(1817\))Tj
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( Yet the sweet converse of an innocent mind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whose words are images of thoughts refined,)Tj
T*
( Is my soul\222s pleasure; and it sure must be)Tj
T*
( Almost the highest bliss of human-kind,)Tj
T*
( When to thy haunts two kindred spirits flee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221O Solitude! if I must with thee dwell\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( O fret not after knowledge\227I have none,)Tj
T*
( And yet my song comes native with the warmth.)Tj
T*
( O fret not after knowledge\227I have none,)Tj
T*
( And yet the Evening listens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221O thou whose face hath felt the winter\222s wind\222 \(written 1818\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Dry your eyes\227O dry your eyes)Tj
T*
( For I was taught in Paradise)Tj
T*
( To ease my breast of melodies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Shed no tear\227O shed no tear\222 \(written 1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Stop and consider! life is but a day;)Tj
T*
( A fragile dew-drop on its perilous way)Tj
T*
( From a tree\222s summit; a poor Indian\222s sleep)Tj
T*
( While his boat hastens to the monstrous steep)Tj
T*
( Of Montmorenci.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Sleep and Poetry\222 \(1817\) l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( O for ten years, that I may overwhelm)Tj
T*
( Myself in poesy; so I may do the deed)Tj
T*
( That my own soul has to itself decreed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Sleep and Poetry\222 \(1817\) l. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( They swayed about upon a rocking horse,)Tj
T*
( And thought it Pegasus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Sleep and Poetry\222 \(1817\) l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( And they shall be accounted poet kings)Tj
T*
( Who simply tell the most heart-easing things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Sleep and Poetry\222 \(1817\) l. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( O soft embalmer of the still midnight,)Tj
T*
( Shutting, with careful fingers and benign)Tj
T*
( Our gloom-pleased eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet to Sleep\222 \(written 1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Turn the key deftly in the oil\351d wards,)Tj
T*
( And seal the hush\351d casket of my soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnet to Sleep\222 \(written 1819\))Tj
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( This living hand, now warm and capable)Tj
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( Of earnest grasping, would, if it were cold)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And in the icy silence of the tomb,)Tj
T*
( So haunt thy days and chill thy dreaming nights)Tj
T*
( That thou wouldst wish thine own heart dry of blood)Tj
T*
( So in my veins red life might stream again,)Tj
T*
( And thus be conscience-calmed\227see here it is)Tj
T*
( I hold it towards you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221This living hand, now warm and capable\222 \(written 1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,)Tj
T*
( Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;)Tj
T*
( Conspiring with him how to load and bless)Tj
T*
( With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eaves run.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221To Autumn\222 \(1820\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store?)Tj
T*
( Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may find)Tj
T*
( Thee sitting careless on a granary floor,)Tj
T*
( Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind;)Tj
T*
( Or on a half-reaped furrow sound asleep,)Tj
T*
( Drowsed with the fume of poppies while thy hook)Tj
T*
( Spares the next swath and all its twin\351d flowers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221To Autumn\222 \(1820\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?)Tj
T*
( Think not of them, thou hast thy music too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221To Autumn\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Then in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn)Tj
T*
( Among the river sallows, borne aloft)Tj
T*
( Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221To Autumn\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( The red-breast whistles from a garden-croft;)Tj
T*
( And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221To Autumn\222 \(1820\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Oh Chatterton! how very sad thy fate!)Tj
T*
( Dear child of sorrow! son of misery!)Tj
T*
( How soon the film of death obscured that eye,)Tj
T*
( Whence genius wildly flashed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221To Chatterton\222 \(written 1815\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong,)Tj
T*
( And doubly sweet a brotherhood in song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221To George Felton Mathew\222 \(1817\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Aye on the shores of darkness there is light,)Tj
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( And precipices show untrodden green,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There is a budding morrow in midnight,)Tj
T*
( There is a triple sight in blindness keen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221To Homer\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( It is a flaw)Tj
T*
( In happiness, to see beyond our bourn\227)Tj
T*
( It forces us in summer skies to mourn:)Tj
T*
( It spoils the singing of the nightingale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221To J. H. Reynolds, Esq.\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Glory and loveliness have passed away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221To Leigh Hunt, Esq.\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( To one who has been long in city pent,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis very sweet to look into the fair)Tj
T*
( And open face of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221To one who has been long in city pent\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( When I have fears that I may cease to be)Tj
T*
( Before my pen has gleaned my teeming brain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221When I have fears that I may cease to be\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( When I behold, upon the night\222s starred face)Tj
T*
( Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221When I have fears that I may cease to be\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Then on the shore)Tj
T*
( Of the wide world I stand alone and think)Tj
T*
( Till love and fame to nothingness do sink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221When I have fears that I may cease to be\222 \(written 1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain,)Tj
T*
( Inconstant, childish, proud, and full of fancies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( I remember your saying that you had notions of a good genius presidi\
ng over you\227I have of )Tj
T*
(late had the same thought. For things which [I] do half at random are af\
terwards confirmed by my )Tj
T*
(judgement in a dozen features of propriety\227Is it too daring to fancy \
Shakespeare this presider?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(Letter to B. R. Haydon, 10 May 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The L\
etters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( A long poem is a test of invention which I take to be the polar star\
of poetry, as fancy is the )Tj
T*
(sails, and imagination the rudder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 8 October 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(170)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( A man should have the fine point of his soul taken off to become fit\
for this world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 22 November 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, )Tj
T*
(p. 188)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the heart\222s affection\
s and the truth of imagination\227)Tj
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(what the imagination seizes as beauty must be truth\227whether it existe\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 22 November 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1, p. 184.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( I have never yet been able to perceive how anything can be known for\
truth by consecutive )Tj
T*
(reasoning\227and yet it must be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 22 November 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. 185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 631.50456 Tm
( O for a life of sensations rather than of thoughts!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 22 November 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. 185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 579.75456 Tm
( The excellence of every art is its intensity, capable of making all \
disagreeables evaporate, from )Tj
T*
(their being in close relationship with beauty and truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(Letter to George and Thomas Keats, 21 December 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(\
ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 510.00456 Tm
( Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of being in uncerta\
inties, mysteries, doubts, )Tj
T*
(without any irritable reaching after fact and reason\227Coleridge, for i\
nstance, would let go by a )Tj
T*
(fine isolated verisimilitude caught from the penetralium of mystery, fro\
m being incapable of )Tj
T*
(remaining content with half knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(Letter to George and Thomas Keats, 21 December 1817, in H. E. Rollins \(\
ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 194)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( There is nothing stable in the world\227uproar\222s your only music.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(Letter to George and Thomas Keats, 13 January 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(e\
d.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 204)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( For the sake of a few fine imaginative or domestic passages, are we \
to be bullied into a certain )Tj
T*
(philosophy engendered in the whims of an egotist?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 3 February 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(223; on the overbearing influence of Wordsworth upon his contemporaries)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( We hate poetry that has a palpable design upon us\227and if we do no\
t agree, seems to put its )Tj
T*
(hand in its breeches pocket. Poetry should be great and unobtrusive, a t\
hing which enters into )Tj
T*
(one\222s soul, and does not startle it or amaze it with itself, but with\
its subject.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 3 February 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(224)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.00456 Tm
( Poetry should surprise by a fine excess, and not by singularity\227i\
t should strike the reader as a )Tj
T*
(wording of his own highest thoughts, and appear almost a remembrance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(Letter to John Taylor, 27 February 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221T\
he Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(238)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.25456 Tm
( Its [poetry\222s] touches of beauty should never be half way, thereb\
y making the reader )Tj
T*
(breathless, instead of content...If poetry comes not as naturally as the\
leaves to a tree it had better )Tj
T*
(not come at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(Letter to John Taylor, 27 February 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221T\
he Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(238)Tj
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( Scenery is fine\227but human nature is finer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 13 March 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(242)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( It is impossible to live in a country which is continually under hat\
ches....Rain! Rain! Rain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds from Devon, 10 April 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(e\
d.\) \221The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 1, p. 269)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 649.50456 Tm
( I have been hovering for some time between an exquisite sense of the\
luxurious and a love for )Tj
T*
(philosophy\227were I calculated for the former I should be glad\227but a\
s I am not I shall turn all my )Tj
T*
(soul to the latter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Taylor, 24 April 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The \
Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 271)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( Axioms in philosophy are not axioms until they are proved upon our p\
ulses: We read fine\227)Tj
T*
(things, but never feel them to the full until we have gone the same step\
s as the author.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 3 May 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The \
Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 279)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.00456 Tm
( I am in that temper that if I were under water I would scarcely kick\
to come to the top.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 25 May 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221Th\
e Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(287)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 470.25456 Tm
( I do think better of womankind than to suppose they care whether Mis\
ter John Keats five feet )Tj
T*
(high likes them or not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.42047 Tm
(Letter to Benjamin Bailey, 18 July 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221T\
he Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(342)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( I wish I could say Tom was any better. His identity presses upon me \
so all day that I am )Tj
T*
(obliged to go out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 366.67047 Tm
(Referring to his youngest brother in a letter to C. W. Dilke, 21 Septemb\
er 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The )Tj
T*
(Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 368)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( There is an awful warmth about my heart like a load of immortality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 22 September 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, )Tj
T*
(p. 370)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( In Endymion, I leaped headlong into the sea, and thereby have become\
better acquainted with )Tj
T*
(the soundings, the quicksands, and the rocks, than if I had stayed upon \
the green shore, and piped )Tj
T*
(a silly pipe, and took tea and comfortable advice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(Letter to James Hessey, 8 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221Th\
e Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(374)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( I would sooner fail than not be among the greatest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(Letter to James Hessey, 8 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221Th\
e Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. )Tj
T*
(374)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( As to the poetical character itself, \(I mean that sort of which, if\
I am any thing, I am a member; )Tj
T*
(that sort distinguished from the Wordsworthian or egotistical sublime; w\
hich is a thing per se and )Tj
T*
(stands alone\) it is not itself\227it has no self....It has as much deli\
ght in conceiving an Iago as an )Tj
T*
(Imogen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(Letter to Richard Woodhouse, 27 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \
\221The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. 386)Tj
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( A poet is the most unpoetical of any thing in existence, because he \
has no identity; he is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(continually in for\227and filling some other body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Letter to Richard Woodhouse, 27 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \
\221The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. 387)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 683.25456 Tm
( I think I shall be among the English Poets after my death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 14 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \
\(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 394)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 631.50456 Tm
( The roaring of the wind is my wife and the stars through the window \
pane are my children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 24 October 1818, in H. E. Rollins \
\(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 1, p. 403)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 579.75456 Tm
( A man\222s life of any worth is a continual allegory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 563.92047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 19 February 1819, in H. E. Rollins\
\(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 528.00456 Tm
( I have come to this resolution\227never to write for the sake of wri\
ting, or making a poem, but )Tj
T*
(from running over with any little knowledge or experience which many yea\
rs of reflection may )Tj
T*
(perhaps give me\227otherwise I shall be dumb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.17047 Tm
(Letter to B. R. Haydon, 8 March 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The \
Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 455.25456 Tm
( It is true that in the height of enthusiasm I have been cheated into\
some fine passages but that )Tj
T*
(is nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(Letter to B. R. Haydon, 8 March 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The \
Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( I go among the fields and catch a glimpse of a stoat or a fieldmouse\
peeping out of the )Tj
T*
(withered grass\227The creature hath a purpose and its eyes are bright wi\
th it\227I go amongst the )Tj
T*
(buildings of a city and I see a man hurrying along\227to what? The Creat\
ure has a purpose and his )Tj
T*
(eyes are bright with it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.67047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 19 March 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(\
ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced\227even a proverb i\
s no proverb to you till your )Tj
T*
(life has illustrated it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 19 March 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(\
ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Call the world if you please \221The vale of soul-making\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 21 April 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(\
ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( I have met with women whom I really think would like to be married t\
o a poem and to be )Tj
T*
(given away by a novel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Brawne, 8 July 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The L\
etters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( I have two luxuries to brood over in my walks, your loveliness and t\
he hour of my death. O )Tj
T*
(that I could have possession of them both in the same minute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Brawne, 25 July 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The \
Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( I am convinced more and more day by day that fine writing is next to\
fine doing the top thing )Tj
T*
(in the world.)Tj
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(Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 24 August 1819, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221\
The Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( All clean and comfortable I sit down to write.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 703.42047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 17 September 1819, in H. E. Rollin\
s\(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 667.50456 Tm
( The only means of strengthening one\222s intellect is to make up one\
\222s mind about nothing\227to let )Tj
T*
(the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts. Not a select party.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 633.67047 Tm
(Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 24 September 1819, in H. E. Rollin\
s \(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 597.75456 Tm
( \221If I should die,\222 said I to myself, \221I have left no immort\
al work behind me\227nothing to make )Tj
T*
(my friends proud of my memory\227but I have loved the principle of beaut\
y in all things, and if I )Tj
T*
(had had time I would have made myself remembered.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Brawne, c.February 1820, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221T\
he Letters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. )Tj
T*
(263)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 510.00456 Tm
( I long to believe in immortality...If I am destined to be happy with\
you here\227how short is the )Tj
T*
(longest life\227I wish to believe in immortality\227I wish to live with \
you for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.17047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Brawne, June 1820, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The Let\
ters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 293)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 455.25456 Tm
( I wish you could invent some means to make me at all happy without y\
ou. Every hour I am )Tj
T*
(more and more concentrated in you; every thing else tastes like chaff in\
my mouth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(Letter to Fanny Brawne, August 1820, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The L\
etters of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 311)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( You I am sure will forgive me for sincerely remarking that you might\
curb your magnanimity )Tj
T*
(and be more of an artist, and \221load every rift\222 of your subject wi\
th ore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 366.67047 Tm
(Letter to Shelley, August 1820, in H. E. Rollins \(ed.\) \221The Letter\
s of John Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 323; )Tj
T*
(echoing Edmund Spenser \221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 7,\
st. 28, l. 5: \221And with rich metal loaded )Tj
T*
(every rift\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( I shall soon be laid in the quiet grave\227thank God for the quiet g\
rave\227O! I can feel the cold )Tj
T*
(earth upon me\227the daisies growing over me\227O for this quiet\227it w\
ill be my first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(In a letter from Joseph Severn to John Taylor, 6 March 1821, in H. E. Ro\
llins \(ed.\) \221The Letters of John )Tj
T*
(Keats\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 378)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( Here lies one whose name was writ in water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(Epitaph for himself, in Richard Monckton Milnes \221Life, Letters and Li\
terary Remains of John Keats\222 \(1848\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 2, p. 91.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 182.9624 Tm
( 11.15 John Keble 1792-1866)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The voice that breathed o\222er Eden,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That earliest wedding-day,)Tj
T*
( The primal marriage blessing,)Tj
T*
( It hath not passed away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 91.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Matrimony\222 \(1869\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 70.50456 Tm
( The trivial round, the common task,)Tj
T*
( Would furnish all we ought to ask;)Tj
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( Room to deny ourselves; a road)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To bring us, daily, nearer God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Christian Year\222 \(1827\) \221Morning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( There is a book, who runs may read,)Tj
T*
( Which heavenly truth imparts,)Tj
T*
( And all the lore its scholars need,)Tj
T*
( Pure eyes and Christian hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Christian Year\222 \(1827\) \221Septuagesima\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( If the Church of England were to fail, it would be found in my paris\
h.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(In D. Newsome \221The Parting of Friends\222 \(1966\) p. 395)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 559.4624 Tm
( 11.16 George Keith, 5th Earl Marischal 1553-1623)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They haif said: Quhat say they? Lat thame say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(Motto of the Earls Marischal of Scotland, inscribed at Marischal College\
, founded by the fifth Earl at )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Aberdeen in 1593; a similarly defiant motto in Greek has been found engr\
aved in remains from classical )Tj
T*
(antiquity)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 459.7124 Tm
( 11.17 Frank B. Kellogg 1856-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Aristide Briand \(2.193\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 11.18 Hugh Kelly 1739-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Of all the stages in a woman\222s life, none is so dangerous as the \
period between her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(acknowledgment of a passion for a man, and the day set apart for her nup\
tials.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs of a Magadalen\222 \(1767\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 328.50456 Tm
( Your people of refined sentiments are the most troublesome creatures\
in the world to deal with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221False Delicacy\222 \(performed 1768\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 280.4624 Tm
( 11.19 Thomas \341 Kempis \(Thomas H\344mmertein or H\344mmerken 1380-17\
41\) 1380-1471)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Thomas \(8.27\) in Volume II)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 11.20 Thomas Ken 1637-1711)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Awake, my soul, and with the sun)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy daily stage of duty run.)Tj
T*
( Shake off dull sloth, and joyful rise)Tj
T*
( To pay thy morning sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Hymn\222 in Winchester College \221Manual of Prayers\222 \(1\
695\) but in use before 1674)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Redeem thy mis-spent time that\222s past,)Tj
T*
( And live this day as if thy last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Hymn\222 \(1709 ed.\) v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( All praise to thee, my God, this night,)Tj
T*
( For all the blessings of the light;)Tj
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( Keep me, O keep me, King of Kings,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beneath thy own almighty wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Evening Hymn\222 in Winchester College \221Manual of Prayers\222 \(1\
695\) but in use before 1674 \(the first line later )Tj
T*
(changed to \221Glory to thee, my God this night\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 682.75456 Tm
( Teach me to live, that I may dread)Tj
T*
( The grave as little as my bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.92047 Tm
(\221Evening Hymn\222 in Winchester College \221Manual of Prayers\222 \(1\
695\) but in use before 1674)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.7124 Tm
( 11.21 John F. Kennedy 1917-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We stand today on the edge of a new frontier...But the New Frontier \
of which I speak is not a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(set of promises\227it is a set of challenges. It sums up not what I inte\
nd to offer the American )Tj
T*
(people, but what I intend to ask of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.17047 Tm
(Speech accepting the Democratic nomination in Los Angeles, 15 July 1960,\
in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 August )Tj
T*
(1960, p. 611)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 507.25456 Tm
( Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe al\
ike, that the torch has been )Tj
T*
(passed to a new generation of Americans\227born in this century, tempere\
d by war, disciplined by )Tj
T*
(a hard and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage\227and unwilling \
to witness or permit the )Tj
T*
(slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been \
committed, and to )Tj
T*
(which we are committed today at home and around the world. Let every nat\
ion know, whether it )Tj
T*
(wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, mee\
t any hardship, support any )Tj
T*
(friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.42047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 362.50456 Tm
( If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save \
the few who are rich.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.67047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 325.75456 Tm
( Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotia\
te.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.92047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 227)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.00456 Tm
( All this will not be finished in the first 100 days. Nor will it be \
finished in the first 1,000 days, )Tj
T*
(nor in the life of this Administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime\
on this planet. But let us )Tj
T*
(begin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.17047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 227)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.25456 Tm
( Now the trumpet summons us again\227not as a call to bear arms, thou\
gh arms we need\227not as )Tj
T*
(a call to battle, though embattled we are\227but a call to bear the burd\
en of a long twilight struggle, )Tj
T*
(year in and year out, \221rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation\222\227\
a struggle against the common )Tj
T*
(enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease and war itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.42047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 227)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.50456 Tm
( And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for yo\
u\227ask what you can do )Tj
T*
(for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America \
will do for you, but what )Tj
T*
(together we can do for the freedom of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.67047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 20 January 1961, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 February\
1961, p. 227. Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., )Tj
T*
(speaking at Keene, New Hampshire, 30 May 1884 said: \221We pause to...re\
call what our country has done for )Tj
T*
(each of us and to ask ourselves what we can do for our country in return\
\222; but the form of words chosen by )Tj
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(Kennedy\222s speechwriters suggests that they drew here \(Frontier\222: \
\221Are you a politician asking what your )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(country can do for you or a zealous one asking what you can do for your \
country?\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Mankind must put an end to war or war will put an end to mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 703.42047 Tm
(Speech to United Nations General Assembly, 25 September 1961, in \221New\
York Times\222 26 September 1961, )Tj
T*
(p. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 667.50456 Tm
( Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revo\
lution inevitable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 651.67047 Tm
(Speech at the White House, 13 March 1962, in \221Vital Speeches\222 1 Ap\
ril 1962, p. 356)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 630.75456 Tm
( No one has been barred on account of his race from fighting or dying\
for America\227there are )Tj
T*
(no \221white\222 or \221coloured\222 signs on the foxholes or graveyards\
of battle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 596.92047 Tm
(Message to Congress on proposed civil rights bill, 19 June 1963)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.00456 Tm
( Ich bin ein Berliner.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am a Berliner.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(Speech in West Berlin, 26 June 1963, in \221New York Times\222 27 June 1\
963, p. 12; ein Berliner is the name )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(given in Germany to a doughnut, and the occasion, therefore, of much hil\
arity.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 502.50456 Tm
( When power leads man toward arrogance, poetry reminds him of his lim\
itations. When power )Tj
T*
(narrows the areas of man\222s concern, poetry reminds him of the richnes\
s and diversity of his )Tj
T*
(existence. When power corrupts, poetry cleanses. For art establishes the\
basic human truths )Tj
T*
(which must serve as the touchstone of our judgement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.67047 Tm
(Speech at Amherst College, Mass., 26 October 1963, in \221New York Times\
\222 27 October 1963, p. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.75456 Tm
( In free society art is not a weapon...Artists are not engineers of t\
he soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(Speech at Amherst College, Mass., 26 October 1963, in \221New York Times\
\222 27 October 1963, p. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( It was involuntary. They sank my boat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(On being asked how he became a war hero, in Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. \221\
A Thousand Days\222 \(1965\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.9624 Tm
( 11.22 Joseph P. Kennedy 1888-1969)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When the going gets tough, the tough get going.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(In J. H. Cutler \221Honey Fitz\222 \(1962\) p. 291 \(also attributed to \
Knute Rockne\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( Don\222t buy a single vote more than necessary. I\222ll be damned if\
I\222m going to pay for a landslide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(Telegraphed message, 1958, to his son, John F. Kennedy, in J. F. Cutler \
\221Honey Fitz\222 \(1962\) p. 306)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 220.4624 Tm
( 11.23 Lloyd Kenyon \(first Baron Kenyon\) 1732-1802)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The Christian religion is part of the law of the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.92047 Tm
(Decision in William\222s Case \(1797\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 150.7124 Tm
( 11.24 Lady Caroline Keppel b. 1735)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What\222s this dull town to me?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Robin\222s not near.)Tj
T*
( He whom I wished to see,)Tj
T*
( Wished for to hear;)Tj
T*
( Where\222s all the joy and mirth)Tj
T*
( Made life a heaven on earth?)Tj
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( O! they\222re all fled with thee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Robin Adair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(\221Robin Adair\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 684.9624 Tm
( 11.25 Jack Kerouac 1922-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sitting around trying to think up the meaning of the Lost Generation\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Existentialism...I said, \221You know, this is really a beat generation.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.42047 Tm
(\221Playboy\222 June 1959, p. 32.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 597.2124 Tm
( 11.26 Ralph Kettell 1563-1643)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Here is Hey for Garsington! and Hey for Cuddesdon! and Hey Hockley! \
but here\222s nobody )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(cries, Hey for God Almighty!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.67047 Tm
(Sermon at Garsington Revel, in Oliver Lawson Dick \(ed.\) \221Aubrey\222\
s Brief Lives\222 \(1949\) \221Ralph Kettell\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 509.4624 Tm
( 11.27 Francis Scott Key 1779-1843)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \222Tis the star-spangled banner; O long may it wave)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O\222er the land of the free, and the home of the brave!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.92047 Tm
(\221The Star-Spangled Banner\222 \(1814\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 421.7124 Tm
( 11.28 Maynard Keynes \(John Maynard Keynes, first Baron Keynes of Tilto\
n\) 1883-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I work for a Government I despise for ends I think criminal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.17047 Tm
(Letter to Duncan Grant, 15 December 1917, in \221British Library Add. MS\
S 57931\222 fo. 119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.25456 Tm
( He felt about France what Pericles felt of Athens\227unique value in\
her, nothing else mattering; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(but his theory of politics was Bismarck\222s. He had one illusion\227Fra\
nce; and one disillusion\227)Tj
T*
(mankind, including Frenchmen, and his colleagues not least.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.42047 Tm
(\221The Economic Consequences of the Peace\222 \(1919\) ch. 3 \(on Cleme\
nceau\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.50456 Tm
( Like Odysseus, the President looked wiser when he was seated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.67047 Tm
(\221The Economic Consequences of the Peace\222 \(1919\) ch. 3 \(on Woodr\
ow Wilson\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 253.75456 Tm
( Lenin was right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning \
the existing basis of society )Tj
T*
(than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces \
of economic law on the )Tj
T*
(side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a mill\
ion is able to diagnose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.92047 Tm
(\221The Economic Consequences of the Peace\222 \(1919\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.00456 Tm
( I do not know which makes a man more conservative\227to know nothing\
but the present, or )Tj
T*
(nothing but the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.17047 Tm
(\221The End of Laissez-Faire\222 \(1926\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.25456 Tm
( Marxian Socialism must always remain a portent to the historians of \
opinion\227how a doctrine )Tj
T*
(so illogical and so dull can have exercised so powerful and enduring an \
influence over the minds )Tj
T*
(of men, and, through them, the events of history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.42047 Tm
(\221The End of Laissez-Faire\222 \(1926\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.50456 Tm
( The important thing for Government is not to do things which individ\
uals are doing already, )Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(and to do them a little better or a little worse; but to do those things\
which at present are not done )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The End of Laissez-Faire\222 \(1926\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I think that capitalism, wisely managed, can probably be made more e\
fficient for attaining )Tj
T*
(economic ends than any alternative system yet in sight, but that in itse\
lf it is in many ways )Tj
T*
(extremely objectionable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The End of Laissez-Faire\222 \(1926\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( This extraordinary figure of our time, this syren, this goat-footed \
bard, this half-human visitor )Tj
T*
(to our age from the hag-ridden magic and enchanted woods of Celtic antiq\
uity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Essays in Biography\222 \(1933\) \221Mr Lloyd George\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they a\
re right and when they are )Tj
T*
(wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood...Practical men, wh\
o believe themselves )Tj
T*
(to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the sla\
ves of some defunct )Tj
T*
(economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilli\
ng their frenzy from some )Tj
T*
(academic scribbler of a few years back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The General Theory of Employment\222 \(1947 ed.\) ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( In the long run we are all dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221A Tract on Monetary Reform\222 \(1923\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 413.9624 Tm
( 11.29 Nikita Khrushchev 1894-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If anyone believes that our smiles involve abandonment of the teachi\
ng of Marx, Engels and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Lenin he deceives himself. Those who wait for that must wait until a shr\
imp learns to whistle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(Speech in Moscow, 17 September 1955, in \221New York Times\222 18 Septem\
ber 1955, p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.50456 Tm
( We say this not only for the socialist states, who are more akin to \
us. We base ourselves on the )Tj
T*
(idea that we must peacefully co-exist. About the capitalist States, it d\
oesn\222t depend on you )Tj
T*
(whether or not we exist. If you don\222t like us, don\222t accept our in\
vitations and don\222t invite us to )Tj
T*
(come to see you. Whether you like it or not, history is on our side. We \
will bury you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(Speech to Western diplomats at reception in Moscow for Polish leader Mr \
Gomulka, 18 November 1956, in )Tj
T*
(\221The Times\222 19 November 1956)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.75456 Tm
( Anyone who believes that the worker can be lulled by fine revolution\
ary phrases is mistaken....)Tj
T*
(If no concern is shown for the growth of material and spiritual riches, \
the people will listen today, )Tj
T*
(they will listen tomorrow, and then they may say: \221Why do you promise\
us everything for the )Tj
T*
(future? You are talking, so to speak, about life beyond the grave. The \
priest has already told us )Tj
T*
(about this.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(Speech at World Youth Forum, 19 September 1964, in \221Pravda\222 22 Sep\
tember 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.00456 Tm
( If one cannot catch the bird of paradise, better take a wet hen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(In \221Time\222 6 January 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( If you start throwing hedgehogs under me, I shall throw a couple of \
porcupines under you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 7 November 1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 38.2124 Tm
( 11.30 Joyce Kilmer 1886-1918)Tj
ET
EMC
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 746.50456 Tm
( I think that I shall never see)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A poem lovely as a tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 712.67047 Tm
(\221Trees\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 691.75456 Tm
( Poems are made by fools like me,)Tj
T*
( But only God can make a tree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 657.92047 Tm
(\221Trees\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 625.7124 Tm
( 11.31 Lord Kilmuir \(Sir David Maxwell Fyfe\) 1900-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Loyalty is the Tory\222s secret weapon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.17047 Tm
(In Anthony Sampson \221Anatomy of Britain\222 \(1962\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 555.9624 Tm
( 11.32 Francis Kilvert 1840-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Of all noxious animals, too, the most noxious is a tourist. And of a\
ll tourists the most vulgar, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ill-bred, offensive and loathsome is the British tourist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(W. Plomer \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Diary of the Rev. Francis Kil\
vert\222 \(1938-40\) 5 April 1870)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( The Vicar of St Ives says the smell of fish there is sometimes so te\
rrific as to stop the church )Tj
T*
(clock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(W. Plomer \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Diary of the Rev. Francis Kil\
vert\222 \(1938-40\) 21 July 1870)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( It is a fine thing to be out on the hills alone. A man can hardly be\
a beast or a fool alone on a )Tj
T*
(great mountain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.92047 Tm
(W. Plomer \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Diary of the Rev. Francis Kil\
vert\222 \(1938-40\) 29 May 1871)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.00456 Tm
( An angel satyr walks these hills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(W. Plomer \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Diary of the Rev. Francis Kil\
vert\222 \(1938-40\) 20 June 1871 \(on \221the )Tj
T*
(Black Mountain\222 in Wales\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 306.9624 Tm
( 11.33 Benjamin Franklin King 1857-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nothing to do but work,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nothing to eat but food,)Tj
T*
( Nothing to wear but clothes)Tj
T*
( To keep one from going nude.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nothing to breathe but air,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quick as a flash \222t is gone;)Tj
T*
( Nowhere to fall but off,)Tj
T*
( Nowhere to stand but on.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.67047 Tm
(\221The Pessimist\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.75456 Tm
( Nowhere to go but out,)Tj
T*
( Nowhere to come but back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.92047 Tm
(\221The Pessimist\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 52.7124 Tm
( 11.34 Henry King 1592-1669)Tj
ET
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( Sleep on \(my Love!\) in thy cold bed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Never to be disquieted.)Tj
T*
( My last Good-night! Thou wilt not wake)Tj
T*
( Till I thy fate shall overtake:)Tj
T*
( Till age, or grief, or sickness must)Tj
T*
( Marry my body to that dust)Tj
T*
( It so much loves; and fill the room)Tj
T*
( My heart keeps empty in thy tomb.)Tj
T*
( Stay for me there: I will not fail)Tj
T*
( To meet thee in that hollow vale.)Tj
T*
( And think not much of my delay;)Tj
T*
( I am already on the way,)Tj
T*
( And follow thee with all the speed)Tj
T*
( Desire can make, or sorrows breed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221An Exequy\222 l. 81 \(written for his wife Anne who died in 1624\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( But hark! My pulse, like a soft drum)Tj
T*
( Beats my approach, tells thee I come;)Tj
T*
( And, slow howe\222er my marches be,)Tj
T*
( I shall at last sit down by thee.)Tj
T*
( The thought of this bids me go on,)Tj
T*
( And wait my dissolution)Tj
T*
( With hope and comfort. Dear! \(forgive)Tj
T*
( The crime\) I am content to live)Tj
T*
( Divided, with but half a heart,)Tj
T*
( Till we shall meet and never part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221An Exequy\222 l. 111 \(written for his wife Anne who died in 1624\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.50456 Tm
( We that did nothing study but the way)Tj
T*
( To love each other, with which thoughts the day)Tj
T*
( Rose with delight to us, and with them set,)Tj
T*
( Must learn the hateful art, how to forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(\221The Surrender\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 181.4624 Tm
( 11.35 Martin Luther King 1929-68)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I want to be the white man\222s brother, not his brother-in-law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(In \221New York Journal-American\222 10 September 1962, p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.00456 Tm
( Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(Letter from Birmingham Jail, Alabama, 16 April 1963, in \221Atlantic Mon\
thly\222 August 1963, p. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( The Negro\222s great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is\
not the White Citizens )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Councillor or the Ku Klux Klanner but the white moderate who is more dev\
oted to order than to )Tj
T*
(justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to\
a positive peace which is )Tj
ET
EMC
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(the presence of justice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter from Birmingham Jail, Alabama, 16 April 1963, in \221Atlantic Mon\
thly\222 August 1963, p. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I submit to you that if a man hasn\222t discovered something he will\
die for, he isn\222t fit to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Speech in Detroit, 23 June 1963, in James Bishop \221The Days of Martin \
Luther King\222 \(1971\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of \
former slaves and the sons )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of\
brotherhood... I have a )Tj
T*
(dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where t\
hey will not be judged by )Tj
T*
(the color of their skin but by the content of their character.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Speech at Civil Rights March in Washington, 28 August 1963, in \221New Y\
ork Times\222 29 August 1963, p. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as foo\
ls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Speech at St Louis, 22 March 1964, in \221St Louis Post-Dispatch\222 23 \
March 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( The means by which we live have outdistanced the ends for which we l\
ive. Our scientific )Tj
T*
(power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misgui\
ded men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Strength to Love\222 \(1963\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( A riot is at bottom the language of the unheard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Where Do We Go From Here?\222 \(1967\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( I just want to do God\222s will. And he\222s allowed me to go up to \
the mountain. And I\222ve looked )Tj
T*
(over, and I\222ve seen the promised land...So I\222m happy tonight. I\222\
m not worried about anything. )Tj
T*
(I\222m not fearing any man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(Speech in Memphis, 3 April 1968 \(the day before his assassination\), in\
\221New York Times\222 4 April 1968, p. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 376.4624 Tm
( 11.36 Stoddard King 1889-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s a long, long trail awinding)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Into the land of my dreams,)Tj
T*
( Where the nightingales are singing)Tj
T*
( And a white moon beams;)Tj
T*
( There\222s a long, long night of waiting)Tj
T*
( Until my dreams all come true,)Tj
T*
( Till the day when I\222ll be going down)Tj
T*
( That long, long trail with you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221There\222s a Long, Long Trail\222 \(1913 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 180.7124 Tm
( 11.37 Charles Kingsley 1819-75)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Oh the pleasant sight to see)Tj
T*
( Shires and towns from Airly Beacon,)Tj
T*
( While my love climbed up to me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Airly Beacon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;)Tj
T*
( Oh the weary haunt for me,)Tj
ET
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( All alone on Airly Beacon,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With his baby on my knee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Airly Beacon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever;)Tj
T*
( Do noble things, not dream them, all day long:)Tj
T*
( And so make Life, Death, and that vast for-ever)Tj
T*
( One grand, sweet song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221A Farewell\222 \(1858\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( What we can we will be,)Tj
T*
( Honest Englishmen.)Tj
T*
( Do the work that\222s nearest,)Tj
T*
( Though it\222s dull at whiles,)Tj
T*
( Helping, when we meet them,)Tj
T*
( Lame dogs over stiles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Letter to Thomas Hughes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( \222Tis the hard grey weather)Tj
T*
( Breeds hard English men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to the North-East Wind\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Come; and strong within us)Tj
T*
( Stir the Vikings\222 blood;)Tj
T*
( Bracing brain and sinew;)Tj
T*
( Blow, thou wind of God!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to the North-East Wind\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( \221O Mary, go and call the cattle home,)Tj
T*
( And call the cattle home,)Tj
T*
( And call the cattle home,)Tj
T*
( Across the sands of Dee.\222)Tj
T*
( The western wind was wild and dank with foam,)Tj
T*
( And all alone went she.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Sands of Dee\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( The western tide crept up along the sand,)Tj
T*
( And o\222er and o\222er the sand,)Tj
T*
( And round and round the sand,)Tj
T*
( As far as eye could see.)Tj
T*
( The rolling mist came down and hid the land:)Tj
T*
( And never home came she.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Sands of Dee\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Three fishers went sailing away to the west,)Tj
T*
( Away to the west as the sun went down;)Tj
T*
( Each thought on the woman who loved him the best,)Tj
ET
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( And the children stood watching them out of the town.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Three Fishers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( For men must work, and women must weep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And there\222s little to earn, and many to keep,)Tj
T*
( Though the harbour bar be moaning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Three Fishers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( When all the world is young, lad,)Tj
T*
( And all the trees are green;)Tj
T*
( And every goose a swan, lad,)Tj
T*
( And every lass a queen;)Tj
T*
( Then hey for boot and horse, lad,)Tj
T*
( And round the world away:)Tj
T*
( Young blood must have its course, lad,)Tj
T*
( And every dog his day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Young and Old\222 \(from \221The Water Babies\222, 1863\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( To be discontented with the divine discontent, and to be ashamed wit\
h the noble shame, is the )Tj
T*
(very germ and first upgrowth of all virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Health and Education\222 \(1874\) p. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( We have used the Bible as if it was a constable\222s handbook\227an \
opium-dose for keeping beasts )Tj
T*
(of burden patient while they are being overloaded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Letters to the Chartists\222 no. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( As thorough an Englishman as ever coveted his neighbour\222s goods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Water Babies\222 \(1863\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Eustace is a man no longer; he is become a thing, a tool, a Jesuit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Westward Ho!\222 \(1855\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Truth, for its own sake, had never been a virtue with the Roman cler\
gy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(Reviewing J. A. Froude\222s History of England, in \221Macmillan\222s Ma\
gazine\222 January 1864)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 249.7124 Tm
( 11.38 Hugh Kingsmill \(Hugh Kingsmill Lunn\) 1889-1949)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What still alive at twenty-two,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A clean upstanding chap like you?)Tj
T*
( Sure, if your throat \222tis hard to slit,)Tj
T*
( Slit your girl\222s, and swing for it.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Like enough, you won\222t be glad,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When they come to hang you, lad:)Tj
T*
( But bacon\222s not the only thing)Tj
T*
( That\222s cured by hanging from a string.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Two Poems, after A. E. Housman\222 \(1933\) no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( \222Tis Summer Time on Bredon,)Tj
T*
( And now the farmers swear:)Tj
ET
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( The cattle rise and listen)Tj
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( In valleys far and near,)Tj
T*
( And blush at what they hear.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But when the mists in autumn)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( On Bredon top are thick,)Tj
T*
( And happy hymns of farmers)Tj
T*
( Go up from fold and rick,)Tj
T*
( The cattle then are sick.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221Two Poems, after A. E. Housman\222 \(1933\) no. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( God\222s apology for relations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.67047 Tm
(On friends, in Michael Holroyd \221The Best of Hugh Kingsmill\222 \(1970\
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15 0 0 15 10 549.75456 Tm
( Society is based on the assumption that everyone is alike and no one\
is alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.92047 Tm
(In Michael Holroyd \221Hugh Kingsmill\222 \(1964\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 501.7124 Tm
( 11.39 Neil Kinnock 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I warn you not to be ordinary, I warn you not to be young, I warn yo\
u not to fall ill, and I warn )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you not to grow old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(On the prospect of a Conservative re-election, in speech at Bridgend, 7 \
June 1983; \221Guardian\222 8 June 1983)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( They left their guts on Goose Green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Referring to British soldiers of the Falklands War, a remark he was late\
r to retract, in \221Hansard\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 377.2124 Tm
( 11.40 Rudyard Kipling 1865-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you\222ve shouted \221Rule Britannia\222, when you\222ve sung \221\
God save the Queen\222\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When you\222ve finished killing Kruger with your mouth\227)Tj
T*
( Will you kindly drop a shilling in my little tambourine)Tj
T*
( For a gentleman in Kharki ordered South?)Tj
T*
( He\222s an absent-minded beggar and his weaknesses are great\227)Tj
T*
( But we and Paul must take him as we find him\227)Tj
T*
( He is out on active service, wiping something off a slate\227)Tj
T*
( And he\222s left a lot o\222 little things behind him!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(\221The Absent-Minded Beggar\222 \(1899\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.75456 Tm
( England\222s on the anvil\227hear the hammers ring\227)Tj
T*
( Clanging from the Severn to the Tyne!)Tj
T*
( Never was a blacksmith like our Norman King\227)Tj
T*
( England\222s being hammered, hammered, hammered into line!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221The Anvil\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,)Tj
T*
( Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God\222s great Judgement Seat;\
)Tj
T*
( But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,)Tj
T*
( When two strong men stand face to face, tho\222 they come from the e\
nds of earth!)Tj
ET
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(\221The Ballad of East and West\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( And the talk slid north, and the talk slid south,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With the sliding puffs from the hookah-mouth.)Tj
T*
( Four things greater than all things are,\227)Tj
T*
( Women and Horses and Power and War.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of the King\222s Jest\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Foot\227foot\227foot\227foot\227sloggin\222 over Africa\227)Tj
T*
( \(Boots\227boots\227boots\227boots\227movin\222 up and down again!\)\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Boots\222 \(1903\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( If any question why we died,)Tj
T*
( Tell them, because our fathers lied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Common Form\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( We know that the tail must wag the dog, for the horse is drawn by th\
e cart;)Tj
T*
( But the Devil whoops, as he whooped of old: \221It\222s clever, but \
is it Art?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Conundrum of the Workshops\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( For they\222re hangin\222 Danny Deever, you can hear the Dead March \
play,)Tj
T*
( The regiment\222s in \222ollow square\227they\222re hangin\222 him t\
o-day;)Tj
T*
( They\222ve taken of his buttons off an\222 cut his stripes away,)Tj
T*
( An\222 they\222re hangin\222 Danny Deever in the mornin\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Danny Deever\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( The \222eathen in \222is blindness bows down to wood an\222 stone;)Tj
T*
( \221E don\222t obey no orders unless they is \222is own;)Tj
T*
( \221E keeps \222is side-arms awful: \222e leaves \222em all about,)Tj
T*
( An\222 then comes up the Regiment an\222 pokes the \222eathen out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The \221Eathen\222 \(1896\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( The \222eathen in \222is blindness must end where \222e began.)Tj
T*
( But the backbone of the Army is the non-commissioned man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The \221Eathen\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Winds of the World, give answer! They are whimpering to and fro\227)Tj
T*
( And what should they know of England who only England know?\227)Tj
T*
( The poor little street-bred people that vapour and fume and brag.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The English Flag\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( The female of the species is more deadly than the male.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Female of the Species\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( There is but one task for all\227)Tj
T*
( For each one life to give.)Tj
T*
( What stands if freedom fall?)Tj
T*
( Who dies if England live?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221For All We Have and Are\222 \(1914\) p. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( So \222ere\222s to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your \222ome in the Soudan;)Tj
ET
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( You\222re a pore benighted \222eathen but a first-class fightin\222 \
man;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An\222 \222ere\222s to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, with your \222ayrick \222ea\
d of \222air\227)Tj
T*
( You big black boundin\222 beggar\227for you broke a British square!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Fuzzy-Wuzzy\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( We\222re poor little lambs who\222ve lost our way,)Tj
T*
( Baa! Baa! Baa!)Tj
T*
( We\222re little black sheep who\222ve gone astray,)Tj
T*
( Baa-aa-aa!)Tj
T*
( Gentlemen-rankers out on the spree,)Tj
T*
( Damned from here to Eternity,)Tj
T*
( God ha\222 mercy on such as we,)Tj
T*
( Baa! Yah! Bah!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen-Rankers\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Our England is a garden, and such gardens are not made)Tj
T*
( By singing:\227\222Oh, how beautiful!\222 and sitting in the shade,)Tj
T*
( While better men than we go out and start their working lives)Tj
T*
( At grubbing weeds from gravel paths with broken dinner-knives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221The Glory of the Garden\222 \(1911\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of Man\227)Tj
T*
( There are only four things certain since Social Progress began:\227)Tj
T*
( That the Dog returns to his Vomit and the Sow returns to her Mire,)Tj
T*
( And the burnt Fool\222s bandaged finger goes wabbling back to the Fi\
re.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Gods of the Copybook Headings\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( The uniform \222e wore)Tj
T*
( Was nothin\222 much before,)Tj
T*
( An\222 rather less than \222arf o\222 that be\222ind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Gunga Din\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( Though I\222ve belted you and flayed you,)Tj
T*
( By the livin\222 Gawd that made you,)Tj
T*
( You\222re a better man than I am, Gunga Din!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Gunga Din\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( There are nine and sixty ways of constructing tribal lays,)Tj
T*
( And\227every\227single\227one\227of\227them\227is\227right!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221In the Neolithic Age\222 \(1893\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( But I consort with long-haired things)Tj
T*
( In velvet collar-rolls,)Tj
T*
( Who talk about the Aims of Art,)Tj
T*
( And \221theories\222 and \221goals\222,)Tj
T*
( And moo and coo with women-folk)Tj
T*
( About their blessed souls.)Tj
ET
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(\221In Partibus\222 \(1909\))Tj
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( Then ye returned to your trinkets; then ye contented your souls)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With the flannelled fools at the wicket or the muddied oafs at the g\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Islanders\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I\222ve taken my fun where I\222ve found it,)Tj
T*
( An\222 now I must pay for my fun,)Tj
T*
( For the more you \222ave known o\222 the others)Tj
T*
( The less will you settle to one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Ladies\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( When you get to a man in the case,)Tj
T*
( They\222re like as a row of pins\227)Tj
T*
( For the Colonel\222s Lady an\222 Judy O\222Grady)Tj
T*
( Are sisters under their skins!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Ladies\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( And Ye take mine honour from me if Ye take away the sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Last Chantey\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( There be triple ways to take, of the eagle or the snake,)Tj
T*
( Or the way of a man with a maid;)Tj
T*
( But the sweetest way to me is a ship\222s upon the sea)Tj
T*
( In the heel of the North-East Trade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Envoi\222 \(\221Barrack-Room Ballads\222, 1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne,)Tj
T*
( He travels the fastest who travels alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Envoi\222 \(\221The Story of the Gadsbys\222, 1890\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( If I were hanged on the highest hill,)Tj
T*
( Mother o\222 mine, O mother o\222 mine!)Tj
T*
( I know whose love would follow me still,)Tj
T*
( Mother o\222 mine, O mother o\222 mine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Light That Failed\222 \(1891\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( The Liner she\222s a lady, an\222 she never looks nor \222eeds\227)Tj
T*
( The Man-o\222-War\222s \222er \222usband, \222an \222e gives \222er \
all she needs;)Tj
T*
( But, oh, the little cargo boats that sail the wet seas roun\222,)Tj
T*
( They\222re just the same as you \222an me a-plyin\222 up and down!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Liner She\222s a Lady\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( It\222s north you may run to the rime-ringed sun,)Tj
T*
( Or south to the blind Horn\222s hate;)Tj
T*
( Or east all the way into Mississippi Bay,)Tj
T*
( Or west to the Golden Gate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221The Long Trail\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( By the old Moulmein Pagoda, lookin\222 eastward to the sea,)Tj
ET
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( There\222s a Burma girl a-settin\222, and I know she thinks o\222 me\
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0 -1.2 TD
( For the wind is in the palm-trees, an\222 the temple-bells they say:\
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T*
( \221Come you back, you British soldier; come you back to Mandalay!\222\
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T*
( Come you back to Mandalay,)Tj
T*
( Where the old flotilla lay:)Tj
T*
( Can\222t you \222ear their paddles chunkin\222 from Rangoon to Manda\
lay?)Tj
T*
( On the road to Mandalay,)Tj
T*
( Where the flyin\222-fishes play,)Tj
T*
( An\222 the dawn comes up like thunder outer China \222crost the Bay!\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.17047 Tm
(\221Mandalay\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( An\222 I seed her first a-smokin\222 of a whackin\222 white cheroot,\
)Tj
T*
( An\222 a-wastin\222 Christian kisses on an \222eathen idol\222s foot\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Mandalay\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Ship me somewheres east of Suez, where the best is like the worst,)Tj
T*
( Where there aren\222t no Ten Commandments an\222 a man can raise a t\
hirst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Mandalay\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( And the end of the fight is a tombstone white, with the name of the \
late deceased,)Tj
T*
( And the epitaph drear: \221A fool lies here who tried to hustle the \
East.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Naulahka\222 \(1892\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( A Nation spoke to a Nation,)Tj
T*
( A Throne sent word to a Throne:)Tj
T*
( \221Daughter am I in my mother\222s house,)Tj
T*
( But mistress in my own.)Tj
T*
( The gates are mine to open,)Tj
T*
( As the gates are mine to close,)Tj
T*
( And I abide by my Mother\222s House.\222)Tj
T*
( Said our Lady of the Snows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Our Lady of the Snows\222 \(1898\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( The toad beneath the harrow knows)Tj
T*
( Exactly where each tooth-point goes;)Tj
T*
( The butterfly upon the road)Tj
T*
( Preaches contentment to that toad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Pagett, MP\222 \(1886\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( There is sorrow enough in the natural way)Tj
T*
( From men and women to fill our day;)Tj
T*
( But when we are certain of sorrow in store,)Tj
T*
( Why do we always arrange for more?)Tj
T*
( Brothers and Sisters, I bid you beware)Tj
T*
( Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221The Power of the Dog\222 \(1909\))Tj
ET
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( What is a woman that you forsake her,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the hearth-fire and the home-acre,)Tj
T*
( To go with the old grey Widow-maker?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Puck of Pook\222s Hill\222 \(1906\) \221Harp Song of the Dane Women\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Five and twenty ponies,)Tj
T*
( Trotting through the dark\227)Tj
T*
( Brandy for the Parson,)Tj
T*
( \221Baccy for the Clerk;)Tj
T*
( Laces for a lady, letters for a spy,)Tj
T*
( Watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Puck of Pook\222s Hill\222 \(1906\) \221A Smuggler\222s Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Of all the trees that grow so fair,)Tj
T*
( Old England to adorn,)Tj
T*
( Greater are none beneath the Sun,)Tj
T*
( Than Oak, and Ash, and Thorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Puck of Pook\222s Hill\222 \(1906\) \221A Tree Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( The tumult and the shouting dies\227)Tj
T*
( The captains and the kings depart\227)Tj
T*
( Still stands Thine ancient Sacrifice,)Tj
T*
( An humble and a contrite heart.)Tj
T*
( Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,)Tj
T*
( Lest we forget\227lest we forget!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221Recessional\222 \(1897\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( Far-called our navies melt away\227)Tj
T*
( On dune and headland sinks the fire\227)Tj
T*
( Lo, all our pomp of yesterday)Tj
T*
( Is one with Nineveh, and Tyre!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Recessional\222 \(1897\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( If, drunk with sight of power, we loose)Tj
T*
( Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe\227)Tj
T*
( Such boasting as the Gentiles use,)Tj
T*
( Or lesser breeds without the Law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Recessional\222 \(1897\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( If you can keep your head when all about you)Tj
T*
( Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;)Tj
T*
( If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,)Tj
T*
( But make allowance for their doubting too;)Tj
T*
( If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,)Tj
T*
( Or being lied about, don\222t deal in lies,)Tj
T*
( Or being hated, don\222t give way to hating,)Tj
ET
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( And yet don\222t look too good, nor talk too wise;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If you can dream\227and not make dreams your master;)Tj
T*
( If you can think\227and not make thoughts your aim,)Tj
T*
( If you can meet with triumph and disaster)Tj
T*
( And treat those two imposters just the same...)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Rewards and Fairies\222 \(1910\) \221If\227\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,)Tj
T*
( Or walk with Kings\227nor lose the common touch,)Tj
T*
( If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,)Tj
T*
( If all men count with you, but none too much;)Tj
T*
( If you can fill the unforgiving minute)Tj
T*
( With sixty seconds\222 worth of distance run,)Tj
T*
( Yours is the Earth and everything that\222s in it,)Tj
T*
( And\227which is more\227you\222ll be a Man, my son!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Rewards and Fairies\222 \(1910\) \221If\227\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( One man in a thousand, Solomon says,)Tj
T*
( Will stick more close than a brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Rewards and Fairies\222 \(1910\) \221The Thousandth Man\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( They shut the road through the woods)Tj
T*
( Seventy years ago.)Tj
T*
( Weather and rain have undone it again,)Tj
T*
( And now you would never know)Tj
T*
( There was once a road through the woods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Rewards and Fairies\222 \(1910\) \221The Way through the Woods\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Who hath desired the Sea?\227the sight of salt water unbounded\227)Tj
T*
( The heave and the halt and the hurl and the crash of the comber wind\
-hounded?)Tj
T*
( The sleek-barrelled swell before storm, grey, foamless, enormous, an\
d growing\227)Tj
T*
( Stark calm on the lap of the Line or the crazy-eyed hurricane blowin\
g.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Sea and the Hills\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( We have fed our sea for a thousand years)Tj
T*
( And she calls us, still unfed,)Tj
T*
( Though there\222s never a wave of all her waves)Tj
T*
( But marks our English dead:)Tj
T*
( We have strawed our best to the weed\222s unrest)Tj
T*
( To the shark and sheering gull.)Tj
T*
( If blood be the price of admiralty,)Tj
T*
( Lord God, we ha\222 paid in full!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221The Song of the Dead\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( And here the sea-fogs lap and cling)Tj
T*
( And here, each warning each,)Tj
ET
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( The sheep-bells and the ship-bells ring)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Along the hidden beach.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Sussex\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( God gives all men all earth to love,)Tj
T*
( But since man\222s heart is small,)Tj
T*
( Ordains for each one spot shall prove)Tj
T*
( Belov\351d over all.)Tj
T*
( Each to his choice, and I rejoice)Tj
T*
( The lot has fallen to me)Tj
T*
( In a fair ground\227in a fair ground\227)Tj
T*
( Yea, Sussex by the sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Sussex\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( For the sin ye do by two and two ye must pay for one by one!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Tomlinson\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( O it\222s Tommy this, an\222 Tommy that, an\222 \221Tommy, go away\222\
;)Tj
T*
( But it\222s \221Thank you, Mister Atkins,\222 when the band begins t\
o play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Tommy\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Then it\222s Tommy this, an\222 Tommy that, an \221Tommy \222ow\222s\
yer soul?\222)Tj
T*
( But it\222s \221Thin red line of \222eroes\222 when the drums begin \
to roll.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Tommy\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( For it\222s Tommy this, an\222 Tommy that, an\222 \221Chuck him out,\
the brute!\222)Tj
T*
( But it\222s \221Saviour of \222is country\222 when the guns begin to\
shoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Tommy\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( A fool there was and he made his prayer)Tj
T*
( \(Even as you and I!\))Tj
T*
( To a rag and a bone and a hank of hair)Tj
T*
( \(We called her the woman who did not care\))Tj
T*
( But the fool he called her his lady fair\227)Tj
T*
( \(Even as you and I!\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221The Vampire\222 st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( It is always a temptation to a rich and lazy nation, )Tj
T*
( To puff and look important and to say:\227 )Tj
T*
( \221Though we know we should defeat you, we have not the time to mee\
t you, )Tj
T*
( We will therefore pay you cash to go away.\222)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And that is called paying the Dane-geld;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But we\222ve proved it again and again,)Tj
T*
( That if once you have paid him the Dane-geld)Tj
T*
( You never get rid of the Dane.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221What Dane-geld means\222 \(1911\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( And only the Master shall praise us, and only the Master shall blame\
;)Tj
ET
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( And no one shall work for money, and no one shall work for fame,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But each for the joy of the working, and each, in his separate star,\
)Tj
T*
( Shall draw the Thing as he sees It for the God of Things as They are\
!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221When Earth\222s Last Picture is Painted\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( When \221Omer smote \222is bloomin\222 lyre,)Tj
T*
( He\222d \222eard men sing by land an\222 sea;)Tj
T*
( An\222 what he thought \222e might require,)Tj
T*
( \221E went an\222 took\227the same as me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221When \221Omer smote \222is bloomin\222 lyre\222 \(1896\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Take up the White Man\222s burden\227)Tj
T*
( Send forth the best ye breed\227)Tj
T*
( Go, bind your sons to exile)Tj
T*
( To serve your captives\222 need.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The White Man\222s Burden\222 \(1899\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( When you\222re wounded and left on Afghanistan\222s plains)Tj
T*
( And the women come out to cut up what remains)Tj
T*
( Just roll to your rifle and blow out your brains)Tj
T*
( An\222 go to your Gawd like a soldier.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Young British Soldier\222 \(1892\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Lalun is a member of the most ancient profession in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221In Black and White\222 \(1888\) \221On the City Wall\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( What the horses o\222 Kansas think to-day, the horses of America wil\
l think tomorrow; an\222 I tell )Tj
T*
(you that when the horses of America rise in their might, the day o\222 t\
he Oppressor is ended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Day\222s Work\222 \(1898\) \221A Walking Delegate\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( \221We be one blood, thou and I\222, Mowgli answered. \221I take my \
life from thee to-night. My kill )Tj
T*
(shall be thy kill if ever thou art hungry, O Kaa.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Jungle Book\222 \(1894\) \221Kaa\222s Hunting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Brother, thy tail hangs down behind!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Jungle Book\222 \(1894\) \221Road Song of the Bandar-Log\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Yes, weekly from Southampton,)Tj
T*
( Great steamers, white and gold,)Tj
T*
( Go rolling down to Rio)Tj
T*
( \(Roll down\227roll down to Rio!\).)Tj
T*
( And I\222d like to roll to Rio)Tj
T*
( Some day before I\222m old!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Beginning of the Armadilloes\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( He walked by himself, and all places were alike to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Cat that Walked by Himself\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( And he went back through the Wet Wild Woods, waving his wild tail an\
d walking by his wild )Tj
T*
(lone. But he never told anybody.)Tj
ET
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(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Cat that Walked by Himself\222)Tj
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( One Elephant\227a new Elephant\227an Elephant\222s Child\227who was \
full of \222satiable curtiosity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Elephant\222s Child\222)Tj
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( Then the Elephant\222s Child put his head down close to the Crocodil\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the Crocodile caught him by his little nose...\222Led go! You are hurtig\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Elephant\222s Child\222)Tj
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( I keep six honest serving-men)Tj
T*
( \(They taught me all I knew\);)Tj
T*
( Their names are What and Why and When)Tj
T*
( And How and Where and Who.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221The Elephant\222s Child\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( The cure for this ill is not to sit still,)Tj
T*
( Or frowst with a book by the fire;)Tj
T*
( But to take a large hoe and a shovel also,)Tj
T*
( And dig till you gently perspire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221How the Camel got his Hump\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( You must not forget the suspenders, Best Beloved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221How the Whale got his Throat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( And the small \221Stute Fish said in a small \222stute voice, \221No\
ble and generous Cetacean, have you )Tj
T*
(ever tasted Man?\222 \221No,\222 said the Whale. \221What is it like?\222\
\221Nice,\222 said the small \221Stute Fish. \221Nice )Tj
T*
(but nubbly.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221How the Whale got his Throat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( He had his Mummy\222s leave to paddle, or else he would never have d\
one it, because he was a )Tj
T*
(man of infinite-resource-and-sagacity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Just So Stories\222 \(1902\) \221How the Whale got his Throat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Little Friend of all the World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Kim\222 \(1901\) ch. 1 \(Kim\222s nickname\))Tj
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( The mad all are in God\222s keeping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Kim\222 \(1901\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( The man who would be king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(Title of story \(1888\))Tj
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( Every one is more or less mad on one point.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Plain Tales from the Hills\222 \(1888\) \221On the Strength of a Lik\
eness\222)Tj
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( Take my word for it, the silliest woman can manage a clever man; but\
it takes a very clever )Tj
T*
(woman to manage a fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221Plain Tales from the Hills\222 \(1888\) \221Three and\227an Extra\222\
)Tj
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( Now this is the Law of the Jungle\227as old and as true as the sky;)Tj
T*
( And the Wolf that shall keep it may prosper, but the Wolf that shall\
break it must die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Second Jungle Book\222 \(1895\) \221The Law of the Jungle\222)Tj
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( Mr Raymond Martin, beyond question, was born in a gutter, and bred i\
n a Board-School, )Tj
ET
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(where they played marbles. He was further \(I give the barest handful fr\
om great store\) a Flopshus )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Cad, an Outrageous Stinker, a Jelly-bellied Flag-flapper...and several o\
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T*
(seemly to put down.)Tj
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(\221Stalky & Co.\222 \(1899\) p. 214)Tj
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( Being kissed by a man who didn\222t wax his moustache was\227like ea\
ting an egg without salt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221The Story of the Gadsbys\222 \(1889\) \221Poor Dear Mamma\222)Tj
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( \222Tisn\222t beauty, so to speak, nor good talk necessarily. It\222\
s just It. Some women\222ll stay in a )Tj
T*
(man\222s memory if they once walked down a street.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.17047 Tm
(\221Traffics and Discoveries\222 \(1904\) \221Mrs Bathurst\222)Tj
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( Power without responsibility: the prerogative of the harlot througho\
ut the ages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(Summing up Max Aitken \(Lord Beaverbrook\)\222s political standpoint vis\
-\341-vis the Daily Express, the latter )Tj
T*
(having said in conversation with Kipling: \221What I want is power. Kiss\
\222em one day and kick \222em the next\222; in )Tj
T*
(\221Kipling Journal\222 vol. 38, no. 180, December 1971, p. 6. Stanley B\
aldwin, Kipling\222s cousin, subsequently )Tj
T*
(obtained permission to use the phrase in a speech in London on 18 March \
1931)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 495.2124 Tm
( 11.41 Henry Kissinger 1923\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Power is the great aphrodisiac.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 19 January 1971, p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 436.75456 Tm
( We are the President\222s men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.92047 Tm
(In M. and B. Kalb \221Kissinger\222 \(1974\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 388.7124 Tm
( 11.42 Fred Kitchen 1872-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Meredith, we\222re in!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.17047 Tm
(Catch-phrase originating in \221The Bailiff\222 \(1907 stage sketch\). J\
. P. Gallagher \221Fred Karno\222 \(1971\) ch. 9, p. 90)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 318.9624 Tm
( 11.43 Lord Kitchener 1850-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( You are ordered abroad as a soldier of the King to help our French c\
omrades against the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(invasion of a common enemy...In this new experience you may find temptat\
ions both in wine and )Tj
T*
(women. You must entirely resist both temptations, and, while treating al\
l women with perfect )Tj
T*
(courtesy, you should avoid any intimacy. Do your duty bravely. Fear God.\
Honour the King.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.42047 Tm
(Message to soldiers of the British Expeditionary Force \(1914\), in \221\
The Times\222 19 August 1914)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.50456 Tm
( I don\222t mind your being killed, but I object to your being taken \
prisoner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.67047 Tm
(To the Prince of Wales \(later King Edward VIII\) on his asking to be al\
lowed to the Front during World War I, )Tj
T*
(in Viscount Esher \221Journal\222 18 December 1914)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 11.44 Paul Klee 1879-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Eine aktive Linie, die sich frei ergeht, ein Spaziergang um seiner s\
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( An active line on a walk, moving freely without a goal. A walk for w\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.17047 Tm
(\221Pedagogical Sketchbook\222 \(1925\) p. 6)Tj
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( Kunst gibt nicht das Sichtbare wieder, sondern macht sichtbar.)Tj
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( Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Creative Credo\222 \(1920\) in \221Inward Vision\222 \(1958\) p. 5)Tj
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( 11.45 Friedrich Klopstock 1724-1803)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( God and I both knew what it meant once; now God alone knows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(In C. Lombroso \221The Man of Genius\222 \(1891\) pt. 1, ch. 2; also att\
ributed to Browning, vis-\341-vis Sordello, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the form \221When it was written, God and Robert Browning knew what it m\
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15 0 0 15 10 620.2124 Tm
( 11.46 Charles Knight and Kenneth Lyle)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When there\222s trouble brewing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When there\222s something doing,)Tj
T*
( Are we downhearted?)Tj
T*
( No! Let \222em all come!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 528.67047 Tm
(\221Here we are! Here we are again!!\222 \(1914 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 496.4624 Tm
( 11.47 Mary Knowles 1733-1807)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He gets at the substance of a book directly; he tears out the heart \
of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(On Samuel Johnson, in James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(\
1934 ed.\) vol. 3, p. 284 \(15 April 1778\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 426.7124 Tm
( 11.48 John Knox 1505-72)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Un homme avec Dieu est toujours dans la majorit\350.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A man with God is always in the majority.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(Inscription on the Reformation Monument, Geneva)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.50456 Tm
( The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Wom\
en.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.67047 Tm
(Title of Pamphlet \(1558\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 298.4624 Tm
( 11.49 Ronald Knox 1888-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When suave politeness, tempering bigot zeal,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Corrected I believe to One does feel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Absolute and Abitofhell\222 \(1913\))Tj
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( Evangelical vicar, in want of a portable, second-hand font, would di\
spose, for the same, of a )Tj
T*
(portrait, in frame, of the Bishop, elect, of Vermont.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(Advertisement placed in a newspaper. W. S. Baring-Gould \221The Lure of \
the Limerick\222 pt. 1, ch. 1, n. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( The tumult and the shouting dies,)Tj
T*
( The captains and the kings depart,)Tj
T*
( And we are left with large supplies)Tj
T*
( Of cold blancmange and rhubarb tart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221After the Party\222 in L. E. Eyres \(ed.\) \221In Three Tongues\222\
\(1959\) p. 130.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( O God, for as much as without Thee)Tj
T*
( We are not enabled to doubt Thee,)Tj
T*
( Help us all by Thy grace)Tj
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( To convince the whole race)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It knows nothing whatever about Thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(Attributed, in Langford Reed \221Complete Limerick Book\222 \(1924\))Tj
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( There once was a man who said, \221God)Tj
T*
( Must think it exceedingly odd)Tj
T*
( If he finds that this tree)Tj
T*
( Continues to be)Tj
T*
( When there\222s no one about in the Quad.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.92047 Tm
(In Langford Reed \221Complete Limerick Book\222 \(1924\), to which came \
the following anonymous reply:)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 589.11667 Tm
( Dear Sir,)Tj
T*
( Your astonishment\222s odd:)Tj
T*
( I am always about in the Quad.)Tj
T*
( And that\222s why the tree)Tj
T*
( Will continue to be,)Tj
T*
( Since observed by Yours faithfully, God.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.45747 TD
( The baby doesn\222t understand English and the Devil knows Latin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(On being asked to perform a baptism in English, in Evelyn Waugh \221Rona\
ld Knox\222 \(1959\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( A loud noise at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(Definition of a baby \(attributed\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 392.4624 Tm
( 11.50 Vicesimus Knox 1752-1821)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That learning belongs not to the female character, and that the fema\
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0 -1.2 TD
(degree of improvement equal to that of the other sex, are narrow and unp\
hilosophical prejudices.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \221Moral and Literary\222 \(1782\) no. 142)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.00456 Tm
( All sensible people agree in thinking that large seminaries of young\
ladies, though managed )Tj
T*
(with all the vigilance and caution which human abilities can exert, are \
in danger of great )Tj
T*
(corruption.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.17047 Tm
(\221Liberal Education\222 \(1780\) sect. 27 \221On the literary educatio\
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15 0 0 15 10 243.25456 Tm
( Can anything be more absurd than keeping women in a state of ignoran\
ce, and yet so )Tj
T*
(vehemently to insist on their resisting temptation?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(In Mary Wollstonecraft \221A Vindication of the Rights of Woman\222 \(17\
92\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 177.2124 Tm
( 11.51 Arthur Koestler 1905-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One may not regard the world as a sort of metaphysical brothel for e\
motions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.67047 Tm
(\221Darkness at Noon\222 \(1940\) \221The Second Hearing\222 ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.75456 Tm
( The definition of the individual was: a multitude of one million div\
ided by one million.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.92047 Tm
(\221Darkness at Noon\222 \(1940\) \221The Grammatical Fiction\222 ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.00456 Tm
( Behaviourism is indeed a kind of flat-earth view of the mind...it ha\
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0 -1.2 TD
(erstwhile anthropomorphic view of the rat, a ratomorphic view of man.)Tj
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(\221The Ghost in the Machine\222 \(1967\) ch. 1)Tj
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( God seems to have left the receiver off the hook, and time is runnin\
g out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Ghost in the Machine\222 \(1967\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A writer\222s ambition should be to trade a hundred contemporary rea\
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0 -1.2 TD
(years\222 time and for one reader in a hundred years\222 time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(In \221New York Times Book Review\222 1 April 1951)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 11.52 Jiddu Krishnamurti d. 1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Happiness comes uninvited; and the moment you are conscious that you\
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0 -1.2 TD
(longer happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221The Penguin Krishnamurti Reader\222 \221Questions and Answers\222)Tj
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( Truth is a pathless land, and you cannot approach it by any path wha\
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T*
(by any sect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Speech in Holland, 3 August 1929, in Lilly Heber \221Krishnamurti\222 \(\
1931\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( Religion is the frozen thought of men out of which they build temple\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 22 April 1928 \221Sayings of the Week\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 11.53 Kris Kristofferson 1936\227and Fred Foster)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Freedom\222s just another word for nothin\222 left to lose,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nothin\222 ain\222t worth nothin\222, but it\222s free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.42047 Tm
(\221Me and Bobby McGee\222 \(1969 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 383.2124 Tm
( 11.54 Jeremy Joe Kronsberg)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every which way but loose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 345.67047 Tm
(Title of film \(1978\); starring Clint Eastwood)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 313.4624 Tm
( 11.55 Paul Kruger 1825-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( A bill of indemnity...for raid by Dr Jameson and the British South A\
frica Company\222s troops. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(The amount falls under two heads\227first, material damage, total of cla\
im, \243677,938 3s.3d.\227)Tj
T*
(second, moral or intellectual damage, total of claim, \2431,000,000.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.92047 Tm
(Telegram from the South African Republic communicated to the House of Co\
mmons by Joseph Chamberlain, )Tj
T*
(in \221Hansard\222 18 February 1897, col. 726)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 192.7124 Tm
( 11.56 Joseph Wood Krutch 1893-1970)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The most serious charge which can be brought against New England is \
not Puritanism but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(February.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221The Twelve Seasons\222 \(1949\) \221February\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Cats seem to go on the principle that it never does any harm to ask \
for what you want.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Twelve Seasons\222 \(1949\) \221February\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 68.2124 Tm
( 11.57 Stanley Kubrick 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The great nations have always acted like gangsters, and the small na\
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(In \221Guardian\222 5 June 1963)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 11.58 Satish Kumar 1937\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Lead me from death to life, from falsehood to truth.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lead me from despair to hope, from fear to trust.)Tj
T*
( Lead me from hate to love, from war to peace.)Tj
T*
( Let peace fill our heart, our world, our universe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Prayer for Peace\222 \(1981, adapted from the Upanishads\))Tj
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( 11.59 Milan Kundera 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The unbearable lightness of being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1984\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.4624 Tm
( 11.60 Thomas Kyd 1558-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( What outcries pluck me from my naked bed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.92047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
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( Oh eyes, no eyes, but fountains fraught with tears;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Oh life, no life, but lively form of death;)Tj
T*
( Oh world, no world, but mass of public wrongs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.17047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 398.25456 Tm
( Thus must we toil in other men\222s extremes,)Tj
T*
( That know not how to remedy our own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 6, l. 1)Tj
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( I am never better than when I am mad. Then methinks I am a brave fel\
low; then I do wonders. )Tj
T*
(But reason abuseth me, and there\222s the torment, there\222s the hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 7, The Fourth Addition \(\
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( My son\227and what\222s a son? A thing begot)Tj
T*
( Within a pair of minutes, thereabout,)Tj
T*
( A lump bred up in darkness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 11, The Third Addition \(\
1602 ed.\) l. 5)Tj
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( Duly twice a morning)Tj
T*
( Would I be sprinkling it with fountain water.)Tj
T*
( At last it grew, and grew, and bore, and bore,)Tj
T*
( Till at the length)Tj
T*
( It grew a gallows and did bear our son,)Tj
T*
( It bore thy fruit and mine: O wicked, wicked plant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.17047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 12, The Fourth Addition \
\(1602 ed.\) l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.25456 Tm
( For what\222s a play without a woman in it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(\221The Spanish Tragedy\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 97)Tj
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( 12.0 L)Tj
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( 12.1 Henry Labouchere 1831-1912)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( He [Labouchere] did not object to the old man always having a card u\
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0 -1.2 TD
(object to his insinuating that the Almighty had placed it there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 657.92047 Tm
(On Gladstone\222s \221frequent appeals to a higher power\222: Earl Curz\
on \221Modern Parliamentary Eloquence\222 \(1913\) )Tj
T*
(p. 25. A. L. Thorold quotes Labouchere from a private letter in \221The \
Life of Henry Labouchere\222 \(1913\) ch. 15: )Tj
T*
(\221Who cannot refrain from perpetually bringing an ace down his sleeve,\
even when he has only to play fair to )Tj
T*
(win the trick.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 580.7124 Tm
( 12.2 Jean de la Bruy\351re 1645-96)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Le commencement et le d\350clin de l\222amour se font sentir par l\222\
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( The onset and the waning of love make themselves felt in the uneasin\
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(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221Du \
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( Le peuple n\222a gu\351re d\222esprit et les grands n\222ont point d\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The people have little intelligence, the great no heart...if I had t\
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(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221Des\
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( There are only three events in a man\222s life; birth, life, and dea\
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T*
(born, he dies in pain, and he forgets to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.17047 Tm
(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221De \
l\222homme\222)Tj
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( Entre le bon sens et le bon go\373t il y a la diff\350rence de la ca\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Between good sense and good taste there is the same difference as be\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.67047 Tm
(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221Des\
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( Tout est dit et l\222on vient trop tard depuis plus de sept mille an\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything has been said, and we are more than seven thousand years \
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0 -1.2 TD
(late.)Tj
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(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221Des\
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15 0 0 15 10 162.25456 Tm
( C\222est un m\350tier que de faire un livre, comme de faire une pend\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Making a book is a craft, as is making a clock; it takes more than w\
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(\221Les Caract\351res ou les moeurs de ce si\351cle\222 \(1688\) \221Des\
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( 12.3 Nivelle de la Chauss\350e 1692-1754)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Quand tout le monde a tort, tout le monde a raison.)Tj
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(\221La Gouvernante\222 \(1747\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
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( 12.4 James Lackington 1746-1815)Tj
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( At last, by singing and repeating enthusiastic amorous hymns, and ig\
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T*
(an instant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs\222 \(1791\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 12.5 Jean de la Fontaine 1621-95)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Aide-toi, le ciel t\222aidera.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Help yourself, and heaven will help you.)Tj
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( C\222est double plaisir de tromper le trompeur.)Tj
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( It is doubly pleasing to trick the trickster.)Tj
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( La raison du plus fort est toujours la meilleure.)Tj
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( The reason of the strongest is always the best.)Tj
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( 12.6 Jules Laforgue 1860-87)Tj
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( Ah! que la vie est quotidienne.)Tj
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(\221Complainte sur certains ennuis\222 \(1885\))Tj
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( When I make a mistake, it\222s a beaut!)Tj
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(On the appointment of Herbert O\222Brien as a judge in 1936, in William \
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(Fortitude\222 \(1976\) p. 219)Tj
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( The divided self.)Tj
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( The brotherhood of man is evoked by particular men according to thei\
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T*
(and to be blown up in turn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 546.17047 Tm
(\221The Politics of Experience\222 \(1967\) ch. 4)Tj
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( Madness need not be all breakdown. It may also be break-through.)Tj
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(\221The Politics of Experience\222 \(1967\) ch. 6)Tj
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( True guilt is guilt at the obligation one owes to oneself to be ones\
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T*
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(\221Self and Others\222 \(1961\) ch. 10)Tj
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( 12.9 Alphonse de Lamartine 1790-1869)Tj
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(\221L\222Isolement\222 \(1820\))Tj
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( 12.11 Charles Lamb 1775-1834)Tj
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221A Bachelor\222s Complaint of the Beh\
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( If the husband be a man with whom you have lived on a friendly footi\
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T*
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T*
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T*
(about you...Every long friendship, every old authentic intimacy, must be\
brought into their office )Tj
T*
(to be new stamped with their currency, as a sovereign Prince calls in th\
e good old money that was )Tj
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221A Bachelor\222s Complaint of the Beh\
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221A Chapter on Ears\222)Tj
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( Presents, I often say, endear Absents.)Tj
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( She unbent her mind afterwards\227over a book.)Tj
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( A votary of the desk\227a notched and cropt scrivener\227one that su\
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221Oxford in the Vacation\222)Tj
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( The uncommunicating muteness of fishes.)Tj
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221A Quakers\222 Meeting\222)Tj
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( The human species, according to the best theory I can form of it, is\
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( Your borrowers of books\227those mutilators of collections, spoilers\
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T*
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221The Two Races of Men\222)Tj
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( Credulity is the man\222s weakness, but the child\222s strength.)Tj
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( Not many sounds in life, and I include all urban and all rural sound\
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(\221Essays of Elia\222 \(1823\) \221Valentine\222s Day\222)Tj
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( How sickness enlarges the dimensions of a man\222s self to himself.)Tj
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( Things in books\222 clothing.)Tj
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(\221Last Essays of Elia\222 \(1833\) \221Detached Thoughts on Books and \
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( A poor relation\227is the most irrelevant thing in nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.17047 Tm
(\221Last Essays of Elia\222 \(1833\) \221Poor Relations\222)Tj
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(\221Last Essays of Elia\222 \(1833\) \221Popular Fallacies\222 no. 9)Tj
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( I have something more to do than feel.)Tj
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T*
(I have not lent out my heart with usury to such scenes?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.42047 Tm
(On London in a letter to Thomas Manning, 15 February 1802 \(quoting from\
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T*
(Marrs \(ed.\) \221The Letters of Charles and Mary Lamb\222 vol. 2 \(197\
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( Nothing puzzles me more than time and space; and yet nothing trouble\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.67047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Manning, 2 January 1810, in E. Marrs \(ed.\) \221The L\
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T*
(\(1978\) p. 36)Tj
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( Anything awful makes me laugh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.92047 Tm
(Letter to Robert Southey, 9 August 1815, in E. Marrs \(ed.\) \221The Le\
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T*
(\(1978\) p. 181)Tj
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( This very night I am going to leave off tobacco! Surely there must b\
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T*
(which this unconquerable purpose shall be realized.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.17047 Tm
(Letter to Thomas Manning, 26 December 1815, in E. Marrs \(ed.\) \221The\
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T*
(vol. 3 \(1978\) p. 207)Tj
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( An Archangel a little damaged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(On Coleridge, in a letter to Wordsworth, 26 April 1816: E. Marrs \(ed.\)\
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T*
(Lamb\222 vol. 3 \(1978\) p. 215)Tj
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( The rogue gives you Love Powders, and then a strong horse drench to \
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T*
(stomach that they mayn\222t hurt you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(On Coleridge, in a letter to Wordsworth, 23 September 1816: E. Marrs \(\
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T*
(Mary Lamb\222 vol. 3 \(1978\) p. 225)Tj
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( Fanny Kelly\222s divine plain face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(Letter to Mary Wordsworth, 18 February 1818, in Henry H. Harper \(ed.\) \
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T*
(Lamb\222 \(1905\) vol. 4, p. 105)Tj
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( Who first invented work\227and tied the free)Tj
T*
( And holy-day rejoicing spirit down)Tj
T*
( To the ever-haunting importunity)Tj
T*
( Of business?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(Letter to Bernard Barton, 11 September 1822, in Henry H. Harper \(ed.\) \
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T*
(vol. 4, p. 189)Tj
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(\221A Farewell to Tobacco\222 l. 122)Tj
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( All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.)Tj
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(\221The Old Familiar Faces\222)Tj
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( A child\222s a plaything for an hour.)Tj
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( If ever I marry a wife,)Tj
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( I\222ll marry a landlord\222s daughter,)Tj
T*
( For then I may sit in the bar,)Tj
T*
( And drink cold brandy and water.)Tj
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(\221Written in a copy of Coelebs in Search of a Wife\222)Tj
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( If dirt were trumps, what hands you would hold!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 366.92047 Tm
(In Leigh Hunt \221Lord Byron and his Contemporaries\222 \(1828\) p. 299)Tj
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( I do not [know the lady]; but damn her at a venture.)Tj
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( The last breath he drew in he wished might be through a pipe and exh\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.42047 Tm
(\221The Diaries of William Charles Macready 1833-1851\222 \(ed. W. Toynb\
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( I toiled after it, sir, as some men toil after virtue.)Tj
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(\221Music Ho!\222 \(1934\) ch. 3)Tj
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( The average English critic is a don manqu\350, hopelessly parochial \
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T*
(\221Above all no enthusiasm\222.)Tj
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(\221Opera\222 December 1950)Tj
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(In Sir Herbert Maxwell \(ed.\) \221The Creevey Papers\222 \(1903\) vol.\
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( In the castle of my skin.)Tj
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( Se vogliamo che tutto rimanga come \351, bisogna che tutto cambi.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221The Leopard\222 \(1957\) p. 33)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 528.7124 Tm
( 12.16 Sir Osbert Lancaster 1908-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nymphs and tribal deities of excessive female physique and alarming \
size balanced )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(precariously on broken pediments, threatening the passer-by with a showe\
r of stone fruit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.17047 Tm
(\221Pillar to Post\222 \(1938\) \221Edwardian Baroque\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 452.25456 Tm
( Fan-vaulting...from an aesthetic standpoint frequently belongs to th\
e \221Last-supper-carved-on-a-)Tj
T*
(peach-stone\222 class of masterpiece.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(\221Pillar to Post\222 \(1938\) \221Perpendicular\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.50456 Tm
( All over the country the latest and most scientific methods of mass-\
production are being )Tj
T*
(utilized to turn out a stream of old oak beams, leaded window-panes and \
small discs of bottle-)Tj
T*
(glass, all structural devices which our ancestors lost no time in abando\
ning as soon as an increase )Tj
T*
(in wealth and knowledge enabled them to do so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221Pillar to Post\222 \(1938\) \221Stockbroker\222s Tudor\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 295.4624 Tm
( 12.17 Bert Lance 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If it ain\222t broke, don\222t fix it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(In \221Nation\222s Business\222 May 1977, p. 27)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 225.7124 Tm
( 12.18 Letitia Elizabeth Landon 1802-38)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Few, save the poor, feel for the poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221The Poor\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 155.9624 Tm
( 12.19 Walter Savage Landor 1775-1864)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Death stands above me, whispering low)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I know not what into my ear;)Tj
T*
( Of his strange language all I know)Tj
T*
( Is, there is not a word of fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Death stands above me\222 \(1853\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( I strove with none; for none was worth my strife;)Tj
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( Nature I loved, and, next to Nature, Art;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I warmed both hands before the fire of life;)Tj
T*
( It sinks, and I am ready to depart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Dying Speech of an Old Philosopher\222 \(1853\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Past ruined Ilion Helen lives,)Tj
T*
( Alcestis rises from the shades;)Tj
T*
( Verse calls them forth; \222tis verse that gives)Tj
T*
( Immortal youth to mortal maids.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221To Ianthe\222 \(1831\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Ireland never was contented...)Tj
T*
( Say you so? You are demented.)Tj
T*
( Ireland was contented when)Tj
T*
( All could use the sword and pen,)Tj
T*
( And when Tara rose so high)Tj
T*
( That her turrets split the sky,)Tj
T*
( And about her courts were seen)Tj
T*
( Liveried Angels robed in green,)Tj
T*
( Wearing, by St Patrick\222s bounty,)Tj
T*
( Emeralds big as half a county.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Ireland never was contented\222 \(1853\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Ah, what avails the sceptred race!)Tj
T*
( Ah, what the form divine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221Rose Aylmer\222 \(1806\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( Rose Aylmer, whom these wakeful eyes)Tj
T*
( May weep, but never see,)Tj
T*
( A night of memories and of sighs)Tj
T*
( I consecrate to thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Rose Aylmer\222 \(1806\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( There is delight in singing, tho\222 none hear)Tj
T*
( Beside the singer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221To Robert Browning\222 \(1846\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Thee gentle Spenser fondly led;)Tj
T*
( But me he mostly sent to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221To Wordsworth: Those Who Have Laid the Harp Aside\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( George the First was always reckoned)Tj
T*
( Vile, but viler George the Second;)Tj
T*
( And what mortal ever heard)Tj
T*
( Any good of George the Third?)Tj
T*
( When from earth the Fourth descended)Tj
T*
( God be praised the Georges ended!)Tj
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(Epigram in \221The Atlas\222, 28 April 1855. \221Notes & Queries\222 3 M\
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15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( There are no fields of amaranth on this side of the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Imaginary Conversations\222 \221Aesop and Rhodope\222 in \221The Wor\
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( Prose on certain occasions can bear a great deal of poetry: on the o\
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0 -1.2 TD
(swoons under a moderate weight of prose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Imaginary Conversations\222 \221Archdeacon Hare and Walter Landor\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( States, like men, have their growth, their manhood, their decrepitud\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Imaginary Conversations\222 \221Pollio and Calvus\222 in \221The Wor\
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15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Clear writers, like clear fountains, do not seem so deep as they are\
; the turbid look the most )Tj
T*
(profound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Imaginary Conversations\222 \(1824\) \221Southey and Porson\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Fleas know not whether they are upon the body of a giant or upon one\
of ordinary size.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Imaginary Conversations\222 \(1824\) \221Southey and Porson\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 503.2124 Tm
( 12.20 Andrew Lang 1844-1912)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( St Andrews by the Northern sea,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A haunted town it is to me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Alma Matres\222 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( If the wild bowler thinks he bowls,)Tj
T*
( Or if the batsman thinks he\222s bowled,)Tj
T*
( They know not, poor misguided souls,)Tj
T*
( They too shall perish unconsoled.)Tj
T*
( I am the batsman and the bat,)Tj
T*
( I am the bowler and the ball,)Tj
T*
( The umpire, the pavilion cat,)Tj
T*
( The roller, pitch, and stumps, and all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Brahma\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( They hear like ocean on a western beach)Tj
T*
( The surge and thunder of the Odyssey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221The Odyssey\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 197.9624 Tm
( 12.21 Julia Lang 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Are you sitting comfortably?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(Introducing stories on \221Listen with Mother\222, BBC Radio 1950-82)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.2124 Tm
( 12.22 Suzanne K. Langer 1895-1985)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Art is the objectification of feeling, and the subjectification of n\
ature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Mind\222 \(1967\) vol. 1, pt. 2, ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 58.4624 Tm
( 12.23 William Langland c.1330-c.1400)Tj
ET
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( In a somer seson, whan softe was the sonne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\)\
prologue l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Ac on a May morwenynge on Malverne hilles)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Me bifel a ferly, of Fairye me thoghte.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) prologue l. \
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T*
(hulles / Me biful for to slepe, for werynesse of-walked\222 in C text \(\
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15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( A faire feeld ful of folk fond I ther bitwene\227)Tj
T*
( Of alle manere of men, the meene and the riche,)Tj
T*
( Werchynge and wandrynge as the world asketh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222, B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) prologue l.\
17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( A gloton of wordes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) prologue l. \
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15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( Whan alle tresors arn tried, Truthe is the beste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 1, l.\
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15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( Brewesters and baksters, bochiers and cokes\227)Tj
T*
( For thise are men on this molde that moost harm wercheth)Tj
T*
( To the povere peple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 3, l.\
79; \221As bakeres and breweres, bocheres and )Tj
T*
(cokes; / For thyse men don most harm to the mene peple\222 in C text \(e\
d. D. Pearsall, 1978\) Passus 3, l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( For if hevene be on this erthe, and ese to any soule,)Tj
T*
( It is in cloistre or in scole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 10, l\
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15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Suffraunce is a soverayn vertue, and a swift vengeaunce.)Tj
T*
( Who suffreth moore than God?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 11, l\
. 378)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.00456 Tm
( Grammer, the ground of al.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 15, l\
. 370)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( Innocence is next God, and nyght and day it crieth)Tj
T*
( \221Vengeaunce! Vengeaunce! Forgyve be it nevere)Tj
T*
( That shente us and shedde oure blood!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 17, l\
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15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( \221After sharpest shoures,\222 quath Pees \222most shene is the son\
ne;)Tj
T*
( Is no weder warmer than after watry cloudes.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 18, l\
. 411 \(Pees Peace\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Forthi be noght abasshed to bide and to be nedy,)Tj
T*
( Since he that wroghte al the world was wilfulliche nedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Piers Plowman\222 B text \(ed. A. V. C. Schmidt, 1987\) Passus 20, l\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.7124 Tm
( 12.24 Archbishop Stephen Langton d. 1228)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Veni, Sancte Spiritus,)Tj
ET
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( Et emitte coelitus)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lucis tuae radium.)Tj
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( Come, Holy Spirit, and send out from heaven the beam of your light.)Tj
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(The \221Golden Sequence\222 for Whitsunday; attributed also to several o\
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15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Lava quod est sordidum,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Riga quod est aridum,)Tj
T*
( Sana quod est saucium.)Tj
T*
( Flecte quod est rigidum,)Tj
T*
( Fove quod est frigidum,)Tj
T*
( Rege quod est devium.)Tj
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( Wash what is dirty, water what is dry, heal what is wounded. Bend wh\
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(The \221Golden Sequence\222 for Whitsunday)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 498.7124 Tm
( 12.25 L\342o Tse)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Heaven and Earth are not ruthful;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To them the Ten Thousand Things are but as straw dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221Tao-T\352-Ching\222 ch. 5, translated by Arthur Waley in \221The Way\
and its Power\222 \(1934\) \(Ten Thousand Things )Tj
T*
(all life forms; straw dogs sacrificial tokens\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 395.9624 Tm
( 12.26 Ring Lardner 1885-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Are you lost daddy I arsked tenderly. Shut up he explained.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221The Young Immigrunts\222 \(1920\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.2124 Tm
( 12.27 Philip Larkin 1922-1985)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Sexual intercourse began)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In nineteen sixty-three)Tj
T*
( \(Which was rather late for me\)\227)Tj
T*
( Between the end of the Chatterley ban)Tj
T*
( And the Beatles\222 first LP.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221Annus Mirabilis\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.75456 Tm
( Time has transfigured them into)Tj
T*
( Untruth. The stone fidelity)Tj
T*
( They hardly meant has come to be)Tj
T*
( Their final blazon, and to prove)Tj
T*
( Our almost-instinct almost true:)Tj
T*
( What will survive of us is love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221An Arundel Tomb\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Hatless, I take off)Tj
T*
( My cycle-clips in awkward reverence.)Tj
ET
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(\221Church Going\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A serious house on serious earth it is,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In whose blent air all our compulsions meet,)Tj
T*
( Are recognised, and robed as destinies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Church Going\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( What are days for?)Tj
T*
( Days are where we live.)Tj
T*
( They come, they wake us)Tj
T*
( Time and time over.)Tj
T*
( They are to be happy in:)Tj
T*
( Where can we live but days?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Days\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Life is first boredom, then fear.)Tj
T*
( Whether or not we use it, it goes,)Tj
T*
( And leaves what something hidden from us chose,)Tj
T*
( And age, and then the only end of age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Dockery & Son\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Rather than words comes the thought of high windows:)Tj
T*
( The sun-comprehending glass,)Tj
T*
( And beyond it, the deep blue air, that shows)Tj
T*
( Nothing, and is nowhere, and is endless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221High Windows\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Next year we are to bring the soldiers home)Tj
T*
( For lack of money, and it is all right.)Tj
T*
( Places they guarded, or kept orderly,)Tj
T*
( Must guard themselves, and keep themselves orderly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Homage to a Government\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Next year we shall be living in a country)Tj
T*
( That brought its soldiers home for lack of money.)Tj
T*
( The statues will be standing in the same)Tj
T*
( Tree-muffled squares, and look nearly the same.)Tj
T*
( Our children will not know it\222s a different country.)Tj
T*
( All we can hope to leave them now is money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Homage to a Government\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Nothing, like something, happens anywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221I Remember, I Remember\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Never such innocence,)Tj
T*
( Never before or since,)Tj
T*
( As changed itself to past)Tj
T*
( Without a word\227the men)Tj
ET
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( Leaving the gardens tidy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The thousands of marriages)Tj
T*
( Lasting a little while longer:)Tj
T*
( Never such innocence again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221MCMXIV\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Perhaps being old is having lighted rooms)Tj
T*
( Inside your head, and people in them, acting.)Tj
T*
( People you know, yet can\222t quite name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Fools\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Don\222t read too much now: the dude)Tj
T*
( Who lets the girl down before)Tj
T*
( The hero arrives, the chap)Tj
T*
( Who\222s yellow and keeps the store,)Tj
T*
( Seem far too familiar. Get stewed:)Tj
T*
( Books are a load of crap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Study of Reading Habits\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( They fuck you up, your mum and dad.)Tj
T*
( They may not mean to, but they do.)Tj
T*
( They fill you with the faults they had)Tj
T*
( And add some extra, just for you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221This Be The Verse\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Man hands on misery to man.)Tj
T*
( It deepens like a coastal shelf.)Tj
T*
( Get out as early as you can,)Tj
T*
( And don\222t have any kids yourself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221This Be The Verse\222 \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Why should I let the toad work)Tj
T*
( Squat on my life?)Tj
T*
( Can\222t I use my wit as a pitchfork)Tj
T*
( And drive the brute off?)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( With its sickening poison\227)Tj
T*
( Just for paying a few bills!)Tj
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( That\222s out of proportion.)Tj
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(\221Toads\222 \(1955\))Tj
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( Give me your arm, old toad;)Tj
T*
( Help me down Cemetery Road.)Tj
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(\221Toads Revisited\222 \(1964\))Tj
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( I thought of London spread out in the sun,)Tj
T*
( Its postal districts packed like squares of wheat.)Tj
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(\221The Whitsun Weddings\222 \(1964\))Tj
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( A beginning, a muddle, and an end.)Tj
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(\221New Fiction\222 no. 15, January 1978 \(the \221classic formula\222 f\
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( Deprivation is for me what daffodils were for Wordsworth.)Tj
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(\221Required Writing\222 \(1983\) p. 47)Tj
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( 12.28 Duc de la Rochefoucauld 1613-80)Tj
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 19)Tj
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( Il est plus honteux de se d\350fier de ses amis que d\222en \352tre \
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 84)Tj
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( There are good marriages, but no delightful ones.)Tj
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 113)Tj
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( L\222hypocrisie est un hommage que le vice rend \341 la vertu.)Tj
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( Hypocrisy is a tribute which vice pays to virtue.)Tj
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 218)Tj
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( C\222est une grande habilet\350 que de savoir cacher son habilet\350\
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( The height of cleverness is to be able to conceal it.)Tj
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 245)Tj
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( Il n\222y a gu\351re d\222homme assez habile pour conna\356tre tout \
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( There is scarcely a single man sufficiently aware to know all the ev\
il he does.)Tj
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 269)Tj
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( L\222absence diminue les m\350diocres passions, et augmente les gran\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 276.)Tj
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( La reconnaissance de la plupart des hommes n\222est qu\222une secr\351\
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T*
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 298)Tj
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( L\222accent du pays o\373 l\222on est n\350 demeure dans l\222esprit\
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( The accent of one\222s birthplace lingers in the mind and in the hea\
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(\221Maximes\222 \(1678\) no. 342)Tj
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on esp\351re.)Tj
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(\221Sentences et Maximes de Morale\222 \(Dutch edition, 1664\) maxim 128\
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( 12.29 Duc de la Rochefoucauld-Liancourt 1747-1827)Tj
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( Louis XVI: C\222est une grande r\350volte.)Tj
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(On the Fall of the Bastille being reported at Versailles, 1789, in F. Dr\
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(Liancourt\222 \(1903\) ch. 2, sect. 3)Tj
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( 12.30 Hugh Latimer c.1485-1555)Tj
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( Gutta cavat lapidem, non vi sed saepe cadendo.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(Sermon preached 19 April 1549, in \221The Second Sermon preached before \
the King\222s Majesty\222 \(1549\).)Tj
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( Be of good comfort Master Ridley, and play the man. We shall this da\
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0 -1.2 TD
(God\222s grace in England, as \(I trust\) shall never be put out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(On being burned for heresy, 16 October 1555, in John Foxe \221Actes and \
Monuments\222 \(1570 ed.\) p. 1937)Tj
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( 12.31 William Laud 1573-1645)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Lord I am coming as fast as I can, I know I must pass through the sh\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(nature; but thou by thy merits and passion, hast broke through the jaws \
of death; the Lord receive )Tj
T*
(my soul, and have mercy upon me, and bless this kingdom with peace and p\
lenty, and with )Tj
T*
(brotherly love and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Chris\
tian blood amongst them, )Tj
T*
(for Jesus Christ his sake, if it be thy will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(Prayer at the scaffold, in Peter Heylin \221Cyprianus Anglicus\222 \(166\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.32 Sir Harry Lauder 1870-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Keep right on to the end of the road,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Keep right on to the end.)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 the way be long, let your heart be strong,)Tj
T*
( Keep right on round the bend.)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 you\222re tired and weary,)Tj
T*
( Still journey on)Tj
T*
( Till you come to your happy abode,)Tj
T*
( Where all you love you\222ve been dreaming of)Tj
T*
( Will be there at the end of the road.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221The End of the Road\222 \(1924 song\))Tj
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( I love a lassie, a bonnie, bonnie lassie,)Tj
T*
( She\222s as pure as the lily in the dell.)Tj
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( She\222s as sweet as the heather, the bonnie bloomin\222 heather\227\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Mary, ma Scotch Bluebell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221I Love a Lassie\222 \(1905 song\))Tj
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( Roamin\222 in the gloamin\222,)Tj
T*
( On the bonnie banks o\222 Clyde.)Tj
T*
( Roamin\222 in the gloamin\222)Tj
T*
( Wae my lassie by my side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Roamin\222 in the Gloamin\222\222 \(1911 song\))Tj
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(See also R. F. Morrison \(1.179\) in Volume II)Tj
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( 12.33 Stan Laurel \(Arthur Stanley Jefferson\) 1890-1965)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Another nice mess you\222ve gotten me into.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Another Fine Mess\222 \(1930 film\) and many other Laurel and Hardy \
films; spoken by Oliver Hardy)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 504.7124 Tm
( 12.34 William L. Laurence 1888-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( At first it was a giant column that soon took the shape of a supramu\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(On the first atomic explosion in New Mexico, 16 July 1945; in \221New Yo\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.35 James Laver 1899-1975)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The same costume will be)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Indecent ... 10 years before its time)Tj
T*
( Shameless ... 5 years before its time)Tj
T*
( Outr\350 \(daring\) ... 1 year before its time)Tj
T*
( Smart)Tj
T*
( Dowdy ... 1 year after its time)Tj
T*
( Hideous ... 10 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Ridiculous ... 20 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Amusing ... 30 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Quaint ... 50 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Charming ... 70 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Romantic ... 100 years after its time)Tj
T*
( Beautiful ... 150 years after its time)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221Taste and Fashion\222 \(1937\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 149.2124 Tm
( 12.36 Andrew Bonar Law 1858-1923)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Bonar Law \(2.149\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 12.37 D. H. Lawrence \(David Herbert Lawrence\) 1885-1930)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( To the Puritan all things are impure, as somebody says.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(\221Etruscan Places\222 \(1932\) \221Cerveteri\222)Tj
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( Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Lady Chatterley\222s Lover\222 \(1928\) ch. 1)Tj
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( John Thomas says good-night to Lady Jane, a little droopingly, but w\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Lady Chatterley\222s Lover\222 \(1928\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( And here lies the vast importance of the novel, properly handled. It\
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0 -1.2 TD
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sympathy away in )Tj
T*
(recoil from things gone dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Lady Chatterley\222s Lover\222 \(1928\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The English...are paralysed by fear. That is what thwarts and distor\
ts the Anglo-Saxon )Tj
T*
(existence. It...seemed to dig in to the English soul at the time of the \
Renaissance. Nothing could )Tj
T*
(be more lovely and fearless than Chaucer. But already Shakespeare is mor\
bid with fear, fear of )Tj
T*
(consequences. That is the strange phenomenon of the English Renaissance:\
this mystic terror of )Tj
T*
(the consequences, the consequences of action.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Phoenix\222 \(1936\) \221An Introduction to these Paintings\222)Tj
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( If you try to nail anything down in the novel, either it kills the n\
ovel, or the novel gets up and )Tj
T*
(walks away with the nail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Phoenix\222 \(1936\) \221Morality and the Novel\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Pornography is the attempt to insult sex, to do dirt on it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Phoenix\222 \(1936\) \221Pornography and Obscenity\222 ch. 3)Tj
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( In life...no new thing has ever arisen, or can arise, save out of th\
e impulse of the male upon the )Tj
T*
(female, the female upon the male. The interaction of the male and female\
spirit begot the wheel, )Tj
T*
(the plough, and the first utterance that was made on the face of the ear\
th.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Phoenix\222 \(1936\) \221Study of Thomas Hardy\222 ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The novel is the one bright book of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Phoenix\222 \(1936\) \221Why the novel matters\222)Tj
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( Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of a cri\
tic is to save the tale from the )Tj
T*
(artist who created it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Studies in Classic American Literature\222 \(1923\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Be a good animal, true to your instincts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The White Peacock\222 \(1911\) pt. 2, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Don\222t you find it a beautiful clean thought, a world empty of peo\
ple, just uninterrupted grass, )Tj
T*
(and a hare sitting up?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Women in Love\222 \(1920\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( The Forsytes are all parasites...parasites upon the thoughts, the fe\
elings, the whole body of life )Tj
T*
(of really living individuals who have gone before them and who live alon\
gside them. All they can )Tj
T*
(do, having no individual life of their own, is out of fear to rake toget\
her property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(xxx)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( Is it the secret of the long-nosed Etruscans?)Tj
T*
( The long-nosed, sensitive-footed, subtly-smiling Etruscans)Tj
T*
( Who made so little noise outside the cypress groves?)Tj
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(\221Cypresses\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( Don\222t be sucked in by the su-superior,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( don\222t drink, don\222t drink and get beerier and beerier,)Tj
T*
( do learn to discriminate.)Tj
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(\221Don\222ts\222 \(1929\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Along the avenue of cypresses)Tj
T*
( All in their scarlet cloaks, and surplices)Tj
T*
( Of linen go the chanting choristers,)Tj
T*
( The priests in gold and black, the villagers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Giorno dei Morti\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( How beastly the bourgeois is)Tj
T*
( Especially the male of the species.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221How Beastly the Bourgeois Is\222 \(1929\))Tj
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( For while we have sex in the mind, we truly have none in the body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Leave Sex Alone\222 \(1929\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Men! The only animal in the world to fear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Mountain Lion\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( So now it is vain for the singer to burst into clamour)Tj
T*
( With the great black piano appassionato. The glamour)Tj
T*
( Of childish days is upon me, my manhood is cast)Tj
T*
( Down in the flood of remembrance, I weep like a child for the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Piano\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( I never saw a wild thing)Tj
T*
( Sorry for itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Self-Pity\222 \(1929\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Now it is autumn and the falling fruit)Tj
T*
( And the long journey towards oblivion...)Tj
T*
( Have you built your ship of death, O have you?)Tj
T*
( O build your ship of death, for you will need it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Ship of Death\222 \(1932\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( A snake came to my water-trough)Tj
T*
( On a hot, hot day, and I in pyjamas for the heat,)Tj
T*
( To drink there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Snake\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( And I thought of the albatross,)Tj
T*
( And I wished he would come back, my snake.)Tj
T*
( For he seemed to me again like a king,)Tj
T*
( Like a king in exile, uncrowned in the underworld,)Tj
T*
( Now due to be crowned again.)Tj
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( And so, I missed my chance with one of the lords)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of life.)Tj
T*
( And I have something to expiate:)Tj
T*
( A pettiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Snake\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Not I, not I, but the wind that blows through me!)Tj
T*
( A fine wind is blowing the new direction of Time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Song of a Man who has Come Through\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( When I read Shakespeare I am struck with wonder)Tj
T*
( That such trivial people should muse and thunder)Tj
T*
( In such lovely language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221When I Read Shakespeare\222 \(1929\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Curse the blasted, jelly-boned swines, the slimy, the belly-wrigglin\
g invertebrates, the )Tj
T*
(miserable sodding rotters, the flaming sods, the snivelling, dribbling, \
dithering, palsied, pulse-less )Tj
T*
(lot that make up England today. They\222ve got white of egg in their vei\
ns, and their spunk is that )Tj
T*
(watery it\222s a marvel they can breed. They can nothing but frog-spawn\227\
the gibberers! God, how I )Tj
T*
(hate them!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(Letter to Edward Garnett, 3 July 1912, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\) \221Colle\
cted Letters of D. H. Lawrence\222 \(1962\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.00456 Tm
( Tragedy ought really to be a great kick at misery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(Letter to A. W. McLeod, 6 October 1912, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\) \221Coll\
ected Letters of D. H. Lawrence\222 \(1962\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( I like to write when I feel spiteful; it\222s like having a good sne\
eze.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(Letter to Lady Cynthia Asquith, c.25 November 1913, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\
\) \221Collected Letters of D. H. )Tj
T*
(Lawrence\222 \(1962\) vol. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 307.50456 Tm
( The dead don\222t die. They look on and help.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.67047 Tm
(Letter to J. Middleton Murry, 2 February 1923, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\) \221\
Collected Letters of D. H. )Tj
T*
(Lawrence\222 \(1962\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.75456 Tm
( The autumn always gets me badly, as it breaks into colours. I want t\
o go south, where there is )Tj
T*
(no autumn, where the cold doesn\222t crouch over one like a snow-leopard\
waiting to pounce. The )Tj
T*
(heart of the North is dead, and the fingers of cold are corpse fingers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.92047 Tm
(Letter to J. Middleton Murry, 3 October 1924, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\) \221\
Collected Letters of D. H. )Tj
T*
(Lawrence\222 \(1962\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( I\222d like to write an essay on [Arnold] Bennett\227sort of pig in \
clover.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(Letter to Aldous Huxley, 27 March 1928, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\) \221Coll\
ected Letters of D. H. Lawrence\222 \(1962\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( My God, what a clumsy olla putrida James Joyce is! Nothing but old f\
ags and cabbage-stumps )Tj
T*
(of quotations from the Bible and the rest, stewed in the juice of delibe\
rate, journalistic dirty-)Tj
T*
(mindedness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(Letter to Aldous and Maria Huxley, 15 August 1928, in H. T. Moore \(ed.\)\
\221Collected Letters of D. H. )Tj
T*
(Lawrence\222 \(1962\) vol. 2)Tj
ET
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( 12.38 T. E. Lawrence 1888-1935)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Many men would take the death-sentence without a whimper to escape t\
he life-sentence which )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fate carries in her other hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 691.67047 Tm
(\221The Mint\222 \(1955\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 670.75456 Tm
( The trumpets came out brazenly with the last post. We all swallowed \
our spittle, chokingly, )Tj
T*
(while our eyes smarted against our wills. A man hates to be moved to fol\
ly by a noise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 636.92047 Tm
(\221The Mint\222 \(1955\) pt. 3, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 616.00456 Tm
( I loved you, so I drew these tides of men into my hands and wrote my\
will across the sky in )Tj
T*
(stars)Tj
T*
( To earn you freedom, the seven pillared worthy house, that your eyes\
might be shining for me)Tj
T*
( When we came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 546.17047 Tm
(\221The Seven Pillars of Wisdom\222 \(1926\) dedication)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 513.9624 Tm
( 12.39 Emma Lazarus 1849-87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Give me your tired, your poor,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,)Tj
T*
( The wretched refuse of your teeming shore,)Tj
T*
( Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me:)Tj
T*
( I lift my lamp beside the golden door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.42047 Tm
(\221The New Colossus\222 \(inscription on the Statue of Liberty, New Yor\
k\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 372.2124 Tm
( 12.40 Sir Edmund Leach 1910\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Far from being the basis of the good society, the family, with its n\
arrow privacy and tawdry )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(secrets, is the source of all our discontents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(BBC Reith Lectures, 1967, in \221Listener\222 30 November 1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.4624 Tm
( 12.41 Stephen Leacock 1869-1944)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am what is called a professor emeritus\227from the Latin e, \221ou\
t\222, and meritus, \221so he ought to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.92047 Tm
(\221Here are my Lectures\222 \(1938\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.00456 Tm
( The landlady of a boarding-house is a parallelogram\227that is, an o\
blong figure, which cannot )Tj
T*
(be described, but which is equal to anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.17047 Tm
(\221Literary Lapses\222 \(1910\) \221Boarding-House Geometry\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.25456 Tm
( There are no handles to a horse, but the 1910 model has a string to \
each side of its face for )Tj
T*
(turning its head when there is anything you want it to see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.42047 Tm
(\221Literary Lapses\222 \(1910\) \221Reflections on Riding\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.50456 Tm
( A sportsman is a man who, every now and then, simply has to get out \
and kill something. Not )Tj
T*
(that he\222s cruel. He wouldn\222t hurt a fly. It\222s not big enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.67047 Tm
(\221My Remarkable Uncle\222 \(1942\) p. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.75456 Tm
( Lord Ronald said nothing; he flung himself from the room, flung hims\
elf upon his horse and )Tj
ET
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(rode madly off in all directions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Nonsense Novels\222 \(1911\) \221Gertrude the Governess\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A decision of the courts decided that the game of golf may be played\
on Sunday, not being a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(game within the view of the law, but being a form of moral effort.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Over the Footlights\222 \(1923\) \221Why I Refuse to Play Golf\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 12.42 Mary Leapor 1722-46)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In spite of all romantic poets sing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This gold, my dearest, is an useful thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Mira to Octavia\222 \(1748\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( Woman, a pleasing but a short-lived flower,)Tj
T*
( Too soft for business and too weak for power:)Tj
T*
( A wife in bondage, or neglected maid:)Tj
T*
( Despised, if ugly; if she\222s fair, betrayed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Woman\222 \(1751\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 12.43 Edward Lear 1812-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who, or why, or which, or what,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is the Akond of Swat?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221The Akond of Swat\222 \(1888\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( On the coast of Coromandel)Tj
T*
( Where the early pumpkins blow,)Tj
T*
( In the middle of the woods,)Tj
T*
( Lived the Yonghy-Bonghy-B\363.)Tj
T*
( Two old chairs, and half a candle;\227)Tj
T*
( One old jug without a handle,\227)Tj
T*
( These were all his worldly goods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(\221The Courtship of the Yonghy-Bonghy-B\363\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 250.50456 Tm
( When awful darkness and silence reign)Tj
T*
( Over the great Gromboolian plain,)Tj
T*
( Through the long, long wintry nights,)Tj
T*
( When the angry breakers roar)Tj
T*
( As they beat on the rocky shore;\227)Tj
T*
( When storm-clouds brood on the towering heights)Tj
T*
( Of the Hills of the Chankly Bore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221The Dong with a Luminous Nose\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( And those who watch at that midnight hour)Tj
T*
( From Hall or Terrace or lofty Tower,)Tj
T*
( Cry as the wild light passes along,\227)Tj
T*
( \221The Dong!\227the Dong!)Tj
ET
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( The wandering Dong through the forest goes!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Dong!\227the Dong!)Tj
T*
( The Dong with a Luminous Nose!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Dong with a Luminous Nose\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( O My ag\351d Uncle Arly!)Tj
T*
( Sitting on a heap of Barley)Tj
T*
( Thro\222 the silent hours of night,\227)Tj
T*
( Close beside a leafy thicket;\227)Tj
T*
( On his nose there was a Cricket,\227)Tj
T*
( In his hat a Railway-Ticket;\227)Tj
T*
( \(But his shoes were far too tight.\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Incidents in the Life of my Uncle Arly\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Far and few, far and few,)Tj
T*
( Are the lands where the Jumblies live;)Tj
T*
( Their heads are green, and their hands are blue,)Tj
T*
( And they went to sea in a Sieve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Jumblies\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( They called aloud \221Our Sieve ain\222t big,)Tj
T*
( But we don\222t care a button! We don\222t care a fig!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Jumblies\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( And they brought an Owl, and a useful Cart,)Tj
T*
( And a pound of Rice, and a Cranberry Tart,)Tj
T*
( And a hive of silvery Bees.)Tj
T*
( And they brought a Pig, and some green Jack-daws,)Tj
T*
( And a lovely Monkey with lollipop paws, and forty bottles of Ring-Bo\
-Ree,)Tj
T*
( And no end of Stilton Cheese.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221The Jumblies\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( Nasticreechia Krorluppia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221More Nonsense\222 \(1872\) \221Nonsense Botany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( There was an old person of Ware,)Tj
T*
( Who rode on the back of a bear:)Tj
T*
( When they asked,\227\222Does it trot?\222\227)Tj
T*
( He said, \221Certainly not!)Tj
T*
( He\222s a Moppsikon Floppsikon bear.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221More Nonsense\222 \(1872\) \221One Hundred Nonsense Pictures and Rhy\
mes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( There was an old man of Thermopylae,)Tj
T*
( Who never did anything properly;)Tj
T*
( But they said, \221If you choose)Tj
T*
( To boil eggs in your shoes,)Tj
T*
( You shall never remain in Thermopylae.\222)Tj
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(\221More Nonsense\222 \(1872\) \221One Hundred Nonsense Pictures and Rhy\
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( Till Mrs Discobbolos said)Tj
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( \221Oh! W! X! Y! Z!)Tj
T*
( It has just come into my head\227)Tj
T*
( Suppose we should happen to fall!!!!)Tj
T*
( Darling Mr Discobbolos?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Mr and Mrs Discobbolos\222 \(1871\))Tj
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( \221How pleasant to know Mr Lear!\222)Tj
T*
( Who has written such volumes of stuff!)Tj
T*
( Some think him ill-tempered and queer,)Tj
T*
( But a few think him pleasant enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Nonsense Songs\222 \(1871\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( He has many friends, laymen and clerical.)Tj
T*
( Old Foss is the name of his cat:)Tj
T*
( His body is perfectly spherical,)Tj
T*
( He weareth a runcible hat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Nonsense Songs\222 \(1871\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( The Owl and the Pussy-Cat went to sea)Tj
T*
( In a beautiful pea-green boat.)Tj
T*
( They took some honey, and plenty of money,)Tj
T*
( Wrapped up in a five-pound note.)Tj
T*
( The Owl looked up to the Stars above)Tj
T*
( And sang to a small guitar,)Tj
T*
( \221Oh lovely Pussy! O Pussy, my love,)Tj
T*
( What a beautiful Pussy you are.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221The Owl and the Pussy-Cat\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Pussy said to the Owl, \221You elegant fowl!)Tj
T*
( How charmingly sweet you sing!)Tj
T*
( O let us be married! too long we have tarried:)Tj
T*
( But what shall we do for a ring?\222)Tj
T*
( They sailed away for a year and a day,)Tj
T*
( To the land where the Bong-tree grows,)Tj
T*
( And there in a wood a Piggy-wig stood)Tj
T*
( With a ring at the end of his nose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221The Owl and the Pussy-Cat\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( \221Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling)Tj
T*
( Your ring?\222 Said the Piggy, \221I will.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221The Owl and the Pussy-Cat\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( They dined on mince, and slices of quince,)Tj
T*
( Which they ate with a runcible spoon;)Tj
ET
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( And hand in hand, on the edge of the sand,)Tj
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( They danced by the light of the moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Owl and the Pussy-Cat\222 \(1871\))Tj
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( The Pobble who has no toes)Tj
T*
( Had once as many as we;)Tj
T*
( When they said, \221Some day you may lose them all\222;\227)Tj
T*
( He replied,\227\222Fish fiddle de-dee!\222)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Lavender water tinged with pink,)Tj
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T*
( There\222s nothing so good for a Pobble\222s toes!\222)Tj
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(\221The Pobble Who Has No Toes\222 \(1871\))Tj
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( When boats or ships came near him)Tj
T*
( He tinkledy-binkledy-winkled a bell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221The Pobble Who Has No Toes\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( He has gone to fish, for his Aunt Jobiska\222s)Tj
T*
( Runcible Cat with crimson whiskers!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.17047 Tm
(\221The Pobble Who Has No Toes\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.25456 Tm
( \221But the longer I live on this Crumpetty Tree)Tj
T*
( The plainer than ever it seems to me)Tj
T*
( That very few people come this way)Tj
T*
( And that life on the whole is far from gay!\222)Tj
T*
( Said the Quangle-Wangle Quee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221The Quangle-Wangle\222s Hat\222 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( And what can we expect if we haven\222t any dinner,)Tj
T*
( But to lose our teeth and eyelashes and keep on growing thinner?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221The Two Old Bachelors\222 \(1871\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 247.4624 Tm
( 12.44 Timothy Leary 1920\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you take the game of life seriously, if you take your nervous sys\
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0 -1.2 TD
(your sense organs seriously, if you take the energy process seriously, y\
ou must turn on, tune in )Tj
T*
(and drop out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(Lecture, June 1966, in \221The Politics of Ecstasy\222 \(1968\) ch. 21)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 141.7124 Tm
( 12.45 Mary Elizabeth Lease 1853-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Kansas had better stop raising corn and begin raising hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 71.9624 Tm
( 12.46 F. R. Leavis 1895-1978)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The common pursuit.)Tj
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(Title of book \(1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The few really great\227the major novelists...are significant in ter\
ms of the human awareness )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(they promote; awareness of the possibilities of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Great Tradition\222 \(1948\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( He [Rupert Brooke] energized the Garden-Suburb ethos with a certain \
original talent and the )Tj
T*
(vigour of a prolonged adolescence...rather like Keats\222s vulgarity wit\
h a Public School accent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221New Bearings in English Poetry\222 \(1932\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( The Sitwells belong to the history of publicity rather than of poetr\
y.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221New Bearings in English Poetry\222 \(1932\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Self-contempt, well-grounded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(On the foundation of T. S. Eliot\222s work, in \221Times Literary Supple\
ment\222 21 October 1988, p. 1177 \(from a )Tj
T*
(BBC radio talk by Christopher Ricks\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 524.9624 Tm
( 12.47 Fran Lebowitz)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There is no such thing as inner peace. There is only nervousness or \
death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221Metropolitan Life\222 \(1978\) p. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( Life is something to do when you can\222t get to sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221Metropolitan Life\222 \(1978\) p. 101)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 418.4624 Tm
( 12.48 Stanislaw Lec 1909-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Is it progress if a cannibal uses knife and fork?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(\221Mysli Nieuczesane\222 \(Unkempt Thoughts, 1962\) p. 78)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 348.7124 Tm
( 12.49 John le Carr\350 \(David John Moore Cornwell\) 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The spy who came in from the cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1963\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.9624 Tm
( 12.50 Le Corbusier \(Charles \310douard Jeanneret\) 1887-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Une maison est une machine-\341-habiter.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A house is a machine for living in.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(\221Vers une architecture\222 \(Towards an Architecture, 1923\) p. ix.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.75456 Tm
( This frightful word [function] was born under other skies than those\
I have loved\227those where )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the sun shines supreme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.92047 Tm
(Quoted in letter to \221The Times\222 15 January 1992)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 132.7124 Tm
( 12.51 Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin 1807-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Eh! je suis leur chef, il fallait bien les suivre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ah well! I am their leader, I have to follow them!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(In E. de Mirecourt \221Histoire Contemporaine\222 no. 79 \221Ledru-Rolli\
n\222 \(1857\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.2124 Tm
( 12.52 Gypsy Rose Lee \(Rose Louise Hovick\) 1914-70)Tj
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( God is love but get it in writing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.67047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 701.4624 Tm
( 12.53 Harper Lee 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit \222em, but remember\
it\222s a sin to kill a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mockingbird.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.92047 Tm
(\221To Kill a Mockingbird\222 \(1960\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 613.7124 Tm
( 12.54 Henry Lee \(\221Light-Horse Harry\222\) 1756-1818)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A citizen, first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of \
his countrymen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.17047 Tm
(\221Resolutions Adopted by the Congress on the Death of Washington\222, \
19 December 1799; moved by John )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Marshall and misquoted in his Life of Washington as \221...first in the \
hearts of his fellow citizens.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 528.9624 Tm
( 12.55 Laurie Lee 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I was set down from the carrier\222s cart at the age of three; and t\
here with a sense of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(bewilderment and terror my life in the village began.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.42047 Tm
(\221Cider with Rosie\222 \(1959\) p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 452.50456 Tm
( Such a morning it is when love)Tj
T*
( leans through geranium windows)Tj
T*
( and calls with a cockerel\222s tongue.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( When red-haired girls scamper like roses)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( over the rain-green grass,)Tj
T*
( and the sun drips honey.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.92047 Tm
(\221Day of these Days\222 \(1947\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 310.7124 Tm
( 12.56 Nathaniel Lee c.1653-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He speaks the kindest words, and looks such things, Vows with so muc\
h passion, swears with )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(so much grace. That \222tis a kind of heaven to be deluded by him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.17047 Tm
(\221The Rival Queens\222 \(1677\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.25456 Tm
( \222Tis beauty calls and glory leads the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.42047 Tm
(\221The Rival Queens\222 \(1677\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.50456 Tm
( Then he will talk, Good Gods, How he will talk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.67047 Tm
(\221The Rival Queens\222 \(1677\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.75456 Tm
( When Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.92047 Tm
(\221The Rival Queens\222 \(1677\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.00456 Tm
( Philip fought men, but Alexander women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.17047 Tm
(\221The Rival Queens\222 \(1677\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.25456 Tm
( Man, false man, smiling, destructive man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.42047 Tm
(\221Theodosius\222 \(1680\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 39.2124 Tm
( 12.57 Robert E. Lee 1807-70)Tj
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( It is well that war is so terrible. We should grow too fond of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 731.67047 Tm
(Attributed; after the battle of Fredericksburg, December 1862)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 699.4624 Tm
( 12.58 Richard Le Gallienne 1866-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The cry of the Little Peoples goes up to God in vain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For the world is given over to the cruel sons of Cain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.92047 Tm
(\221The Cry of the Little Peoples\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 611.7124 Tm
( 12.59 Ernest Lehman)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sweet smell of success.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.17047 Tm
(Title of book and film \(1957\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.9624 Tm
( 12.60 Tom Lehrer 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Plagiarize! Let no one else\222s work evade your eyes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Remember why the good Lord made your eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.42047 Tm
(\221Lobachevski\222 \(1953 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.50456 Tm
( Life is like a sewer. What you get out of it depends on what you put\
into it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.67047 Tm
(Preamble to \221We Will All Go Together When We Go\222, in \221An Evenin\
g Wasted with Tom Lehrer\222 \(1953 )Tj
T*
(record album\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.75456 Tm
( And we will all go together when we go\227)Tj
T*
( Every Hottentot and every Eskimo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.92047 Tm
(\221We Will All Go Together When We Go\222 \(1953 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 347.7124 Tm
( 12.61 Fred W. Leigh d. 1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There was I, waiting at the church, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Waiting at the church, waiting at the church, )Tj
T*
( When I found he\222d left me in the lurch... )Tj
T*
( Here\222s the very note, )Tj
T*
( This is what he wrote\227 )Tj
T*
( \221Can\222t get away to marry you today, )Tj
T*
( My wife won\222t let me!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.17047 Tm
(\221Waiting at the Church \(My Wife Won\222t Let Me\)\222 \(1906 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 169.9624 Tm
( 12.62 Fred W. Leigh d. 1924, Charles Collins, and Lily Morris)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Why am I always the bridesmaid, Never the blushing bride?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.42047 Tm
(\221Why Am I Always the Bridesmaid?\222 \(1917 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 100.2124 Tm
( 12.63 Henry Sambrooke Leigh 1837-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The rapturous, wild, and ineffable pleasure)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of drinking at somebody else\222s expense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.67047 Tm
(\221Carols of Cockayne\222 \(1869\) \221Stanzas to an Intoxicated Fly\222\
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( 12.64 Charles G. Leland 1824-1903)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hans Breitmann gife a barty\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Vhere ish dat barty now?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 686.92047 Tm
(\221Hans Breitmann\222s Barty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 666.00456 Tm
( All goned afay mit de lager-beer\227)Tj
T*
( Afay in de ewigkeit!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 632.17047 Tm
(\221Hans Breitmann\222s Barty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 611.25456 Tm
( They saw a Dream of Loveliness descending from the train.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221The Masher\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 563.2124 Tm
( 12.65 Curtis E. LeMay 1906-90)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They\222ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression, or \
we\222re going to bomb them )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(back into the Stone Age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 507.67047 Tm
(On the North Vietnamese, in \221Mission with LeMay\222 \(1965\) p. 565)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 475.4624 Tm
( 12.66 Lenin \(Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov\) 1870-1924)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Communism is Soviet power plus the electrification of the whole coun\
try.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.92047 Tm
(Report to 8th Congress, 1920, in \221Collected Works\222 \(ed. 5\) vol. \
42, p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 417.00456 Tm
( Imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.17047 Tm
(\221Briefest possible definition of imperialism\222 in \221Imperialism a\
s the Last Stage of Capitalism\222 ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.25456 Tm
( No, Democracy is not identical with majority rule. No, Democracy is \
a State which recognizes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the subjection of the minority to the majority, that is, an organization\
for the systematic use of )Tj
T*
(violence by one class against the other, by one part of the population a\
gainst another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 328.42047 Tm
(\221State and Revolution\222 \(1919\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 307.50456 Tm
( While the State exists, there can be no freedom. When there is freed\
om there will be no State.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.67047 Tm
(\221State and Revolution\222 \(1919\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.75456 Tm
( What is to be done?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(Title of pamphlet \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.00456 Tm
( Who? Whom? We or they?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(Definition of his political theory, in Alan Bullock \221Hitler and Stali\
n\222 \(1991\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.25456 Tm
( A good man fallen among Fabians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(On George Bernard Shaw, in Arthur Ransome \221Six Weeks in Russia in 191\
9\222 \(1919\) \221Notes of Conversations )Tj
T*
(with Lenin\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( Liberty is precious\227so precious that it must be rationed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(In Sidney and Beatrice Webb \221Soviet Communism\222 \(1936\) p. 1036)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.4624 Tm
( 12.67 John Lennon 1940-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Imagine there\222s no heaven,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It\222s easy if you try,)Tj
T*
( No hell below us,)Tj
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( Above us only sky,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Imagine all the people)Tj
T*
( Living for today.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221Imagine\222 \(1971 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( Will the people in the cheaper seats clap your hands? All the rest o\
f you, if you\222ll just rattle )Tj
T*
(your jewellery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(At Royal Variety Performance, 4 November 1963, in R. Colman \221John Win\
ston Lennon\222 \(1984\) pt. 1, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( We\222re more popular than Jesus now; I don\222t know which will go \
first\227rock \222n\222 roll or )Tj
T*
(Christianity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221Evening Standard\222 4 March 1966 \(interview with Maureen Cleave\).\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.2124 Tm
( 12.68 John Lennon 1940-1980 and Paul McCartney 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Back in the USSR.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.75456 Tm
( For I don\222t care too much for money,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For money can\222t buy me love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.92047 Tm
(\221Can\222t Buy Me Love\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.00456 Tm
( I heard the news today, oh boy.)Tj
T*
( Four thousand holes in Blackburn Lancashire.)Tj
T*
( And though the holes were rather small,)Tj
T*
( They had to count them all.)Tj
T*
( Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall.)Tj
T*
( I\222d love to turn you on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.17047 Tm
(\221A Day in the Life\222 \(1967 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.25456 Tm
( Give peace a chance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.50456 Tm
( It\222s been a hard day\222s night,)Tj
T*
( And I\222ve been working like a dog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.67047 Tm
(\221A Hard Day\222s Night\222 \(1964 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.75456 Tm
( Strawberry fields forever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1967\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.00456 Tm
( She\222s got a ticket to ride, but she don\222t care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.17047 Tm
(\221Ticket to Ride\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.25456 Tm
( Will you still need me, will you still feed me,)Tj
T*
( When I\222m sixty four?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.42047 Tm
(\221When I\222m Sixty Four\222 \(1967 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.50456 Tm
( Oh I get by with a little help from my friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(\221With a Little Help From My Friends\222 \(1967 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.75456 Tm
( Yesterday, all my troubles seemed so far away,)Tj
T*
( Now it looks as though they\222re here to stay.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Oh I believe in yesterday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Yesterday\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 12.69 Dan Leno \(George Galvin\) 1860-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ah! what is man? Wherefore does he why? Whence did he whence? Whithe\
r is he withering?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221Dan Leno Hys Booke\222 \(1901\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 12.70 William Lenthall 1591-1662)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I have neither eye to see, nor tongue to speak here, but as the Hous\
e is pleased to direct me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(Said to Charles I on 4 January 1642, when asked if he saw any of the fiv\
e M.P.s whom the King had ordered )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to be arrested, in John Rushworth \221Historical Collections. The Third \
Part\222 vol. 2 \(1692\) p. 478)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 550.4624 Tm
( 12.71 Leonardo da Vinci 1452-1519)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whoever in discussion adduces authority uses not intellect but rathe\
r memory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 512.92047 Tm
(Edward McCurdy \(ed. and trans.\) \221Leonardo da Vinci\222s Notebooks\222\
\(1906\) bk. 1, p. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 492.00456 Tm
( Every man at three years old is half his height.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.17047 Tm
(Irma A. Richter \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Notebooks of Leonardo d\
a Vinci\222 \(World\222s Classics, 1952\) p. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 455.25456 Tm
( The poet ranks far below the painter in the representation of visibl\
e things, and far below the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(musician in that of invisible things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(Irma A. Richter \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Notebooks of Leonardo d\
a Vinci\222 \(World\222s Classics, 1952\) p. 198)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 400.50456 Tm
( Life well spent is long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(Irma A. Richter \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Notebooks of Leonardo d\
a Vinci\222 \(World\222s Classics, 1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.75456 Tm
( Iron rusts from disuse; stagnant water loses its purity and in cold \
weather becomes frozen; )Tj
T*
(even so does inaction sap the vigour of the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(Irma A. Richter \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Notebooks of Leonardo d\
a Vinci\222 \(World\222s Classics, 1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.00456 Tm
( [In Nature\222s] inventions nothing is lacking, and nothing is super\
fluous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.17047 Tm
(Irma A. Richter \(ed.\) \221Selections from the Notebooks of Leonardo d\
a Vinci\222 \(World\222s Classics, 1952\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 260.9624 Tm
( 12.72 Alan Jay Lerner 1918-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Thank heaven for little girls!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For little girls get bigger every day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(\221Gigi\222 \(1958\) \221Thank Heaven for Little Girls\222 \(music by F\
rederick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.50456 Tm
( I\222m getting married in the morning,)Tj
T*
( Ding! dong! the bells are gonna chime.)Tj
T*
( Pull out the stopper;)Tj
T*
( Let\222s have a whopper;)Tj
T*
( But get me to the church on time!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221Get Me to the Church on Time\222 \(mus\
ic by Frederick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( Why can\222t a woman be more like a man?)Tj
T*
( Men are so honest, so thoroughly square;)Tj
T*
( Eternally noble, historically fair;)Tj
ET
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( Who, when you win, will always give your back a pat.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Why can\222t a woman be like that?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221A Hymn to Him\222 \(music by Frederick\
Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( I\222ve grown accustomed to the trace)Tj
T*
( Of something in the air;)Tj
T*
( Accustomed to her face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221I\222ve Grown Accustomed to her Face\222\
\(music by Frederick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221The Rain in Spain\222 \(music by Frede\
rick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( In Hampshire, Hertfordshire, and Herefordshire,)Tj
T*
( Hurricanes hardly ever happen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221The Rain in Spain\222 \(music by Frede\
rick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( All I want is a room somewhere,)Tj
T*
( Far away from the cold night air,)Tj
T*
( With one enormous chair;)Tj
T*
( Oh, wouldn\222t it be loverly?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\) \221Wouldn\222t it be Loverly\222 \(music \
by Frederick Loewe\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( Oozing charm from every pore,)Tj
T*
( He oiled his way around the floor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221My Fair Lady\222 \(1956\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 375.9624 Tm
( 12.73 Doris Lessing 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s only one real sin, and that is to persuade oneself that t\
he second-best is anything but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the second-best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.42047 Tm
(\221The Golden Notebook\222 \(1962\) p. 554)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.50456 Tm
( When old settlers say \221One has to understand the country,\222 wha\
t they mean is, \221You have to get )Tj
T*
(used to our ideas about the native.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.67047 Tm
(\221The Grass is Singing\222 \(1950\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.75456 Tm
( When a white man in Africa by accident looks into the eyes of a nati\
ve and sees the human )Tj
T*
(being \(which it is his chief preoccupation to avoid\), his sense of gui\
lt, which he denies, fumes up )Tj
T*
(in resentment and he brings down the whip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.92047 Tm
(\221The Grass is Singing\222 \(1950\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.00456 Tm
( Pleasure resorts are like film stars and royalty...embarrassed by th\
e figures they cut in the )Tj
T*
(fantasies of people who have never met them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.17047 Tm
(\221The Habit of Loving\222 \(1957\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.25456 Tm
( What of October, that ambiguous month, the month of tension, the une\
ndurable month?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.42047 Tm
(\221The Martha Quest\222 \(1952\) pt. 4, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.50456 Tm
( What is charm then? The free giving of a grace, the spending of some\
thing given by nature in )Tj
T*
(her role of spendthrift...something extra, superfluous, unnecessary, ess\
entially a power thrown )Tj
T*
(away.)Tj
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(\221Particularly Cats\222 \(1967\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 12.74 G. E. Lessing 1729-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gestern liebt\222 ich,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Heute leid\222 ich,)Tj
T*
( Morgen sterb\222 ich:)Tj
T*
( Dennoch denk\222 ich)Tj
T*
( Heut und morgen)Tj
T*
( Gern an gestern.)Tj
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( Yesterday I loved, today I suffer, tomorrow I die: but I still think\
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(of yesterday.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Lied aus dem Spanischen\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Ein einziger dankbarer Gedanke gen Himmel ist das volkommenste Gebet\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One single grateful thought raised to heaven is the most perfect pra\
yer.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.17047 Tm
(\221Minna von Barnhelm\222 \(1767\) act 2, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.25456 Tm
( Wenn Gott in seiner Rechten alle Wahrheit und in seiner Linken den e\
inzigen, immer regen )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Trieb nach Warhheit, obgleich mit dem Zusatz, mich immer und ewig zu irr\
en, verschlossen )Tj
T*
(hielte and spr\344che zu mir: W\344hle! ich fiele ihm mit Demut in seine\
Linke und sagte: Vater, gieb! )Tj
T*
(Die reine Warhheit ist ja doch nur f\374r Dich allein.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If God were to hold out enclosed in His right hand all Truth, and in\
His left hand just the active )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(search for Truth, though with the condition that I should ever err there\
in, and should say to me: )Tj
T*
(Choose! I should humbly take His left hand and say: Father! Give me this\
one; absolute Truth )Tj
T*
(belongs to Thee alone.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.67047 Tm
(\221Wolfenb\374ttler Fragmente\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 298.4624 Tm
( 12.75 Winifred Mary Letts 1882-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I saw the spires of Oxford)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As I was passing by,)Tj
T*
( The grey spires of Oxford)Tj
T*
( Against a pearl-grey sky;)Tj
T*
( My heart was with the Oxford men)Tj
T*
( Who went abroad to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221The Spires of Oxford\222 \(1916\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 138.7124 Tm
( 12.76 Ros Levenstein)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m only here for the beer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(Slogan for Double Diamond beer, 1971 onwards. Nigel Rees \221Slogans\222\
\(1982\) p. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 68.9624 Tm
( 12.77 Ada Leverson 1865-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( He seemed at ease and to have the look of the last gentleman in Euro\
pe.)Tj
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(On Oscar Wilde, in \221Letters to the Sphinx\222 \(1930\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( You don\222t know a woman until you have had a letter from her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Tenterhooks\222 \(1912\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( \221No hurry, no hurry,\222 said Sir James, with that air of self-de\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Twelfth Hour\222 ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Before he left, Aunt William pressed a sovereign into his hand, as i\
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T*
(He, on his side, took it as though it were a doctor\222s fee, and both i\
gnored the transaction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Twelfth Hour\222 \(1907\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 12.78 Bernard Levin 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Paul Getty...had always been vastly, immeasurably wealthy, and yet w\
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0 -1.2 TD
(man who cannot quite remember whether he remembered to turn the gas off \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221The Pendulum Years\222 \(1970\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( In every age of transition men are never so firmly bound to one way \
of life as when they are )Tj
T*
(about to abandon it, so that fanaticism and intolerance reach their most\
intense forms before )Tj
T*
(tolerance and mutual acceptance come to be the natural order of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Pendulum Years\222 \(1970\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Between them, then, the Walrus and Carpenter, they divided up the Si\
xties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(On the Harolds, Macmillan and Wilson, in \221The Pendulum Years\222 \(19\
70\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Whom the mad would destroy, they first make gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(Of Mao Tse-Tung in 1967; Levin quoting himself in \221The Times\222 21 S\
eptember 1987.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( A stag at bay with the mentality of a fox at large.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(On Harold Macmillan; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 305.9624 Tm
( 12.79 Duc de L\350vis 1764-1830)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Noblesse oblige.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nobility has its obligations.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Maximes et R\350flexions\222 \(1812 ed.\) \221Morale: Maximes et Pr\350\
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( Gouverner, c\222est choisir.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( To govern is to choose.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Maximes et R\350flexions\222 \(1812 ed.\) \221Politique: Maximes de \
Politique\222 no. 19)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 155.9624 Tm
( 12.80 Claude L\350vi-Strauss 1908\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La langue est une raison humaine qui a ses raisons, et que l\222homm\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Language is a form of human reason, and has its reasons which are un\
known to man.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221La Pens\350e sauvage\222 \(1962\) ch. 9.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 64.4624 Tm
( 12.81 G. H. Lewes \(George Henry Lewes\) 1817-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Murder, like talent, seems occasionally to run in families.)Tj
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(\221The Physiology of Common Life\222 \(1859\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The pen, in our age, weighs heavier in the social scale than the swo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Ranthorpe\222 \(1847\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Many a genius has been slow of growth. Oaks that flourish for a thou\
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0 -1.2 TD
(up into beauty like a reed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221A Spanish Drama\222 ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 631.4624 Tm
( 12.82 C. Day Lewis)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See C. Day-Lewis \(4.21\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 12.83 C. S. Lewis 1898-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have trained them [men] to think of the Future as a promised land\
which favoured heroes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attain\227not as something which everyone reaches at the rate of sixty m\
inutes an hour, whatever )Tj
T*
(he does, whoever he is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221The Screwtape Letters\222 \(1942\) no. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( She\222s the sort of woman who lives for others\227you can always te\
ll the others by their hunted )Tj
T*
(expression.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Screwtape Letters\222 \(1942\) no. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Term, holidays, term, holidays, till we leave school, and then work,\
work, work till we die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Suprised by Joy\222 \(1955\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Leavis demands moral earnestness; I prefer morality...I\222d sooner \
live among people who don\222t )Tj
T*
(cheat at cards than among people who are earnest about not cheating at c\
ards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(In Brian Aldiss and Kingsley Amis \221Spectrum IV\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( Courage is not simply one of the virtues but the form of every virtu\
e at the testing point, which )Tj
T*
(means at the point of highest reality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(In Cyril Connolly \221The Unquiet Grave\222 \(1944\) ch. 31)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.9624 Tm
( 12.84 Esther Lewis \(later Clark\) fl. 1747-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Are simple women only fit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To dress, to darn, to flower, or knit,)Tj
T*
( To mind the distaff, or the spit?)Tj
T*
( Why are the needle and the pen)Tj
T*
( Thought incompatible by men?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221A Mirror for Detractors\222 \(1754\) l. 146)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.2124 Tm
( 12.85 Sir George Cornewall Lewis 1806-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life would be tolerable but for its amusements.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Dictionary of National Biography\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 58.4624 Tm
( 12.86 John Spedan Lewis 1885-1963)Tj
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( Never knowingly undersold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Slogan \(c. 1920\) of the John Lewis Partnership, in \221Partnership for\
All\222 \(1948\) ch. 29)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 12.87 Wyndham Lewis \(Percy Wyndham Lewis\) 1882-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Those prosperous mountebanks who alternately imitate and mock at and\
traduce those figures )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(they at once admire and hate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(Defining the eponymous Apes of God \(1930\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( Gertrude Stein\222s prose-song is a cold, black suet-pudding...Cut i\
t at any point, it is the same )Tj
T*
(thing...all fat, without nerve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Time and Western Man\222 \(1927\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( Angels in jumpers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(Describing the figures in Stanley Spencer\222s paintings; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.7124 Tm
( 12.88 Sam M. Lewis 1885-1959 and Joe Young 1889-1939)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How \222ya gonna keep \222em down on the farm \(after they\222ve see\
n Paree\)?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( Mammy, Mammy, look at me. Don\222t you know me? I\222m your little b\
aby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221My Mammy\222 \(1920 song\); sung by Al Jolson)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.2124 Tm
( 12.89 Sinclair Lewis 1885-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Our American professors like their literature clear and cold and pur\
e and very dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(\221The American Fear of Literature\222 \(Nobel Prize Address, 12 Decemb\
er 1930\), in H. Frenz \221Literature 1901-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(67\222 \(1969\) p. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 345.75456 Tm
( To George F. Babbitt, as to most prosperous citizens of Zenith, his \
motor car was poetry and )Tj
T*
(tragedy, love and heroism. The office was his pirate ship but the car hi\
s perilous excursion ashore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(\221Babbitt\222 \(1922\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.00456 Tm
( In other countries, art and literature are left to a lot of shabby b\
ums living in attics and feeding )Tj
T*
(on booze and spaghetti, but in America the successful writer or picture-\
painter is )Tj
T*
(indistinguishable from any other decent business man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.17047 Tm
(\221Babbitt\222 \(1922\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 218.25456 Tm
( She did her work with the thoroughness of a mind that reveres detail\
s and never quite )Tj
T*
(understands them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(\221Babbitt\222 \(1922\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( It can\222t happen here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1935\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 115.4624 Tm
( 12.90 Robert Ley 1890-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Kraft durch Freude.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Strength through joy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(German Labour Front slogan, in \221The Times\222 30 November 1933, p. 13\
)Tj
ET
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( 12.91 George Leybourne d. 1884)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O he flies through the air with the greatest of ease,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This daring young man on the flying trapeze.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221The Daring Young Man\222 \(1868 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 12.92 Liberace \(Wladziu Valentino Liberace\) 1919-87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He [Liberace] begins to belabour the critics announcing that he does\
n\222t mind what they say but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that poor George [his brother] \221cried all the way to the bank\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Collier\222s\222 17 September 1954. Liberace\222s \221Autobiography\222\
\(1973\) ch. 2: \221When the reviews are bad I tell my )Tj
T*
(staff that they can join me as I cry all the way to the bank\222\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 562.4624 Tm
( 12.93 Georg Christoph Lichtenberg 1742-99)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The journalists have constructed for themselves a little wooden chap\
el, which they also call the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Temple of Fame, in which they put up and take down portraits all day lon\
g and make such a )Tj
T*
(hammering you can\222t hear yourself speak.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 18 November 1990, p. 20)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 456.7124 Tm
( 12.94 Charles-Joseph, Prince de Ligne 1735-1814)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Le congr\351s ne marche pas, il danse.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The Congress makes no progress; it dances.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(In Auguste de la Garde-Chambonas \221Souvenirs du Congr\351s de Vienne\222\
\(1820\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.2124 Tm
( 12.95 Beatrice Lillie 1894-1989)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never darken my Dior again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(To a waiter, who had spilled soup down her neck, in \221Every Other Inch\
a Lady\222 \(1973\) ch. 14)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 295.4624 Tm
( 12.96 George Lillo 1693-1739)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( There\222s sure no passion in the human soul,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But finds its food in music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 239.92047 Tm
(\221The Fatal Curiosity\222 \(1736\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 207.7124 Tm
( 12.97 Abraham Lincoln 1809-1865)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The ballot is stronger than the bullet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(Speech, 19 May 1856)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( \221A house divided against itself cannot stand.\222 I believe this \
government cannot endure )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(permanently, half slave and half free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(Speech, 16 June 1858.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people\
all the time, but you can )Tj
T*
(not fool all the people all of the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Attributed, in a speech at Clinton, 8 September 1858: N. W. Stephenson \
\221Autobiography of A. )Tj
T*
(Lincoln\222 \(1927\). Attributed also to Phineas Barnum)Tj
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( What is conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried, agai\
nst the new and untried?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech, 27 February 1860)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Let us have faith that right makes might; and in that faith let us t\
o the end, dare to do our duty )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as we understand it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Speech, 27 February 1860)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I take the official oath to-day with no mental reservations, and wit\
h no purpose to construe the )Tj
T*
(Constitution or laws by any hypercritical rules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1861)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhab\
it it. Whenever they shall )Tj
T*
(grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise their constitut\
ional right of amending )Tj
T*
(it, or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1861)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history...No personal significance\
or insignificance can )Tj
T*
(spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass will l\
ight us down in honour or )Tj
T*
(dishonour to the last generation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(Annual Message to Congress, 1 December 1862)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free\227hon\
ourable alike in what we )Tj
T*
(give and what we preserve. We shall nobly save or meanly lose the last, \
best hope of earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(Annual Message to Congress, 1 December 1862)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of\
war may speedily pass )Tj
T*
(away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by t\
he bondsman\222s two hundred )Tj
T*
(and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop o\
f blood drawn with the lash )Tj
T*
(shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousan\
d years ago, so still it )Tj
T*
(must be said, \221The judgements of the Lord are true and righteous alto\
gether.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(Second Inaugural Address, 4 March 1865)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the \
right, as God gives us to see )Tj
T*
(the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in: to bind up the\
nation\222s wounds; to care for )Tj
T*
(him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan, t\
o do all which may )Tj
T*
(achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with a\
ll nations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(Second Inaugural Address, 4 March 1865)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this co\
ntinent a new nation, )Tj
T*
(conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are \
created equal...In a larger )Tj
T*
(sense we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this gr\
ound. The brave men, )Tj
T*
(living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our p\
ower to add or detract. )Tj
T*
(The world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here, but it \
can never forget what they )Tj
T*
(did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the u\
nfinished work which they who )Tj
T*
(fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be h\
ere dedicated to the great )Tj
T*
(task remaining before us, that from these honoured dead we take increase\
d devotion to that cause )Tj
T*
(for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here high\
ly resolve that the dead )Tj
T*
(shall not have died in vain, that this nation, under God, shall have a n\
ew birth of freedom; and )Tj
ET
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(that government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall \
not perish from the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Address at the Dedication of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, 19 Nov\
ember 1863, as reported the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(following day; the Lincoln Memorial inscription reads \221by the people,\
for the people\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( I think the necessity of being ready increases.\227Look to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(The whole of a letter to Governor Andrew Curtin of Pennsylvania, 8 April\
1861)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union...If I cou\
ld save the Union without )Tj
T*
(freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all \
the slaves, I would do it; and )Tj
T*
(if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would als\
o do that...I have here )Tj
T*
(stated my purpose according to my views of official duty and I intend no\
modification of my oft-)Tj
T*
(expressed personal wish that all men everywhere could be free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(Letter to Horace Greeley, 22 August 1862)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that even\
ts have controlled me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Letter to A. G. Hodges, 4 April 1864)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( As President, I have no eyes but constitutional eyes; I cannot see y\
ou.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(Attributed reply to the South Carolina Commissioners.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( The Lord prefers common-looking people. That is why he makes so many\
of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(In James Morgan \221Our President\222 ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( It is not best to swap horses while crossing the river.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(Reply to National Union League, 9 June 1864, in J. G. Nicolay and J. Hay\
\221Abraham Lincoln\222 bk. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort of thing \
they like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(Judgement on a book, in G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollectio\
ns\222 \(1898\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( So you\222re the little woman who wrote the book that made this grea\
t war!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(On meeting Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of \221Uncle Tom\222s Cabin\222\
\(1852\); in Carl Sandburg \221Abraham )Tj
T*
(Lincoln: The War Years\222 vol. 2, ch. 39)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 308.9624 Tm
( 12.98 R. M. Lindner 1914-56)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rebel without a cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1944\) and film \(1955\) starring James Dean)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 239.2124 Tm
( 12.99 Vachel Lindsay 1879-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Then I saw the Congo, creeping through the black,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cutting through the forest with a golden track.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(\221The Congo\222 pt. 1 \(1914\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.75456 Tm
( Booth led boldly with his big brass drum\227)Tj
T*
( \(Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?\))Tj
T*
( The Saints smiled gravely and they said: \221He\222s come.\222)Tj
T*
( \(Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?\))Tj
T*
( Walking Lepers followed, rank on rank,)Tj
T*
( Lurching bravos from the ditches dank,)Tj
T*
( Drabs from the alleyways and drug fiends pale\227)Tj
ET
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( Minds still passion-ridden, soul-power frail:\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Vermin-eaten saints with moldy breath,)Tj
T*
( Unwashed legions with the ways of Death\227)Tj
T*
( \(Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221General William Booth Enters into Heaven\222 \(1913\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Booth died blind and still by faith he trod,)Tj
T*
( Eyes still dazzled by the ways of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221General William Booth Enters into Heaven\222 \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.2124 Tm
( 12.100 Eric Linklater 1899-1974)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221There won\222t be any revolution in America,\222 said Isadore. N\
ikitin agreed. \221The people are all )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(too clean. They spend all their time changing their shirts and washing t\
hemselves. You can\222t feel )Tj
T*
(fierce and revolutionary in a bathroom.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.67047 Tm
(\221Juan in America\222 \(1931\) bk. 5, pt. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 490.4624 Tm
( 12.101 Art Linkletter 1912\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The four stages of man are infancy, childhood, adolescence and obsol\
escence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Misinformation\222 \(1965\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 420.7124 Tm
( 12.102 George Linley 1798-1865)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Among our ancient mountains,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And from our lovely vales,)Tj
T*
( Oh, let the prayer re-echo:)Tj
T*
( \221God bless the Prince of Wales!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.17047 Tm
(\221God Bless the Prince of Wales\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 296.9624 Tm
( 12.103 Walter Lippmann 1889-1974)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mr Coolidge\222s genius for inactivity is developed to a very high p\
oint. It is far from being an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(indolent activity. It is a grim, determined, alert inactivity which keep\
s Mr Coolidge occupied )Tj
T*
(constantly. Nobody has ever worked harder at inactivity, with such force\
of character, with such )Tj
T*
(unremitting attention to detail, with such conscientious devotion to the\
task.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(\221Men of Destiny\222 \(1927\) p. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.2124 Tm
( 12.104 Joan Littlewood and Charles Chilton 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh what a lovely war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(Title of stage show \(1963\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 103.4624 Tm
( 12.105 Maxim Litvinov 1876-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Peace is indivisible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(Note to the Allies, 25 February 1920, in A. U. Pope \221Maxim Litvinoff\222\
\(1943\) p. 234)Tj
ET
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( 12.106 Livy \(Titus Livius\) 59 B.C.\227AD 17)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Vae victis.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Down with the defeated!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 693.67047 Tm
(The cry \(already proverbial\) of the Gallic King, Brennus, on capturing\
Rome \(390 B.C.\), in \221Ab Urbe )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Condita\222 bk. 5, ch. 48, sect. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.75456 Tm
( Pugna magna victi sumus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( In a battle, a big one, we were the defeated!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 620.17047 Tm
(The announcement of the Roman disaster in Hannibal\222s ambush at Lake T\
rasimene \(217 B.C.\), in \221Ab Urbe )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Condita\222 bk. 22, ch. 7, sect. 8)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 572.9624 Tm
( 12.107 Richard Llewellyn \(Richard Dafydd Vivian Llewellyn Lloyd\) 1907\
-83)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How green was my valley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1939\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 503.2124 Tm
( 12.108 Robert Lloyd)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Turn parson, Colman, that\222s the way to thrive;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Your parsons are the happiest men alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221The Law-Student\222 \(1762\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Alone from Jargon born to rescue Law,)Tj
T*
( From precedent, grave hum, and formal saw!)Tj
T*
( To strip chicanery of its vain pretence,)Tj
T*
( And marry Common Law to Common Sense!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Law-Student\222 \(1762\) \(on Lord Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice\
, 1756-88\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( True Genius, like Armida\222s wand,)Tj
T*
( Can raise the spring from barren land.)Tj
T*
( While all the art of Imitation,)Tj
T*
( Is pilf\222ring from the first creation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Shakespeare\222 \(1762\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.9624 Tm
( 12.109 David Lloyd George \(Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor\) 1863-1945)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The leal and trusty mastiff which is to watch over our interests, bu\
t which runs away at the first )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(snarl of the trade unions....A mastiff? It is the right hon. Gentleman\222\
s poodle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(On the House of Lords and Lord Balfour, in \221Hansard\222 26 June 1907,\
col. 1429)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( A fully-equipped duke costs as much to keep up as two Dreadnoughts; \
and dukes are just as )Tj
T*
(great a terror and they last longer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(Speech at Newcastle, 9 October 1909, in \221The Times\222 11 October 190\
9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( The great peaks of honour we had forgotten\227Duty, Patriotism, and\227\
clad in glittering white\227)Tj
T*
(the great pinnacle of Sacrifice, pointing like a rugged finger to Heaven\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(Speech at Queen\222s Hall, London, 19 September 1914, in \221The Times\222\
20 September 1914)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.00456 Tm
( At eleven o\222clock this morning came to an end the cruellest and m\
ost terrible war that has ever )Tj
ET
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(scourged mankind. I hope we may say that thus, this fateful morning, cam\
e to an end all wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In \221Hansard\222 11 November 1918, col. 2463.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live i\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Speech at Wolverhampton, 23 November 1918, in \221The Times\222 25 Novem\
ber 1918)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( M. Clemenceau...is one of the greatest living orators, but he knows \
that the finest eloquence is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that which gets things done and the worst is that which delays them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Speech at Paris Peace Conference, 18 January 1919, in \221The Times\222 \
20 January 1919)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( A politician was a person with whose politics you did not agree. Whe\
n you did agree, he was a )Tj
T*
(statesman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Speech at Central Hall, Westminster, 2 July 1935, in \221The Times\222 3\
July 1935)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Negotiating with de Valera...is like trying to pick up mercury with \
a fork.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(In M. J. MacManus \221Eamon de Valera\222 \(1944\) ch. 6 \(to which de V\
alera replied, \221Why doesn\222t he use a )Tj
T*
(spoon?\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( The world is becoming like a lunatic asylum run by lunatics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 8 January 1933.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( Sufficient conscience to bother him, but not sufficient to keep him \
straight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(On Ramsay MacDonald, in A. J. Sylvester \221Life with Lloyd George\222 \(\
1975\) p. 216)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 433.4624 Tm
( 12.110 John Locke 1632-1704)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without any \
other reason but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(because they are not already common.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) dedicatory epis\
tle)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.00456 Tm
( The commonwealth of learning is not at this time without master-buil\
ders, whose mighty )Tj
T*
(designs, in advancing the sciences, will leave lasting monuments to the \
admiration of posterity...)Tj
T*
(in an age that produces such masters as the great Huygenius and the inco\
mparable Mr )Tj
T*
(Newton...\222tis ambition enough to be employed as an under-labourer in \
clearing ground a little, )Tj
T*
(and removing some of the rubbish that lies in the way of knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) epistle to the \
reader)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( General propositions are seldom mentioned in the huts of Indians: mu\
ch less are they to found )Tj
T*
(in the thoughts of children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 1, ch. 2, s\
ect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( Nature never makes excellent things for mean or no uses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 177.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 2, ch. 1, s\
ect. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( No man\222s knowledge here can go beyond his experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 2, ch. 1, s\
ect. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( It is one thing to show a man that he is in error, and another to pu\
t him in possession of truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 4, ch. 7, s\
ect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( There are very few lovers of truth, for truth-sake, even among those\
who persuade themselves )Tj
T*
(that they are so. How a man may know, whether he be so, in earnest, is w\
orth enquiry; and I )Tj
T*
(think, there is this one unerring mark of it, viz. the not entertaining \
any proposition with greater )Tj
ET
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(assurance than the proof it is built on will warrant. Whoever goes beyon\
d this measure of assent, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(it is plain, receives not truth in the love of it, loves not truth for t\
ruth-sake, but for some other by-)Tj
T*
(end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 4, ch. 19, \
sect. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Reason is natural revelation, whereby the eternal Father of light, a\
nd fountain of all knowledge )Tj
T*
(communicates to mankind that portion of truth which he has laid within t\
he reach of their natural )Tj
T*
(faculties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 4, ch. 19, \
sect. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Crooked things may be as stiff and unflexible as straight: and men m\
ay be as positive in error )Tj
T*
(as in truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 4, ch. 19, \
sect. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( All men are liable to error; and most men are, in many points, by pa\
ssion or interest, under )Tj
T*
(temptation to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay concerning Human Understanding\222 \(1690\) bk. 4, ch. 20, \
sect. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The great and chief end...of men uniting into commonwealths, and put\
ting themselves under )Tj
T*
(government, is the preservation of their property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Whatsoever...[man] removes out of the state that nature hath provide\
d and left it in, he hath )Tj
T*
(mixed his labour with, and joined to it something that is his own, and t\
hereby makes it his )Tj
T*
(property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 5, sect. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( [That] ill deserves the name of confinement which hedges us in only \
from bogs and precipices. )Tj
T*
(So that, however it may be mistaken, the end of law is, not to abolish o\
r restrain, but to preserve )Tj
T*
(and enlarge freedom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 6, sect. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Man...hath by nature a power...to preserve his property\227that is, \
his life, liberty, and estate\227)Tj
T*
(against the injuries and attempts of other men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 7, sect. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Man being...by nature all free, equal, and independent, no one can b\
e put out of this estate, and )Tj
T*
(subjected to the political power of another, without his own consent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 8, sect. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( The only way by which any one divests himself of his natural liberty\
and puts on the bonds of )Tj
T*
(civil society is by agreeing with other men to join and unite into a com\
munity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 8, sect. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( This power to act according to discretion for the public good, witho\
ut the prescription of the )Tj
T*
(law, and sometimes even against it, is that which is called prerogative.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Second Treatise of Civil Government\222 \(1690\) ch. 14, sect. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( The rod, which is the only instrument of government that tutors gene\
rally know, or ever think )Tj
T*
(of, is the most unfit of any to be used in education.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Some Thoughts Concerning Education\222 \(5th ed., 1705\) sect. 47)Tj
ET
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( You would think him a very foolish fellow, that should not value a v\
irtuous, or a wise man, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(infinitely before a great scholar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Some Thoughts Concerning Education\222 \(5th ed., 1705\) sect. 147)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 12.111 Frederick Locker-Lampson 1821-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The world\222s as ugly, ay, as sin,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And almost as delightful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221The Jester\222s Plea\222 \(1868\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( And many are afraid of God\227)Tj
T*
( And more of Mrs Grundy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221The Jester\222s Plea\222 \(1868\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Some men are good for righting wrongs,\227)Tj
T*
( And some for writing verses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221The Jester\222s Plea\222 \(1868\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 12.112 John Gibson Lockhart 1794-1854)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is a better and a wiser thing to be a starved apothecary than a s\
tarved poet; so back to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shop Mr John, back to \221plasters, pills, and ointment boxes.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(Reviewing Keats Endymion in \221Blackwood\222s Edinburgh Magazine\222 Au\
gust 1818)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( Barring drink and the girls, I ne\222er heard of a sin:)Tj
T*
( Many worse, better few, than bright, broken Maginn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Epitaph for William Maginn \(1794-1842\)\222, in William Maginn \221\
Miscellanies\222 \(1885\) vol. 1, p. xviii)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Here lies that peerless paper peer Lord Peter,)Tj
T*
( Who broke the laws of God and man and metre.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(Epitaph for Patrick \(\221Peter\222\), Lord Robertson, in \221The Journa\
l of Sir Walter Scott\222 \(1890\) vol. 1, p. 259, n. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 292.4624 Tm
( 12.113 Francis Lockier 1667-1740)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In all my travels I never met with any one Scotchman but what was a \
man of sense. I believe )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(everybody of that country that has any, leaves it as fast as they can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(In Joseph Spence \221Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters, of Books a\
nd Men\222 \(1820\) sect. 2, p. 72)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 204.7124 Tm
( 12.114 David Lodge 1935\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Literature is mostly about having sex and not much about having chil\
dren. Life is the other )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(way round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221The British Museum is Falling Down\222 \(1965\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.25456 Tm
( Four times, under our educational rules, the human pack is shuffled \
and cut\227at eleven-plus, )Tj
T*
(sixteen-plus, eighteen-plus and twenty-plus\227and happy is he who comes\
top of the deck on each )Tj
T*
(occasion, but especially the last. This is called Finals, the very name \
of which implies that )Tj
T*
(nothing of importance can happen after it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(\221Changing Places\222 \(1975\) ch. 1)Tj
ET
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( The British postgraduate student is a lonely forlorn soul, uncertain\
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0 -1.2 TD
(whom he is trying to please\227you may recognize him...by the glazed loo\
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T*
(stare of the shell-shocked veteran for whom nothing has been real since \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Changing Places\222 \(1975\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( He understood...Walt Whitman who laid end to end words never seen in\
each other\222s company )Tj
T*
(before outside of a dictionary, and Herman Melville who split the atom o\
f the traditional novel in )Tj
T*
(the effort to make whaling a universal metaphor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Changing Places\222 \(1975\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.2124 Tm
( 12.115 Thomas Lodge c.1558-1625)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love, in my bosom, like a bee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Doth suck his sweet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221Love, In My Bosom\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( Heigh ho, would she were mine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Rosalind\222s Description\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 12.116 Frank Loesser 1910-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See what the boys in the back room will have)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And tell them I\222m having the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Boys in the Back Room\222 \(1939 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( Isn\222t it grand! Isn\222t it fine! Look at the cut, the style, the\
line!)Tj
T*
( The suit of clothes is altogether, but altogether its altogether)Tj
T*
( The most remarkable suit of clothes that I have ever seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221The King\222s New Clothes\222 \(1952 song\), from the film \221Hans \
Christian Andersen\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( I\222d love to get you)Tj
T*
( On a slow boat to China,)Tj
T*
( All to myself, alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221Slow Boat to China\222 \(1948 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 238.4624 Tm
( 12.117 Friedrich von Logau 1604-55)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gottes M\374hlen mahlen langsam, mahlen aber trefflich klein;)Tj
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( Ob aus Langmut Er sich s\344umet, bringt mit Sch\344rf\222 Er alles \
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small\
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0 -1.2 TD
( Though with patience He stands waiting, with exactness grinds He all\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.17047 Tm
(\221Sinnegedichte\222 \(1654\) Desz Dritten Tausend, Andres Hundert, no.\
24 \(translation by Longfellow\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 110.9624 Tm
( 12.118 Jack London \(John Griffith London\) 1876-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The call of the wild.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1903\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.2124 Tm
( 12.119 Huey Long 1893-1935)Tj
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( The time has come for all good men to rise above principle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.67047 Tm
(In T. Harry Williams \221Huey Long\222 \(1969\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 712.75456 Tm
( Hell, I was born barefoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.92047 Tm
(To a rival candidate, who had claimed he never wore shoes until he was e\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Long\222 \(1969\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 649.7124 Tm
( 12.120 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I shot an arrow into the air,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It fell to earth, I knew not where.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.17047 Tm
(\221The Arrow and the Song\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.25456 Tm
( Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State!)Tj
T*
( Sail on, O Union, strong and great!)Tj
T*
( Humanity with all its fears,)Tj
T*
( With all the hopes of future years,)Tj
T*
( Is hanging breathless on thy fate!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.42047 Tm
(\221The Building of the Ship\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.50456 Tm
( Ye are better than all the ballads)Tj
T*
( That ever were sung or said;)Tj
T*
( For ye are living poems,)Tj
T*
( And all the rest are dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.67047 Tm
(\221Children\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.75456 Tm
( Between the dark and the daylight,)Tj
T*
( When the night is beginning to lower,)Tj
T*
( Comes a pause in the day\222s occupations,)Tj
T*
( That is known as the Children\222s Hour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.92047 Tm
(\221The Children\222s Hour\222 \(1859\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.00456 Tm
( The cares that infest the day)Tj
T*
( Shall fold their tents, like the Arabs,)Tj
T*
( And as silently steal away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.17047 Tm
(\221The Day is Done\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.25456 Tm
( If you would hit the mark, you must aim a little above it;)Tj
T*
( Every arrow that flies feels the attraction of earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.42047 Tm
(\221Elegiac Verse\222 \(1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.50456 Tm
( This is the forest primeval.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.67047 Tm
(\221Evangeline\222 \(1847\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.75456 Tm
( Sorrow and silence are strong, and patient endurance is godlike.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
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( \221Evangeline\222 \(1847\) pt. 2, l. 60)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The shades of night were falling fast,)Tj
T*
( As through an Alpine village passed)Tj
T*
( A youth, who bore, \222mid snow and ice,)Tj
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( Excelsior!)Tj
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(\221Excelsior\222 \(1841\))Tj
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T*
( \221Dark lowers the tempest overhead.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Excelsior\222 \(1841\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( A traveller, by the faithful hound,)Tj
T*
( Half-buried in the snow was found.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Excelsior\222 \(1841\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Giotto\222s tower,)Tj
T*
( The lily of Florence blossoming in stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Giotto\222s Tower\222 \(1866\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I like that ancient Saxon phrase, which calls)Tj
T*
( The burial-ground God\222s-Acre!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221God\222s-Acre\222 \(1841\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( The holiest of all holidays are those)Tj
T*
( Kept by ourselves in silence and apart;)Tj
T*
( The secret anniversaries of the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Holidays\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( The heights by great men reached and kept)Tj
T*
( Were not attained by sudden flight,)Tj
T*
( But they, while their companions slept,)Tj
T*
( Were toiling upward in the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Ladder of Saint Augustine\222 \(1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Standing, with reluctant feet,)Tj
T*
( Where the brook and river meet,)Tj
T*
( Womanhood and childhood fleet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Maidenhood\222 \(1841\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( The men that women marry,)Tj
T*
( And why they marry them, will always be)Tj
T*
( A marvel and a mystery to the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Michael Angelo\222 \(1883\) pt. 1, sect. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( I remember the black wharves and the slips,)Tj
T*
( And the sea-rides tossing free;)Tj
T*
( And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,)Tj
T*
( And the beauty and mystery of the ships,)Tj
T*
( And the magic of the sea.)Tj
T*
( And the voice of that wayward song)Tj
T*
( Is singing and saying still:)Tj
T*
( \221A boy\222s will is the wind\222s will)Tj
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( And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.\222)Tj
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(\221My Lost Youth\222 \(1858\))Tj
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( Emigravit is the inscription on the tombstone where he lies;)Tj
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( Dead he is not, but departed,\227for the artist never dies.)Tj
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(\221Nuremberg\222 \(1844\) \(on Albrecht D\374rer\))Tj
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( Not in the clamour of the crowded street,)Tj
T*
( Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng,)Tj
T*
( But in ourselves, are triumph and defeat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Poets\222 \(1876\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Tell me not, in mournful numbers,)Tj
T*
( Life is but an empty dream!)Tj
T*
( For the soul is dead that slumbers,)Tj
T*
( And things are not what they seem.)Tj
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( Life is real! Life is earnest!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Dust thou art, to dust returnest,)Tj
T*
( Was not spoken of the soul.)Tj
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(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\).)Tj
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( Art is long, and Time is fleeting,)Tj
T*
( And our hearts, though stout and brave,)Tj
T*
( Still, like muffled drums, are beating)Tj
T*
( Funeral marches to the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Trust no Future, howe\222er pleasant!)Tj
T*
( Let the dead Past bury its dead!)Tj
T*
( Act,\227act in the living Present!)Tj
T*
( Heart within, and God o\222erhead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Lives of great men all remind us)Tj
T*
( We can make our lives sublime,)Tj
T*
( And, departing, leave behind us)Tj
T*
( Footprints on the sands of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Let us, then, be up and doing,)Tj
T*
( With a heart for any fate;)Tj
T*
( Still achieving, still pursuing,)Tj
T*
( Learn to labour and to wait.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( There is no flock, however watched and tended,)Tj
T*
( But one dead lamb is there!)Tj
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( There is no fireside, howsoe\222er defended,)Tj
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( But has one vacant chair!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Psalm of Life\222 \(1838\))Tj
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( A Lady with a Lamp shall stand)Tj
T*
( In the great history of the land,)Tj
T*
( A noble type of good,)Tj
T*
( Heroic womanhood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Santa Filomena\222 \(1857\) \(on Florence Nightingale\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( The forests, with their myriad tongues,)Tj
T*
( Shouted of liberty;)Tj
T*
( And the Blast of the Desert cried aloud,)Tj
T*
( With a voice so wild and free,)Tj
T*
( That he started in his sleep and smiled)Tj
T*
( At their tempestuous glee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Slave\222s Dream\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( By the shore of Gitche Gumee,)Tj
T*
( By the shining Big-Sea-Water,)Tj
T*
( Stood the wigwam of Nokomis,)Tj
T*
( Daughter of the Moon, Nokomis.)Tj
T*
( Dark behind it rose the forest,)Tj
T*
( Rose the black and gloomy pine-trees,)Tj
T*
( Rose the firs with cones upon them;)Tj
T*
( Bright before it beat the water,)Tj
T*
( Beat the clear and sunny water,)Tj
T*
( Beat the shining Big-Sea-Water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Song of Hiawatha\222 \(1855\) \221Hiawatha\222s Childhood\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( From the waterfall he named her,)Tj
T*
( Minnehaha, Laughing Water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Song of Hiawatha\222 \(1855\) \221Hiawatha and Mudjekeewis\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Onaway! Awake, beloved!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221The Song of Hiawatha\222 \(1855\) \221Hiawatha\222s Wedding-feast\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( He is dead, the sweet musician!)Tj
T*
( He the sweetest of all singers!)Tj
T*
( He has gone from us for ever,)Tj
T*
( He has moved a little nearer)Tj
T*
( To the Master of all music,)Tj
T*
( To the Master of all singing!)Tj
T*
( O my brother, Chibiabos!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221The Song of Hiawatha\222 \(1855\) 15 \221Hiawatha\222s Lamentation\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Listen, my children, and you shall hear)Tj
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( Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( On the eighteenth of April in Seventy-five.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Tales of a Wayside Inn\222 pt. 1 \(1863\) \221The Landlord\222s Tale\
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( A hurry of hoofs in a village street,)Tj
T*
( A shape in the moonlight, a bulk in the dark,)Tj
T*
( And beneath, from the pebbles, in passing, a spark)Tj
T*
( Struck out from a steed flying fearless and fleet:)Tj
T*
( That was all! And yet, through the gloom and the light,)Tj
T*
( The fate of a nation was riding that night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Tales of a Wayside Inn\222 pt. 1 \(1863\) \221The Landlord\222s Tale\
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( Ships that pass in the night, and speak each other in passing;)Tj
T*
( Only a signal shown and a distant voice in the darkness;)Tj
T*
( So on the ocean of life we pass and speak one another,)Tj
T*
( Only a look and a voice; then darkness again and a silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Tales of a Wayside Inn\222 pt. 3 \(1874\) \221The Theologian\222s Ta\
le: Elizabeth\222 pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Under a spreading chestnut tree)Tj
T*
( The village smithy stands;)Tj
T*
( The smith, a mighty man is he,)Tj
T*
( With large and sinewy hands;)Tj
T*
( And the muscles of his brawny arms)Tj
T*
( Are strong as iron bands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Village Blacksmith\222 \(1839\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( It was the schooner Hesperus,)Tj
T*
( That sailed the wintry sea;)Tj
T*
( And the skipper had taken his little daughter,)Tj
T*
( To bear him company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221The Wreck of the Hesperus\222 \(1839\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( But the father answered never a word,)Tj
T*
( A frozen corpse was he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Wreck of the Hesperus\222 \(1839\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( There was a little girl)Tj
T*
( Who had a little curl)Tj
T*
( Right in the middle of her forehead,)Tj
T*
( When she was good)Tj
T*
( She was very, very good,)Tj
T*
( But when she was bad she was horrid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(Composed for, and sung to, his second daughter while a babe in arms, c.1\
850. B. R. Tucker-Macchetta \221The )Tj
T*
(Home Life of Henry W. Longfellow\222 \(1882\) ch. 5, also E. W. Longfell\
ow \221Random Memories\222 \(1922\) p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( The square root of half a number of bees, and also eight-ninths of t\
he whole, alighted on the )Tj
T*
(jasmines, and a female buzzed responsive to the hum of the male inclosed\
at night in a water-lily. )Tj
ET
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(O, beautiful damsel, tell me the number of bees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Kavanagh\222 \(1849\) ch. 4)Tj
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( See also Friedrich von Logau \(12.117\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.121 Longinus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Sublimity is the echo of a noble mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221On the Sublime\222 sect. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.122 Frederick Lonsdale 1881-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Don\222t keep finishing your sentences, I\222m not a bloody fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(To the author, in Frances Donaldson \221Child of the Twenties\222 \(1959\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.123 Anita Loos 1893-1981)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( So this gentleman said a girl with brains ought to do something with\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\222 \(1925\) ch. 1)Tj
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( She said she always believed in the old addage, \221Leave them while\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\222 \(1925\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Kissing your hand may make you feel very very good but a diamond and\
safire bracelet lasts )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(forever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\222 \(1925\) ch. 4.)Tj
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( Fun is fun but no girl wants to laugh all of the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\222 \(1925\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.00456 Tm
( So then Dr Froyd said that all I needed was to cultivate a few inhib\
itions and get some sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\222 \(1925\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 308.9624 Tm
( 12.124 Frederico Garc\355a Lorca 1899-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Garc\355a Lorca \(7.12\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 12.125 Konrad Lorenz 1903-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \334berhaupt ist es f\374r den Forscher ein guter Morgensport, t\344\
glich vor dem Fr\374hst\374ck eine )Tj
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(Lieblingshypothese einzustampfen\227das erh\344lt jung.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( It is a good morning exercise for a research scientist to discard a \
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(before breakfast. It keeps him young.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221Das sogennante B\366se\222 \(The So-Called Evil, 1963; translated by\
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T*
(ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.126 Louis XIV 1638-1715)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222\310tat c\222est moi.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I am the State.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(Before the Parlement de Paris, 13 April 1655, in Dulaure \221Histoire de\
Paris\222 \(1834\) vol. 6, p. 298 \(probably )Tj
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(apocryphal\))Tj
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( J\222ai failli attendre.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I almost had to wait.)Tj
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(Expressing impatience; attribution doubted, among others, by E. Fournier\
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0 -1.2 TD
(edition, 1884\) ch. 48)Tj
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( Toutes les fois que je donne une place vacante, je fais cent m\350co\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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( Every time I create an appointment, I create a hundred malcontents a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.17047 Tm
(In Voltaire \221Si\351cle de Louis XIV\222 \(1753\) ch. 26)Tj
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( Il n\222y a plus de Pyr\350n\350es.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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( The Pyrenees are no more.)Tj
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(On the accession of his grandson to the throne of Spain, 1700. Attribute\
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0 -1.2 TD
(XIV\222 \(1753\) ch. 26, but to the Spanish Ambassador in \221Mercure Ga\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 12.127 Louis XVIII 1755-1824)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rappelez-vous bien qu\222il n\222est aucun de vous qui n\222ait dans\
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0 -1.2 TD
(duc de Reggio; c\222est \341 vous \341 l\222en fait sortir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(Speech to Saint Cyr cadets, 9 August 1819, in \221Moniteur Universel\222\
10 August 1819)Tj
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( L\222exactitude est la politesse des rois.)Tj
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( Punctuality is the politeness of kings.)Tj
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(Attributed, in \221Souvenirs de J. Lafitte\222 \(1844\) bk. 1, ch. 3)Tj
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( 12.128 Richard Lovelace 1618-58)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Lucasta that bright northern star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Amyntor from Beyond the Sea to Alexis\222)Tj
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( Forbear, thou great good husband, little ant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221The Ant\222)Tj
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( When Love with unconfined wings)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And my divine Althea brings)Tj
T*
( To whisper at the grates:)Tj
T*
( When I lie tangled in her hair,)Tj
T*
( And fettered to her eye;)Tj
T*
( The Gods, that wanton in the air)Tj
T*
( Know no such liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221To Althea, From Prison\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( When flowing cups run swiftly round)Tj
T*
( With no allaying Thames.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221To Althea, From Prison\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( When thirsty grief in wine we steep,)Tj
T*
( When healths and draughts go free,)Tj
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( Fishes, that tipple in the deep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Know no such liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221To Althea, From Prison\222)Tj
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( Stone walls do not a prison make)Tj
T*
( Nor iron bars a cage;)Tj
T*
( Minds innocent and quiet take)Tj
T*
( That for an hermitage;)Tj
T*
( If I have freedom in my love,)Tj
T*
( And in my soul am free;)Tj
T*
( Angels alone, that soar above,)Tj
T*
( Enjoy such liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(\221To Althea, From Prison\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.00456 Tm
( If to be absent were to be)Tj
T*
( Away from thee;)Tj
T*
( Or that when I am gone,)Tj
T*
( You or I were alone;)Tj
T*
( Then my Lucasta might I crave)Tj
T*
( Pity from blust\222ring wind, or swallowing wave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.17047 Tm
(\221To Lucasta, Going Beyond the Seas\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.25456 Tm
( Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind,)Tj
T*
( That from the nunnery)Tj
T*
( Of thy chaste breast, and quiet mind,)Tj
T*
( To war and arms I fly.)Tj
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( True; a new mistress now I chase,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The first foe in the field;)Tj
T*
( And with a stronger faith embrace)Tj
T*
( A sword, a horse, a shield.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Yet this inconstancy is such,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As you too shall adore;)Tj
T*
( I could not love thee, Dear, so much,)Tj
T*
( Loved I not honour more.)Tj
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(\221To Lucasta, Going to the Wars\222)Tj
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( 12.129 Samuel Lover 1797-1868)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When once the itch of literature comes over a man, nothing can cure \
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0 -1.2 TD
(pen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.17047 Tm
(\221Handy Andy\222 \(1842\) ch. 36)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 66.9624 Tm
( 12.130 David Low 1891-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Colonel Blimp.)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Generic name for the archetypal right-wing voter from the shires)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I have never met anyone who wasn\222t against war. Even Hitler and M\
ussolini were, according )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221New York Times Magazine\222 10 February 1946)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 12.131 Robert Lowe, Viscount Sherbrooke 1811-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I believe it will be absolutely necessary that you should prevail on\
our future masters to learn )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(their letters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(In \221Hansard\222 15 July 1867, col. 1549, on the passing of the Reform\
Bill, popularized as \221We must educate our )Tj
T*
(masters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( The Chancellor of the Exchequer is a man whose duties make him more \
or less of a taxing )Tj
T*
(machine. He is intrusted with a certain amount of misery which it is his\
duty to distribute as fairly )Tj
T*
(as he can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(In \221Hansard\222 11 April 1870, col. 1639)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 492.7124 Tm
( 12.132 Amy Lowell 1874-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And the softness of my body will be guarded by embrace)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By each button, hook, and lace.)Tj
T*
( For the man who should loose me is dead,)Tj
T*
( Fighting with the Duke in Flanders,)Tj
T*
( In a pattern called a war.)Tj
T*
( Christ! What are patterns for?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.17047 Tm
(\221Patterns\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.25456 Tm
( I [Death] was astonished to see him in Baghdad, for I had an appoint\
ment with him tonight in )Tj
T*
(Samarra.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221Sheppy\222 \(1933\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( All books are either dreams or swords,)Tj
T*
( You can cut, or you can drug, with words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(\221Sword Blades and Poppy Seed\222 \(1914\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 223.4624 Tm
( 12.133 James Russell Lowell 1819-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( An\222 you\222ve gut to git up airly)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ef you want to take in God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221The Biglow Papers\222 \(First Series, 1848\) no. 1 \221A Letter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( It ain\222t by princerples nor men)Tj
T*
( My preudunt course is steadied,\227)Tj
T*
( I scent wich pays the best, an\222 then)Tj
T*
( Go into it baldheaded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221The Biglow Papers\222 \(First Series, 1848\) no. 6 \221The Pious Edi\
tor\222s Creed\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( We\222ve a war, an\222 a debt, an\222 a flag; an\222 ef this)Tj
T*
( Ain\222t to be interpendunt, why, wut on airth is?)Tj
ET
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(\221The Biglow Papers\222 \(Second Series, 1867\) no. 4 \221A Message of\
Jeff. Davis in Secret Session\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 731.50456 Tm
( There comes Poe with his raven like Barnaby Rudge,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Three-fifths of him genius, and two-fifths sheer fudge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.67047 Tm
(\221A Fable for Critics\222 \(1848\) l. 1215.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.75456 Tm
( No man is born into the world, whose work)Tj
T*
( Is not born with him; there is always work,)Tj
T*
( And tools to work withal, for those who will:)Tj
T*
( And bless\351d are the horny hands of toil!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.92047 Tm
(\221A Glance Behind the Curtain\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.00456 Tm
( These pearls of thought in Persian gulfs were bred,)Tj
T*
( Each softly lucent as a rounded moon;)Tj
T*
( The diver Omar plucked them from their bed,)Tj
T*
( Fitzgerald strung them on an English thread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.17047 Tm
(\221In a Copy of Omar Khayy m\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.25456 Tm
( Before Man made us citizens, great Nature made us men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.42047 Tm
(\221On the Capture of Fugitive Slaves\222 \(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.50456 Tm
( Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide,)Tj
T*
( In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or evil side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(\221The Present Crisis\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne,\227)Tj
T*
( Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown,)Tj
T*
( Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.92047 Tm
(\221The Present Crisis\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.00456 Tm
( New occasions teach new duties: Time makes ancient good uncouth;)Tj
T*
( They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of Truth.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.17047 Tm
(\221The Present Crisis\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.25456 Tm
( May is a pious fraud of the almanac.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221Under the Willows\222 \(1869\) l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.50456 Tm
( There is no good in arguing with the inevitable. The only argument a\
vailable with an east wind )Tj
T*
(is to put on your overcoat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.67047 Tm
(\221Democracy and other Addresses\222 \(1887\) \221Democracy\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.4624 Tm
( 12.134 Robert Lowell 1917-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My eyes have seen what my hand did.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.92047 Tm
(\221Dolphin\222 \(1973\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.00456 Tm
( Terrible that old life of decency)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( without unseemly intimacy)Tj
T*
( or quarrels, when the unemancipated woman)Tj
T*
( still had her Freudian papa and maids!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.17047 Tm
(\221During Fever\222 \(1959\))Tj
ET
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( The aquarium is gone. Everywhere,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( giant finned cars nose forward like fish;)Tj
T*
( a savage servility)Tj
T*
( slides by on grease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221For the Union Dead\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Their monument sticks like a fishbone)Tj
T*
( in the city\222s throat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
( \221For the Union Dead\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( These are the tranquillized Fifties,)Tj
T*
( and I am forty. Ought I to regret my seed-time?)Tj
T*
( I was a fire-breathing Catholic C.O.,)Tj
T*
( and made my manic statement,)Tj
T*
( telling off the state and president, and then)Tj
T*
( sat waiting sentence in the bull pen)Tj
T*
( beside a Negro boy with curlicues)Tj
T*
( of marijuana in his hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Memories of West Street and Lepke\222 \(1956\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( I saw the spiders marching through the air,)Tj
T*
( Swimming from tree to tree that mildewed day)Tj
T*
( In latter August when the hay)Tj
T*
( Came creaking to the barn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Mr Edwards and the Spider\222 \(1950\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( This is death.)Tj
T*
( To die and know it. This is the Black Widow, death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Mr Edwards and the Spider\222 \(1950\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( The Lord survives the rainbow of His will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket\222 \(1950\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( We feel the machine slipping from our hands)Tj
T*
( As if someone else were steering;)Tj
T*
( If we see light at the end of the tunnel,)Tj
T*
( It\222s the light of the oncoming train.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Since 1939\222 \(1977\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( My mind\222s not right.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A car radio bleats,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Love, O careless Love...\222 I hear)Tj
T*
( my ill-spirit sob in each blood cell,)Tj
T*
( as if my hand were at its throat...)Tj
T*
( I myself am hell,)Tj
T*
( nobody\222s here.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221Skunk Hour\222 \(1959\) st. 5)Tj
ET
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( But I suppose even God was born)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( too late to trust the old religion\227)Tj
T*
( all those settings out)Tj
T*
( that never left the ground,)Tj
T*
( beginning in wisdom, dying in doubt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Tenth Muse\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( At forty-five,)Tj
T*
( What next, what next?)Tj
T*
( At every corner,)Tj
T*
( I meet my Father,)Tj
T*
( my age, still alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Middle Age\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Who asks for me, the Shelley of my age,)Tj
T*
( must lay his heart out for my bed and board.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Words for Hart Crane\222 \(1959\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 469.4624 Tm
( 12.135 William Lowndes 1652-1724)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take care of themselves.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(In Lord Chesterfield \221Letters Written...to his Son\222 \(1774\) 5 Feb\
ruary1750; \221...for the pounds...\222 in an earlier )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(letter, 6 November 1747)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 384.7124 Tm
( 12.136 L. S. Lowry 1887-1976)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m a simple man, and I use simple materials.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.17047 Tm
(In Mervyn Levy \221Paintings of L. S. Lowry\222 \(1975\) p. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 314.9624 Tm
( 12.137 Malcolm Lowry 1909-57)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( How alike are the groans of love to those of the dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.42047 Tm
(\221Under the Volcano\222 \(1947\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 245.2124 Tm
( 12.138 Lucan A.D. 39-65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Quis iustius induit arma)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Scire nefas, magno se iudice quisque tuetur:)Tj
T*
( Victrix causa deis placuit, sed victa Catoni.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is not granted to know which man took up arms with more right on \
his side. Each pleads his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(cause before a great judge: the winning cause pleased the gods, but the \
losing one pleased Cato.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Pharsalia\222 bk. 1, l. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( Stat magni nominis umbra.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There stands the ghost of a great name.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(\221Pharsalia\222 bk. 1, l. 135 \(on Pompey\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 52.50456 Tm
( Nil actum credens, dum quid superesset agendum.)Tj
ET
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( Thinking nothing done while anything remained to be done.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Pharsalia\222 bk. 2, l. 657)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Coniunx)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Est mihi, sunt nati: dedimus tot pignora fatis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I have a wife, I have sons: all of them hostages to fortune.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Pharsalia\222 bk. 6, l. 661.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 639.75456 Tm
( Jupiter est quodcumque vides, quocumque moveris.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Jupiter is whatever you see, whichever way you move.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.17047 Tm
(\221Pharsalia\222 bk. 9, l. 580)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 569.9624 Tm
( 12.139 George Lucas 1944\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Empire strikes back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.42047 Tm
(Title of film \(1980\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 511.50456 Tm
( Then man your ships, and may the force be with you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(\221Star Wars\222 \(1977 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 463.4624 Tm
( 12.140 Lucilius \(Gaius Lucilius\) c.180-102 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Maior erat natu; non omnia possumus omnes.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He was older; we cannot all do everything.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.17047 Tm
(In Macrobius \221Saturnalia\222 bk. 6, ch. 1, sect. 35.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 371.9624 Tm
( 12.141 Lucretius c.94-55 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ergo vivida vis animi pervicit, et extra)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Processit longe flammantia moenia mundi)Tj
T*
( Atque omne immensum peragravit, mente animoque.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So the vital strength of his spirit won through, and he made his way\
far outside the flaming )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(walls of the world and ranged over the measureless whole, both in mind a\
nd spirit.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.67047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 1, l. 72 \(on Epicurus\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.75456 Tm
( Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So much wrong could religion induce.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 1, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( Nil posse creari)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( De nilo.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nothing can be created out of nothing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 1, l. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.75456 Tm
( Suave, mari magno turbantibus aequora ventis,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( E terra magnum alterius spectare laborem;)Tj
T*
( Non quia vexari quemquamst iucunda voluptas,)Tj
T*
( Sed quibus ipse malis careas quia cernere suave est.)Tj
ET
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( Suave etiam belli certamina magna tueri)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Per campos instructa tua sine parte pericli.)Tj
T*
( Sed nil dulcius est, bene quam munita tenere)Tj
T*
( Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena,)Tj
T*
( Despicere unde queas alios passimque videre)Tj
T*
( Errare atque viam palantis quaerere vitae,)Tj
T*
( Certare ingenio, contendere nobilitate,)Tj
T*
( Noctes atque dies niti praestante labore)Tj
T*
( Ad summas emergere opes rerumque potiri.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Lovely it is, when the winds are churning up the waves on the great \
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0 -1.2 TD
(land on the great efforts of someone else; not because it\222s an enjoya\
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T*
(in difficulties, but because it\222s lovely to realize what troubles you\
are yourself spared. Lovely )Tj
T*
(also to witness great battle-plans of war, carried out across the plains\
, without your having any )Tj
T*
(share in the danger. But nothing is sweeter than to occupy the quiet pre\
cincts that are well )Tj
T*
(protected by the teachings of the wise, from where you can look down on \
others and see them )Tj
T*
(wandering all over the place, getting lost and seeking the way in life, \
striving by their wits, )Tj
T*
(pitting their noble birth, by night and by day struggling by superior ef\
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T*
(top and make all theirs.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Augescunt aliae gentes, aliae minuntur,)Tj
T*
( Inque brevi spatio mutantur saecla animantum)Tj
T*
( Et quasi cursores vitai lampada tradunt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Some races increase, others are reduced, and in a short while the ge\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 2, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.00456 Tm
( Nil igitur mors est ad nos neque pertinet hilum,)Tj
T*
( Quandoquidem natura animi mortalis habetur.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Death therefore is nothing to us nor does it concern us a scrap, see\
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0 -1.2 TD
(spirit we possess is something mortal.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.42047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 3, l. 830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.50456 Tm
( Scire licet nobis nil esse in morte timendum)Tj
T*
( Nec miserum fieri qui non est posse neque hilum)Tj
T*
( Differre an nullo fuerit iam tempore natus,)Tj
T*
( Mortalem vitam mors cum immortalis ademit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We can know there is nothing to be feared in death, that one who is \
not cannot be made )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unhappy, and that it matters not a scrap whether one might ever have bee\
n born at all, when death )Tj
T*
(that is immortal has taken over one\222s mortal life.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 71.92047 Tm
(\221De Rerum Natura\222 bk. 3, l. 866)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 51.00456 Tm
( Vitaque mancipio, nulli datur, omnibus usu.)Tj
ET
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T*
( y sigue la escondida)Tj
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( senda, por donde han ido)Tj
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( los pocos sabios que en el mundo han sido!)Tj
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( Here stand I. I can do no other. God help me. Amen.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
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(g\366nnt.)Tj
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( Whatever your heart clings to and confides in that is really your Go\
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(Attributed; written in the Luther room in the Wartburg, but no proof exi\
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( 12.144 Rosa Luxemburg 1871-1919)Tj
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(\221The Fall of Princes\222 prologue l. 356)Tj
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( Comparisouns doon offte gret greuaunce.)Tj
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(\221The Fall of Princes\222 bk. 3, l. 2188)Tj
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( Woord is but wynd; leff woord and tak the dede.)Tj
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(\221Secrees of Old Phillsoffres\222 l. 1224)Tj
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( Love is mor than gold or gret richesse.)Tj
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(\221The Story of Thebes\222 pt. 3, l. 2716)Tj
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( What shall, alas! become of me?)Tj
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( And still her woes at midnight rise.)Tj
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( The morn not waking till she sings.)Tj
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( Night hath a thousand eyes.)Tj
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T*
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T*
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( Abide with me; fast falls the eventide;)Tj
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( )Tj
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T*
(working in the tenement dweller\222s subconscious mind.)Tj
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(\221No Mean City\222 \(1935\) ch. 4)Tj
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( In war, indeed, there can be no substitute for victory.)Tj
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( I came through and I shall return.)Tj
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( The business of everybody is the business of nobody.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
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T*
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(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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T*
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( As civilization advances, poetry almost necessarily declines.)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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( On the rich and the eloquent, on nobles and priests, they [the Purit\
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T*
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T*
(sublime language, nobles by the right of an earlier creation, and priest\
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T*
(mightier hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of i\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
1 \221Moore\222s Life of Lord Byron\222)Tj
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( From the poetry of Lord Byron they drew a system of ethics, compound\
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(voluptuousness, a system in which the two great commandments were, to ha\
te your neighbour, )Tj
T*
(and to love your neighbour\222s wife.)Tj
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(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
1 \221Moore\222s Life of Lord Byron\222)Tj
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( We have heard it said that five per cent is the natural interest of \
money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
1 \221Southey\222s Colloquies\222)Tj
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( With the dead there is no rivalry. In the dead there is no change. P\
lato is never sullen. )Tj
T*
(Cervantes is never petulant. Demosthenes never comes unseasonably. Dante\
never stays too long. )Tj
T*
(No difference of political opinion can alienate Cicero. No heresy can ex\
cite the horror of Bossuet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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( An acre in Middlesex is better than a principality in Utopia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.42047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
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( The rising hope of those stern and unbending Tories.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(On Gladstone in \221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222\
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T*
(State\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.75456 Tm
( The highest intellects, like the tops of mountains, are the first to\
catch and to reflect the dawn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.92047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
2 \221Sir James Mackintosh\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.00456 Tm
( The history of England is emphatically the history of progress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
2 \221Sir James Mackintosh\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.25456 Tm
( Biographers, translators, editors, all, in short, who employ themsel\
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T*
(or writings of others, are peculiarly exposed to the Lues Boswelliana, o\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.42047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
2 \221William Pitt, Earl of Chatham\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.50456 Tm
( The conformation of his mind was such that whatever was little seeme\
d to him great, and )Tj
T*
(whatever was great seemed to him little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.67047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 1843 vol. 2 \221\
Horace Walpole\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.75456 Tm
( The reluctant obedience of distant provinces generally costs more th\
an it [the territory] is worth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.92047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
2 \221War of the Succession in Spain\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.00456 Tm
( Every schoolboy knows who imprisoned Montezuma, and who strangled At\
ahualpa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
3 \221Lord Clive\222)Tj
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( The Chief Justice was rich, quiet, and infamous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
3 \221Warren Hastings\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.50456 Tm
( That temple of silence and reconciliation where the enmities of twen\
ty generations lie buried.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.67047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
3 \221Warren Hastings\222 \(on Westminster Abbey\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.75456 Tm
( She [the Roman Catholic Church] may still exist in undiminished vigo\
ur when some traveller )Tj
T*
(from New Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand \
on a broken arch of )Tj
T*
(London Bridge to sketch the ruins of St Paul\222s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
3 \221Von Ranke\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.00456 Tm
( She [the Church of Rome] thoroughly understands what no other church\
has ever understood, )Tj
T*
(how to deal with enthusiasts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.17047 Tm
(\221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\222 \(1843\) vol.\
3 \221Von Ranke\222)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On Richard Steele in \221Essays Contributed to the \221Edinburgh Review\222\
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(Addison\222)Tj
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( [History] is a debatable line. It lies on the confines of two distin\
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T*
(jurisdiction of two hostile powers; and like other districts similarly s\
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T*
(cultivated, and ill-regulated. Instead of being equally shared between i\
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T*
(and the Imagination, it falls alternately under the sole and absolute do\
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T*
(sometimes fiction. It is sometimes theory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(\221History\222 in \221Edinburgh Review\222 May 1828)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( Knowledge advances by steps, and not by leaps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221History\222 in \221Edinburgh Review\222 May 1828)Tj
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( I shall cheerfully bear the reproach of having descended below the d\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221History of England\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Thus our democracy was, from an early period, the most aristocratic,\
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T*
(most democratic in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221History of England\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Persecution produced its natural effect on them [Puritans and Calvin\
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T*
(it made them a faction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221History of England\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) ch. 1)Tj
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( It was a crime in a child to read by the bedside of a sick parent on\
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T*
(which had soothed the griefs of forty generations of Christians.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221History of England\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) ch. 2)Tj
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T*
(pleasure to the spectators.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221History of England\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) ch. 2)Tj
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( We must at present do our best to form a class who may be interprete\
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T*
(millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour,\
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T*
(opinions, in morals, and in intellect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(Minute, as Member of Supreme Council of India, 2 February 1835, in W. Na\
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T*
(ns\222 \(1871\) p. 93)Tj
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( Chatham was only the ruin of Pitt, but an awful and majestic ruin, n\
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T*
(any man of sense and feeling without emotions resembling those which are\
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T*
(remains of the Parthenon and the Coliseum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221William Pitt\222 in \221Edinburgh Review\222 January 1859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( Thank you, madam, the agony is abated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 123.67047 Tm
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T*
(ch. 1)Tj
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( We were regaled by a dogfight...How odd that people of sense should \
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T*
(being accompanied by a beast who is always spoiling conversation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(In G. M. Trevelyan \221The Life and Letters of Macaulay\222 ch. 14)Tj
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(\221The Armada\222 \(1833\))Tj
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( Till Belvoir\222s lordly terraces the sign to Lincoln sent,)Tj
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( Till Skiddaw saw the fire that burned on Gaunt\222s embattled pile,)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Armada\222 \(1833\))Tj
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( Obadiah Bind-their-kings-in-chains-and-their-nobles-with-links-of-ir\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Battle of Naseby\222 \(1824\) fictitious author\222s name.)Tj
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( Oh, wherefore come ye forth in triumph from the north,)Tj
T*
( With your hands, and your feet, and your raiment all red?)Tj
T*
( And wherefore doth your rout send forth a joyous shout?)Tj
T*
( And whence be the grapes of the wine-press which ye tread?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Battle of Naseby\222 \(1824\))Tj
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( And the Man of Blood was there, with his long essenced hair,)Tj
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( And Astley, and Sir Marmaduke, and Rupert of the Rhine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Battle of Naseby\222 \(1824\))Tj
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( To my true king I offered free from stain)Tj
T*
( Courage and faith; vain faith, and courage vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221A Jacobite\222s Epitaph\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( By those white cliffs I never more must see,)Tj
T*
( By that dear language which I spake like thee,)Tj
T*
( Forget all feuds, and shed one English tear)Tj
T*
( O\222er English dust. A broken heart lies here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221A Jacobite\222s Epitaph\222 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Let no man stop to plunder,)Tj
T*
( But slay, and slay, and slay;)Tj
T*
( The Gods who live for ever)Tj
T*
( Are on our side to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221The Battle of Lake Regillus\222\
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( Lars Porsena of Clusium)Tj
T*
( By the nine gods he swore)Tj
T*
( That the great house of Tarquin)Tj
T*
( Should suffer wrong no more.)Tj
T*
( By the Nine Gods he swore it,)Tj
T*
( And named a trysting day,)Tj
T*
( And bade his messengers ride forth,)Tj
T*
( East and west and south and north,)Tj
T*
( To summon his array.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 1)Tj
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( \221To every man upon this earth)Tj
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( Death cometh soon or late.)Tj
T*
( And how can man die better)Tj
T*
( Than facing fearful odds,)Tj
T*
( For the ashes of his fathers,)Tj
T*
( And the temples of his Gods?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 27)Tj
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( \221Now who will stand on either hand,)Tj
T*
( And keep the bridge with me?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 29)Tj
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( Then none was for a party;)Tj
T*
( Then all were for the state;)Tj
T*
( Then the great man helped the poor,)Tj
T*
( And the poor man loved the great:)Tj
T*
( Then lands were fairly portioned;)Tj
T*
( Then spoils were fairly sold:)Tj
T*
( The Romans were like brothers)Tj
T*
( In the brave days of old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 32)Tj
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( Was none who would be foremost)Tj
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( To lead such dire attack;)Tj
T*
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T*
( And those before cried \221Back!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 50)Tj
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T*
( To whom the Romans pray,)Tj
T*
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T*
( Take thou in charge this day!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 60)Tj
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T*
( Still is the story told,)Tj
T*
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T*
( In the brave days of old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Lays of Ancient Rome\222 \(1842\) \221Horatius\222 st. 70)Tj
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(\221Crewe Train\222 pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
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( \221What does a lovely maid with rhyming, pray?\222 \221It makes no \
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T*
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T*
(from High Mass.)Tj
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(\221The Towers of Trebizond\222 \(1956\) p. 9)Tj
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( 1.7 Joseph McCarthy 1908-57)Tj
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( McCarthyism is Americanism with its sleeves rolled.)Tj
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( If someone tells you he is going to make a \221realistic decision\222\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221On the Contrary\222 \(1961\) \221American Realist Playwrights\222)Tj
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( The immense popularity of American movies abroad demonstrates that E\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.92047 Tm
(\221On the Contrary\222 \(1961\) \221America the Beautiful\222)Tj
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( In violence, we forget who we are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221On the Contrary\222 \(1961\) \221Characters in Fiction)Tj
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( There are no new truths, but only truths that have not been recogniz\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221On the Contrary\222 \(1961\) \221Vita Activa\222)Tj
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( Every word she writes is a lie, including \221and\222 and \221the\222\
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( All quiet along the Potomac.)Tj
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( 1.10 David McCord 1897\227)Tj
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( In Flanders fields the poppies blow)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221In Flanders Fields\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.75456 Tm
( To you from failing hands we throw)Tj
T*
( The torch; be yours to hold it high.)Tj
T*
( If ye break faith with us who die)Tj
T*
( We shall not sleep, though poppies grow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.92047 Tm
(\221In Flanders Fields\222 \(1915\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 382.7124 Tm
( 1.13 Hugh MacDiarmid \(Christopher Murray Grieve\) 1892-1978)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222ll ha\222e nae hauf-way hoose, but aye be whaur)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Extremes meet\227it\222s the only way I ken)Tj
T*
( To dodge the curst conceit o\222 bein\222 richt)Tj
T*
( That damns the vast majority o\222 men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.17047 Tm
(\221A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle\222 \(1926\) p. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.25456 Tm
( He\222s no a man ava\222,)Tj
T*
( And lacks a proper pride,)Tj
T*
( Gin less than a\222 the world)Tj
T*
( Can ser\222 him for a bride!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.42047 Tm
(\221A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle\222 \(1926\) p. 36)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 168.2124 Tm
( 1.14 George MacDonald 1824-1905)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where did you come from, baby dear?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Out of the everywhere into here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.67047 Tm
(\221At the Back of the North Wind\222 \(1871\) ch. 33 \221Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.75456 Tm
( Here lie I, Martin Elginbrodde:)Tj
T*
( Hae mercy o\222 my soul, Lord God;)Tj
T*
( As I wad do, were I Lord God,)Tj
ET
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( And ye were Martin Elginbrodde.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221David Elginbrod\222 \(1863\) bk. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( They all were looking for a king)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To slay their foes, and lift them high;)Tj
T*
( Thou cam\222st, a little baby thing,)Tj
T*
( That made a woman cry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221That Holy Thing\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 614.2124 Tm
( 1.15 Ramsay MacDonald 1866-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We hear war called murder. It is not: it is suicide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 4 May 1930)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Tomorrow every Duchess in London will be wanting to kiss me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(After forming the National Government, 25 August 1931; in Philip Viscoun\
t Snowden \221An )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Autobiography\222 \(1934\) vol. 2, p. 957)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 492.7124 Tm
( 1.16 A. G. MacDonell 1889\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( England, their England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1933\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 422.9624 Tm
( 1.17 William McGonagall c.1825-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Alas! Lord and Lady Dalhousie are dead, and buried at last,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which causes many people to feel a little downcast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(\221The Death of Lord and Lady Dalhousie\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.50456 Tm
( Beautiful Railway Bridge of the Silv\222ry Tay!)Tj
T*
( Alas, I am very sorry to say)Tj
T*
( That ninety lives have been taken away)Tj
T*
( On the last Sabbath day of 1879,)Tj
T*
( Which will be remembered for a very long time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 258.67047 Tm
(\221The Tay Bridge Disaster\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 226.4624 Tm
( 1.18 Roger McGough 1937\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You will put on a dress of guilt)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( and shoes with broken high ideals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Comeclose and Sleepnow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Let me die a youngman\222s death)Tj
T*
( Not a clean & in-between\227)Tj
T*
( The-sheets, holy-water death,)Tj
T*
( Not a famous-last-words)Tj
T*
( Peaceful out-of-breath death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Let Me Die a Youngman\222s Death\222 \(1967\))Tj
ET
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( 1.19 Sir Ian MacGregor 1912\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( People are now discovering the price of insubordination and insurrec\
tion. And boy, are we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(going to make it stick!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(Reported during the coal-miners\222 strike, in \221Sunday Telegraph\222 \
10 March 1985.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 1.20 Jimmy McGregor)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, he\222s football crazy, he\222s football mad)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the football it has robbed him o\222 the wee bit sense he had.)Tj
T*
( And it would take a dozen skivvies, his clothes to wash and scrub,)Tj
T*
( Since our Jock became a member of that terrible football club.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Football Crazy\222 \(1960 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.4624 Tm
( 1.21 Antonio Machado 1875-1902)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Yo vivo en paz con los hombres)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( y en guerra con mis entra\361as.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am living at peace with men and at war with my innards.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Proverbios y Cantares\222 no. 22 in \221Campos de Castilla\222 \(191\
7\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.9624 Tm
( 1.22 Niccol\363 Machiavelli 1469-1527)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As a prince must be able to act just like a beast, he should learn f\
rom the fox and the lion; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(because the lion does not defend himself against traps, and the fox does\
not defend himself )Tj
T*
(against wolves. So one has to be a fox in order to recognize traps, and \
a lion to frighten off )Tj
T*
(wolves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221The Prince\222 \(1532\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 308.2124 Tm
( 1.23 Claude McKay 1890-1948)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If we must die, let it not be like hogs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot,)Tj
T*
( While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs,)Tj
T*
( Making their mock at our accursed lot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221If We Must Die\222 \(1953\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 184.4624 Tm
( 1.24 Sir Compton Mackenzie 1883-1972)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Women do not find it difficult nowadays to behave like men, but they\
often find it extremely )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(difficult to behave like gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.92047 Tm
(\221Literature in My Time\222 \(1933\) ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.00456 Tm
( You are offered a piece of bread and butter that feels like a damp h\
andkerchief and sometimes, )Tj
T*
(when cucumber is added to it, like a wet one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(\221Vestal Fire\222 \(1927\) bk. 1, ch. 3)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.9624 Tm
( 1.25 Sir James Mackintosh 1765-1832)Tj
ET
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BT
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( Men are never so good or so bad as their opinions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Dissertation on the Progress of Ethical Philosophy\222 \(1830\) sect\
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15 0 0 15 10 713.50456 Tm
( The Commons, faithful to their system, remained in a wise and master\
ly inactivity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.67047 Tm
(\221Vindiciae Gallicae\222 \(1791\) sect. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.4624 Tm
( 1.26 Alexander Maclaren 1826-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221The Church is an anvil which has worn out many hammers\222, and \
the story of the first collision )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is, in essentials, the story of all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.92047 Tm
(\221Expositions of Holy Scripture: Acts of the Apostles\222 \(1907\) ch.\
4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 577.7124 Tm
( 1.27 Archibald MacLeish 1892-1982)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A Poem should be palpable and mute)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As a globed fruit)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Dumb)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As old medallions to the thumb)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Silent as the sleeve-worn stone)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of casement ledges where the moss has grown\227)Tj
T*
( A poem should be wordless)Tj
T*
( As the flight of birds)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.75456 Tm
( A poem should not mean)Tj
T*
( But be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.92047 Tm
(\221Ars Poetica\222 \(1926\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 319.7124 Tm
( 1.28 Murdoch McLennanfl. 1715)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s some say that we wan, some say that they wan,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Some say that nane wan at a\222, man;)Tj
T*
( But one thing I\222m sure, that at Sheriffmuir)Tj
T*
( A battle there was which I saw, man:)Tj
T*
( And we ran, and they ran, and they ran, and we ran,)Tj
T*
( And we ran; and they ran awa\222, man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.17047 Tm
(\221Sheriffmuir\222 in J. Woodfall Ebsworth \(ed.\) \221Roxburghe Balla\
ds\222 vol. 6 \(1889\). In James Hogg \221The Jacobite )Tj
T*
(Relics of Scotland\222 \(1821\) vol. 2, the last line reads: \221But Flo\
rence ran fastest of a\222, man\222 \(Florence being the )Tj
T*
(Marquis of Huntley\222s horse\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 129.9624 Tm
( 1.29 Fiona McLeod 1855-1905)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My heart is a lonely hunter that hunts on a lonely hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.42047 Tm
(\221The Lonely Hunter\222 \(1896\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 60.2124 Tm
( 1.30 Marshall McLuhan 1911-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The new electronic interdependence recreates the world in the image \
of a global village.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Gutenberg Galaxy\222 \(1962\) p. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 731.75456 Tm
( The medium is the message.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.92047 Tm
(\221Understanding Media\222 \(1964\) ch. 1 \(title\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 695.00456 Tm
( The name of a man is a numbing blow from which he never recovers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.17047 Tm
(\221Understanding Media\222 \(1964\) p. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.25456 Tm
( The car has become an article of dress without which we feel uncerta\
in, unclad and incomplete )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in the urban compound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.42047 Tm
(\221Understanding Media\222 \(1964\) p. 217)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 592.2124 Tm
( 1.31 Mar\350chal de Mac-Mahon 1808-93)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( J\222y suis, j\222y reste.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Here I am, and here I stay.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.92047 Tm
(At the taking of the Malakoff fortress during the Crimean War, 8 Septemb\
er 1855; MacMahon later cast )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(doubt on his having expressed himself so tersely. G. Hanotaux \221Histoi\
re de la France Contemporaine\222 \(1903-)Tj
T*
(8\) vol. 2, ch. 1, sect. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 470.7124 Tm
( 1.32 Harold Macmillan \(first Earl of Stockton\) 1894-1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There ain\222t gonna be no war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.17047 Tm
(At a London press conference, 24 July 1955, following the Geneva summit;\
in \221News Chronicle\222 25 July 1955)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.25456 Tm
( Let us be frank about it: most of our people have never had it so go\
od.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.42047 Tm
(Speech at Bedford, 20 July 1957, in \221The Times\222 22 July 1957; \221\
You Never Had It So Good\222 was the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Democratic Party slogan in the US election campaign of 1952)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.50456 Tm
( I thought the best thing to do was to settle up these little local d\
ifficulties, and then turn to the )Tj
T*
(wider vision of the Commonwealth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.67047 Tm
(Statement at London airport on leaving for a Commonwealth tour, 7 Januar\
y 1958, following the resignation )Tj
T*
(of the Chancellor of the Exchequer and others, in \221The Times\222 8 Ja\
nuary 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.75456 Tm
( The wind of change is blowing through this continent, and, whether w\
e like it or not, this )Tj
T*
(growth of [African] national consciousness is a political fact.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.92047 Tm
(Speech at Cape Town, 3 February 1960, in \221Pointing the Way\222 \(1972\
\) p. 475)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.00456 Tm
( First of all the Georgian silver goes, and then all that nice furnit\
ure that used to be in the )Tj
T*
(saloon. Then the Canalettos go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.17047 Tm
(Speech on privatization to the Tory Reform Group, 8 November 1985, in \221\
The Times\222 9 November 1985)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.25456 Tm
( Forever poised between a clich\350 and an indiscretion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.42047 Tm
(In \221Newsweek\222 30 Apr. 1956 \(on the life of a Foreign Secretary\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.50456 Tm
( He [Aneurin Bevan] enjoys prophesying the imminent fall of the capit\
alist system and is )Tj
T*
(prepared to play a part, any part, in its burial, except that of mute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.67047 Tm
(In Michael Foot \221Aneurin Bevan\222 \(1962\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.75456 Tm
( I was determined that no British government should be brought down b\
y the action of two tarts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.92047 Tm
(Comment on the Profumo affair, July 1963, in Anthony Sampson \221Macmill\
an\222 \(1967\) p. 243)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.00456 Tm
( There were three bodies no sensible man directly challenged: the Rom\
an Catholic Church, the )Tj
ET
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(Brigade of Guards and the National Union of Mineworkers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Alan Watkins, quoting Macmillan, in \221Observer\222 22 February 1981.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Even Mr Gladstone only had a suitcase named after him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(On opening a building at Pembroke College, Oxford, which had been given \
his name; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 1.33 Leonard MacNally 1752-1820)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This lass so neat, with smiles so sweet,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Has won my right good-will,)Tj
T*
( I\222d crowns resign to call thee mine,)Tj
T*
( Sweet lass of Richmond Hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221The Lass of Richmond Hill\222; also attributed to W. Upton in The Ox\
ford Song Book, and to W. Hudson in S. )Tj
T*
(Baring-Gould English Minstrelsie \(1895\) vol. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.4624 Tm
( 1.34 Louis MacNeice 1907-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Better authentic mammon than a bogus god.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.92047 Tm
(\221Autumn Journal\222 \(1939\) p. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 471.00456 Tm
( It\222s no go the merrygoround, it\222s no go the rickshaw,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All we want is a limousine and a ticket for the peepshow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.17047 Tm
(\221Bagpipe Music\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 416.25456 Tm
( It\222s no go the picture palace, it\222s no go the stadium,)Tj
T*
( It\222s no go the country cot with a pot of pink geraniums,)Tj
T*
( It\222s no go the Government grants, it\222s no go the elections,)Tj
T*
( Sit on your arse for fifty years and hang your hat on a pension.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(\221Bagpipe Music\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 325.50456 Tm
( It\222s no go my honey love, it\222s no go my poppet;)Tj
T*
( Work your hands from day to day, the winds will blow the profit.)Tj
T*
( The glass is falling hour by hour, the glass will fall for ever,)Tj
T*
( But if you break the bloody glass you won\222t hold up the weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(\221Bagpipe Music\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.75456 Tm
( And under the totem poles\227the ancient terror\227)Tj
T*
( Between the enormous fluted Ionic columns)Tj
T*
( There seeps from heavily jowled or hawk-like foreign faces)Tj
T*
( The guttural sorrow of the refugees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.92047 Tm
(\221The British Museum Reading Room\222 \(1941\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.00456 Tm
( Crumbling between the fingers, under the feet,)Tj
T*
( Crumbling behind the eyes,)Tj
T*
( Their world gives way and dies)Tj
T*
( And something twangs and breaks at the end of the street.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(\221D\350b\342cle\222 \(1941\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.25456 Tm
( Time was away and somewhere else,)Tj
ET
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( There were two glasses and two chairs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And two people with the one pulse)Tj
T*
( \(Somebody stopped the moving stairs\):)Tj
T*
( Time was away and somewhere else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Meeting Point\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( I am not yet born; O fill me)Tj
T*
( With strength against those who would freeze my)Tj
T*
( humanity, would dragoon me into a lethal automaton,)Tj
T*
( would make me a cog in a machine, a thing with)Tj
T*
( one face, a thing, and against all those)Tj
T*
( who would dissipate my entirety, would)Tj
T*
( blow me like thistledown hither and)Tj
T*
( thither or hither and thither)Tj
T*
( like water held in the)Tj
T*
( hands would spill me.)Tj
T*
( Let them not make me a stone and let them not spill me,)Tj
T*
( Otherwise kill me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Prayer Before Birth\222 \(1944\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( World is crazier and more of it than we think,)Tj
T*
( Incorrigibly plural. I peel and portion)Tj
T*
( A tangerine and spit the pips and feel)Tj
T*
( The drunkenness of things being various.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Snow\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Down the road someone is practising scales,)Tj
T*
( The notes like little fishes vanish with a wink of tails,)Tj
T*
( Man\222s heart expands to tinker with his car)Tj
T*
( For this is Sunday morning, Fate\222s great bazaar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Sunday Morning\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( The sunlight on the garden)Tj
T*
( Hardens and grows cold,)Tj
T*
( We cannot cage the minute)Tj
T*
( Within its net of gold,)Tj
T*
( When all is told)Tj
T*
( We cannot beg for pardon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(\221Sunlight on the Garden\222 \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( Our freedom as free lances)Tj
T*
( Advances towards its end;)Tj
T*
( The earth compels, upon it)Tj
T*
( Sonnets and birds descend;)Tj
T*
( And soon, my friend,)Tj
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( We shall have no time for dances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Sunlight on the Garden\222 \(1938\))Tj
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( Divided by the morning tea,)Tj
T*
( By the evening paper,)Tj
T*
( By children and tradesmen\222s bills.)Tj
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(\221Les Sylphides\222 \(1941\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( By a high star our course is set,)Tj
T*
( Our end is Life. Put out to sea.)Tj
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(\221Thalassa\222 \(1964\))Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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( Warm lagoon of indolence and irreligion which seems to be the proper\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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( The great tragedy of the classical languages is to have been born tw\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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( Peers: a kind of eye-shade or smoked glass, to protect us from the f\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( Don\222s room, like the nest of a foolish bird.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Conservative ideal of freedom and progress: everyone to have an unfe\
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T*
(remaining exactly where they are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(In J. A. Gere and John Sparrow \221Geoffrey Madan\222s Notebooks\222 \(1\
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( The dust of exploded beliefs may make a fine sunset.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Livre sans nom: Twelve Reflections\222 \(privately printed 1934\) no\
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( 1.36 Salvador de Madariaga 1886-1978)Tj
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T*
(efficient state as required by its fear, otherwise styled security.)Tj
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(\221Morning Without Noon\222 \(1974\) pt. 1, ch. 9)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Words are men\222s daughters, but God\222s sons are things.)Tj
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(\221Boulter\222s Monument\222 \(1745\) l. 377.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 39.7124 Tm
( 1.38 James Madison 1751-1836)Tj
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T*
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(\221The Federalist\222 \(1787\) no. 10)Tj
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( Il n\222y a pas de morts.)Tj
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( Quod Anglicana ecclesia libera sit.)Tj
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(Clause 1)Tj
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( Nullius liber homo capiatur, vel imprisonetur, aut dissaisiatur, aut\
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(Clause 40)Tj
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( Fortissimo at last!)Tj
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(On seeing Niagara Falls, in K. Blaukopf \221Gustav Mahler\222 \(1973\) c\
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( \221I am just going outside and may be some time.\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The others nod, pretending not to know.)Tj
T*
( At the heart of the ridiculous, the sublime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Antarctica\222 \(1985\) title poem.)Tj
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( 1.45 Norman Mailer 1923\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221Cannibals and Christians\222 \(1966\) p. 51)Tj
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( The horror of the Twentieth Century was the size of each event, and \
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221A Fire on the Moon\222 \(1970\) pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
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( So we think of Marilyn who was every man\222s love affair with Ameri\
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T*
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T*
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(\221Marilyn\222 \(1973\) p. 15)Tj
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( Ultimately a hero is a man who would argue with the Gods, and so awa\
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(\221The Presidential Papers\222 \(1976\) Special Preface to the 1st Berk\
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( Hip is the sophistication of the wise primitive in a giant jungle.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
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( That virgin, vital, fine day: today.)Tj
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(\221Plusieurs Sonnets\222)Tj
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( A throw of the dice will never eliminate chance.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
( With something left to treat my friends.)Tj
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(Imitation of Horace.)Tj
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( And thrice he called on Margaret\222s name,)Tj
T*
( And thrice he wept full sore:)Tj
T*
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T*
( And word spake never more.)Tj
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(\221William and Margaret\222 l. 65)Tj
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( 1.51 George Leigh Mallory 1886-1924)Tj
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( Because it\222s there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
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( Whoso pulleth out this sword of this stone and anvil is rightwise Ki\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
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T*
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( God defend me, said Dinadan, for the joy of love is too short, and t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
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( Now I thank God, said Sir Launcelot, for His great mercy of that I h\
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
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( Fair lord, salute me to my lord, Sir Launcelot, my father, and as so\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
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( Thus endeth the story of the Sangreal, that was briefly drawn out of\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 17, ch. 23)Tj
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 18, ch. 25)Tj
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( Therefore all ye that be lovers call unto your remembrance the month\
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T*
(Queen Guenevere, for whom I make here a little mention, that while she l\
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T*
(lover, and therefore she had a good end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 18, ch. 25)Tj
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( Through this man and me hath all this war been wrought, and the deat\
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T*
(knights of the world; for through our love that we have loved together i\
s my most noble lord slain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 9)Tj
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( Wherefore, madam, I pray you kiss me and never no more. Nay, said th\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 10)Tj
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( And Sir Launcelot awoke, and went and took his horse, and rode all t\
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T*
(forest, weeping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 10)Tj
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( Then Sir Launcelot never after ate but little meat, ne drank, till h\
e was dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 12)Tj
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( I saw the angels heave up Sir Launcelot unto heaven, and the gates o\
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T*
(him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Said Sir Ector...Sir Launcelot...thou wert never matched of earthly \
knight\222s hand; and thou )Tj
T*
(wert the courteoust knight that ever bare shield; and thou wert the true\
st friend to thy lover that )Tj
T*
(ever bestrad horse; and thou wert the truest lover of a sinful man that \
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T*
(wert the kindest man that ever struck with sword; and thou wert the good\
liest person that ever )Tj
T*
(came among press of knights; and thou wert the meekest man and the gentl\
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T*
(among ladies; and thou wert the sternest knight to thy mortal foe that e\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Le Morte D\222Arthur\222 \(1485\) bk. 21, ch. 13)Tj
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( 1.53 Andr\350 Malraux 1901-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La Condition humaine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1933\))Tj
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( 1.54 Thomas Robert Malthus 1766-1834)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Population, when unchecked, increases in a geometrical ratio. Subsis\
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0 -1.2 TD
(arithmetical ratio.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Principle of Population\222 \(1798\) ch. 1)Tj
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( The perpetual struggle for room and food.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Principle of Population\222 \(1798\) ch. 3)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 143.2124 Tm
( 1.55 Lord Mancroft \(Baron Mancroft\) 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cricket\227a game which the English, not being a spiritual people, h\
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0 -1.2 TD
(themselves some conception of eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Bees in Some Bonnets\222 \(1979\) p. 185)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 55.4624 Tm
( 1.56 W. R. Mandale)Tj
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( Up and down the City Road,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In and out the Eagle,)Tj
T*
( That\222s the way the money goes\227)Tj
T*
( Pop goes the weasel!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Pop Goes the Weasel\222 \(1853 song\))Tj
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( 1.57 Winnie Mandela 1936\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( With that stick of matches, with our necklace, we shall liberate thi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 581.2124 Tm
( 1.58 Osip Mandelstam 1891-1938)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Perhaps my whisper was already born before my lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221Selected Poems\222 \(1973, translated by D. McDuff\) p. 129 \221Poem\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.59 Manilius \(Marcus Manilius\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Eripuitque Jovi fulmen viresque tonandi,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
(the winds, the flame to the clouds.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Astronomica\222 bk. 1, l. 104 \(on human intelligence\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 383.9624 Tm
( 1.60 Joseph L. Mankiewicz 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fasten your seat-belts, it\222s going to be a bumpy night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(Spoken by Bette Davis in \221All About Eve\222 \(1950 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 314.2124 Tm
( 1.61 Mrs Manley 1663-1724)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( No time like the present.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.67047 Tm
(\221The Lost Lover\222 \(1696\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 244.4624 Tm
( 1.62 Horace Mann 1796-1859)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The object of punishment is, prevention from evil; it never can be m\
ade impulsive to good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Lectures and Reports on Education\222 \(1867 ed.\) lecture 7)Tj
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( Lost, yesterday, somewhere between Sunrise and Sunset, two golden ho\
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0 -1.2 TD
(diamond minutes. No reward is offered, for they are gone forever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Lost, Two Golden Hours\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 119.9624 Tm
( 1.63 Thomas Mann 1875-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Our capacity for disgust, let me observe, is in proportion to our de\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the intensity of our attachment to the things of this world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221The Confessions of Felix Krull\222 \(1954\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
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( Time has no divisions to mark its passage, there is never a thunders\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 4, sect. 4 \(translation by H. T\
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15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( And waiting means hanging on ahead, it means regarding time and the \
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T*
(boon, but an obstruction; it means making their actual content null and \
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T*
(overleaping them. Waiting we say is long. We might just as well\227or mo\
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T*
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T*
(as such.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 5, sect. 5 \(translation by H. T\
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15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( We come out of the dark and go into the dark again, and in between l\
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T*
(life. But the beginning and end, birth and death, we do not experience; \
they have no subjective )Tj
T*
(character, they fall entirely in the category of objective events, and t\
hat\222s that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 6, sect. \(translation by H. T. \
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15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Human reason needs only to will more strongly than fate, and she is \
fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( All interest in disease and death is only another expression of inte\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 6, sect. 7)Tj
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( Unser Sterben mehr eine Angelegenheit der Weiterlebenden als unserer\
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( A man\222s dying is more the survivor\222s affair than his own.)Tj
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(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 6, sect. 8, \(translation by H. \
T. Lowe-Porter\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.75456 Tm
( For time is the medium of narration, as it is the medium of life. Bo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(with it, as are bodies in space. Similarly, time is the medium of music;\
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T*
(articulates time, and can shorten it, yet enhance its value, both at onc\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.92047 Tm
(\221The Magic Mountain\222 \(1924\) ch. 7, sect. 1, \(translation by H. \
T. Lowe-Porter\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.64 Lord John Manners, Duke of Rutland 1818-1906)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let wealth and commerce, laws and learning die,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But leave us still our old nobility!)Tj
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(\221England\222s Trust\222 \(1841\), pt. 3, l. 227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 212.9624 Tm
( 1.65 Katherine Mansfield \(Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp\) 1888-1923)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( E. M. Forster never gets any further than warming the teapot. He\222\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 May 1917 \(1927\) p. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Whenever I prepare for a journey I prepare as though for death. Shou\
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T*
(order.)Tj
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(\221Journal\222 29 January 1922 \(1927\) p. 224)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 70.4624 Tm
( 1.66 Lord Mansfield 1705-93)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The constitution does not allow reasons of state to influence our ju\
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(should! We must not regard political consequences; however formidable so\
ever they might be: if )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(rebellion was the certain consequence, we are bound to say \221fiat just\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Rex v. Wilkes, 8 June 1768.)Tj
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( Consider what you think justice requires, and decide accordingly. Bu\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Advice to a newly appointed colonial governor ignorant in the law, in Jo\
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T*
(Chief Justices of England\222 \(1849\) vol. 2, ch. 40)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
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( Politics is war without bloodshed while war is politics with bloodsh\
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( Every Communist must grasp the truth, \221Political power grows out \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(Speech at 6th Plenary Session of 6th Central Committee, 6 November 1938,\
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T*
(2, p. 224)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 452.25456 Tm
( The atom bomb is a paper tiger which the United States reactionaries\
use to scare people. It )Tj
T*
(looks terrible, but in fact it isn\222t ... All reactionaries are paper \
tigers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(Interview with Anne Louise Strong, August 1946, in \221Selected Works\222\
\(1961\) vol. 4, p. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.50456 Tm
( Letting a hundred flowers blossom and a hundred schools of thought c\
ontend is the policy for )Tj
T*
(promoting progress in the arts and the sciences and a flourishing social\
ist culture in our land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(Speech at Peking, 27 February 1957, in \221Quotations of Chairman Mao\222\
\(1966\) p. 302)Tj
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( 1.68 William Learned Marcy 1786-1857)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The politicians of New York...see nothing wrong in the rule, that to\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Senate, 25 January 1832, in James Parton \221Life of Andre\
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( 1.69 Miriam Margoyles)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Life, if you\222re fat, is a minefield\227you have to pick your way,\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.70 Marie-Antoinette 1755-93)Tj
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( Qu\222ils mangent de la brioche.)Tj
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( Let them eat cake.)Tj
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(On being told that her people had no bread, though much older in origin.\
In Confessions \(1740\) Rousseau )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(1791 \(1823, p. 59\) Louis XVIII attributes \221Que ne mangent-ils de la\
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T*
(pastry?]\222 to Marie-Th\350r\351se \(1638-83\), wife of Louis XIV)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( The emptiness of ages in his face,)Tj
T*
( And on his back the burden of the world.)Tj
T*
( Who made him dead to rapture and despair,)Tj
T*
( A thing that grieves not and that never hopes,)Tj
T*
( Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox?)Tj
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(\221The Man with the Hoe\222 \(1899\))Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And if you ever saw it,)Tj
T*
( You would even say it glows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer\222 \(1949 song\) based on a Robert \
L. May story \(1939\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 1.73 Sarah, first Duchess of Marlborough 1660-1744)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Duke returned from the wars today and did pleasure me in his top\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(Oral tradition, attributed in various forms. See, among others, I. Butle\
r \221Rule of Three\222 \(1967\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( If I were young and handsome as I was, instead of old and faded as I\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(John, Duke of Marlborough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(Refusing the offer of marriage from the Duke of Somerset, in W. S. Churc\
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T*
(Times\222 \(1938\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 293.9624 Tm
( 1.74 Bob Marley 1945-81)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Get up, stand up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.42047 Tm
(Title of song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.50456 Tm
( I shot the sheriff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(Title of song)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 187.4624 Tm
( 1.75 Christopher Marlowe 1564-93)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( Sweet Analytics, \222tis thou hast ravished me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(published 1604\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.00456 Tm
( I\222ll have them fly to India for gold,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ransack the ocean for orient pearl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( I\222ll hae them wall all Germany with brass,)Tj
T*
( And make swift Rhine circle fair Wertemberg. )Tj
T*
( I\222ll have them fill the public schools with silk,)Tj
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( Wherewith the students shall be bravely clad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 713.50456 Tm
( Faustus: And what are you that live with Lucifer?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mephistopheles: Unhappy spirits that fell with Lucifer,)Tj
T*
( Conspired against our God with Lucifer,)Tj
T*
( And are for ever damned with Lucifer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.75456 Tm
( Why, this is hell, nor am I out of it: )Tj
T*
( Thinkst thou that I who saw the face of God,)Tj
T*
( And tasted the eternal joys of heaven,)Tj
T*
( Am not tormented with ten thousand hells)Tj
T*
( In being deprived of everlasting bliss!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.00456 Tm
( Hell hath no limits nor is circumscribed)Tj
T*
( In one self place, where we are is Hell,)Tj
T*
( And to be short, when all the world dissolves,)Tj
T*
( And every creature shall be purified,)Tj
T*
( All places shall be hell that are not heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( Have not I made blind Homer sing to me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.42047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.50456 Tm
( Was this the face that launched a thousand ships,)Tj
T*
( And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? )Tj
T*
( Sweet Helen, make me immortal with a kiss! )Tj
T*
( Her lips suck forth my soul: see, where it flies! )Tj
T*
( Come Helen, come give me my soul again. )Tj
T*
( Here will I dwell, for heaven be in these lips,)Tj
T*
( And all is dross that is not Helena.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.67047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.75456 Tm
( Now hast thou but one bare hour to live,)Tj
T*
( And then thou must be damned perpetually. )Tj
T*
( Stand still, you ever-moving spheres of heaven,)Tj
T*
( That time may cease, and midnight never come. )Tj
T*
( Fair nature\222s eye, rise, rise again and make)Tj
T*
( Perpetual day; or let this hour be but)Tj
T*
( A year, a month, a week, a natural day,)Tj
T*
( That Faustus may repent and save his soul. )Tj
T*
( O lente lente currite noctis equi. )Tj
T*
( The stars move still, time runs, the clock will strike,)Tj
T*
( The devil will come, and Faustus must be damned. )Tj
ET
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( O I\222ll leap up to my God: who pulls me down? )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( See, see, where Christ\222s blood streams in the firmament. )Tj
T*
( One drop would save my soul, half a drop, ah my Christ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( You stars that reigned at my nativity,)Tj
T*
( Whose influence hath allotted death and hell,)Tj
T*
( Now draw up Faustus like a foggy mist,)Tj
T*
( Into the entrails of yon labouring cloud,)Tj
T*
( That when you vomit forth into the air,)Tj
T*
( My limbs may issue from your smoky mouths,)Tj
T*
( So that my soul may but ascend to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Ah, Pythagoras\222 metempsychosis, were that true,)Tj
T*
( This soul should fly from me, and I be changed)Tj
T*
( Unto some brutish beast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( O soul, be changed into little water drops,)Tj
T*
( And fall into the ocean, ne\222er be found: )Tj
T*
( My God, my God, look not so fierce on me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Cut is the branch that might have grown full straight,)Tj
T*
( And burn\351d is Apollo\222s laurel bough,)Tj
T*
( That sometime grew within this learned man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Doctor Faustus\222 \(1604\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( My men, like satyrs grazing on the lawns,)Tj
T*
( Shall with their goat feet dance an antic hay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Edward II\222 \(1593\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( His body was as straight as Circe\222s wand etc.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Hero and Leander\222 \(published 1598\) First Sestiad, l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( It lies not in our power to love, or hate,)Tj
T*
( For will in us is over-ruled by fate.)Tj
T*
( When two are stripped, long ere the course begin,)Tj
T*
( We wish that one should lose, the other win;)Tj
T*
( And one especially do we affect)Tj
T*
( Of two gold ingots, like in each respect.)Tj
T*
( The reason no man knows; let it suffice,)Tj
T*
( What we behold is censured by our eyes.)Tj
T*
( Where both deliberate, the love is slight;)Tj
T*
( Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Hero and Leander\222 \(published 1598\) First Sestiad, l. 167.)Tj
ET
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( I count religion but a childish toy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hold there is no sin but ignorance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Jew of Malta\222 \(written and performed c.1592\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Thus methinks should men of judgement frame)Tj
T*
( Their means of traffic from the vulgar trade,)Tj
T*
( And, as their wealth increaseth, so enclose)Tj
T*
( Infinite riches in a little room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Jew of Malta\222 \(c.1592\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
(As for myself, I walk abroad o\222 nights And kill sick people groaning \
under walls: Sometimes I )Tj
T*
(go about and poison wells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Jew of Malta\222 \(c.1592\) act 2, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Barnardine: Thou hast committed\227)Tj
T*
( Barabas: Fornication? But that was in another country: and besides,\
the wench is dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Jew of Malta\222 \(c.1592\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Come live with me, and be my love,)Tj
T*
( And we will all the pleasures prove,)Tj
T*
( That valleys, groves, hills and fields,)Tj
T*
( Woods or steepy mountain yields.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Passionate Shepherd to his Love\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( By shallow rivers, to whose falls,)Tj
T*
( Melodious birds sing madrigals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Passionate Shepherd to his Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( From jigging veins of rhyming mother-wits,)Tj
T*
( And such conceits as clownage keeps in pay,)Tj
T*
( We\222ll lead you to the stately tents of war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(performed c.1588, published 1590\) pt. 1\
, prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Zenocrate, lovelier than the Love of Jove,)Tj
T*
( Brighter than is the silver Rhodope,)Tj
T*
( Fairer than whitest snow on Scythian hills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Our swords shall play the orators for us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( With Nature\222s pride, and richest furniture? )Tj
T*
( His looks do menace heaven and dare the Gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Accurst be he that first invented war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Is it not passing brave to be a King,)Tj
T*
( And ride in triumph through Persepolis?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 2, sc. 5)Tj
ET
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( Nature that framed us of four elements,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Warring within our breasts for regiment,)Tj
T*
( Doth teach us all to have aspiring minds: )Tj
T*
( Our souls, whose faculties can comprehend)Tj
T*
( The wondrous architecture of the world: )Tj
T*
( And measure every wand\222ring planet\222s course,)Tj
T*
( Still climbing after knowledge infinite,)Tj
T*
( And always moving as the restless spheres,)Tj
T*
( Wills us to wear ourselves and never rest,)Tj
T*
( Until we reach the ripest fruit of all,)Tj
T*
( That perfect bliss and sole felicity,)Tj
T*
( The sweet fruition of an earthly crown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 2, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( Virtue is the fount whence honour springs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 4, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( Ah fair Zenocrate, divine Zenocrate,)Tj
T*
( Fair is too foul an epithet for thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) act 5, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( What is beauty saith my sufferings, then? )Tj
T*
( If all the pens that ever poets held)Tj
T*
( Had fed the feeling of their masters\222 thoughts,)Tj
T*
( And every sweetness that inspired their hearts,)Tj
T*
( Their minds, and muses on admired themes: )Tj
T*
( If all the heavenly quintessence they still)Tj
T*
( From their immortal flowers of Poesy,)Tj
T*
( Wherein as in a mirror we perceive)Tj
T*
( The highest reaches of a human wit;)Tj
T*
( If these had made one poem\222s period,)Tj
T*
( And all combined in beauty\222s worthiness,)Tj
T*
( Yet should there hover in their restless heads)Tj
T*
( One thought, one grace, one wonder at the least,)Tj
T*
( Which into words no virtue can digest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( And every warrior that is rapt with love)Tj
T*
( Of fame, of valour, and of victory,)Tj
T*
( Must needs have beauty beat on his conceits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 1, act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( Now walk the angels on the walls of heaven,)Tj
T*
( As sentinels to warn th\222 immortal souls,)Tj
T*
( To entertain divine Zenocrate.)Tj
ET
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(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 2, act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Yet let me kiss my Lord before I die,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And let me die with kissing of my Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 2, act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Helen, whose beauty summoned Greece to arms,)Tj
T*
( And drew a thousand ships to Tenedos.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 2, act 2, sc. 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( More childish valourous than manly wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Tamburlaine the Great\222 \(1590\) pt. 2, act 4, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 1.76 Don Marquis 1878-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) ch. 12 \221certain maxims of archy\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( an optimist is a guy that has never had much experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) ch. 12 \221certain maxims of archy\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( but wotthehell)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( archy wotthehell)Tj
T*
( it s cheerio)Tj
T*
( my deario that)Tj
T*
( pulls a lady through.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) \221cheerio, my deario\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( I have got you out here)Tj
T*
( in the great open spaces)Tj
T*
( where cats are cats.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) ch. 14 \221mehitabel has an adventu\
re\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( but wotthehell archy wotthehell)Tj
T*
( jamais triste archy jamais triste)Tj
T*
( that is my motto.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) ch. 46 \221mehitabel sees paris\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( but wotthehell wotthehell)Tj
T*
( oh i should worry and fret)Tj
T*
( death and I will coquette)Tj
T*
( there s a dance in the old dame yet)Tj
T*
( toujours gai toujours gai.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221archy and mehitabel\222 \(1927\) ch. 3 \221the song of mehitabel\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( boss there is always)Tj
T*
( a comforting thought)Tj
T*
( in time of trouble when)Tj
T*
( it is not our trouble)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221archy does his part\222 \(1935\) \221comforting thoughts\222)Tj
ET
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( honesty is a good)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( thing but)Tj
T*
( it is not profitable to)Tj
T*
( its possessor)Tj
T*
( unless it is)Tj
T*
( kept under control.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221archys life of mehitabel\222 \(1933\) ch. 40 \221archygrams\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( did you ever)Tj
T*
( notice that when)Tj
T*
( a politician)Tj
T*
( does get an idea)Tj
T*
( he usually)Tj
T*
( gets it all wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221archys life of mehitabel\222 \(1933\) ch. 40 \221archygrams\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( now and then)Tj
T*
( there is a person born)Tj
T*
( who is so unlucky)Tj
T*
( that he runs into accidents)Tj
T*
( which started to happen)Tj
T*
( to somebody else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221archys life of mehitabel\222 \(1933\) ch. 41 \221archy says\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( Writing a book of poetry is like dropping a rose petal down the Gran\
d Canyon and waiting for )Tj
T*
(the echo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(In E. Anthony \221O Rare Don Marquis\222 \(1962\) p. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( The art of newspaper paragraphing is to stroke a platitude until it \
purrs like an epigram.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(In E. Anthony \221O Rare Don Marquis\222 \(1962\) p. 354)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.9624 Tm
( 1.77 Captain Marryat 1792-1848)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222s no getting blood out of a turnip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(\221Japhet, in Search of a Father\222 \(1836\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 211.50456 Tm
( As savage as a bear with a sore head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(\221The King\222s Own\222 \(1830\) vol. 2, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( If you please, ma\222am, it was a very little one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221Mr Midshipman Easy\222 \(1836\) ch. 3 \(the nurse, excusing her ille\
gitimate baby\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( All zeal...all zeal, Mr Easy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Mr Midshipman Easy\222 \(1836\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 89.9624 Tm
( 1.78 Arthur Marshall 1910-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Oh My! Bertha\222s got a bang on the boko. Keep a stiff upper lip, B\
ertha dear. What, knocked a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(tooth out? Never mind, dear, laugh it off, laugh it off; it\222s all par\
t of life\222s rich pageant.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Games Mistress\222 \(recorded monologue, 1937\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 1.79 Thomas R. Marshall 1854-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What this country needs is a really good 5-cent cigar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(In \221New York Tribune\222 4 January 1920, pt. 7, p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 653.2124 Tm
( 1.80 Martial A.D. c.40-104)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Non est, crede mihi, sapientis dicere \221Vivam\222:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sera nimis vita est crastina: vive hodie.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Believe me, wise men don\222t say \221I shall live to do that\222, t\
omorrow\222s life\222s too late; live today.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 1, no. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( Non amo te, Sabidi, nec possum dicere quare:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I don\222t love you, Sabidius, and I can\222t tell you why; all I ca\
n tell you is this, that I don\222t love )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 1, no. 32.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Laudant illa sed ista legunt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( They praise those works, but they\222re not the ones they read.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.92047 Tm
(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 4, no. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.00456 Tm
( Bonosque)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Soles effugere atque abire sentit,)Tj
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( Qui nobis pereunt et imputantur.)Tj
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(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 5, no. 20)Tj
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( Non est vivere, sed valere vita est.)Tj
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( Life\222s not just being alive, but being well.)Tj
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(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 12, no. 46\(47\))Tj
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( Rus in urbe.)Tj
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( Country in the town.)Tj
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(\221Epigrammata\222 bk. 12, no. 57)Tj
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( 1.81 Andrew Marvell 1621-78)Tj
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( Where the remote Bermudas ride)Tj
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( He hangs in shades the orange bright,)Tj
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(\221Bermudas\222 \(written c.1653, published 1681\))Tj
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( And makes the hollow seas, that roar,)Tj
T*
( Proclaim the ambergris on shore.)Tj
T*
( He cast \(of which we rather boast\))Tj
T*
( The gospel\222s pearl upon our coast.)Tj
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(\221Bermudas\222 \(written c.1653, published 1681\))Tj
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( Oh let our voice his praise exalt,)Tj
T*
( Till it arrive at heaven\222s vault:)Tj
T*
( Which thence \(perhaps\) rebounding, may)Tj
T*
( Echo beyond the Mexique Bay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Bermudas\222 \(written c.1653, published 1681\))Tj
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( My love is of a birth as rare)Tj
T*
( As \222tis for object strange and high:)Tj
T*
( It was begotten by Despair)Tj
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( Upon Impossibility.)Tj
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( But vainly flapped its tinsel wing.)Tj
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(\221The Definition of Love\222 \(1681\))Tj
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( As lines \(so loves\) oblique may well)Tj
T*
( Themselves in every angle greet:)Tj
T*
( But ours so truly parallel,)Tj
T*
( Though infinite, can never meet.)Tj
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( Therefore the love which us doth bind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But Fate so enviously debars,)Tj
T*
( Is the conjunction of the mind,)Tj
T*
( And opposition of the stars.)Tj
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(\221The Definition of Love\222 \(1681\))Tj
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( Choosing each stone, and poising every weight,)Tj
T*
( Trying the measures of the breadth and height;)Tj
T*
( Here pulling down, and there erecting new,)Tj
T*
( Founding a firm state by proportions true.)Tj
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(\221The First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the Lord \
Protector, 1655\222 l. 245)Tj
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( How vainly men themselves amaze)Tj
T*
( To win the palm, the oak, or bays,)Tj
T*
( And their uncessant labours see)Tj
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( Crowned from some single herb or tree,)Tj
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( Whose short and narrow verg\351d shade)Tj
T*
( Does prudently their toils upbraid,)Tj
T*
( While all flowers and all trees do close)Tj
T*
( To weave the garlands of repose.)Tj
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(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 1)Tj
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( Fair Quiet, have I found thee here,)Tj
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( And Innocence, thy sister dear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 2)Tj
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( Society is all but rude,)Tj
T*
( To this delicious solitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( The gods, that mortal beauty chase,)Tj
T*
( Still in a tree did end their race.)Tj
T*
( Apollo hunted Daphne so,)Tj
T*
( Only that she might laurel grow.)Tj
T*
( And Pan did after Syrinx speed,)Tj
T*
( Not as a nymph, but for a reed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 4)Tj
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( What wondrous life is this I lead!)Tj
T*
( Ripe apples drop about my head;)Tj
T*
( The luscious clusters of the vine)Tj
T*
( Upon my mouth do crush their wine;)Tj
T*
( The nectarine, and curious peach,)Tj
T*
( Into my hands themselves do reach;)Tj
T*
( Stumbling on melons, as I pass,)Tj
T*
( Ensnared with flowers, I fall on grass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.42047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.50456 Tm
( Meanwhile the mind, from pleasure less,)Tj
T*
( Withdraws into its happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.67047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 6)Tj
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( Annihilating all that\222s made)Tj
T*
( To a green thought in a green shade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.92047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 6)Tj
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( Here at the fountain\222s sliding foot,)Tj
T*
( Or at some fruit-tree\222s mossy root,)Tj
T*
( Casting the body\222s vest aside,)Tj
T*
( My soul into the boughs does glide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 7)Tj
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( Such was that happy garden-state,)Tj
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( While man there walked without a mate.)Tj
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(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 8)Tj
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( But \222twas beyond a mortal\222s share)Tj
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( To wander solitary there:)Tj
T*
( Two paradises \222twere in one)Tj
T*
( To live in paradise alone.)Tj
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(\221The Garden\222 \(1681\) st. 8)Tj
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( He nothing common did or mean)Tj
T*
( Upon that memorable scene:)Tj
T*
( But with his keener eye)Tj
T*
( The axe\222s edge did try:)Tj
T*
( Nor called the gods with vulgar spite)Tj
T*
( To vindicate his helpless right,)Tj
T*
( But bowed his comely head,)Tj
T*
( Down as upon a bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell\222s Return from Ireland\222 \(written\
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( And now the Irish are ashamed)Tj
T*
( To see themselves in one year tamed:)Tj
T*
( So much one man can do,)Tj
T*
( That does both act and know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell\222s Return from Ireland\222 \(written\
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( Ye living lamps, by whose dear light)Tj
T*
( The nightingale does sit so late,)Tj
T*
( And studying all the summer night,)Tj
T*
( Her matchless songs does meditate;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ye country comets, that portend)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No war, nor prince\222s funeral,)Tj
T*
( Shining unto no higher end)Tj
T*
( Then to presage the grass\222s fall.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The Mower to the Glow-worms\222 \(1681\))Tj
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( It is a wondrous thing, how fleet)Tj
T*
( \222Twas on those little silver feet.)Tj
T*
( With what a pretty skipping grace,)Tj
T*
( It oft would challenge me the race:)Tj
T*
( And when \222t had left me far away,)Tj
T*
( \222Twould stay, and run again, and stay.)Tj
T*
( For it was nimbler much than hinds;)Tj
T*
( And trod, as on the fo\371r winds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn\222 \(1681\) l. 63)Tj
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( I have a garden of my own)Tj
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( But so with roses overgrown,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And lilies, that you would it guess)Tj
T*
( To be a little wilderness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn\222 \(1681\) l. 71)Tj
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( Had it lived long, it would have been)Tj
T*
( Lilies without, roses within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn\222 \(1681\) l. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( For though the whole world cannot show such another,)Tj
T*
( Yet we\222d better by far have him than his brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Statue in Stocks-Market\222 \(1689\), on Charles II)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Had we but world enough, and time,)Tj
T*
( This coyness, lady, were no crime.)Tj
T*
( We would sit down, and think which way)Tj
T*
( To walk, and pass our long love\222s day.)Tj
T*
( Thou by the Indian Ganges\222 side)Tj
T*
( Shouldst rubies find: I by the tide)Tj
T*
( Of Humber would complain. I would)Tj
T*
( Love you ten years before the flood:)Tj
T*
( And you should, if you please, refuse)Tj
T*
( Till the conversion of the Jews.)Tj
T*
( My vegetable love should grow)Tj
T*
( Vaster than empires, and more slow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221To His coy Mistress\222 \(1681\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( But at my back I always hear)Tj
T*
( Time\222s wing\351d chariot hurrying near:)Tj
T*
( And yonder all before us lie)Tj
T*
( Deserts of vast eternity.)Tj
T*
( Thy beauty shall no more be found;)Tj
T*
( Nor, in thy marble vault, shall sound)Tj
T*
( My echoing song: then worms shall try)Tj
T*
( That long preserved virginity:)Tj
T*
( And your quaint honour turn to dust;)Tj
T*
( And into ashes all my lust.)Tj
T*
( The grave\222s a fine and private place,)Tj
T*
( But none, I think, do there embrace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221To His Coy Mistress\222 \(1681\) l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( Let us roll all our strength, and all)Tj
T*
( Our sweetness, up into one ball:)Tj
T*
( And tear our pleasures with rough strife,)Tj
T*
( Thorough the iron gates of life.)Tj
ET
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( Thus, though we cannot make our sun)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Stand still, yet we will make him run.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221To His Coy Mistress\222 \(1681\) l. 41)Tj
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( He is translation\222s thief that addeth more,)Tj
T*
( As much as he that taketh from the store)Tj
T*
( Of the first author.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221To His Worthy Friend Dr Witty\222 \(1651\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( What need of all this marble crust)Tj
T*
( T\222impark the wanton mote of dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 3)Tj
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( A stately frontispiece of poor)Tj
T*
( Adorns without the open door:)Tj
T*
( Nor less the rooms within commends)Tj
T*
( Daily new furniture of friends.)Tj
T*
( The House was built upon the place)Tj
T*
( Only as for a mark of grace;)Tj
T*
( And for an inn to entertain)Tj
T*
( Its lord a while, but not remain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 9)Tj
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( Oh thou, that dear and happy isle)Tj
T*
( The garden of the world ere while,)Tj
T*
( Thou paradise of four seas,)Tj
T*
( Which heaven planted us to please,)Tj
T*
( But, to exclude the world, did guard)Tj
T*
( With watery if not flaming sword;)Tj
T*
( What luckless apple did we taste,)Tj
T*
( To make us mortal, and thee waste?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( For he did, with his utmost skill,)Tj
T*
( Ambition weed, but conscience till:)Tj
T*
( Conscience, that heaven-nurs\351d plant,)Tj
T*
( Which most our earthy gardens want.)Tj
T*
( A prickling leaf it bears, and such)Tj
T*
( As that which shrinks at every touch;)Tj
T*
( But flowers eternal, and divine,)Tj
T*
( That in the crowns of saints do shine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( And now to the abyss I pass)Tj
T*
( Of that unfathomable grass,)Tj
T*
( Where men like grasshoppers appear,)Tj
ET
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( But grasshoppers are giants there:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They, in their squeaking laugh, contemn)Tj
T*
( Us as we walk more low than them:)Tj
T*
( And, from the precipices tall)Tj
T*
( Of the green spires, to us do call.)Tj
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(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 47)Tj
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( Unhappy birds! what does it boot)Tj
T*
( To build below the grass\222s root,)Tj
T*
( When lowness is unsafe as height,)Tj
T*
( And chance o\222ertakes, what \222scapeth spite?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 52)Tj
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( \222Tis not what once it was, the world,)Tj
T*
( But a rude heap together hurled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( But now the salmon-fishers moist)Tj
T*
( Their leathern boats begin to hoist;)Tj
T*
( And, like Antipodes in shoes,)Tj
T*
( Have shod their heads in their canoes.)Tj
T*
( How tortoise-like, but not so slow,)Tj
T*
( These rational amphibii go!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Upon Appleton House\222 \(1681\) st. 97)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.82 Holt Marvell)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A cigarette that bears a lipstick\222s traces,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An airline ticket to romantic places;)Tj
T*
( And still my heart has wings)Tj
T*
( These foolish things)Tj
T*
( Remind me of you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221These Foolish Things Remind Me of You\222 \(1935 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 218.9624 Tm
( 1.83 Chico Marx 1891-1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I wasn\222t kissing her, I was just whispering in her mouth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(On being discovered by his wife with a chorus girl, in Groucho Marx and \
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0 -1.2 TD
(Scrapbook\222 \(1973\) ch. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 134.2124 Tm
( 1.84 Groucho Marx 1895-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( please accept my resignation. i don\222t want to belong to any club \
that will accept me as a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(member.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221Groucho and Me\222 \(1959\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( I never forget a face, but in your case I\222ll be glad to make an e\
xception.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(In Leo Rosten \221People I have Loved, Known or Admired\222 \(1970\) \221\
Groucho\222)Tj
ET
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( I like a cigar, but every now and again I take it out of my mouth.)Tj
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(To a lady, who was the mother of ten children; attributed)Tj
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( 1.85 Karl Marx 1818-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.42047 Tm
(\221Critique of the Gotha Programme\222 \(written 1875\) but of earlier \
origin. Morelly \221Code de la nature\222 \(1755\) pt. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(4, p. 190, and J. J. L. Blanc \221Organisation du travail\222 \(1839\) p\
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T*
(notion\) for possible sources.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 614.50456 Tm
( Religion...is the opium of the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 598.67047 Tm
(\221A Contribution to the Critique of Hegel\222s Philosophy of Right\222\
\(1843-4\) introduction.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 577.75456 Tm
( Mankind always sets itself only such problems as it can solve; since\
, looking at the matter )Tj
T*
(more closely, it will always be found that the task itself arises only w\
hen the material conditions )Tj
T*
(for its solution already exist or are at least in the process of formati\
on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.92047 Tm
(\221A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy\222 \(1859\) pre\
face \(translation by D. McLellan\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 505.00456 Tm
( It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, \
but their social existence that )Tj
T*
(determines their consciousness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.17047 Tm
(\221A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy\222 \(1859\) pre\
face)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.25456 Tm
( And even when a society has got upon the right track for the discove\
ry of the natural laws of )Tj
T*
(its movement\227and it is the ultimate aim of this work, to lay bare the\
economic law of motion of )Tj
T*
(modern society\227it can neither clear by bold leaps, nor remove by lega\
l enactments, the obstacles )Tj
T*
(offered by the successive phases of its normal development. But it can s\
horten and lessen the )Tj
T*
(birth-pangs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.42047 Tm
(\221Das Kapital\222 \(1st German ed., 1867\) preface \(25 July 1865\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.50456 Tm
( Hegel says somewhere that all great events and personalities in worl\
d history reappear in one )Tj
T*
(fashion or another. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the se\
cond as farce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.67047 Tm
(\221The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte\222 \(1852\) sect. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.75456 Tm
( The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; th\
e point is to change it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.92047 Tm
(\221Theses on Feuerbach\222 \(written 1845, published 1888\) no. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 250.00456 Tm
( What I did that was new was to prove...that the class struggle neces\
sarily leads to the )Tj
T*
(dictatorship of the proletariat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.17047 Tm
(Letter to Joseph Weydemeyer 5 March 1852. The phrase \221dictatorship of\
the proletariat\222 had earlier been used )Tj
T*
(in the Constitution of the World Society of Revolutionary Communists \(1\
850\), signed by Marx and others. )Tj
T*
(Marx claimed that the phrase had been coined by Auguste Blanqui \(1805-8\
1\), but it has not been found in this )Tj
T*
(form in Blanqui\222s work. D. Fernbach \(ed.\) \221Karl Marx: The Revol\
utions of 1848: Political Writings\222 \(1973 )Tj
T*
(vol. 1, p. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.25456 Tm
( All I know is that I am not a Marxist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.42047 Tm
(Attributed in a letter from Engels to C. Schmidt, 5 August 1890)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 87.2124 Tm
( 1.86 Karl Marx 1818-83 and Friedrich Engels 1820-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A spectre is haunting Europe\227the spectre of Communism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.67047 Tm
(\221The Communist Manifesto\222 \(1848\) opening words)Tj
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( In place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and class an\
tagonists, we shall have an )Tj
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(association, in which the free development of each is the free developme\
nt of all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Communist Manifesto\222 \(1848\) para. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class\
struggles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Communist Manifesto\222 \(1848\) \221Bourgeois and Proletarians\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a \
world to win. working men )Tj
T*
(of all countries, unite!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Communist Manifesto\222 \(1848\) closing words \(from the 1888 t\
ranslation by Samuel Moore, edited by )Tj
T*
(Engels\). D. Fernbach \(ed.\) \221Karl Marx: The Revolutions of 1848: P\
olitical Writings\222 \(1973\) vol. 1, p. 62)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 580.4624 Tm
( 1.87 Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots 1542-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In my end is my beginning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(Motto.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 510.7124 Tm
( 1.88 Mary Tudor 1516-58)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( When I am dead and opened, you shall find \221Calais\222 lying in my\
heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.17047 Tm
(\221Holinshed\222s Chronicles\222 vol. 4 \(1808\) p. 137)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 440.9624 Tm
( 1.89 Queen Mary 1867-1953)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( To give up all that for this\227!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.42047 Tm
(Referring to her son [Edward VIII]\222s natural inheritance on the one h\
and, and the Instrument of Abdication on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the other; in J. Bryan III and Charles J. V. Murphy \221The Windsor Stor\
y\222 \(1979\) bk. 2, ch. 11, sometimes )Tj
T*
(quoted \221To give up all this for that!\227\222 \221that\222 being Mrs \
Simpson)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( \221Well, Mr Baldwin! this is a pretty kettle of fish!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(On the abdication crisis, in James Pope-Hennessy \221Life of Queen Mary\222\
\(1959\) pt. 4, ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 304.4624 Tm
( 1.90 Eric Maschwitz 1901-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A nightingale sang in Berkeley Square.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1940\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 234.7124 Tm
( 1.91 John Masefield 1878-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Quinquireme of Nineveh from distant Ophir)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Rowing home to haven in sunny Palestine,)Tj
T*
( With a cargo of ivory,)Tj
T*
( And apes and peacocks,)Tj
T*
( Sandalwood, cedarwood, and sweet white wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Cargoes\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Dirty British coaster with a salt-caked smoke stack,)Tj
T*
( Butting through the Channel in the mad March days,)Tj
T*
( With a cargo of Tyne coal,)Tj
T*
( Road-rails, pig lead,)Tj
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( Firewood, ironware, and cheap tin trays.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Cargoes\222 \(1903\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( In the dark womb where I began)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( My mother\222s life made me a man.)Tj
T*
( Through all the months of human birth)Tj
T*
( Her beauty fed my common earth.)Tj
T*
( I cannot see, nor breathe, nor stir,)Tj
T*
( But through the death of some of her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221C.L.M.\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Jane brought the bowl of stewing gin)Tj
T*
( And poured the egg and lemon in,)Tj
T*
( And whisked it up and served it out)Tj
T*
( While bawdy questions went about.)Tj
T*
( Jack chucked her chin, and Jim accost her)Tj
T*
( With bits out of the \221Maid of Gloster\222.)Tj
T*
( And fifteen arms went round her waist.)Tj
T*
( \(And then men ask, Are Barmaids Chaste?\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Mercy\222 \(1911\) st. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( The corn that makes the holy bread)Tj
T*
( By which the soul of man is fed,)Tj
T*
( The holy bread, the food unpriced,)Tj
T*
( Thy everlasting mercy, Christ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Everlasting Mercy\222 \(1911\) st. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( I must down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,)Tj
T*
( And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,)Tj
T*
( And the wheel\222s kick and the wind\222s song and the white sail\222\
s shaking,)Tj
T*
( And a grey mist on the sea\222s face and a grey dawn breaking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Sea Fever\222 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( I must down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide)Tj
T*
( Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Sea Fever\222 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( I must down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,)Tj
T*
( To the gull\222s way and the whale\222s way where the wind\222s like\
a whetted knife;)Tj
T*
( And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,)Tj
T*
( And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick\222s over.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Sea Fever\222 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Death opens unknown doors. It is most grand to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Pompey The Great\222 \(1910\) act 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 51.7124 Tm
( 1.92 Donald Mason 1913\227)Tj
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( Sighted sub, sank same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Radio message, 28 January 1942, in \221New York Times\222 27 February 19\
42, on sinking a Japanese submarine )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in the Atlantic region, the first US naval success in the war)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.93 Philip Massinger 1583-1640)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ambition, in a private man a vice,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is in a prince the virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 634.42047 Tm
(\221The Bashful Lover\222 \(licensed 1636, published 1655\) act 1, sc. 2\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 613.50456 Tm
( Pray enter)Tj
T*
( You are learned Europeans and we worse)Tj
T*
( Than ignorant Americans.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221The City Madam\222 \(licensed 1632, published 1658\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( Greatness, with private men)Tj
T*
( Esteemed a blessing, is to me a curse;)Tj
T*
( And we, whom, for our high births, they conclude)Tj
T*
( The only freemen, are the only slaves.)Tj
T*
( Happy the golden mean!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221The Great Duke of Florence\222 \(licensed 1627, printed 1635\) act 1\
, sc. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.00456 Tm
( Oh that thou hadst like others been all words,)Tj
T*
( And no performance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(\221The Parliament of Love\222 \(1624\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.25456 Tm
( Death has a thousand doors to let out life:)Tj
T*
( I shall find one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221A Very Woman\222 \(licensed 1634, published 1655\) act 5, sc. 4.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.2124 Tm
( 1.94 Sir James Mathew 1830-1908)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In England, justice is open to all\227like the Ritz Hotel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.67047 Tm
(In R. E. Megarry \221Miscellany-at-Law\222 \(1955\) p. 254.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 241.4624 Tm
( 1.95 Henri Matisse 1869-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ce que je r\352ve, c\222est un art d\222\350quilibre, de puret\350, \
de tranquillit\350, sans sujet inqui\350tant ou )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pr\350occupant, qui soit...un l\350nifiant, un calmant c\350r\350bral, q\
uelque chose d\222analogue \341 un bon )Tj
T*
(fauteuil qui le d\350lasse de ses fatigues physiques.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What I dream of is an art of balance, of purity and serenity devoid \
of troubling or depressing )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(subject matter...a soothing, calming influence on the mind, rather like \
a good armchair which )Tj
T*
(provides relaxation from physical fatigue.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.17047 Tm
(\221Notes d\222un peintre\222 \(1908\) in Dominique Fourcade \221\310cri\
ts et propos sur l\222art\222 \(1972\) p. 30)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 77.9624 Tm
( 1.96 W. Somerset Maugham 1874-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hypocrisy is the most difficult and nerve-racking vice that any man \
can pursue; it needs an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unceasing vigilance and a rare detachment of spirit. It cannot, like adu\
ltery or gluttony, be )Tj
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(practised at spare moments; it is a whole-time job.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Cakes and Ale\222 \(1930\) ch. 1)Tj
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( From the earliest times the old have rubbed it into the young that t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(before the young had discovered what nonsense this was they were old too\
, and it profited them )Tj
T*
(to carry on the imposture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.67047 Tm
(\221Cakes and Ale\222 \(1930\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.75456 Tm
( Poor Henry [James], he\222s spending eternity wandering round and ro\
und a stately park and the )Tj
T*
(fence is just too high for him to peep over and they\222re having tea ju\
st too far away for him to hear )Tj
T*
(what the countess is saying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221Cakes and Ale\222 \(1930\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( You can\222t learn too soon that the most useful thing about a princ\
iple is that it can always be )Tj
T*
(sacrificed to expediency.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221The Circle\222 \(1921\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( A woman will always sacrifice herself if you give her the opportunit\
y. It is her favourite form )Tj
T*
(of self-indulgence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.42047 Tm
(\221The Circle\222 \(1921\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.50456 Tm
( Impropriety is the soul of wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 442.67047 Tm
(\221The Moon and Sixpence\222 \(1919\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 421.75456 Tm
( It is not true that suffering ennobles the character; happiness does\
that sometimes, but )Tj
T*
(suffering, for the most part, makes men petty and vindictive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(\221The Moon and Sixpence\222 \(1919\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.00456 Tm
( \221A woman can forgive a man for the harm he does her,\222 he said,\
\221but she can never forgive him )Tj
T*
(for the sacrifices he makes on her account.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(\221The Moon and Sixpence\222 \(1919\) ch. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( Like all weak men he laid an exaggerated stress on not changing one\222\
s mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(\221Of Human Bondage\222 \(1915\) ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( People ask you for criticism, but they only want praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(\221Of Human Bondage\222 \(1915\) ch. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete\
use of the other five.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.92047 Tm
(\221Of Human Bondage\222 \(1915\) ch. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.00456 Tm
( Few misfortunes can befall a boy which bring worse consequences than\
to have a really )Tj
T*
(affectionate mother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.17047 Tm
(\221A Writer\222s Notebook\222 \(1949\) p. 27 \(written in 1896\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 135.9624 Tm
( 1.97 Bill Mauldin 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I feel like a fugitive from th\222 law of averages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221Up Front\222 \(1945\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 66.2124 Tm
( 1.98 James Maxton 1885-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All I say is, if you cannot ride two horses you have no right in the\
circus.)Tj
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(Opposing disaffiliation of the Scottish Independent Labour Party from th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(January 1931 \(often quoted as \221...no right in the bloody circus\222\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 707.9624 Tm
( 1.99 Jonathan Mayhew 1720-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rulers have no authority from God to do mischief...As soon as the pr\
ince sets himself up above )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the law, he loses the king in the tyrant. He does to all intents and pur\
pose unking himself...and in )Tj
T*
(such cases has no more right to be obeyed than any inferior officer who \
acts beyond his )Tj
T*
(commission.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 616.42047 Tm
(\221A Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and Non-Resistance to th\
e Higher Powers\222 30 January 1750)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 584.2124 Tm
( 1.100 Margaret Mead 1901-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The knowledge that the personalities of the two sexes are socially p\
roduced is congenial to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(every programme that looks forward towards a planned order of society. I\
t is a two-edged sword.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 528.67047 Tm
(\221Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies\222 \(1935\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 496.4624 Tm
( 1.101 Shepherd Mead 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How to succeed in business without really trying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(Title of book \(1952\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 426.7124 Tm
( 1.102 Hughes Mearns 1875-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( As I was walking up the stair)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I met a man who wasn\222t there.)Tj
T*
( He wasn\222t there again today.)Tj
T*
( I wish, I wish he\222d stay away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(Lines written for \221The Psycho-ed\222, an amateur play, in Philadelphi\
a, 1910. Set to music in 1939 as \221The Little )Tj
T*
(Man Who Wasn\222t There\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 287.9624 Tm
( 1.103 Cosimo De\222 Medici 1389-1464)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We read that we ought to forgive our enemies; but we do not read tha\
t we ought to forgive our )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(In Francis Bacon \221Apophthegms\222 \(1625\) no. 206 \(speaking of what\
Bacon calls \221perfidious friends\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 200.2124 Tm
( 1.104 Lorenzo De\222 Medici 1449-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Quanto \351 bella giovinezza)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Che si fugge tuttavia!)Tj
T*
( Chi vuol esser lieto sia:)Tj
T*
( Di doman non ci \351 certezza.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( How beautiful is youth, that is always slipping away! Whoever wants \
to be happy, let him be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(so: of tomorrow there\222s no knowing.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(\221Trionfo di Bacco di Arianna\222)Tj
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( 1.105 Dame Nellie Melba \(Helen Porter Mitchell\) 1861-1931)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sing \222em muck! It\222s all they can understand!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Advice to Dame Clara Butt, prior to her departure for Australia, in W. H\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 683.2124 Tm
( 1.106 Lord Melbourne 1779-1848)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Now, is it to lower the price of corn, or isn\222t it? It is not muc\
h matter which we say, but mind, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(we must all say the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Attributed, in Walter Bagehot \221The English Constitution\222 \(1867\) \
ch. 1, p. 16 n.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( What I like about the Order of the Garter is that there is no damned\
merit about it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(In Lord David Cecil \221The Young Melbourne\222 \(1939\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The worst of the present day is that men hate one another so damnabl\
y. For my part I love )Tj
T*
(them all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(In Lord David Cecil \221The Young Melbourne\222 \(1939\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( God help the Minister that meddles with art!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(In Lord David Cecil \221Lord M\222 \(1954\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( What I want is men who will support me when I am in the wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(Replying to a politician who said \221I will support you as long as you \
are in the right\222, in Lord David Cecil )Tj
T*
(\221Lord M\222 \(1954\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Damn it! Another Bishop dead! I believe they die to vex me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(Attributed, in Lord David Cecil \221Lord M\222 \(1954\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( I do not know why there is all this fuss about education; none of th\
e Paget family can read or )Tj
T*
(write, and they do very well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(Attributed to Melbourne, in conversation with Queen Victoria, in Lord Da\
vid Cecil \221Lord M\222 \(1954\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( I have always thought complaints of ill-usage contemptible, whether \
from a seduced )Tj
T*
(disappointed girl or a turned out Prime Minister.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(On being dismissed by William IV, in V. Dickinson \(ed.\) \221Miss Eden\
\222s Letters\222 \(1919\) letter from Emily )Tj
T*
(Eden to Mrs Lister, 23 November 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the d\227\
d fools said would )Tj
T*
(happen has come to pass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(Referring to the Catholic Emancipation Act \(1829\), in H. Dunckley \221\
Lord Melbourne\222 \(1890\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( Things have come to a pretty pass when religion is allowed to invade\
the sphere of private life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(Remark on hearing an evangelical sermon, in G. W. E. Russell \221Collect\
ions and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 162.7124 Tm
( 1.107 Herman Melville 1819-91)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That Calvanistic sense of innate depravity and original sin from who\
se visitations, in some )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shape or other, no deeply thinking mind is always and wholly free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(\221Hawthorne and His Mosses\222 \(1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( Genius all over the world stands hand in hand, and one shock of reco\
gnition runs the whole )Tj
T*
(circle round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(\221Hawthorne and His Mosses\222 \(1850\))Tj
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( Call me Ishmael.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) opening words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Delight\227top-gallant delight is to him, who acknowledges no law or\
lord, but the Lord his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(God, and is only a patriot to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( But when a man\222s religion becomes really frantic; when it is a po\
sitive torment to him; and, in )Tj
T*
(fine, makes this earth of ours an uncomfortable inn to lodge in; then I \
think it high time to take )Tj
T*
(that individual aside and argue the point with him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( A whaleship was my Yale College and my Harvard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( This it is, that forever keeps God\222s true princes of the Empire f\
rom the world\222s hustings; and )Tj
T*
(leaves the highest honours that this air can give, to those men who beco\
me famous more through )Tj
T*
(their infinite inferiority to the choice hidden handful of the Divine In\
ert, than through their )Tj
T*
(undoubted superiority over the dead level of the mass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) ch. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( From hell\222s heart I stab at thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Aye, toil as we may, we all sleep at last on the field. Sleep? Aye, \
and rust amid greenness; as )Tj
T*
(last year\222s scythes flung down, and left in the half-cut swaths.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Moby Dick\222 \(1851\) ch. 132)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 358.4624 Tm
( 1.108 Gilles M\350nage 1613-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Comme nous nous entretenions de ce qui pouvait rendre heureux, je lu\
i dis; Sanitas sanitatum, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(et omnia sanitas.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( While we were discussing what could make one happy, I said to him: S\
anitas sanitatum et )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(omnia sanitas.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(From a conversation with Jean-Louis Guez de Balzac \(1594-1654\), in \221\
M\350nagiana\222 \(1693\) p. 166 \(sanitas )Tj
T*
(health\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.9624 Tm
( 1.109 Menander c.342-292 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whom the gods love dies young.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221Dis Exapaton\222 fragment 4, in F. H. Sandbach \(ed.\) \221Menandri\
Reliquiae Selectae\222 \(1990\))Tj
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( We live, not as we wish to, but as we can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Andros\222 in \221Menander: the Principal Fragments\222 \
translated by F. G. Allinson \(1951\) p. 316)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 109.4624 Tm
( 1.110 H. L. Mencken 1880-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( He [Calvin Coolidge] slept more than any other President, whether by\
day or by night. Nero )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fiddled, but Coolidge only snored.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(\221American Mercury\222 April 1933)Tj
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( The saddest life is that of a political aspirant under democracy. Hi\
s failure is ignominious and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(his success is disgraceful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Baltimore Evening Sun\222 9 December 1929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Love is the delusion that one woman differs from another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Chrestomathy\222 \(1949\) ch. 30.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Puritanism. The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Chrestomathy\222 \(1949\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, \
and deserve to get it )Tj
T*
(good and hard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221A Little Book in C major\222 \(1916\) p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Conscience: the inner voice which warns us that someone may be looki\
ng.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221A Little Book in C major\222 \(1916\) p. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( It is now quite lawful for a Catholic woman to avoid pregnancy by a \
resort to mathematics, )Tj
T*
(though she is still forbidden to resort to physics and chemistry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1956\) \221Minority Report\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.2124 Tm
( 1.111 David Mercer 1928-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A suitable case for treatment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(Title of television play \(1962\), later filmed as \221Morgan-A Suitable\
Case for Treatment\222 \(1966\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.4624 Tm
( 1.112 Johnny Mercer 1909-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( You\222ve got to ac-cent-tchu-ate the positive)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Elim-my-nate the negative)Tj
T*
( Latch on to the affirmative)Tj
T*
( Don\222t mess with Mister In-between.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Ac-cent-tchu-ate the Positive\222 \(1944 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( Jeepers Creepers\227where you get them peepers?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221Jeepers Creepers\222 \(1938 song\); sung to a horse of the same name\
, by Louis Armstrong, in the film \221Going )Tj
T*
(Places\222 \(1939\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 233.25456 Tm
( We\222re drinking my friend,)Tj
T*
( To the end of a brief episode,)Tj
T*
( Make it one for my baby)Tj
T*
( And one more for the road.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(\221One For My Baby\222 \(1943 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.50456 Tm
( That old black magic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1942\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 94.4624 Tm
( 1.113 George Meredith 1828-1909)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The lark ascending.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(Title of poem \(1881\))Tj
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( She whom I love is hard to catch and conquer,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hard, but O the glory of the winning were she won!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Love in the Valley\222 st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( On a starred night Prince Lucifer uprose.)Tj
T*
( Tired of his dark dominion swung the fiend...)Tj
T*
( He reached a middle height, and at the stars,)Tj
T*
( Which are the brain of heaven, he looked, and sank.)Tj
T*
( Around the ancient track marched, rank on rank,)Tj
T*
( The army of unalterable law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Lucifer in Starlight\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( \221I play for Seasons; not Eternities!\222)Tj
T*
( Says Nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Modern Love\222 \(1862\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( In tragic life, God wot,)Tj
T*
( No villain need be! Passions spin the plot:)Tj
T*
( We are betrayed by what is false within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Modern Love\222 \(1862\) st. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Ah, what a dusty answer gets the soul)Tj
T*
( When hot for certainties in this our life!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Modern Love\222 \(1862\) st. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Thoughts of heroes were as good as warming-pans.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Beauchamp\222s Career\222 \(1876\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( A witty woman is a treasure; a witty beauty is a power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Diana of the Crossways\222 \(1885\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( \222Tis Ireland gives England her soldiers, her generals too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Diana of the Crossways\222 \(1885\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( She was a lady of incisive features bound in stale parchment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Diana of the Crossways\222 \(1885\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( There is nothing the body suffers the soul may not profit by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Diana of the Crossways\222 \(1885\) ch. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( A Phoebus Apollo turned fasting friar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221The Egoist\222 \(1879\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( A dainty rogue in porcelain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221The Egoist\222 \(1879\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( Cynicism is intellectual dandyism without the coxcomb\222s feathers.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221The Egoist\222 \(1879\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( In...the Book of Egoism it is written: Possession without obligation\
to the object possessed )Tj
T*
(approaches felicity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Egoist\222 \(1879\) ch. 14)Tj
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( None of your dam punctilio.)Tj
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(\221One of Our Conquerors\222 \(1891\) ch. 1)Tj
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( I expect that Woman will be the last thing civilized by Man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 1)Tj
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( In action Wisdom goes by majorities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Who rises from prayer a better man, his prayer is answered.)Tj
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(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 12)Tj
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( The sun is coming down to earth, and walks the fields and the waters\
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(to earth, and the fields and the waters shout to him golden shouts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 19)Tj
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( Kissing don\222t last: cookery do!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 28)Tj
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( Speech is the small change of silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.17047 Tm
(\221The Ordeal of Richard Feverel\222 \(1859\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.25456 Tm
( Much benevolence of the passive order may be traced to a disinclinat\
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T*
(oneself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(\221Vittoria\222 \(1866\) ch. 42)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 429.2124 Tm
( 1.114 Owen Meredith \(Edward Robert Bulwer Lytton, first Earl of Lytton\
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Genius does what it must, and Talent does what it can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\221Last Words of a Sensitive Second-Rate Poet\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.75456 Tm
( We may live without poetry, music and art;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We may live without conscience, and live without heart;)Tj
T*
( We may live without friends; we may live without books;)Tj
T*
( But civilized man cannot live without cooks.)Tj
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( He may live without books,\227what is knowledge but grieving?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He may live without hope,\227what is hope but deceiving?)Tj
T*
( He may live without love,\227what is passion but pining?)Tj
T*
( But where is the man that can live without dining?)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.17047 Tm
(\221Lucile\222 \(1860\) pt. 1, canto 2, sect. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 192.9624 Tm
( 1.115 Dixon Lanier Merritt 1879-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, a wondrous bird is the pelican!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His beak holds more than his belican.)Tj
T*
( He takes in his beak)Tj
T*
( Food enough for a week.)Tj
T*
( But I\222ll be darned if I know how the helican.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.42047 Tm
(In \221Nashville Banner\222 22 April 1913)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 51.2124 Tm
( 1.116 Le Cur\350 Meslier c.1664-1733)Tj
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( Il me souvient \341 ce sujet d\222un souhait que faisait autrefois u\
n homme, qui n\222avait ni science ni )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\350tude...Il souhaitait, disait-il...que tous les grands de la terre et\
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T*
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T*
(la force d\222Hercule pour purger le monde de tout vice et de toute iniq\
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T*
(d\222assommer tous ces monstres d\222erreurs et d\222iniquit\350 qui fon\
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cated man...He said he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wished...that all the great men in the world and all the nobility could \
be hanged, and strangled in )Tj
T*
(the guts of priests. For myself...I wish I could have the strength of He\
rcules to purge the world of )Tj
T*
(all vice and sin, and the pleasure of destroying all those monsters of e\
rror and sin [priests] who )Tj
T*
(make all the peoples of the world groan so pitiably.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221Testament\222 \(ed. R. Charles, 1864\) vol. 1, ch. 2; often quoted a\
s \221Je voudrais...que le dernier des rois f\373t )Tj
T*
(\350trangl\350 avec les boyaux du dernier pr\352tre [I should like...the\
last of the kings to be strangled with the guts of )Tj
T*
(the last priest]\222 or in Diderot\222s version:)Tj
T*
( Et des boyaux du dernier pr\352tre )Tj
T*
( Serrons le cou du dernier roi.)Tj
T*
( And [with] the guts of the last priest )Tj
T*
( Let\222s shake the neck of the last king.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.2124 Tm
( 1.117 Prince Metternich 1773-1859)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
(I would like to call out to the representatives of social upheaval: \221\
Citizen of a world, that exists )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(but in your dreams, nothing is altered. On 14 March, nothing happened sa\
ve the elimination of a )Tj
T*
(single man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(On his own downfall in 1848, in \221Aus Metternich\222s Nachgelassenen P\
apieren\222 \(ed. A. von Klinkowstr\366m, )Tj
T*
(1880\) vol. 8, p. 232)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( The Emperor is everything, Vienna is nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Aus Metternich\222s Nachgelassenen Papieren\222 \(ed. A. von Klinkow\
str\366m, 1880\) vol. 8, p. 424)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( The true merit of a statesman...consists of governing so as to avoid\
a situation in which )Tj
T*
(concessions become necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221Aus Metternich\222s Nachgelassenen Papieren\222 \(ed. A. von Klinkow\
str\366m, 1880\) vol. 8, p. 562)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( The word freedom has for me never had the character of a point of de\
parture but of a goal. The )Tj
T*
(point of departure is order which alone can produce freedom. Without ord\
er the appeal to )Tj
T*
(freedom is no more than the quest of some specific party for its special\
objectives and will in )Tj
T*
(practice always lead to tyranny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221Aus Metternich\222s Nachgelassenen Papieren\222 \(ed. A. von Klinkow\
str\366m, 1880\) vol. 8, p. 633)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( Religion, morality, legislation, economics, politics, administration\
, all seem to have become a )Tj
T*
(common good and accessible to everyone. Science appears intuitive, exper\
ience has no value for )Tj
T*
(the presumptuous; faith means nothing to him, and he substitutes for it \
the pretence of a personal )Tj
T*
(conviction.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.63535 Tm
(Memorandum to Czar Alexander I \(1820\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( L\222erreur n\222a jamais approch\350 de mon esprit.)Tj
ET
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( Error has never approached my spirit.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Addressed to Guizot in 1848, in Francois Pierre G. Guizot \221M\350moire\
s\222 \(1858-1867\) vol. 4, p. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Italien ist ein geographischer Begriff.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Italy is a geographical expression.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.67047 Tm
(Discussing the Italian question with Palmerston in 1847. \221Aus dem Nac\
hlasse des Grafen Prokesch-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Osten\222 \(1881\) vol. 2, p. 343; and M\350moires, Documents, etc. de \221\
Metternich publi\350s par son fils\222 \(1883\) vol. )Tj
T*
(7, p. 415)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.4624 Tm
( 1.118 Charlotte Mew 1869-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( She sleeps up in the attic there)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Alone, poor maid. \222Tis but a stair)Tj
T*
( Betwixt us. Oh! my God! the down,)Tj
T*
( The soft young down of her, the brown,)Tj
T*
( The brown of her\227her eyes, her hair, her hair!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.92047 Tm
(\221The Farmer\222s Bride\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 1.119 William Julius Mickle 1735-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For there\222s nae luck about the house,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There\222s nae luck at a\222,)Tj
T*
( There\222s little pleasure in the house)Tj
T*
( When our gudeman\222s awa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.17047 Tm
(\221There\222s nae Luck about the House\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 350.9624 Tm
( 1.120 Thomas Middleton c.1580-1627)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Anything for a quiet life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.42047 Tm
(Title of play \(written c.1620, possibly with John Webster\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.50456 Tm
( I never heard)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of any true affection, but \222twas nipt)Tj
T*
( With care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.67047 Tm
(\221Blurt, Master-Constable\222 \(published 1602\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.75456 Tm
( Does the silk-worm expend her yellow labours)Tj
T*
( For thee? for thee does she undo herself?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.92047 Tm
(\221The Revenger\222s Tragedy\222 \(1607\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 71 \(previou\
sly thought to be the work of Cyril Tourneur, )Tj
T*
(c.1575-1626\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( There\222s no hate lost between us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The Witch\222 \(written 1609-16, printed 1778\) act 4, sc. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 101.9624 Tm
( 1.121 Thomas Middleton 1580-1627 and William Rowley c.1585-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I could not get the ring without the finger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221The Changeling\222 \(performed c.1622\) act 3, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Y\222are the deed\222s creature.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Changeling\222 \(performed c.1622\) act 3, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O come not near me sir; I shall defile you.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I that am of your blood was taken from you)Tj
T*
( For your better health. Look no more upon\222t,)Tj
T*
( But cast it to the ground regardlessly;)Tj
T*
( Let the common sewer take it from distinction.)Tj
T*
( Beneath the stars, upon yon meteor)Tj
T*
( Ever hung my fate, \222mongst things corruptible;)Tj
T*
( I ne\222er could pluck it from him. My loathing)Tj
T*
( Was prophet to the rest, but ne\222er believed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Changeling\222 \(performed c.1622\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 542.2124 Tm
( 1.122 George Mikes 1912\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( On the Continent people have good food; in England people have good \
table manners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.67047 Tm
(\221How to be an Alien\222 \(1946\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.75456 Tm
( Continental people have sex life; the English have hot-water bottles\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.92047 Tm
(\221How to be an Alien\222 \(1946\) p. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.00456 Tm
( An Englishman, even if he is alone, forms an orderly queue of one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221How to be an Alien\222 \(1946\) p. 44)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.9624 Tm
( 1.123 John Stuart Mill 1806-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ask yourself whether you are happy, and you cease to be so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1873\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 340.50456 Tm
( No great improvements in the lot of mankind are possible, until a gr\
eat change takes place in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the fundamental constitution of their modes of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1873\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( As often as a study is cultivated by narrow minds, they will draw fr\
om it narrow conclusions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Auguste Comte and Positivism\222 \(1865\) pt. 1, p. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( The Conservatives...being by the law of their existence the stupides\
t party.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Considerations on Representative Government\222 \(1861\) ch. 7 \(not\
e\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( When society requires to be rebuilt, there is no use in attempting t\
o rebuild it on the old plan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221Dissertations and Discussions\222 vol. 1 \(1859\) \221Essay on Coler\
idge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( If we may be excused the antithesis, we should say that eloquence is\
heard, poetry is overheard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Dissertations and Discussions\222 vol. 1 \(1859\) \221Thoughts on Po\
etry and its Varieties\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Detention by the State of the unearned increment of rent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Dissertations and Discussions\222 vol. 4 \(1875\) \221The Right of P\
roperty in Land\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( I will call no being good, who is not what I mean when I apply that \
epithet to my fellow-)Tj
T*
(creatures; and if such a being can sentence me to hell for not so callin\
g him, to hell I will go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Examination of Sir William Hamilton\222s Philosophy\222 \(1865\) ch.\
7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( The sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collec\
tively, in interfering with )Tj
ET
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(the liberty of action of any of their number, is self-protection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over an\
y member of a civilized )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good,\
either physical or moral, )Tj
T*
(is not a sufficient warrant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( If all mankind minus one were of one opinion, and only one person we\
re of the contrary )Tj
T*
(opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person\
, than he, if he had the )Tj
T*
(power, would be justified in silencing mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( We can never be sure that the opinion we are endeavouring to stifle \
is a false opinion; and if )Tj
T*
(we were sure, stifling it would be an evil still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( A party of order or stability, and a party of progress or reform, ar\
e both necessary elements of a )Tj
T*
(healthy state of political life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( The liberty of the individual must be thus far limited; he must not \
make himself a nuisance to )Tj
T*
(other people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( All good things which exist are the fruits of originality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Liberty consists in doing what one desires.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the individua\
ls composing it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( A State which dwarfs its men, in order that they may be more docile \
instruments in its hands )Tj
T*
(even for beneficial purposes, will find that with small men no great thi\
ng can really be )Tj
T*
(accomplished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221On Liberty\222 \(1859\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( The great majority of those who speak of perfectibility as a dream, \
do so because they feel that )Tj
T*
(it is one which would afford them no pleasure if it were realized.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Speech on Perfectibility\222 \(1828\) in \221Autobiography\222 \(ed.\
Harold J. Laski, 1924\) p. 290)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( The principle which regulates the existing social relations between \
the two sexes\227the legal )Tj
T*
(subordination of one sex to the other\227is wrong in itself, and now one\
of the chief hindrances to )Tj
T*
(human improvement...it ought to be replaced by a principle of perfect eq\
uality, admitting no )Tj
T*
(power or privilege on the one side, nor disability on the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Subjection of Women\222 \(1869\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( The moral regeneration of mankind will only really commence, when th\
e most fundamental of )Tj
T*
(the social relations [marriage] is placed under the rule of equal justic\
e, and when human beings )Tj
T*
(learn to cultivate their strongest sympathy with an equal in rights and \
in cultivation.)Tj
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(\221The Subjection of Women\222 \(1869\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The most important thing women have to do is to stir up the zeal of \
women themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Letter to Alexander Bain, 14 July 1869, in Hugh S. R. Elliot \(ed.\) \221\
Letters of John Stuart Mill\222 vol. 2 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Were there but a few hearts and intellects like hers this earth woul\
d already become the hoped-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(Epitaph \(1859\) inscribed on the tomb of his wife, Harriet, at the ceme\
tery of St V\350ran, near Avignon. M. St J. )Tj
T*
(Packe \221Life of John Stuart Mill\222 \(1954\) bk. 7, ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.4624 Tm
( 1.124 Edna St Vincent Millay 1892-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Childhood is not from birth to a certain age and at a certain age)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The child is grown, and puts away childish things.)Tj
T*
( Childhood is the kingdom where nobody dies.)Tj
T*
( Nobody that matters, that is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(\221Childhood is the Kingdom where Nobody dies\222 \(1934\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.00456 Tm
( Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave)Tj
T*
( Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the kind;)Tj
T*
( Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave.)Tj
T*
( I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Dirge Without Music\222 \(1928\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( My candle burns at both ends;)Tj
T*
( It will not last the night;)Tj
T*
( But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends\227)Tj
T*
( It gives a lovely light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221A Few Figs From Thistles\222 \(1920\) \221First Fig\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( Safe upon solid rock the ugly houses stand:)Tj
T*
( Come and see my shining palace built upon the sand!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 288.67047 Tm
(\221A Few Figs From Thistles\222 \(1920\) \221Second Fig\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.75456 Tm
( I only know that summer sang in me)Tj
T*
( A little while, that in me sings no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(\221The Harp-Weaver and Other Poems\222 \(1923\) sonnet 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.00456 Tm
( Death devours all lovely things;)Tj
T*
( Lesbia with her sparrow)Tj
T*
( Shares the darkness\227presently)Tj
T*
( Every bed is narrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.17047 Tm
(\221Passer Mortuus Est\222 \(1921\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.25456 Tm
( After all, my erstwhile dear,)Tj
T*
( My no longer cherished,)Tj
T*
( Need we say it was not love,)Tj
T*
( Now that love is perished?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(\221Passer Mortuus Est\222 \(1921\))Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 750.2124 Tm
( 1.125 Alice Duer Miller 1874-1942)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am American bred,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I have seen much to hate here\227much to forgive,)Tj
T*
( But in a world where England is finished and dead,)Tj
T*
( I do not wish to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 658.67047 Tm
(\221The White Cliffs\222 \(1940\) p. 70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 626.4624 Tm
( 1.126 Arthur Miller 1915\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that\222s what it\222s for!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221After the Fall\222 \(1964\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( All organization is and must be grounded on the idea of exclusion an\
d prohibition just as two )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(objects cannot occupy the same space.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221The Crucible\222 \(1952\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( The world is an oyster, but you don\222t crack it open on a mattress\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(\221Death of a Salesman\222 \(1949\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( Willy Loman never made a lot of money. His name was never in the pap\
er. He\222s not the finest )Tj
T*
(character that ever lived. But he\222s a human being, and a terrible thi\
ng is happening to him. So )Tj
T*
(attention must be paid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(\221Death of a Salesman\222 \(1949\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( For a salesman, there is no rock bottom to the life. He don\222t put\
a bolt to a nut, he don\222t tell )Tj
T*
(you the law or give you medicine. He\222s a man way out there in the blu\
e, riding on a smile and a )Tj
T*
(shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back\227that\222s an earthqua\
ke. And then you get )Tj
T*
(yourself a couple of spots on your hat, and you\222re finished. Nobody d\
ast blame this man. A )Tj
T*
(salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the territory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.92047 Tm
(\221Death of a Salesman\222 \(1949\) \221Requiem\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.00456 Tm
( \221How do you find your way back in the dark?...\222Just head for t\
hat big star straight on. The )Tj
T*
(highway\222s under it; take us right home.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.17047 Tm
(\221The Misfits\222 \(1961\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.25456 Tm
( The car, the furniture, the wife, the children\227everything has to \
be disposable. Because you see )Tj
T*
(the main thing today is\227shopping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.42047 Tm
(\221The Price\222 \(1968\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.50456 Tm
( The gullet of New York, swallowing the tonnage of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.67047 Tm
(\221A View from the Bridge\222 \(1955\); describing Red Hook)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.75456 Tm
( The structure of a play is always the story of how the birds came ho\
me to roost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.92047 Tm
(\221Shadows of the Gods: A critical View of the American Theatre\222, in\
\221Harper\222s Magazine\222 August 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.00456 Tm
( A good newspaper, I suppose, is a nation talking to itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 26 November 1961)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.25456 Tm
( A theatre where no-one is allowed to walk out and everyone is forced\
to applause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.42047 Tm
(Describing Eastern Europe in \221Omnibus\222 \(BBC TV\) 30 October 1987;\
in \221Independent\222 31 October 1987)Tj
ET
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( 1.127 Henry Miller 1891-1980)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Even before the music begins there is that bored look on people\222s\
faces. A polite form of self-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(imposed torture, the concert.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Tropic of Cancer\222 \(1934\) p. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Every man with a bellyful of the classics is an enemy to the human r\
ace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Tropic of Cancer\222 \(1934\) p. 280)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.4624 Tm
( 1.128 Jonathan Miller 1934\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In fact, I\222m not really a Jew. Just Jew-ish. Not the whole hog, y\
ou know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Beyond the Fringe\222 \(1960 review\) \221Real Class\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 1.129 William Miller 1810-72)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Wee Willie Winkie rins through the town,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Up stairs and down stairs in his nicht-gown,)Tj
T*
( Tirling at the window, crying at the lock,)Tj
T*
( Are the weans in their bed, for it\222s now ten o\222clock?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Willie Winkie\222 \(1841\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.9624 Tm
( 1.130 Spike Milligan \(Terence Alan Milligan\) 1918\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You silly twisted boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(\221The Goon Show\222 \(BBC radio series\) \221The Dreaded Batter Puddin\
g Hurler\222 12 October 1954)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 376.50456 Tm
( Ying tong iddle I po.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221The Goon Show\222 \(BBC radio series\) \221The Dreaded Batter Puddin\
g Hurler\222 12 October 1954; also in \221The )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Ying Tong Song\222 \(1956\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 324.75456 Tm
( You rotten swines. I told you I\222d be deaded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221The Goon Show\222 \(BBC radio series\) \221The Hastings Flyer\222 3 \
January 1956 \(Bluebottle speaking\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( Moriarty: Sapristi Nuckoes\227do you always drink ink?)Tj
T*
( Seagoon: Only in the mating season.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.17047 Tm
(\221The Goon Show\222 \(BBC radio series\) \221Napoleon\222s Piano\222 1\
1 October 1955)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 233.25456 Tm
( He\222s fallen in the water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 217.42047 Tm
(\221The Goon Show\222 \(BBC radio series\) 1956 onwards; \221Little Jim\222\
[Spike Milligan]\222s catch-phrase)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 196.50456 Tm
( Money couldn\222t buy friends but you got a better class of enemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221Puckoon\222 \(1963\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 148.4624 Tm
( 1.131 A. J. Mills, Fred Godfrey, and Bennett Scott)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Take me back to dear old Blighty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1916\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 78.7124 Tm
( 1.132 A. A. Milne 1882-1956)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( \221I don\222t want him,\222 said Rabbit. \221But it\222s always use\
ful to know where a friend-and-relation is, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(whether you want him or whether you don\222t.\222)Tj
ET
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(\221The House at Pooh Corner\222 \(1928\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.25456 Tm
( He respects Owl, because you can\222t help respecting anybody who ca\
n spell TUESDAY, even if )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(he doesn\222t spell it right; but spelling isn\222t everything. There ar\
e days when spelling Tuesday )Tj
T*
(simply doesn\222t count.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221The House at Pooh Corner\222 \(1928\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( Pooh began to feel a little more comfortable, because when you are a\
Bear of Very Little )Tj
T*
(Brain, and you Think of Things, you sometimes find that a Thing which se\
emed very Thingish )Tj
T*
(inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has oth\
er people looking at it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221The House at Pooh Corner\222 \(1928\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( They\222re changing guard at Buckingham Palace\227)Tj
T*
( Christopher Robin went down with Alice.)Tj
T*
( Alice is marrying one of the guard.)Tj
T*
( \221A soldier\222s life is terrible hard,\222)Tj
T*
( Says Alice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221Buckingham Palace\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( James James)Tj
T*
( Morrison Morrison)Tj
T*
( Weatherby George Dupree)Tj
T*
( Took great)Tj
T*
( Care of his Mother,)Tj
T*
( Though he was only three.)Tj
T*
( James James)Tj
T*
( Said to his Mother,)Tj
T*
( \221Mother,\222 he said, said he;)Tj
T*
( \221You must never go down to the end of the town, if you don\222t g\
o down with me.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.17047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221Disobedience\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.25456 Tm
( There once was a Dormouse who lived in a bed)Tj
T*
( Of delphiniums \(blue\) and geraniums \(red\),)Tj
T*
( And all the day long he\222d a wonderful view)Tj
T*
( Of geraniums \(red\) and delphiniums \(blue\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221The Dormouse and the Doctor\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.50456 Tm
( The King asked)Tj
T*
( The Queen, and)Tj
T*
( The Queen asked)Tj
T*
( The Dairymaid:)Tj
T*
( \221Could we have some butter for)Tj
T*
( The Royal slice of bread?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221The King\222s Breakfast\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.75456 Tm
( And some of the bigger bears try to pretend)Tj
T*
( That they came round the corner to look for a friend;)Tj
ET
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( And they try to pretend that nobody cares)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whether you walk on the lines or squares.)Tj
T*
( But only the sillies believe their talk;)Tj
T*
( It\222s ever so portant how you walk. And it\222s ever so jolly to c\
all out, \221Bears,)Tj
T*
( Just watch me walking in all the squares!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221Lines and Squares\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( What is the matter with Mary Jane?)Tj
T*
( She\222s perfectly well and she hasn\222t a pain,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s lovely rice pudding for dinner again!)Tj
T*
( What is the matter with Mary Jane?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221Rice Pudding\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Little Boy kneels at the foot of the bed,)Tj
T*
( Droops on the little hands little gold head.)Tj
T*
( Hush! Hush! Whisper who dares!)Tj
T*
( Christopher Robin is saying his prayers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221When We Were Very Young\222 \(1924\) \221Vespers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Isn\222t it funny)Tj
T*
( How a bear likes honey?)Tj
T*
( Buzz! Buzz! Buzz!)Tj
T*
( I wonder why he does?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( How sweet to be a Cloud)Tj
T*
( Floating in the Blue!)Tj
T*
( It makes him very proud)Tj
T*
( To be a little cloud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Pooh woke up suddenly with a sinking feeling. He had had that sinkin\
g feeling before, and he )Tj
T*
(knew what it meant. He was hungry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Cottleston, Cottleston, Cottleston Pie.)Tj
T*
( A fly can\222t bird, but a bird can fly.)Tj
T*
( Ask me a riddle and I reply:)Tj
T*
( \221Cottleston, Cottleston, Cottleston Pie.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Time for a little something.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( My spelling is Wobbly. It\222s good spelling but it Wobbles, and the\
letters get in the wrong )Tj
T*
(places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Owl hasn\222t exactly got Brain, but he Knows Things.)Tj
ET
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(\221Winnie-the-Pooh\222 \(1926\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 1.133 Lord Milner \(Alfred, Viscount Milner\) 1854-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If we believe a thing to be bad, and if we have a right to prevent i\
t, it is our duty to try to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(prevent it and to damn the consequences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Speech at Glasgow, 26 November 1909, in \221The Times\222 27 November 19\
09)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 1.134 John Milton 1608-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(\221Arcades\222 \(1645\) l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( Blest pair of Sirens, pledges of heaven\222s joy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sphere-born harmonious sisters, Voice, and Verse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(\221At a Solemn Music\222 \(1645\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.00456 Tm
( Where the bright seraphim in burning row)Tj
T*
( Their loud uplifted angel trumpets blow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(\221At a Solemn Music\222 \(1645\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( Before the starry threshold of Jove\222s Court)Tj
T*
( My mansion is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( Above the smoke and stir of this dim spot,)Tj
T*
( Which men call earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Yet some there be that by due steps aspire)Tj
T*
( To lay their just hands on that golden key)Tj
T*
( That opes the palace of eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( That like to rich and various gems inlay)Tj
T*
( The unadorn\351d bosom of the deep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( An old and haughty nation proud in arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( And the gilded car of day)Tj
T*
( His glowing axle doth allay)Tj
T*
( In the steep Atlantic stream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( What hath night to do with sleep?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Come, knit hands, and beat the ground,)Tj
T*
( In a light fantastic round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 143)Tj
ET
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( When the grey-hooded Even)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like a sad votarist in palmer\222s weed)Tj
T*
( Rose from the hindmost wheels of Phoebus\222 wain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 188)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( O thievish Night)Tj
T*
( Why shouldst thou, but for some felonious end,)Tj
T*
( In thy dark lantern thus close up the stars,)Tj
T*
( That Nature hung in heaven, and filled their lamps)Tj
T*
( With everlasting oil, to give due light)Tj
T*
( To the misled and lonely traveller?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 195)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Was I deceived, or did a sable cloud)Tj
T*
( Turn forth her silver lining on the night?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 221)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph that liv\222st unseen)Tj
T*
( Within thy airy shell)Tj
T*
( By slow Meander\222s margent green,)Tj
T*
( And in the violet-embroidered vale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 230)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Can any mortal mixture of earth\222s mould)Tj
T*
( Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 244)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Such sober certainty of waking bliss)Tj
T*
( I never heard till now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 263)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Shepherd, I take thy word,)Tj
T*
( And trust thy honest-offered courtesy,)Tj
T*
( Which oft is sooner found in lowly sheds)Tj
T*
( With smoky rafters, than in tap\222stry halls)Tj
T*
( And courts of princes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 321)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( With thy long levelled rule of streaming light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 340)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Virtue could see to do what Virtue would)Tj
T*
( By her own radiant light, though sun and moon)Tj
T*
( Were in the flat sea sunk. And Wisdom\222s self)Tj
T*
( Oft seeks to sweet retired solitude,)Tj
T*
( Where with her best nurse Contemplation,)Tj
T*
( She plumes her feathers, and lets grow her wings)Tj
T*
( That in the various bustle of resort)Tj
ET
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( Were all to-ruffled, and sometimes impaired.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He that has light within his own clear breast)Tj
T*
( May sit i\222 the centre, and enjoy bright day,)Tj
T*
( But he that hides a dark soul, and foul thoughts)Tj
T*
( Benighted walks under the midday sun;)Tj
T*
( Himself is his own dungeon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 373)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Yet where an equal poise of hope and fear)Tj
T*
( Does arbitrate the event, my nature is)Tj
T*
( That I incline to hope, rather than fear,)Tj
T*
( And gladly banish squint suspicion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 410)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( \222Tis chastity, my brother, chastity:)Tj
T*
( She that has that, is clad in complete steel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 420)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( How charming is divine philosophy!)Tj
T*
( Not harsh and crabb\351d, as dull fools suppose,)Tj
T*
( But musical as is Apollo\222s lute,)Tj
T*
( And a perpetual feast of nectared sweets,)Tj
T*
( Where no crude surfeit reigns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 475)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( What the sage poets taught by th\222 heavenly Muse,)Tj
T*
( Storied of old in high immortal verse)Tj
T*
( Of dire chimeras and enchanted isles,)Tj
T*
( And rifted rocks whose entrance leads to hell,)Tj
T*
( For such there be, but unbelief is blind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 515)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( And filled the air with barbarous dissonance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 550)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( I was all ear,)Tj
T*
( And took in strains that might create a soul)Tj
T*
( Under the ribs of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 560)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Against the threats)Tj
T*
( Of malice or of sorcery, or that power)Tj
T*
( Which erring men call chance, this I hold firm,)Tj
T*
( Virtue may be assailed, but never hurt,)Tj
T*
( Surprised by unjust force, but not enthralled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 586)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( O foolishness of men! that lend their ears)Tj
ET
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( To those budge doctors of the Stoic fur,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And fetch their precepts from the Cynic tub,)Tj
T*
( Praising the lean and sallow Abstinence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 706)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Beauty is Nature\222s coin, must not be hoarded,)Tj
T*
( But must be current, and the good thereof)Tj
T*
( Consists in mutual and partaken bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 739)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Beauty is Nature\222s brag, and must be shown)Tj
T*
( In courts, at feasts, and high solemnities)Tj
T*
( Where most may wonder at the workmanship;)Tj
T*
( It is for homely features to keep home,)Tj
T*
( They had their name thence; coarse complexions)Tj
T*
( And cheeks of sorry grain will serve to ply)Tj
T*
( The sampler, and to tease the housewife\222s wool.)Tj
T*
( What need a vermeil-tinctured lip for that,)Tj
T*
( Love-darting eyes, or tresses like the morn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 745)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Obtruding false rules pranked in reason\222s garb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 759)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Sabrina fair,)Tj
T*
( Listen where thou art sitting)Tj
T*
( Under the glassy, cool, translucent wave,)Tj
T*
( In twisted braids of lilies knitting)Tj
T*
( The loose train of thy amber-dropping hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Thus I set my printless feet)Tj
T*
( O\222er the cowslip\222s velvet head,)Tj
T*
( That bends not as I tread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 897)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( Love Virtue, she alone is free,)Tj
T*
( She can teach ye how to climb)Tj
T*
( Higher than the sphery chime;)Tj
T*
( Or, if Virtue feeble were,)Tj
T*
( Heaven itself would stoop to her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Comus\222 \(1637\) l. 1019)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Hence, vain deluding joys,)Tj
T*
( The brood of folly without father bred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( As thick and numberless)Tj
ET
EMC
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( As the gay motes that people the sunbeams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Hail, divinest Melancholy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whose saintly visage is too bright)Tj
T*
( To hit the sense of human sight;)Tj
T*
( And therefore to our weaker view,)Tj
T*
( O\222erlaid with black staid wisdom\222s hue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Come, pensive nun, devout and pure,)Tj
T*
( Sober, steadfast, and demure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( And join with thee calm Peace, and Quiet,)Tj
T*
( Spare Fast, that oft with gods doth diet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( And add to these retired Leisure,)Tj
T*
( That in trim gardens takes his pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Sweet bird that shunn\222st the noise of folly,)Tj
T*
( Most musical, most melancholy!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( And missing thee, I walk unseen)Tj
T*
( On the dry smooth-shaven green,)Tj
T*
( To behold the wandering moon,)Tj
T*
( Riding near her highest noon,)Tj
T*
( Like one that had been led astray)Tj
T*
( Through the heaven\222s wide pathless way;)Tj
T*
( And oft, as if her head she bowed,)Tj
T*
( Stooping through a fleecy cloud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Oft on a plat of rising ground,)Tj
T*
( I hear the far-off curfew sound)Tj
T*
( Over some wide-watered shore,)Tj
T*
( Swinging slow with sullen roar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Where glowing embers through the room)Tj
T*
( Teach light to counterfeit a gloom,)Tj
T*
( Far from all resort of mirth,)Tj
T*
( Save the cricket on the hearth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Or bid the soul of Orpheus sing)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Such notes as warbled to the string,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drew iron tears down Pluto\222s cheek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Where more is meant than meets the ear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 120)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Hide me from day\222s garish eye,)Tj
T*
( While the bee with honied thigh,)Tj
T*
( That at her flowery work doth sing,)Tj
T*
( And the waters murmuring)Tj
T*
( And such consort as they keep,)Tj
T*
( Entice the dewy-feathered Sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( But let my due feet never fail)Tj
T*
( To walk the studious cloister\222s pale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( And love the high embow\351d roof,)Tj
T*
( With antique pillars\222 massy proof,)Tj
T*
( And storied windows richly dight,)Tj
T*
( Casting a dim religious light.)Tj
T*
( There let the pealing organ blow)Tj
T*
( To the full-voiced quire below,)Tj
T*
( In service high, and anthems clear,)Tj
T*
( As may with sweetness, through mine ear,)Tj
T*
( Dissolve me into ecstasies,)Tj
T*
( And bring all heaven before mine eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Till old experience do attain)Tj
T*
( To something like prophetic strain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Il Penseroso\222 \(1645\) l. 173)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Hence, loath\351d Melancholy,)Tj
T*
( Of Cerberus, and blackest Midnight born,)Tj
T*
( In Stygian cave forlorn)Tj
T*
( \222Mongst horrid shapes, and shrieks, and sights unholy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( So buxom, blithe, and debonair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 24 \(on Euphrosyne \(Mirth\), one of th\
e three graces\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Haste thee nymph, and bring with thee)Tj
T*
( Jest and youthful jollity,)Tj
T*
( Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles,)Tj
T*
( Nods, and becks, and wreath\351d smiles.)Tj
ET
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(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Sport that wrinkled Care derides,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And Laughter holding both his sides.)Tj
T*
( Come, and trip it as ye go)Tj
T*
( On the light fantastic toe,)Tj
T*
( And in thy right hand lead with thee,)Tj
T*
( The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Mirth, admit me of thy crew)Tj
T*
( To live with her, and live with thee,)Tj
T*
( In unreprov\351d pleasures free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( While the cock with lively din)Tj
T*
( Scatters the rear of darkness thin,)Tj
T*
( And to the stack, or the barn door,)Tj
T*
( Stoutly struts his dames before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Right against the eastern gate,)Tj
T*
( Where the great sun begins his state.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( While the ploughman near at hand,)Tj
T*
( Whistles o\222er the furrowed land,)Tj
T*
( And the milkmaid singeth blithe,)Tj
T*
( And the mower whets his scythe,)Tj
T*
( And every shepherd tells his tale)Tj
T*
( Under the hawthorn in the dale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Meadows trim with daisies pied,)Tj
T*
( Shallow brooks, and rivers wide,)Tj
T*
( Towers, and battlements it sees)Tj
T*
( Bosomed high in tufted trees,)Tj
T*
( Where perhaps some beauty lies,)Tj
T*
( The cynosure of neighbouring eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Of herbs, and other country messes,)Tj
T*
( Which the neat-handed Phyllis dresses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( And the jocund rebecks sound)Tj
T*
( To many a youth, and many a maid,)Tj
T*
( Dancing in the chequered shade;)Tj
ET
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( And young and old come forth to play)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( On a sunshine holiday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Then to the spicy nut-brown ale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Towered cities please us then,)Tj
T*
( And the busy hum of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( With store of ladies, whose bright eyes)Tj
T*
( Rain influence, and judge the prize)Tj
T*
( Of wit or arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 121)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( There let Hymen oft appear)Tj
T*
( In saffron robe, with taper clear,)Tj
T*
( And pomp, and feast, and revelry,)Tj
T*
( With masque, and antique pageantry:)Tj
T*
( Such sights as youthful poets dream)Tj
T*
( On summer eves by haunted stream.)Tj
T*
( Then to the well-trod stage anon,)Tj
T*
( If Jonson\222s learn\351d sock be on,)Tj
T*
( Or sweetest Shakespeare fancy\222s child,)Tj
T*
( Warble his native wood-notes wild,)Tj
T*
( And ever against eating cares,)Tj
T*
( Lap me in soft Lydian airs,)Tj
T*
( Married to immortal verse)Tj
T*
( Such as the meeting soul may pierce)Tj
T*
( In notes, with many a winding bout)Tj
T*
( Of link\351d sweetness long drawn out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 125)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Such strains as would have won the ear)Tj
T*
( Of Pluto, to have quite set free)Tj
T*
( His half-regained Eurydice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Allegro\222 \(1645\) l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Yet once more, O ye laurels, and once more)Tj
T*
( Ye myrtles brown, with ivy never sere,)Tj
T*
( I come to pluck your berries harsh and crude,)Tj
T*
( And with forced fingers rude)Tj
T*
( Shatter your leaves before the mellowing year.)Tj
T*
( Bitter constraint, and sad occasion dear,)Tj
T*
( Compels me to disturb your season due;)Tj
ET
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( For Lycidas is dead, dead ere his prime,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Young Lycidas, and hath not left his peer:)Tj
T*
( Who would not sing for Lycidas? he knew)Tj
T*
( Himself to sing, and build the lofty rhyme.)Tj
T*
( He must not float upon his watery bier)Tj
T*
( Unwept, and welter to the parching wind,)Tj
T*
( Without the meed of some melodious tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Hence with denial vain, and coy excuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( For we were nursed upon the self-same hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( But O the heavy change, now thou art gone,)Tj
T*
( Now thou art gone, and never must return!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( The woods, and desert caves,)Tj
T*
( With wild thyme and the gadding vine o\222ergrown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Where were ye nymphs, when the remorseless deep)Tj
T*
( Closed o\222er the head of your loved Lycidas?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Alas! What boots it with uncessant care)Tj
T*
( To tend the homely slighted shepherd\222s trade,)Tj
T*
( And strictly meditate the thankless muse;)Tj
T*
( Were it not better done as others use,)Tj
T*
( To sport with Amaryllis in the shade,)Tj
T*
( Or with the tangles of Neaera\222s hair?)Tj
T*
( Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise)Tj
T*
( \(That last infirmity of noble mind\))Tj
T*
( To scorn delights, and live laborious days;)Tj
T*
( But the fair guerdon when we hope to find,)Tj
T*
( And think to burst out into sudden blaze,)Tj
T*
( Comes the blind Fury with th\222 abhorr\351d shears,)Tj
T*
( And slits the thin-spun life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Fame is no plant that grows on mortal soil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( It was that fatal and perfidious bark)Tj
T*
( Built in th\222 eclipse, and rigged with curses dark,)Tj
T*
( That sunk so low that sacred head of thine.)Tj
ET
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(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Last came, and last did go,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The pilot of the Galilean lake,)Tj
T*
( Two massy keys he bore of metals twain)Tj
T*
( \(The golden opes, the iron shuts amain\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Enow of such as for their bellies\222 sake,)Tj
T*
( Creep and intrude, and climb into the fold!)Tj
T*
( Of other care they little reck\222ning make,)Tj
T*
( Than how to scramble at the shearers\222 feast,)Tj
T*
( And shove away the worthy bidden guest.)Tj
T*
( Blind mouths! that scarce themselves know how to hold)Tj
T*
( A sheep-hook, or have learned aught else the least)Tj
T*
( That to the faithful herdman\222s art belongs!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( And when they list, their lean and flashy songs)Tj
T*
( Grate on their scrannel pipes of wretched straw,)Tj
T*
( The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed,)Tj
T*
( But swoll\222n with wind, and the rank mist they draw,)Tj
T*
( Rot inwardly, and foul contagion spread;)Tj
T*
( Besides what the grim wolf with privy paw)Tj
T*
( Daily devours apace, and nothing said;)Tj
T*
( But that two-handed engine at the door)Tj
T*
( Stands ready to smite once, and smite no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Return, Alpheus, the dread voice is past)Tj
T*
( That shrunk thy streams; return Sicilian muse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies,)Tj
T*
( The tufted crow-toe, and pale jessamine,)Tj
T*
( The white pink, and the pansy freaked with jet,)Tj
T*
( The glowing violet,)Tj
T*
( The musk-rose, and the well-attired woodbine,)Tj
T*
( With cowslips wan that hang the pensive head,)Tj
T*
( And every flower that sad embroidery wears:)Tj
T*
( Bid amaranthus all his beauty shed,)Tj
T*
( And daffodillies fill their cups with tears,)Tj
T*
( To strew the laureate hearse where Lycid lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 142)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Whether beyond the stormy Hebrides,)Tj
ET
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( Where thou perhaps under the whelming tide)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Visit\222st the bottom of the monstrous world;)Tj
T*
( Or whether thou, to our moist vows denied,)Tj
T*
( Sleep\222st by the fable of Bellerus old,)Tj
T*
( Where the great vision of the guarded mount)Tj
T*
( Looks toward Namancos and Bayona\222s hold;)Tj
T*
( Look homeward angel now, and melt with ruth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( For Lycidas your sorrow is not dead,)Tj
T*
( Sunk though he be beneath the watery floor,)Tj
T*
( So sinks the day-star in the ocean bed,)Tj
T*
( And yet anon repairs his drooping head,)Tj
T*
( And tricks his beams, and with new spangled ore,)Tj
T*
( Flames in the forehead of the morning sky:)Tj
T*
( So Lycidas sunk low, but mounted high,)Tj
T*
( Through the dear might of Him that walked the waves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( There entertain him all the saints above,)Tj
T*
( In solemn troops, and sweet societies)Tj
T*
( That sing, and singing in their glory move,)Tj
T*
( And wipe the tears for ever from his eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( Thus sang the uncouth swain to th\222 oaks and rills,)Tj
T*
( While the still morn went out with sandals grey,)Tj
T*
( He touched the tender stops of various quills,)Tj
T*
( With eager thought warbling his Doric lay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( At last he rose, and twitched his mantle blue:)Tj
T*
( Tomorrow to fresh woods, and pastures new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Lycidas\222 \(1638\) l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( What needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones,)Tj
T*
( The labour of an age in pil\351d stones,)Tj
T*
( Or that his hallowed relics should be hid)Tj
T*
( Under a star-ypointing pyramid?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221On Shakespeare\222 \(1632\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( O fairest flower no sooner blown but blasted,)Tj
T*
( Soft silken primrose fading timelessly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221On the Death of a Fair Infant Dying of a Cough\222 \(1673\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( This is the month, and this the happy morn)Tj
T*
( Wherein the son of heaven\222s eternal king,)Tj
ET
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( Of wedded maid, and virgin mother born,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Our great redemption from above did bring;)Tj
T*
( For so the holy sages once did sing,)Tj
T*
( That he our deadly forfeit should release,)Tj
T*
( And with his father work us a perpetual peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity\222 \(1645\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( The star-led wizards haste with odours sweet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity\222 \(1645\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( It was the winter wild,)Tj
T*
( While the heaven-born-child)Tj
T*
( All meanly wrapped in the rude manger lies;)Tj
T*
( Nature in awe to him)Tj
T*
( Had doffed her gaudy trim,)Tj
T*
( With her great master so to sympathize.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( No war, or battle\222s sound)Tj
T*
( Was heard the world around,)Tj
T*
( The idle spear and shield were high up hung.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( The stars with deep amaze)Tj
T*
( Stand fixed in steadfast gaze,)Tj
T*
( Bending one way their precious influence,)Tj
T*
( And will not take their flight)Tj
T*
( For all the morning light,)Tj
T*
( Or Lucifer that often warned them thence;)Tj
T*
( But in their glimmering orbs did glow,)Tj
T*
( Until their Lord himself bespake, and bid them go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Perhaps their loves, or else their sheep,)Tj
T*
( Was all that did their silly thoughts so busy keep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( The helm\351d cherubim)Tj
T*
( And sworded seraphim)Tj
T*
( Are seen in glittering ranks with wings displayed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 11\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Ring out, ye crystal spheres,)Tj
T*
( Once bless our human ears)Tj
T*
( \(If ye have power to touch our senses so\),)Tj
T*
( And let your silver chime)Tj
T*
( Move in melodious time;)Tj
ET
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( And let the base of heaven\222s deep organ blow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And with your ninefold harmony)Tj
T*
( Make up full consort to the angelic symphony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 13\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( For if such holy song)Tj
T*
( Enwrap our fancy long,)Tj
T*
( Time will run back, and fetch the age of gold,)Tj
T*
( And speckled vanity)Tj
T*
( Will sicken soon and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 14\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( And hell itself will pass away,)Tj
T*
( And leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 14\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Swinges the scaly horror of his folded tail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 18\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( The oracles are dumb,)Tj
T*
( No voice or hideous hum)Tj
T*
( Runs through the arch\351d roof in words deceiving.)Tj
T*
( Apollo from his shrine)Tj
T*
( Can no more divine,)Tj
T*
( With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 19\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( So when the sun in bed,)Tj
T*
( Curtained with cloudy red,)Tj
T*
( Pillows his chin upon an orient wave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 26\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( But see the virgin blest,)Tj
T*
( Hath laid her babe to rest.)Tj
T*
( Time is our tedious song should here have ending.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221On the Morning of Christ\222s Nativity: The Hymn\222 \(1645\) st. 27\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Showed him his room where he must lodge that night,)Tj
T*
( Pulled off his boots, and took away the light:)Tj
T*
( If any ask for him, it shall be said,)Tj
T*
( Hobson has supped, and\222s newly gone to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221On the University Carrier\222 \(1645\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Fly envious Time, till thou run out thy race,)Tj
T*
( Call on the lazy leaden-stepping hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221On Time\222 \(1645\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Rhyme being no necessary adjunct or true ornament of poem or good ve\
rse, in longer works )Tj
T*
(especially, but the invention of a barbarous age, to set off wretched ma\
tter and lame metre.)Tj
ET
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(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) \221The Verse\222 \(preface, added 1668\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The troublesome and modern bondage of rhyming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) \221The Verse\222 \(preface, added 1668\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Of man\222s first disobedience, and the fruit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste)Tj
T*
( Brought death into the world, and all our woe,)Tj
T*
( With loss of Eden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( What in me is dark)Tj
T*
( Illumine, what is low raise and support;)Tj
T*
( That to the height of this great argument)Tj
T*
( I may assert eternal providence,)Tj
T*
( And justify the ways of God to men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( The infernal serpent; he it was, whose guile)Tj
T*
( Stirred up with envy and revenge, deceived)Tj
T*
( The mother of mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Him the almighty power)Tj
T*
( Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky)Tj
T*
( With hideous ruin and combustion down)Tj
T*
( To bottomless perdition, there to dwell)Tj
T*
( In adamantine chains and penal fire,)Tj
T*
( Who durst defy the omnipotent to arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( A dungeon horrible, on all sides round)Tj
T*
( As one great furnace flamed, yet from those flames)Tj
T*
( No light, but rather darkness visible)Tj
T*
( Served only to discover sights of woe,)Tj
T*
( Regions of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace)Tj
T*
( And rest can never dwell, hope never comes)Tj
T*
( That comes to all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( But O how fallen! how changed)Tj
T*
( From him, who in the happy realms of light)Tj
T*
( Clothed with transcendent brightness didst outshine)Tj
T*
( Myriads though bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 84)Tj
ET
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( United thoughts and counsels, equal hope)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hazard in the glorious enterprise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Yet not for those,)Tj
T*
( Nor what the potent victor in his rage)Tj
T*
( Can else inflict, do I repent or change,)Tj
T*
( Though changed in outward lustre; that fixed mind)Tj
T*
( And high disdain, from sense of injured merit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( What though the field be lost?)Tj
T*
( All is not lost; the unconquerable will,)Tj
T*
( And study of revenge, immortal hate,)Tj
T*
( And courage never to submit or yield:)Tj
T*
( And what is else not to be overcome?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Vaunting aloud, but racked with deep despair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Fallen cherub, to be weak is miserable,)Tj
T*
( Doing or suffering: but of this be sure,)Tj
T*
( To do aught good never will be our task,)Tj
T*
( But ever to do ill our sole delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( And out of good still to find means of evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 165)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( What reinforcement we may gain from hope;)Tj
T*
( If not, what resolution from despair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 190)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( The will)Tj
T*
( And high permission of all-ruling heaven)Tj
T*
( Left him at large to his own dark designs,)Tj
T*
( That with reiterated crimes he might)Tj
T*
( Heap on himself damnation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Is this the region, this the soil, the clime,)Tj
T*
( Said then the lost archangel, this the seat)Tj
T*
( That we must change for heaven, this mournful gloom)Tj
T*
( For that celestial light?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 242)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Farewell, happy fields)Tj
T*
( Where joy for ever dwells: hail horrors, hail)Tj
ET
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( Infernal world, and thou profoundest hell)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Receive thy new possessor: one who brings)Tj
T*
( A mind not to be changed by place or time.)Tj
T*
( The mind is its own place, and in itself)Tj
T*
( Can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Here we may reign secure, and in my choice)Tj
T*
( To reign is worth ambition though in hell:)Tj
T*
( Better to reign in hell, than serve in heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 261)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( His spear, to equal which the tallest pine)Tj
T*
( Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast)Tj
T*
( Of some great admiral, were but a wand,)Tj
T*
( He walked with to support uneasy steps)Tj
T*
( Over the burning marl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 292)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Thick as autumnal leaves that strew the brooks)Tj
T*
( In Vallombrosa, where the Etrurian shades)Tj
T*
( High overarched imbower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 302)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( First Moloch, horrid king besmeared with blood)Tj
T*
( Of human sacrifice, and parents\222 tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 392)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( For spirits when they please)Tj
T*
( Can either sex assume, or both; so soft)Tj
T*
( And uncompounded is their essence pure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 423)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( But in what shape they choose,)Tj
T*
( Dilated or condensed, bright or obscure,)Tj
T*
( Can execute their aery purposes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 428)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Astarte, queen of heaven, with crescent horns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 439)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Thammuz came next behind,)Tj
T*
( Whose annual wound in Lebanon allured)Tj
T*
( The Syrian damsels to lament his fate)Tj
T*
( In amorous ditties all a summer\222s day,)Tj
T*
( While smooth Adonis from his native rock)Tj
T*
( Ran purple to the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 446)Tj
ET
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( And when night)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Darkens the streets, then wander forth the sons)Tj
T*
( Of Belial, flown with insolence and wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 500)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The imperial ensign, which full high advanced)Tj
T*
( Shone like a meteor streaming to the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 536)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Sonorous metal blowing martial sounds:)Tj
T*
( At which the universal host upsent)Tj
T*
( A shout that tore hell\222s concave, and beyond)Tj
T*
( Frighted the reign of Chaos and old Night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 540)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Anon they move)Tj
T*
( In perfect phalanx to the Dorian mode)Tj
T*
( Of flutes and soft recorders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 549)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( That small infantry)Tj
T*
( Warred on by cranes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 575 \(on the Pygmies\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( What resounds)Tj
T*
( In fable or romance of Uther\222s son)Tj
T*
( Begirt with British and Armoric knights;)Tj
T*
( And all who since, baptized or infidel,)Tj
T*
( Jousted in Aspramont or Montalban,)Tj
T*
( Damasco, or Marocco, or Trebisond,)Tj
T*
( Or whom Biserta sent from Afric shore)Tj
T*
( When Charlemain with all his peerage fell)Tj
T*
( By Fontarabia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 579)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( As when the sun new risen)Tj
T*
( Looks through the horizontal misty air)Tj
T*
( Shorn of his beams, or from behind the moon)Tj
T*
( In dim eclipse disastrous twilight sheds)Tj
T*
( On half the nations, and with fear of change)Tj
T*
( Perplexes monarchs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 594)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Who overcomes)Tj
T*
( By force, hath overcome but half his foe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 648)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Mammon led them on,)Tj
ET
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( Mammon, the least erected spirit that fell)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From heaven, for even in heaven his looks and thoughts)Tj
T*
( Were always downward bent, admiring more)Tj
T*
( The riches of heaven\222s pavement, trodden gold,)Tj
T*
( Than aught divine or holy else enjoyed)Tj
T*
( In vision beatific.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 678)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Let none admire)Tj
T*
( That riches grow in hell; that soil may best)Tj
T*
( Deserve the precious bane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 690)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Anon out of the earth a fabric huge)Tj
T*
( Rose like an exhalation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 710)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( From morn)Tj
T*
( To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,)Tj
T*
( A summer\222s day; and with the setting sun)Tj
T*
( Dropped from the zenith like a falling star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 742)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Nor aught availed him now)Tj
T*
( To have built in heaven high towers; nor did he scape)Tj
T*
( By all his engines, but was headlong sent)Tj
T*
( With his industrious crew to build in hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 748)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Pandemonium, the high capital)Tj
T*
( Of Satan and his peers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 1, l. 756)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( High on a throne of royal state, which far)Tj
T*
( Outshone the wealth of Ormuz and of Ind,)Tj
T*
( Or where the gorgeous East with richest hand)Tj
T*
( Showers on her kings barbaric pearl and gold,)Tj
T*
( Satan exalted sat, by merit raised)Tj
T*
( To that bad eminence; and from despair)Tj
T*
( Thus high uplifted beyond hope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( The strongest and the fiercest spirit)Tj
T*
( That fought in heaven; now fiercer by despair:)Tj
T*
( His trust was with the eternal to be deemed)Tj
T*
( Equal in strength, and rather than be less)Tj
T*
( Cared not to be at all.)Tj
ET
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(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( My sentence is for open war: of wiles)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( More unexpert, I boast not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Belial, in act more graceful and humane;)Tj
T*
( A fairer person lost not heaven; he seemed)Tj
T*
( For dignity composed and high exploit:)Tj
T*
( But all was false and hollow; though his tongue)Tj
T*
( Dropped manna, and could make the worse appear)Tj
T*
( The better reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( For who would lose,)Tj
T*
( Though full of pain, this intellectual being,)Tj
T*
( Those thoughts that wander through eternity,)Tj
T*
( To perish rather, swallowed up and lost)Tj
T*
( In the wide womb of uncreated night,)Tj
T*
( Devoid of sense and motion?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( There to converse with everlasting groans,)Tj
T*
( Unrespited, unpitied, unreprieved,)Tj
T*
( Ages of hopeless end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 184)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Thus Belial with words clothed in reason\222s garb)Tj
T*
( Counselled ignoble ease, and peaceful sloth,)Tj
T*
( Not peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. l. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Our torments also may in length of time)Tj
T*
( Become our elements.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. l. 274)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( With grave)Tj
T*
( Aspect he rose, and in his rising seemed)Tj
T*
( A pillar of state; deep on his front engraven)Tj
T*
( Deliberation sat and public care;)Tj
T*
( And princely counsel in his face yet shone,)Tj
T*
( Majestic though in ruin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 300)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( To sit in darkness here)Tj
T*
( Hatching vain empires.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 377)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Who shall tempt with wandering feet)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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( The dark unbottomed infinite abyss)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And through the palpable obscure find out)Tj
T*
( His uncouth way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 404)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Long is the way)Tj
T*
( And hard, that out of hell leads up to light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 432)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( O shame to men! Devil with devil damned)Tj
T*
( Firm concord holds, men only disagree)Tj
T*
( Of creatures rational.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 496)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( In discourse more sweet)Tj
T*
( \(For eloquence the soul, song charms the sense,\))Tj
T*
( Others apart sat on a hill retired,)Tj
T*
( In thoughts more elevate, and reasoned high)Tj
T*
( Of providence, foreknowledge, will and fate,)Tj
T*
( Fixed fate, free will, foreknowledge absolute,)Tj
T*
( And found no end, in wandering mazes lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 555)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Of good and evil much they argued then,)Tj
T*
( Of happiness and final misery,)Tj
T*
( Passion and apathy, and glory and shame,)Tj
T*
( Vain wisdom all, and false philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 562)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( The parching air)Tj
T*
( Burns frore, and cold performs the effect of fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 594)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Feel by turns the bitter change)Tj
T*
( Of fierce extremes, extremes by change more fierce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 598)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( O\222er many a frozen, many a fiery alp,)Tj
T*
( Rocks, caves, lakes, fens, bogs, dens, and shades of death,)Tj
T*
( A universe of death, which God by curse)Tj
T*
( Created evil, for evil only good,)Tj
T*
( Where all life dies, death lives, and nature breeds,)Tj
T*
( Perverse, all monstrous, all prodigious things,)Tj
T*
( Abominable, inutterable, and worse)Tj
T*
( Than fables yet have feigned, or fear conceived,)Tj
T*
( Gorgons and Hydras, and Chimeras dire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 620)Tj
ET
EMC
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( The other shape,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If shape it might be called that shape had none)Tj
T*
( Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb,)Tj
T*
( Or substance might be called that shadow seemed,)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( For each seemed either, black it stood as night,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fierce as ten Furies, terrible as hell,)Tj
T*
( And shook a dreadful dart; what seemed his head)Tj
T*
( The likeness of a kingly crown had on.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 666)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( Whence and what art thou, execrable shape?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 681)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.75456 Tm
( Incensed with indignation Satan stood)Tj
T*
( Unterrified, and like a comet burned)Tj
T*
( That fires the length of Ophiuchus huge)Tj
T*
( In the Arctic sky, and from his horrid hair)Tj
T*
( Shakes pestilence and war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 707)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( Their fatal hands)Tj
T*
( No second stroke intend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 712)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( I fled, and cried out Death!)Tj
T*
( Hell trembled at the hideous name, and sighed)Tj
T*
( From all her caves, and back resounded Death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 787)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( On a sudden open fly)Tj
T*
( With impetuous recoil and jarring sound)Tj
T*
( The infernal doors, and on their hinges grate)Tj
T*
( Harsh thunder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 879)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Chaos umpire sits,)Tj
T*
( And by decision more embroils the fray)Tj
T*
( By which he reigns; next him high arbiter)Tj
T*
( Chance governs all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 907)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( Sable-vested Night, eldest of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( With ruin upon ruin, rout on rout,)Tj
T*
( Confusion worse confounded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 995)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( So he with difficulty and labour hard)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Moved on, with difficulty and labour he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 2, l. 1021)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Hail, holy Light, offspring of heaven first-born,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or of the eternal co-eternal beam)Tj
T*
( May I express thee unblamed? since God is light,)Tj
T*
( And never but in unapproach\351d light)Tj
T*
( Dwelt from eternity, dwelt then in thee,)Tj
T*
( Bright effluence of bright essence increate.)Tj
T*
( Or hear\222st thou rather pure ethereal stream,)Tj
T*
( Whose fountain who shall tell?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.00456 Tm
( Then feed on thoughts that voluntary move)Tj
T*
( Harmonious numbers, as the wakeful bird)Tj
T*
( Sings darkling, and in shadiest covert hid,)Tj
T*
( Tunes her nocturnal note. Thus with the year)Tj
T*
( Seasons return, but not to me returns)Tj
T*
( Day, or the sweet approach of ev\222n or morn,)Tj
T*
( Or sight of vernal bloom, or summer\222s rose,)Tj
T*
( Or flocks, or herds, or human face divine;)Tj
T*
( But cloud instead, and ever-during dark)Tj
T*
( Surrounds me, from the cheerful ways of men)Tj
T*
( Cut off, and for the book of knowledge fair)Tj
T*
( Presented with a universal blank)Tj
T*
( Of Nature\222s works to me expunged and razed,)Tj
T*
( And wisdom at one entrance quite shut out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.25456 Tm
( Die he or justice must.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 210)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.50456 Tm
( Dark with excessive bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 380)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.75456 Tm
( So on this windy sea of land, the fiend)Tj
T*
( Walked up and down alone bent on his prey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 440)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.00456 Tm
( Into a limbo large and broad, since called)Tj
T*
( The Paradise of Fools, to few unknown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l.495)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.25456 Tm
( For neither man nor angel can discern)Tj
T*
( Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks)Tj
T*
( Invisible, except to God alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 3, l. 682)Tj
ET
EMC
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( At whose sight all the stars)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hide their diminished heads.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Warring in heaven against heaven\222s matchless king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( A grateful mind)Tj
T*
( By owing owes not, but still pays, at once)Tj
T*
( Indebted and discharged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Me miserable! which way shall I fly)Tj
T*
( Infinite wrath, and infinite despair?)Tj
T*
( Which way I fly is hell; myself am hell;)Tj
T*
( And in the lowest deep a lower deep)Tj
T*
( Still threatening to devour me opens wide,)Tj
T*
( To which the hell I suffer seems a heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( So farewell hope, and with hope farewell fear,)Tj
T*
( Farewell remorse! All good to me is lost;)Tj
T*
( Evil, be thou my good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( So clomb this first grand thief into God\222s fold:)Tj
T*
( So since into his church lewd hirelings climb.)Tj
T*
( Thence up he flew, and on the tree of life,)Tj
T*
( The middle tree and highest there that grew,)Tj
T*
( Sat like a cormorant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Groves whose rich trees wept odorous gums and balm,)Tj
T*
( Others whose fruit burnished with golden rind)Tj
T*
( Hung amiable, Hesperian fables true,)Tj
T*
( If true, here only.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 248)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Flowers of all hue, and without thorn the rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 256)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Not that fair field)Tj
T*
( Of Enna, where Proserpine gathering flowers)Tj
T*
( Herself a fairer flower by gloomy Dis)Tj
T*
( Was gathered, which cost Ceres all that pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 268)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( For contemplation he and valour formed,)Tj
T*
( For softness she and sweet attractive grace,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( He for God only, she for God in him:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His fair large front and eye sublime declared)Tj
T*
( Absolute rule.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 297)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( And by her yielded, by him best received,)Tj
T*
( Yielded with coy submission, modest pride,)Tj
T*
( And sweet reluctant amorous delay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 309)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Adam, the goodliest man of men since born)Tj
T*
( His sons, the fairest of her daughters Eve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 323)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The unwieldy elephant)Tj
T*
( To make them mirth used all his might, and wreathed)Tj
T*
( His lithe proboscis.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 345)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( These two)Tj
T*
( Emparadised in one another\222s arms)Tj
T*
( The happier Eden, shall enjoy their fill)Tj
T*
( Of bliss on bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 505)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Now came still evening on, and twilight grey)Tj
T*
( Had in her sober livery all things clad;)Tj
T*
( Silence accompanied, for beast and bird,)Tj
T*
( They to their grassy couch, these to their nests)Tj
T*
( Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale;)Tj
T*
( She all night long her amorous descant sung;)Tj
T*
( Silence was pleased: now glowed the firmament)Tj
T*
( With living sapphires: Hesperus that led)Tj
T*
( The starry host, rode brightest, till the moon)Tj
T*
( Rising in clouded majesty, at length)Tj
T*
( Apparent queen unveiled her peerless light,)Tj
T*
( And o\222er the dark her silver mantle threw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 598)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( God is thy law, thou mine: to know no more)Tj
T*
( Is woman\222s happiest knowledge and her praise.)Tj
T*
( With thee conversing I forget all time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 637)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Sweet the coming on)Tj
T*
( Of grateful evening mild, then silent night)Tj
T*
( With this her solemn bird and this fair moon,)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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( And these the gems of heaven, her starry train.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 646)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Unseen, both when we wake, and when we sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 677)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Into their inmost bower)Tj
T*
( Handed they went; and eased the putting off)Tj
T*
( These troublesome disguises which we wear,)Tj
T*
( Strait side by side were laid, nor turned I ween)Tj
T*
( Adam from his fair spouse, nor Eve the rites)Tj
T*
( Mysterious of connubial love refused:)Tj
T*
( Whatever hypocrites austerely talk)Tj
T*
( Of purity and place and innocence,)Tj
T*
( Defaming as impure what God declares)Tj
T*
( Pure, and commands to some, leaves free to all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 738)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Hail, wedded love, mysterious law, true source)Tj
T*
( Of human offspring, sole propriety)Tj
T*
( In Paradise of all things common else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 750)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Sleep on)Tj
T*
( Blest pair; and O yet happiest if ye seek)Tj
T*
( No happier state, and know to know no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 773)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Him there they found)Tj
T*
( Squat like a toad, close at the ear of Eve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 799)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( But wherefore thou alone? Wherefore with thee)Tj
T*
( Came not all hell broke loose?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 917)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Then when I am thy captive talk of chains,)Tj
T*
( Proud limitary cherub.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 4, l. 970)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( His sleep)Tj
T*
( Was airy light from pure digestion bred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( My fairest, my espoused, my latest found,)Tj
T*
( Heaven\222s last best gift, my ever new delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Best image of myself and dearer half.)Tj
ET
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(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( On earth join all ye creatures to extol)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Him first, him last, him midst, and without end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 164)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( So saying, with dispatchful looks in haste)Tj
T*
( She turns, on hospitable thoughts intent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 331)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Nor jealousy)Tj
T*
( Was understood, the injured lover\222s hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 449)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Freely we serve,)Tj
T*
( Because we freely love, as in our will)Tj
T*
( To love or not; in this we stand or fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 538)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( What if earth)Tj
T*
( Be but the shadow of heaven, and things therein)Tj
T*
( Each to other like, more than on earth is thought?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 574)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Hear all ye angels, progeny of light,)Tj
T*
( Thrones, dominations, princedoms, virtues, powers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 600)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( All seemed well pleased, all seemed, but were not all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 617)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Mystical dance, which yonder starry sphere)Tj
T*
( Of planets and of fixed in all her wheels)Tj
T*
( Resembles nearest, mazes intricate,)Tj
T*
( Eccentric intervolved, yet regular)Tj
T*
( Then most, when most irregular they seem,)Tj
T*
( And in their motions harmony divine)Tj
T*
( So smoothes her charming tones, that God\222s own ear)Tj
T*
( Listens delighted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 620)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Satan, so call him now, his former name)Tj
T*
( Is heard no more in heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 5, l. 658)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Servant of God, well done, well hast thou fought)Tj
T*
( The better fight, who single has maintained)Tj
T*
( Against revolted multitudes the cause)Tj
T*
( Of truth, in word mightier than they in arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 6, l. 29)Tj
ET
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( Headlong themselves they threw)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Down from the verge of heaven, eternal wrath)Tj
T*
( Burnt after them to the bottomless pit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 6, l. 864)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Standing on earth, not rapt above the pole,)Tj
T*
( More safe I sing with mortal voice, unchanged)Tj
T*
( To hoarse or mute, though fall\222n on evil days,)Tj
T*
( On evil days though fallen, and evil tongues.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 7, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( But drive far off the barbarous dissonance)Tj
T*
( Of Bacchus and his revellers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 7, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Necessity and chance)Tj
T*
( Approach not me, and what I will is fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 7, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( There Leviathan)Tj
T*
( Hugest of living creatures, on the deep)Tj
T*
( Stretched like a promontory sleeps or swims,)Tj
T*
( And seems a moving land, and at his gills)Tj
T*
( Draws in, and at his trunk spouts out a sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 7, l. 412)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( The planets in their stations listening stood,)Tj
T*
( While the bright pomp ascended jubilant.)Tj
T*
( Open, ye everlasting gates, they sung,)Tj
T*
( Open, ye heavens, your living doors; let in)Tj
T*
( The great creator from his work returned)Tj
T*
( Magnificent, his six days\222 work, a world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 7, l. 563)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( He his fabric of the heavens)Tj
T*
( Hath left to their disputes, perhaps to move)Tj
T*
( His laughter at their quaint opinions wide)Tj
T*
( Hereafter, when they come to model heaven)Tj
T*
( And calculate the stars, how they will wield)Tj
T*
( The mighty frame, how build, unbuild, contrive)Tj
T*
( To save appearances, how gird the sphere)Tj
T*
( With centric and eccentric scribbled o\222er,)Tj
T*
( Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Heaven is for thee too high)Tj
T*
( To know what passes there; be lowly wise:)Tj
ET
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( Think only what concerns thee and thy being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Tell me, how may I know him, how adore,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From whom I have that thus I move and live,)Tj
T*
( And feel that I am happier than I know?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 280)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( In solitude)Tj
T*
( What happiness? who can enjoy alone,)Tj
T*
( Or all enjoying, what contentment find?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 364)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( So absolute she seems)Tj
T*
( And in herself complete, so well to know)Tj
T*
( Her own, that what she wills to do or say)Tj
T*
( Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 547)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Ofttimes nothing profits more)Tj
T*
( Than self esteem, grounded on just and right)Tj
T*
( Well managed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 8, l. 571)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( My celestial patroness, who deigns)Tj
T*
( Her nightly visitation unimplored,)Tj
T*
( And dictates to me slumbering, or inspires)Tj
T*
( Easy my unpremeditated verse:)Tj
T*
( Since first this subject for heroic song)Tj
T*
( Pleased me long choosing, and beginning late.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Unless an age too late, or cold)Tj
T*
( Climate, or years damp my intended wing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( The serpent subtlest beast of all the field.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( For solitude sometimes is best society,)Tj
T*
( And short retirement urges sweet return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( As one who long in populous city pent,)Tj
T*
( Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air,)Tj
T*
( Forth issuing on a summer\222s morn to breathe)Tj
T*
( Among the pleasant villages and farms)Tj
T*
( Adjoined, from each thing met conceives delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 445)Tj
ET
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( She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 489)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( God so commanded, and left that command)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sole daughter of his voice; the rest, we live)Tj
T*
( Law to our selves, our reason is our law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 652)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Her rash hand in evil hour)Tj
T*
( Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she ate:)Tj
T*
( Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seat)Tj
T*
( Sighing through all her works gave signs of woe)Tj
T*
( That all was lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 780)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( O fairest of creation, last and best)Tj
T*
( Of all God\222s works, creature in whom excelled)Tj
T*
( Whatever can to sight or thought be formed,)Tj
T*
( Holy, divine, good, amiable or sweet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 896)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( For with thee)Tj
T*
( Certain my resolution is to die;)Tj
T*
( How can I live without thee, how forgo)Tj
T*
( Thy sweet converse and love so dearly joined,)Tj
T*
( To live again in these wild woods forlorn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 906)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Flesh of flesh,)Tj
T*
( Bone of my bone thou art, and from thy state)Tj
T*
( Mine never shall be parted, bliss or woe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 914)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( What thou art is mine;)Tj
T*
( Our state cannot be severed, we are one,)Tj
T*
( One flesh; to lose thee were to lose my self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 9, l. 957)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Yet I shall temper so)Tj
T*
( Justice with mercy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 10, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( He hears)Tj
T*
( On all sides, from innumerable tongues)Tj
T*
( A dismal universal hiss, the sound)Tj
T*
( Of public scorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 10, l. 506)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( O why did God,)Tj
ET
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( Creator wise, that peopled highest heaven)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With spirits masculine, create at last)Tj
T*
( This novelty on earth, this fair defect)Tj
T*
( Of nature?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 10, l. 888)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Demoniac frenzy, moping melancholy)Tj
T*
( And moon-struck madness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 11, l. 485)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Henceforth I fly not death, nor would prolong)Tj
T*
( Life much, bent rather how I may quit)Tj
T*
( Fairest and easiest of this cumbrous charge,)Tj
T*
( Which I must keep till my appointed day)Tj
T*
( Of rendering up, and patiently attend)Tj
T*
( My dissolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 11, l. 547)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Nor love thy life, nor hate; but what thou liv\222st)Tj
T*
( Live well, how long or short permit to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 11, l. 553)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( The evening star,)Tj
T*
( Love\222s harbinger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 11, l. 588)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( For now I see)Tj
T*
( Peace to corrupt no less than war to waste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 11, l. 783)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( O goodness infinite, goodness immense!)Tj
T*
( That all this good of evil shall produce,)Tj
T*
( And evil turn to good; more wonderful)Tj
T*
( Than that which by creation first brought forth)Tj
T*
( Light out of darkness! full of doubt I stand,)Tj
T*
( Whether I should repent me now of sin)Tj
T*
( By me done and occasioned, or rejoice)Tj
T*
( Much more, that much more good thereof shall spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 12, l. 469)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Only add)Tj
T*
( Deeds to thy knowledge answerable, add faith,)Tj
T*
( Add virtue, patience, temperance, add love,)Tj
T*
( By name to come called Charity, the soul)Tj
T*
( Of all the rest: then wilt thou not be loath)Tj
T*
( To leave this Paradise, but shalt possess)Tj
T*
( A paradise within thee, happier far.)Tj
ET
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(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 12, l. 581)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( In me is no delay; with thee to go,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is to stay here; without thee here to stay,)Tj
T*
( Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me)Tj
T*
( Art all things under heaven, all places thou,)Tj
T*
( Who for my wilful crime art banished hence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 12, l. 615)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( They looking back, all the eastern side beheld)Tj
T*
( Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,)Tj
T*
( Waved over by that flaming brand, the gate)Tj
T*
( With dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms:)Tj
T*
( Some natural tears they dropped, but wiped them soon;)Tj
T*
( The world was all before them, where to choose)Tj
T*
( Their place of rest, and Providence their guide:)Tj
T*
( They hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,)Tj
T*
( Through Eden took their solitary way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Lost\222 \(1667\) bk. 12, l. 641)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Skilled to retire, and in retiring draw)Tj
T*
( Hearts after them tangled in amorous nets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 2, l. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Of whom to be dispraised were no small praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( But on occasion\222s forelock watchful wait.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 3, l. 173)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( He who seeking asses found a kingdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 3, l. 242 \(referring to Saul\). \
See Samuel ch. 9, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( The childhood shows the man,)Tj
T*
( As morning shows the day. Be famous then)Tj
T*
( By wisdom; as thy empire must extend,)Tj
T*
( So let extend thy mind o\222er all the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 4, l. 220)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Athens, the eye of Greece, mother of arts)Tj
T*
( And eloquence, native to famous wits)Tj
T*
( Or hospitable, in her sweet recess,)Tj
T*
( City or suburban, studious walks and shades;)Tj
T*
( See there the olive grove of Academe,)Tj
T*
( Plato\222s retirement, where the Attic bird)Tj
T*
( Trills her thick-warbled notes the summer long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 4, l. 240)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( The first and wisest of them all professed)Tj
ET
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( To know this only, that he nothing knew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 4, l. 293.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Who reads)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Incessantly, and to his reading brings not)Tj
T*
( A spirit and judgement equal or superior)Tj
T*
( \(And what he brings, what needs he elsewhere seek?\))Tj
T*
( Uncertain and unsettled still remains,)Tj
T*
( Deep-versed in books and shallow in himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 4, l. 322)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( In them is plainest taught, and easiest learnt,)Tj
T*
( What makes a nation happy, and keeps it so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Regained\222 \(1671\) bk. 4, l. 361 \(on the prophets\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( But headlong joy is ever on the wing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Passion\222 \(1645\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Ask for this great deliverer now, and find him)Tj
T*
( Eyeless in Gaza at the mill with slaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( O dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon,)Tj
T*
( Irrecoverably dark, total eclipse)Tj
T*
( Without all hope of day!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( The sun to me is dark)Tj
T*
( And silent as the moon,)Tj
T*
( When she deserts the night)Tj
T*
( Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( To live a life half dead, a living death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Ran on embattled armies clad in iron,)Tj
T*
( And, weaponless himself,)Tj
T*
( Made arms ridiculous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Wisest men)Tj
T*
( Have erred, and by bad women been deceived;)Tj
T*
( And shall again, pretend they ne\222er so wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 210)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Just are the ways of God,)Tj
T*
( And justifiable to men;)Tj
T*
( Unless there be who think not God at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 293)Tj
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( Of such doctrine never was there school,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But the heart of the fool,)Tj
T*
( And no man therein doctor but himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 297)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( But what availed this temperance, not complete)Tj
T*
( Against another object more enticing?)Tj
T*
( What boots it at one gate to make defence,)Tj
T*
( And at another to let in the foe?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 558)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( That grounded maxim)Tj
T*
( So rife and celebrated in the mouths)Tj
T*
( Of wisest men; that to the public good)Tj
T*
( Private respects must yield.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 865)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Yet beauty, though injurious, hath strange power,)Tj
T*
( After offence returning, to regain)Tj
T*
( Love once possessed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1003)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Love-quarrels oft in pleasing concord end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1008)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Lords are lordliest in their wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1418)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( For evil news rides post, while good news baits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1538)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( And as an evening dragon came,)Tj
T*
( Assailant on the perch\351d roosts,)Tj
T*
( And nests in order ranged)Tj
T*
( Of tame villatic fowl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1692)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Like that self-begotten bird)Tj
T*
( In the Arabian woods embossed,)Tj
T*
( That no second knows nor third,)Tj
T*
( And lay erewhile a holocaust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1699)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( And though her body die, her fame survives,)Tj
T*
( A secular bird ages of lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1706)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Samson hath quit himself)Tj
T*
( Like Samson, and heroically hath finished)Tj
T*
( A life heroic.)Tj
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(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1709)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or knock the breast, no weakness, no contempt,)Tj
T*
( Dispraise, or blame, nothing but well and fair,)Tj
T*
( And what may quiet us in a death so noble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1721)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( All is best, though we oft doubt,)Tj
T*
( What the unsearchable dispose)Tj
T*
( Of highest wisdom brings about,)Tj
T*
( And ever best found in the close.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1745)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( His servants he, with new acquist)Tj
T*
( Of true experience from this great event)Tj
T*
( With peace and consolation hath dismissed,)Tj
T*
( And calm of mind, all passion spent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1671\) l. 1755)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( How soon hath time the subtle thief of youth,)Tj
T*
( Stol\222n on his wing my three and twentieth year!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 7 \221How soon hath time\222 \(1645\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( I did but prompt the age to quit their clogs)Tj
T*
( By the known rules of ancient liberty,)Tj
T*
( When straight a barbarous noise environs me)Tj
T*
( Of owls and cuckoos, asses, apes, and dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 12 \221I did but prompt the age\222 \(1673\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Licence they mean when they cry liberty;)Tj
T*
( For who loves that, must first be wise and good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 12 \221I did but prompt the age\222 \(1673\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Doth God exact day-labour, light denied,)Tj
T*
( I fondly ask; but patience to prevent)Tj
T*
( That murmur, soon replies, God doth not need)Tj
T*
( Either man\222s work or his own gifts, who best)Tj
T*
( Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best, his state)Tj
T*
( Is kingly. Thousands at his bidding speed)Tj
T*
( And post o\222er land and ocean without rest:)Tj
T*
( They also serve who only stand and wait.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 16 \221When I consider how my light is spent\222 \(1673\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Today deep thoughts resolve with me to drench)Tj
T*
( In mirth, that after no repenting draws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 18 \221Cyriack, whose grandsire on the royal bench\222 \(\
1673\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Methought I saw my late espous\351d saint)Tj
ET
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( Brought to me like Alcestis from the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 19 \221Methought I saw my late espous\351d saint\222 \(16\
73\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( But oh as to embrace me she inclined)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I waked, she fled, and day brought back my night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 19 \221Methought I saw my late espous\351d saint\222 \(16\
73\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( New Presbyter is but old Priest writ large.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221On the New Forcers of Conscience under the Long Parliament\222 \(164\
6\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( For what can war, but endless war still breed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221On the Lord General Fairfax at the Siege of Colchester\222 \(written\
1648, published 1694\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Cromwell, our chief of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221To the Lord General Cromwell\222 \(written 1652, published 1694\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Peace hath her victories)Tj
T*
( No less renowned than war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221To the Lord General Cromwell\222 \(written 1652, published 1694\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( He who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in\
laudable things, ought )Tj
T*
(himself to be a true poem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221An Apology for Smectymnuus\222 \(1642\) introduction, p. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( His words...like so many nimble and airy servitors trip about him at\
command.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221An Apology for Smectymnuus\222 \(1642\) sect. 12, p. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( For this is not the liberty which we can hope, that no grievance eve\
r should arise in the )Tj
T*
(Commonwealth, that let no man in this world expect; but when complaints \
are freely heard, )Tj
T*
(deeply considered, and speedily reformed, then is the utmost bound of ci\
vil liberty attained that )Tj
T*
(wise men look for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain a potency of li\
fe in them to be as active as )Tj
T*
(that soul was whose progeny they are; nay they do preserve as in a vial \
the purest efficacy and )Tj
T*
(extraction of that living intellect that bred them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( As good almost kill a man as kill a good book: who kills a man kills\
a reasonable creature, )Tj
T*
(God\222s image; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, ki\
lls the image of God, as it )Tj
T*
(were in the eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( A good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed \
and treasured up on )Tj
T*
(purpose to a life beyond life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( It was from out the rind of one apple tasted that the knowledge of g\
ood and evil as two twins )Tj
T*
(cleaving together leaped forth into the world. And perhaps this is that \
doom that Adam fell into )Tj
T*
(of knowing good and evil, that is to say, of knowing good by evil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( He that can apprehend and consider vice with all her baits and seemi\
ng pleasures, and yet )Tj
ET
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(abstain, and yet distinguish, and yet prefer that which is truly better,\
he is the true warfaring )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Christian. I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised\
and unbreathed, that never )Tj
T*
(sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race, where th\
at immortal garland is to be )Tj
T*
(run for, not without dust and heat. Assuredly we bring not innocence int\
o the world, we bring )Tj
T*
(impurity much rather: that which purifies us is trial, and trial is by w\
hat is contrary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( If we think to regulate printing, thereby to rectify manners, we mus\
t regulate all recreations )Tj
T*
(and pastimes, all that is delightful to man...It will ask more than the \
work of twenty licensers to )Tj
T*
(examine all the lutes, the violins, and the guitars in every house; they\
must not be suffered to )Tj
T*
(pratle as they do, but must be licenced what they may say. And who shall\
silence all the airs and )Tj
T*
(madrigals, that whisper softness in chambers?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( From that time ever since, the sad friends of Truth, such as durst a\
ppear, imitating the careful )Tj
T*
(search that Isis made for the mangled body of Osiris, went up and down g\
athering up limb by )Tj
T*
(limb still as they could find them. We have not yet found them all, Lord\
s and Commons, nor ever )Tj
T*
(shall do, till her Master\222s second coming; He shall bring together ev\
ery joint and member, and )Tj
T*
(shall mould them into an immortal feature of loveliness and perfection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( To be still searching what we know not, by what we know, still closi\
ng up truth to truth as we )Tj
T*
(find it \(for all her body is homogeneal and proportional\), this is the\
golden rule in theology as )Tj
T*
(well as in arithmetic, and makes up the best harmony in a church.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( God is decreeing to begin some new and great period in his Church, e\
ven to the reforming of )Tj
T*
(Reformation itself. What does he then but reveal Himself to his servants\
, and as his manner is, )Tj
T*
(first to his Englishmen?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Behold now this vast city [London]; a city of refuge, the mansion-ho\
use of liberty, )Tj
T*
(encompassed and surrounded with his protection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Where there is much desire to learn, there of necessity will be much\
arguing, much writing, )Tj
T*
(many opinions; for opinion in good men is but knowledge in the making.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Methinks I see in my mind a noble and puissant nation rousing hersel\
f like a strong man after )Tj
T*
(sleep, and shaking her invincible locks. Methinks I see her as an eagle \
mewing her mighty youth, )Tj
T*
(and kindling her undazzled eyes at the full midday beam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according\
to conscience, above all )Tj
T*
(liberties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Though all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon the ear\
th, so Truth be in the field, )Tj
ET
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(we do injuriously by licensing and prohibiting to misdoubt her strength.\
Let her and Falsehood )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encoun\
ter?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Areopagitica\222 \(1644\) p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Let not England forget her precedence of teaching nations how to liv\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce\222 \(1643\) \221To the Parli\
ament of England\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I owe no light or leading received from any man in the discovery of \
this truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Judgement of Martin Bucer\222 \(1644\); on \221The Doctrine and \
Discipline of Divorce\222 \(1643\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( I call therefore a complete and generous education that which fits a\
man to perform justly, )Tj
T*
(skilfully and magnanimously all the offices both private and public of p\
eace and war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Of Education\222 \(1644\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Ornate rhetoric taught out of the rule of Plato...To which poetry wo\
uld be made subsequent, or )Tj
T*
(indeed rather precedent, as being less subtle and fine, but more simple,\
sensuous and passionate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Of Education\222 \(1644\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( In those vernal seasons of the year, when the air is calm and pleasa\
nt, it were an injury and )Tj
T*
(sullenness against nature not to go out, and see her riches, and partake\
in her rejoicing with )Tj
T*
(heaven and earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Of Education\222 \(1644\) \221Their Exercise\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( What I have spoken, is the language of that which is not called amis\
s The good old Cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Ready and Easy Way to Establish a Free Commonwealth\222 \(2nd ed\
., 1660\) p. 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( But because about the manner and order of this government, whether i\
t ought to be )Tj
T*
(Presbyterial, or Prelatical, such endless question, or rather uproar is \
arisen in this land, as may be )Tj
T*
(justly termed, what the fever is to the physicians, the eternal reproach\
of our divines.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221The Reason of Church Government\222 \(1642\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( This manner of writing [prose] wherein knowing myself inferior to my\
self...I have the use, as I )Tj
T*
(may account it, but of my left hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221The Reason of Church Government\222 \(1642\) bk. 2, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( By labour and intent study \(which I take to be my portion in this l\
ife\) joined with the strong )Tj
T*
(propensity of nature, I might perhaps leave something so written to afte\
rtimes, as they should not )Tj
T*
(willingly let it die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The Reason of Church Government\222 \(1642\) bk. 2, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( The land had once enfranchised herself from this impertinent yoke of\
prelaty, under whose )Tj
T*
(inquisitorious and tyrannical duncery no free and splendid wit can flour\
ish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221The Reason of Church Government\222 \(1642\) bk. 2, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( Beholding the bright countenance of truth in the quiet and still air\
of delightful studies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221The Reason of Church Government\222 \(1642\) bk. 2, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not free\
dom, but licence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates\222 \(1649\))Tj
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( No man who knows aught, can be so stupid to deny that all men natura\
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(\221The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates\222 \(1649\))Tj
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( 1.135 Comte de Mirabeau 1749-91)Tj
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( La guerre est l\222industrie nationale de la Prusse.)Tj
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( War is the national industry of Prussia.)Tj
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(Attributed to Mirabeau by Albert Sorel, based on words found in the intr\
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(\221Anthem at Sprinkling the Holy Water\222.)Tj
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( And with thy spirit.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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( I will go unto the altar of God.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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T*
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(that I have sinned exceedingly in thought, word, and deed, through my fa\
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T*
(through my most grievous fault.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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( Kyrie eleison...Christe eleison.)Tj
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( Lord, have mercy upon us...Christ, have mercy upon us.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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( Gloria in excelsis Deo, et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis.)Tj
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( Laudamus te, benedicimus te, adoramus te, glorificamus te.)Tj
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( Glory be to God on high, and on earth peace to men of good will. We \
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(thee, we adore thee, we glorify thee.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Oremus.)Tj
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( Let us pray.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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( Thanks be to God.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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T*
(ante omnia saecula: Deum de Deo, lumen de lumine, Deum verum de Deo vero\
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T*
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T*
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T*
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t sepultus est. Et )Tj
T*
(resurrexit tertia die, secundum Scripturas; et ascendit in coelum; sedet\
ad dexteram Patris; et )Tj
T*
(iterum venturus est cum gloria, judicare vivos et mortuos; cuius regni n\
on erit finis. Et in )Tj
T*
(Spiritum Sanctum, Dominum vivificantem, qui ex Patre Filioque procedit; \
qui cum Patre et Filio )Tj
T*
(simul adoratur, et conglorificatur; qui locutus est per Prophetas. Et un\
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T*
(Apostolicam Ecclesiam. Confiteor unum Baptisma in remissionem peccatorum\
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T*
(resurrectionem mortuorum, et vitam venturi saeculi.)Tj
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T*
(before all ages; God of God, light of light; true God of true God; begot\
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T*
(consubstantial with the Father, by whom all things were made. Who for us\
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T*
(salvation, came down from heaven; and became incarnate by the Holy Ghost\
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T*
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T*
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T*
(sitteth at the right hand of the Father; and he is to come again with gl\
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T*
(and the dead; of whose kingdom there shall be no end. And in the Holy Gh\
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T*
(of life, who proceedeth from the Father and the Son; who together with t\
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T*
(adored and glorified; who spoke by the Prophets. And one holy Catholic a\
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T*
(confess one Baptism for the remission of sins. And I expect the resurrec\
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T*
(life of the world to come.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222 \221The Nicene Creed\222.)Tj
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( Lift up your hearts.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( It is right and fitting.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus, Dominus Deus Sabaoth. Pleni sunt coeli et\
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Pater noster, qui es in coelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum; adveniat r\
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T*
(tua sicut in coelo, et in terra; panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodi\
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T*
(nostra, sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris; et ne nos inducas i\
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T*
(a malo.)Tj
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( Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom com\
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T*
(forgive them that trespass against us; and lead us not into temptation, \
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum.)Tj
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( The peace of the Lord be always with you.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222 Domine, non sum dignus ut intres sub te\
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T*
(sanabitur anima mea.)Tj
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( Lord, I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter under my roof; but sa\
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T*
(soul shall be healed.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Ite missa est.)Tj
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( Go, you are dismissed.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222 \(commonly interpreted as \221Go, the M\
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( In principio erat Verbum, et Verbum erat apud Deum, et Deus erat Ver\
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( In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Wo\
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( VERBUM CARO FACTUM EST. )Tj
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( THE WORD WAS MADE FLESH.)Tj
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(\221The Ordinary of the Mass\222.)Tj
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( Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine: et lux perpetua luceat eis.)Tj
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(\221Order of Mass for the Dead\222)Tj
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( Solvet saeclum in favilla,)Tj
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( Teste David cum Sibylla.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.67047 Tm
(\221Order of Mass for the Dead\222 \221Sequentia\222 \(commonly known as\
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T*
(\(c.1190-1260\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Tuba mirum spargens sonum)Tj
T*
( Per sepulcra regionum,)Tj
T*
( Coget omnes ante thronum.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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( Iudicanti responsura.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Liber scriptus proferetur,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In quo totum continetur)Tj
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( Unde mundus iudicetur.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(make answer to the judge. The written book will be brought forth, in whi\
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T*
(included whereby the world will be judged.)Tj
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T*
(\(c.1190-1260\) l. 7)Tj
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( Rex tremendae maiestatis,)Tj
T*
( Qui salvandos salvas gratis,)Tj
T*
( Salva me, fons pietatis!)Tj
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( O King of tremendous majesty, who freely saves those who should be s\
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0 -1.2 TD
(source of pity!)Tj
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(\221Order of Mass for the Dead\222 \221Sequentia\222 \(commonly known as\
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(\(c.1190-1260\) l. 22)Tj
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( Inter oves locum praesta)Tj
T*
( Et ab haedis me sequestra)Tj
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( Statuens in parte dextra.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Order of Mass for the Dead\222 \221Sequentia\222 \(commonly known as\
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T*
(\(c.1190-1260\) l. 43)Tj
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( Requiescant in pace.)Tj
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(\221Order of Mass for the Dead\222)Tj
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( O felix culpa, quae talem ac tantum meruit habere Redemptorem.)Tj
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( O happy fault, which has earned such a mighty Redeemer.)Tj
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(\221Exsultet\222 on Holy Saturday)Tj
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( 1.137 Adrian Mitchell 1932\227)Tj
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( Most people ignore most poetry)Tj
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( most poetry ignores most people.)Tj
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(\221Poems\222 \(1964\) p. 8)Tj
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( 1.138 Joni Mitchell 1945\227)Tj
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( I\222ve looked at life from both sides now,)Tj
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T*
( It\222s life\222s illusions I recall;)Tj
T*
( I really don\222t know life at all.)Tj
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(\221Both Sides Now\222 \(1967 song\))Tj
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( They paved paradise)Tj
T*
( And put up a parking lot,)Tj
T*
( With a pink hotel,)Tj
T*
( A boutique, and a swinging hot spot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221Big Yellow Taxi\222 \(1970 song\))Tj
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( We are stardust,)Tj
T*
( We are golden,)Tj
T*
( And we got to get ourselves)Tj
T*
( Back to the garden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Woodstock\222 \(1969 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.139 Margaret Mitchell 1900-49)Tj
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( Death and taxes and childbirth! There\222s never any convenient time\
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(\221Gone with the Wind\222 \(1936\) ch. 38.)Tj
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( I wish I could care what you do or where you go but I can\222t...My \
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(\221Gone with the Wind\222 \(1936\) ch. 57 \(Rhett Butler to Scarlett\);\
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0 -1.2 TD
(1939 screen version by Sidney Howard)Tj
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( After all, tomorrow is another day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.42047 Tm
(\221Gone with the Wind\222 \(1936\) closing words)Tj
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( 1.140 Nancy Mitford 1904-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Always be civil to the girls, you never know who they may marry\222\
is an aphorism which has )Tj
ET
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(saved many an English spinster from being treated like an Indian widow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Love in a Cold Climate\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
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( An aristocracy in a republic is like a chicken whose head has been c\
ut off: it may run about in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a lively way, but in fact it is dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Noblesse Oblige\222 \(1956\) \221The English Aristocracy\222)Tj
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( Frogs...are slightly better than Huns or Wops, but abroad is unutter\
ably bloody and foreigners )Tj
T*
(are fiends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Pursuit of Love\222 \(1945\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Wooing, so tiring, you know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Pursuit of Love\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( There\222s a letter for you from France. How disgusting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Pursuit of Love\222 \(1945\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 521.9624 Tm
( 1.141 Fran\347ois Mitterand 1916\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You, Attali, are a mere chapter. I am the entire volume.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(To his adviser, Jacques Attali, in \221Observer\222 \221Sayings of the Y\
ear\222 \(1991\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.2124 Tm
( 1.142 Addison Mizner 1892-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See Ethel Watts Mumford \(1.195\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 1.143 Wilson Mizner 1876-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Be nice to people on your way up because you\222ll meet \222em on yo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(In Alva Johnston \221The Legendary Mizners\222 \(1953\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( Treat a whore like a lady and a lady like a whore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(In Alva Johnston \221The Legendary Mizners\222 \(1953\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( If you steal from one author, it\222s plagiarism; if you steal from \
many, it\222s research.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(In Alva Johnston \221The Legendary Mizners\222 \(1953\) ch. 4)Tj
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( A trip through a sewer in a glass-bottomed boat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(On Hollywood, in Alva Johnston \221The Legendary Mizners\222 \(1953\) ch\
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0 -1.2 TD
(into \221A reformer is a guy who rides through a sewer in a glass-bottom\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 202.4624 Tm
( 1.144 Moli\351re \(Jean-Baptiste Poquelin\) 1622-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pr\350sentez toujours le devant au monde.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Always present your front to the world.)Tj
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(\221L\222Avare\222 \(1669\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
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( Il faut manger pour vivre et non pas vivre pour manger.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( One should eat to live, and not live to eat.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Avare\222 \(1669\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Tout ce qui n\222est point prose est vers; et tout ce qui n\222est p\
oint vers est prose.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( All that is not prose is verse; and all that is not verse is prose.)Tj
ET
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(\221Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme\222 \(1671\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( M. Jourdain: Quoi? quand je dis: \221Nicole, apportez-moi mes panto\
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0 -1.2 TD
(bonnet de nuit\222, c\222est de la prose?)Tj
T*
( Ma\356tre de Philosophie: Oui, Monsieur.)Tj
T*
( M. Jourdain: Par ma foi! il y a plus de quarante ans que je dis de \
la prose sans que j\222en susse )Tj
T*
(rien.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( M. Jourdain: What? when I say: \221Nicole, bring me my slippers, an\
d give me my night-cap,\222 is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that prose?)Tj
T*
( Philosophy Teacher: Yes, Sir.)Tj
T*
( M. Jourdain: Good heavens! For more than forty years I have been sp\
eaking prose without )Tj
T*
(knowing it.)Tj
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(\221Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme\222 \(1671\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( Ah, la belle chose que de savoir quelque chose.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ah, it\222s a lovely thing, to know a thing or two.)Tj
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(\221Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme\222 \(1671\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 473.25456 Tm
( C\222est une \350trange entreprise que celle de faire rire les honn\352\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( It\222s an odd job, making decent people laugh.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.67047 Tm
(\221La Critique de l\222\350cole des femmes\222 \(1663\) sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.75456 Tm
( Je voudrais bien savoir si la grande r\351gle de toutes les r\351gle\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( I shouldn\222t be surprised if the greatest rule of all weren\222t t\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221La Critique de l\222\350cole des femmes\222 \(1663\) sc. 6)Tj
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( On ne meurt qu\222une fois, et c\222est pour si longtemps!)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( One dies only once, and it\222s for such a long time!)Tj
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(\221Le D\350pit Amoureux\222 \(performed 1656, published 1662\) act 5, s\
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( Qui vit sans tabac n\222est pas digne de vivre.)Tj
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T*
( He who lives without tobacco is not worthy to live.)Tj
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(\221Dom Juan\222 \(performed 1665\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( Je vis de bonne soupe et non de beau langage.)Tj
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T*
( It\222s good food and not fine words that keeps me alive.)Tj
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(\221Les femmes savantes\222 \(1672\) act 2, sc. 7)Tj
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( Guenille, si l\222on veut: ma guenille m\222est ch\351re.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Rags and tatters, if you like: I am fond of my rags and tatters.)Tj
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(\221Les femmes savantes\222 \(1672\) act 2, sc. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.25456 Tm
( Un sot savant est sot plus qu\222un sot ignorant.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( A knowledgeable fool is a greater fool than an ignorant fool.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Les femmes savantes\222 \(1672\) act 4, sc. 3)Tj
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( Les livres cadrent mal avec le mariage.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Reading goes ill with the married state.)Tj
ET
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(\221Les femmes savantes\222 \(1672\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( G\350ronte: Il me semble que vous les placez autrement qu\222ils ne\
sont: que le coeur est du c\364t\350 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gauche, et le foie du c\364t\350 droit.)Tj
T*
( Sganarelle: Oui, cela \350tait autrefois ainsi, mais nous avons cha\
ng\350 tout cela, et nous faisons )Tj
T*
(maintenant la m\350decine d\222une m\350thode toute nouvelle.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( G\350ronte: It seems to me you are locating them wrongly: the heart\
is on the left and the liver is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(on the right.)Tj
T*
( Sganarelle: Yes, in the old days that was so, but we have changed a\
ll that, and we now practise )Tj
T*
(medicine by a completely new method.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.67047 Tm
(\221Le M\350decin malgr\350 lui\222 \(1667\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.75456 Tm
( Il faut, parmi le monde, une vertu traitable.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Virtue, in the great world, should be amenable.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.17047 Tm
(\221Le Misanthrope\222 \(1666\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 509.25456 Tm
( Et c\222est une folie \341 nulle autre seconde,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( De vouloir se m\352ler de corriger le monde.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Of all human follies there\222s none could be greater)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Than trying to render our fellow-men better.)Tj
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(\221Le Misanthrope\222 \(1666\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.75456 Tm
( On doit se regarder soi-m\352me, un fort long temps,)Tj
T*
( Avant que de songer \341 condamner les gens.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One should look long and carefully at oneself before passing judgeme\
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(\221Le Misanthrope\222 \(1666\) act 3, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( C\222est un homme exp\350ditif, qui aime \341 d\350p\352cher ses mal\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He\222s an expeditious man, who likes to hurry his patients along; a\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Monsieur de Pourceaugnac\222 \(1670\) act 1, sc. 5)Tj
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( Ils commencent ici par faire pendre un homme et puis ils lui font so\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Here [in Paris] they hang a man first, and try him afterwards.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Monsieur de Pourceaugnac\222 \(1670\) act 1, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( Les gens de qualit\350 savent tout sans avoir jamais rien appris.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( People of quality know everything without ever having been taught an\
ything.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Les Pr\350cieuses ridicules\222 \(1660\) sc. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( Assassiner c\222est le plus court chemin.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Assassination is the quickest way.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Le Sicilien\222 \(1668\) sc. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( Ah, pour \352tre d\350vot, je n\222en suis pas moins homme.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( I am not the less human for being devout.)Tj
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(\221Le Tartuffe\222 \(performed 1664, published 1669\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
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( Le ciel d\350fend, de vrai, certains contentements;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mais on trouve avec lui des accommodements.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God, it is true, does some delights condemn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But \222tis not hard to come to terms with Him.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Le Tartuffe\222 \(1669\) act 4, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 639.75456 Tm
( Le scandale du monde est ce qui fait l\222offense,)Tj
T*
( Et ce n\222est pas p\350cher que p\350cher en silence.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is public scandal that constitutes offence, and to sin in secret \
is not to sin at all.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Le Tartuffe\222 \(1669\) act 4, sc. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( L\222homme est, je vous l\222avoue, un m\350chant animal.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Man, I can assure you, is a nasty creature.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Le Tartuffe\222 \(1669\) act 5, sc. 6)Tj
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( Il m\222est permis de reprendre mon bien o\373 je le trouve.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( It is permitted me to take good fortune where I find it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(In J. L. Le Gallois \221La Vie de Moli\351re\222 \(1704\) p. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.9624 Tm
( 1.145 Mary Mollineux 1648-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How sweet is harmless solitude!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What can its joys control?)Tj
T*
( Tumults and noise may not intrude,)Tj
T*
( To interrupt the soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221Solitude\222 \(1670\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.2124 Tm
( 1.146 Helmuth Von Moltke 1800-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Der ewige Friede ist ein Traum, und nicht einmal ein sch\366ner und \
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0 -1.2 TD
(Weltordnung...Ohne den Krieg w\374rde die Welt in Materialismus versumpf\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Everlasting peace is a dream, and not even a pleasant one; and war i\
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0 -1.2 TD
(arrangement of the world...Without war the world would deteriorate into \
materialism.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(Letter to Dr J. K. Bluntschli, 11 December 1880, in \221Field-Marshall C\
ount Helmuth von Moltke as a )Tj
T*
(Correspondent\222 \(1893\) p. 272 \(translation by Mary Herms\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 168.7124 Tm
( 1.147 Walter Mondale 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Cliff Freeman \(6.81\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 1.148 William Cosmo Monkhouse 1840-1901)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There once was an old man of Lyme)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who married three wives at a time,)Tj
T*
( When asked \221Why a third?\222)Tj
T*
( He replied, \221One\222s absurd!)Tj
ET
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( And bigamy, Sir, is a crime!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Nonsense Rhymes\222 \(1902\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.149 Duke of Monmouth 1649-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Do not hack me as you did my Lord Russell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.67047 Tm
(Words addressed to his executioner, in T. B. Macaulay \221History of Eng\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 632.4624 Tm
( 1.150 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu 1689-1762)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( But the fruit that can fall without shaking,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Indeed is too mellow for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.92047 Tm
(\221Answered, for Lord William Hamilton\222 in Lord Wharncliffe \(ed.\) \
\221The Letters and Works of Lady Mary )Tj
T*
(Wortley Montagu\222 \(1861\) vol. 2, p. 477)Tj
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( Let this great maxim be my virtue\222s guide:)Tj
T*
( In part she is to blame, who has been tried,)Tj
T*
( He comes too near, that comes to be denied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.17047 Tm
(\221The Plain Dealer\222 \(27 April 1724\) \221The Resolve\222)Tj
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( And we meet with champagne and a chicken at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.42047 Tm
(\221Six Town Eclogues\222 \(1747\) \221The Lover\222 l. 25)Tj
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( As Ovid has sweetly in parable told,)Tj
T*
( We harden like trees, and like rivers grow cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.67047 Tm
(\221Six Town Eclogues\222 \(1747\) \221The Lover\222 l. 47)Tj
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( In chains and darkness, wherefore should I stay,)Tj
T*
( And mourn in prison, while I keep the key?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.92047 Tm
(\221Verses on Self-Murder\222 in \221The London Magazine\222 \(1749\))Tj
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( This world consists of men, women, and Herveys.)Tj
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(\221Letters\222 vol. 1, p. 67; John Hervey \(Baron Hervey of Ickworth, 1\
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T*
(Lady Mary collaborating with him in his attempts at retaliation)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.25456 Tm
( General notions are generally wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.42047 Tm
(Letter to her husband Edward Wortley Montagu, 28 March 1710, in Robert H\
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T*
(Letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu\222 vol. 1 \(1965\) p. 24)Tj
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( Civility costs nothing and buys everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.67047 Tm
(Letter to her daughter Mary, Countess of Bute, 30 May 1756, in Robert Ha\
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T*
(Letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu\222 vol. 3 \(1967\) p. 107)Tj
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( People wish their enemies dead\227but I do not; I say give them the \
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(Letter from Horace Walpole to the Earl of Harcourt, 17 September 1778, i\
n W. S. Lewis et al. \(eds.\) \221Horace )Tj
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(Walpole\222s Correspondence\222 vol. 35 \(1973\) p. 489)Tj
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( 1.151 C. E. Montague 1867-1928)Tj
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( War hath no fury like a non-combatant.)Tj
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(\221Disenchantment\222 \(1922\) ch. 16)Tj
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( 1.152 Montaigne \(Michel Eyquem de Montaigne\) 1533-92)Tj
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( Pour juger des choses grandes et hautes, il faut une \342me de m\352\
me, autrement nous leur )Tj
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(attribuons le vice qui est le n\364tre.)Tj
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( To make judgements about great and high things, a soul of the same s\
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(otherwise we ascribe to them that vice which is our own.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 14 [References are to M. Rat\222s edi\
tion of the \221Essais\222 \(1958\) which, in accordance )Tj
T*
(with the Strowski and Gebelin text \(1906-33\), conflates the 1580 editi\
on of books 1 and 2, the revised and )Tj
T*
(enlarged 1588 edition of all three books, and later manuscript additions\
published posthumously])Tj
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( Il faut \352tre toujours bott\350 et pr\352t \341 partir.)Tj
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( One should always have one\222s boots on, and be ready to leave.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 20.)Tj
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( Je veux...que la mort me trouve plantant mes choux, mais nonchalant \
d\222elle, et encore plus de )Tj
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(mon jardin imparfait.)Tj
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( I want death to find me planting my cabbages, but caring little for \
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(imperfections of my garden.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 20)Tj
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( Le continuel ouvrage de votre vie, c\222est b\342tir la mort.)Tj
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( The ceaseless labour of your life is to build the house of death.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 20)Tj
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( L\222utilit\350 du vivre n\222est pas en l\222espace, elle est en l\222\
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( The value of life lies not in the length of days but in the use you \
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(a long time who has little lived. Whether you have lived enough depends \
not on the number of )Tj
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(your years but on your will.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 20)Tj
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( Il faut noter, que les jeux d\222enfants ne sont pas jeux, et les fa\
ut juger en eux comme leurs plus )Tj
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( It should be noted that children at play are not playing about; thei\
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 23)Tj
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( Si on me presse de dire pourquoi je l\222aimais, je sens que cela ne\
se peut s\222exprimer, qu\222en )Tj
T*
(r\350pondant: \221Parce que c\222\350tait lui; parce que c\222\350tait m\
oi.\222)Tj
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( If I am pressed to say why I loved him, I feel it can only be explai\
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 28 \(on his friend \310tienne de la B\
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( Il n\222y a gu\351re moins de tourment au gouvernement d\222une fami\
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(\352tre les occupations domestiques moins importantes, elles n\222en son\
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( There is scarcely any less bother in the running of a family than in\
that of an entire state. And )Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 39)Tj
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( Il se faut r\350server une arri\351re boutique toute n\364tre, toute\
franche, en laquelle nous \350tablissons )Tj
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(n\364tre vraie libert\350 et principale retraite et solitude.)Tj
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( A man should keep for himself a little back shop, all his own, quite\
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(establishes his true freedom and chief place of seclusion and solitude.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 39)Tj
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( La plus grande chose du monde, c\222est de savoir \352tre \341 soi.)Tj
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( The greatest thing in the world is to know how to be one\222s own.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( La gloire et le repos sont choses qui ne peuvent loger en m\352me g\356\
te.)Tj
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( Fame and tranquillity can never be bedfellows.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 1, ch. 39)Tj
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( Mon m\350tier et mon art c\222est vivre.)Tj
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( Living is my job and my art.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 6)Tj
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( La vertu refuse la facilit\350 pour compagne...Elle demande un chemi\
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( Virtue shuns ease as a companion....It demands a rough and thorny pa\
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 11)Tj
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( Notre religion est faite pour extirper les vices; elle les couvre, l\
es nourrit, les incite.)Tj
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( Our religion is made so as to wipe out vices; it covers them up, nou\
rishes them, incites them.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
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( Quand je me joue \341 ma chatte, qui sait si elle passe son temps de\
moi plus que je ne fais d\222elle?)Tj
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( When I play with my cat, who knows whether she isn\222t amusing hers\
elf with me more than I )Tj
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(am with her?)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
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( \221Que sais-je?\222)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( What do I know?)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 12 \(on discussing the position of th\
e sceptic\))Tj
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( L\222homme est bien insens\350. Il ne saurait forger un ciron, et fo\
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( Man is quite insane. He wouldn\222t know how to create a maggot, and\
he creates Gods by the )Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Ceux qui ont appari\350 notre vie \341 un songe, ont eu de la raison\
, \341 l\222aventure plus qu\222ils ne )Tj
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(pensaient...Nous veillons dormants, et veillants dormons.)Tj
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( Those who have likened our life to a dream were more right, by chanc\
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
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( Quelqu\222un pourrait dire de moi que j\222ai seulement fait ici un \
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(ayant fourni du mien que le filet \341 les lier.)Tj
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( It could be said of me that in this book I have only made up a bunch\
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(providing of my own only the string that ties them together.)Tj
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(\221Essais\222 \(1580\) bk. 3, ch. 12)Tj
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( 1.153 Montesquieu \(Charles-Louis Secondat\) 1689-1755)Tj
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( A man should be mourned at his birth, not his death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Lettres Persanes\222 \(1721\) no. 40)Tj
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( If triangles had a god, he would have three sides.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Lettres Persanes\222 \(1721\) no. 59)Tj
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( Freedom is the right of doing whatever the laws permit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221De l\222Esprit des Lois\222 \(1748\))Tj
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( Under moderate government, men are more attached to morals and less \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221De l\222Esprit des Lois\222 \(1748\))Tj
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( Les grands seigneurs ont des plaisirs, le peuple a de la joie.)Tj
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( Great lords have their pleasures, but the people have fun.)Tj
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(\221Pens\350es et fragments in\350dits de Montesquieu\222 vol. 2 \(1901\)\
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( Les Anglais sont occup\350s; ils n\222ont pas le temps d\222\352tre \
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( The English are busy; they don\222t have time to be polite.)Tj
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(\221Pens\350es et fragments in\350dits de Montesquieu\222 vol. 2 \(1901\)\
no. 1428)Tj
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( Happy the people whose annals are blank in history-books!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(Attributed to Montesquieu by Thomas Carlyle, in \221History of Frederick\
the Great\222 bk. 16, ch. 1.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 295.4624 Tm
( 1.154 Field-Marshal Montgomery \(Viscount Montgomery of Alamein\) 1887-\
1976)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Rule 1, on page 1 of the book of war, is: \221Do not march on Moscow\
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(fighting with your land armies in China.\222)Tj
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(\221Hansard\222 \(Lords\) 30 May 1962, col. 227)Tj
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( I have heard some say...that such [homosexual] practices are allowed\
in France and in other )Tj
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(NATO countries. We are not French, and we are not other nationals. We ar\
e British, thank God!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(Speaking on the 2nd reading of the Sexual Offences Bill; in \221Hansard\222\
\(Lords\) 24 May 1965, col. 648)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 152.9624 Tm
( 1.155 Robert Montgomery 1807-55)Tj
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( The solitary monk who shook the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Luther: a Poem\222 \(1842\) ch. 3 \221Man\222s Need and God\222s Sup\
ply\222)Tj
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( And thou, vast ocean! on whose awful face)Tj
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( Time\222s iron feet can print no ruin-trace.)Tj
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(\221The Omnipresence of the Deity\222 \(1830 ed.\) pt. 1, l. 105)Tj
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( D\350fiez-vous des premiers mouvements parce qu\222ils sont bons.)Tj
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(Attributed, in Comte J. d\222Estourmel \221Derniers Souvenirs\222 \(1860\
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(denied.)Tj
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( 1.157 Marquis of Montrose)Tj
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( See James Graham \(7.77\) in Volume I)Tj
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( 1.158 Percy Montrose)Tj
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( In a cavern, in a canyon,)Tj
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( Excavating for a mine,)Tj
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( Dwelt a miner, Forty-niner,)Tj
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( And his daughter, Clementine.)Tj
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( Oh, my darling, oh my darling, oh my darling Clementine!)Tj
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( Thou art lost and gone for ever, dreadful sorry, Clementine.)Tj
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(\221Clementine\222 \(1884\))Tj
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( 1.159 Clement C. Moore 1779-1863)Tj
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( \222Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house)Tj
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( Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse;)Tj
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( The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,)Tj
T*
( In hopes that St Nicholas soon would be there.)Tj
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(\221A Visit from St Nicholas\222 \(December 1823\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 308.2124 Tm
( 1.160 Edward Moore 1712-57)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This is adding insult to injuries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221The Foundling\222 \(1748\) act 5, sc. 5)Tj
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( I am rich beyond the dreams of avarice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.92047 Tm
(\221The Gamester\222 \(1753\) act 2, sc. 2.)Tj
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( 1.161 George Moore 1852-1933)Tj
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( The lot of critics is to be remembered by what they failed to unders\
tand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(\221Impressions and Opinions\222 \(1891\) \221Balzac\222)Tj
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( All reformers are bachelors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221The Bending of the Bough\222 \(1900\) act 1)Tj
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( A man travels the world in search of what he needs and returns home \
to find it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221The Brook Kerith\222 \(1916\) ch. 11)Tj
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( Art must be parochial in the beginning to become cosmopolitan in the\
end.)Tj
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(\221Hail and Farewell: Ave\222 \(1911\) p. 3 \(quoting himself\))Tj
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( Acting is therefore the lowest of the arts, if it be an art at all.)Tj
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(\221Impressions and Opinions\222 \(1891\) \221Mummer-Worship\222)Tj
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( 1.162 Marianne Moore 1887-1972)Tj
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( O to be a dragon,)Tj
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( a symbol of the power of Heaven\227of silkworm)Tj
T*
( size or immense; at times invisible.)Tj
T*
( Felicitous phenomenon!)Tj
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(\221O To Be a Dragon\222 \(1959\))Tj
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( I, too, dislike it: there are things that are important beyond all t\
his fiddle. Reading it, however, )Tj
T*
(with a perfect contempt for it, one discovers in it, after all, a place \
for the genuine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221Poetry\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( Nor till the poets among us can be)Tj
T*
( \221literalists of)Tj
T*
( the imagination\222\227above)Tj
T*
( insolence and triviality and can present)Tj
T*
( for inspection, imaginary gardens with real toads in them, shall we \
have it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(\221Poetry\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( My father used to say,)Tj
T*
( \221Superior people never make long visits,)Tj
T*
( have to be shown Longfellow\222s grave)Tj
T*
( or the glass flowers at Harvard.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221Silence\222 \(1935\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Nor was he insincere in saying, \221Make my house your inn.\222)Tj
T*
( Inns are not residences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221Silence\222 \(1935\))Tj
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( 1.163 Sturge Moore 1870-1944)Tj
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( Then, cleaving the grass, gazelles appear)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(The gentler dolphins of kindlier waves\))Tj
T*
( With sensitive heads alert of ear;)Tj
T*
( Frail crowds that a delicate hearing saves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221The Gazelles\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.164 Thomas Moore 1779-1852)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Yet, who can help loving the land that has taught us)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Six hundred and eighty-five ways to dress eggs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221The Fudge Family in Paris\222 \(1818\) letter 8, l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( For you know, dear\227I may, without vanity, hint\227)Tj
T*
( Though an angel should write, still \221tis devils must print.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.17047 Tm
(\221The Fudges in England\222 \(1835\) letter 3, l. 64)Tj
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( Believe me, if all those endearing young charms,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which I gaze on so fondly today,)Tj
T*
( Were to change by tomorrow, and fleet in my arms,)Tj
T*
( Like fairy gifts fading away!)Tj
T*
( Thou wouldst still be adored as this moment thou art,)Tj
T*
( Let thy loveliness fade as it will,)Tj
T*
( And around the dear ruin each wish of my heart)Tj
T*
( Would entwine itself verdantly still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.42047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Believe me, if all those endearing y\
oung charms\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 584.50456 Tm
( No, the heart that has truly loved never forgets,)Tj
T*
( But as truly loves on to the close,)Tj
T*
( As the sun-flower turns on her god, when he sets,)Tj
T*
( The same look which she turned when he rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.67047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Believe me, if all those endearing y\
oung charms\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.75456 Tm
( \222Twas from Kathleen\222s eyes he flew,)Tj
T*
( Eyes of most unholy blue!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.92047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221By that Lake\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.00456 Tm
( You may break, you may shatter the vase, if you will,)Tj
T*
( But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.17047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Farewell!-but whenever\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.25456 Tm
( The harp that once through Tara\222s halls)Tj
T*
( The soul of music shed,)Tj
T*
( Now hangs as mute on Tara\222s walls)Tj
T*
( As if that soul were fled.\227)Tj
T*
( So sleeps the pride of former days,)Tj
T*
( So glory\222s thrill is o\222er;)Tj
T*
( And hearts, that once beat high for praise,)Tj
T*
( Now feel that pulse no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.42047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221The harp that once through Tara\222s\
halls\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.50456 Tm
( No, there\222s nothing half so sweet in life)Tj
T*
( As love\222s young dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.67047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Love\222s Young Dream\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.75456 Tm
( The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone,)Tj
T*
( In the ranks of death you\222ll find him;)Tj
T*
( His father\222s sword he has girded on,)Tj
T*
( And his wild harp slung behind him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221The Minstrel Boy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( Oh! blame not the bard, if he fly to the bowers,)Tj
T*
( Where Pleasure lies, carelessly smiling at Fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.17047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Oh! blame not the bard\222)Tj
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( Oh! breathe not his name, let it sleep in the shade,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where cold and unhonoured his relics are laid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.42047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Oh! breathe not his name\222)Tj
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( Rich and rare were the gems she wore,)Tj
T*
( And a bright gold ring on her wand she bore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.67047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221Rich and rare were the gems she wore\
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15 0 0 15 10 641.75456 Tm
( My only books)Tj
T*
( Were woman\222s looks,)Tj
T*
( And folly\222s all they\222ve taught me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.92047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221The time I\222ve lost in wooing\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.00456 Tm
( \222Tis the last rose of summer)Tj
T*
( Left blooming alone;)Tj
T*
( All her lovely companions)Tj
T*
( Are faded and gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.17047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221\222Tis the last rose of summer\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.25456 Tm
( Then awake! the heavens look bright, my dear;)Tj
T*
( \222Tis never too late for delight, my dear;)Tj
T*
( And the best of all ways)Tj
T*
( To lengthen our days)Tj
T*
( Is to steal a few hours from the night, my dear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.42047 Tm
(\221Irish Melodies\222 \(1807\) \221The young May moon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.50456 Tm
( Oh! ever thus, from childhood\222s hour,)Tj
T*
( I\222ve seen my fondest hopes decay;)Tj
T*
( I never loved a tree or flower,)Tj
T*
( But \222twas the first to fade away.)Tj
T*
( I never nursed a dear gazelle,)Tj
T*
( To glad me with its soft black eye,)Tj
T*
( But when it came to know me well,)Tj
T*
( And love me, it was sure to die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.67047 Tm
(\221Lalla Rookh\222 \(1817\) \221The Fire-Worshippers\222 pt. 1, l. 279)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.75456 Tm
( Like Dead Sea fruits, that tempt the eye,)Tj
T*
( But turn to ashes on the lips!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.92047 Tm
(\221Lalla Rookh\222 \(1817\) \221The Fire-Worshippers\222 pt. 2, l. 484)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.00456 Tm
( But Faith, fanatic Faith, once wedded fast)Tj
T*
( To some dear falsehood, hugs it to the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.17047 Tm
(\221Lalla Rookh\222 \(1817\) \221The Veiled Prophet\222 pt. 3, l. 356)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.25456 Tm
( Oft, in the stilly night,)Tj
T*
( Ere Slumber\222s chain has bound me,)Tj
T*
( Fond Memory brings the light)Tj
T*
( Of other days around me.)Tj
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(\221National Airs\222 \(1815\) \221Oft in the Stilly Night\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.165 Thomas Osbert Mordaunt 1730-1809)Tj
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( Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Throughout the sensual world proclaim,)Tj
T*
( One crowded hour of glorious life)Tj
T*
( Is worth an age without a name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221A Poem, said to be written by Major Mordaunt during the last German \
War\222, in \221The Bee, or Literary )Tj
T*
(Weekly Intelligencer\222 12 October 1791)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.166 Hannah More 1745-1833)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For you\222ll ne\222er mend your fortunes, nor help the just cause,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( By breaking of windows, or breaking of laws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 528.67047 Tm
(\221An Address to the Meeting in Spa Fields\222 \(1817\), in H. Thompson\
\221The Life of Hannah More\222 \(1838\) )Tj
T*
(appendix, no. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 492.75456 Tm
( Small habits, well pursued betimes,)Tj
T*
( May reach the dignity of crimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221Florio\222 \(1786\) pt. 1, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.00456 Tm
( He liked those literary cooks)Tj
T*
( Who skim the cream of others\222 books;)Tj
T*
( And ruin half an author\222s graces)Tj
T*
( By plucking bon-mots from their places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(\221Florio\222 \(1786\) pt. 1, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( Did not God)Tj
T*
( Sometimes withhold in mercy what we ask,)Tj
T*
( We should be ruined at our own request.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 295.42047 Tm
(\221Moses in the Bulrushes\222 \(1782\) pt. 1, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 274.50456 Tm
( Whether we consider the manual industry of the poor, or the intellec\
tual exertions of the )Tj
T*
(superior classes, we shall find that diligent occupation, if not crimina\
lly perverted from its )Tj
T*
(purposes, is at once the instrument of virtue and the secret of happines\
s. Man cannot be safely )Tj
T*
(trusted with a life of leisure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(\221Christian Morals\222 \(1813\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( The prevailing manners of an age depend more than we are aware, or a\
re willing to allow, on )Tj
T*
(the conduct of the women: this is one of the principal hinges on which t\
he great machine of )Tj
T*
(human society turns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Essays on Various Subjects Principally Designed for Young Ladies\222\
\(1777\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( How much it is to be regretted, that the British ladies should ever \
sit down contented to polish, )Tj
T*
(when they are able to reform; to entertain, when they might instruct; an\
d to dazzle for an hour, )Tj
T*
(when they are candidates for eternity!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221Essays on Various Subjects Principally Designed for Young Ladies\222\
\(1777\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.25456 Tm
( It is humbling to reflect, that in those countries in which the fond\
ness for the mere persons of )Tj
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(women is carried to the highest excess, they are slaves; and that their \
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0 -1.2 TD
(degradation increases in direct proportion to the adoration which is pai\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.42047 Tm
(\221Strictures on the Modern System of Education\222 \(1799\) vol. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 1.167 Sir Thomas More 1478-1535)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oves inquam vestrae, quae tam mites esse, tamque exiguo solent ali, \
nunc \(uti fertur\) tam )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(ac depopulentur.)Tj
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( Your sheep, that were wont to be so meek and tame, and so small eate\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(themselves.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221Utopia\222 \(1516\) bk. 1 \(following the marginal pr\350cis \221The\
Disaster Produced by Standing Military Garrisons\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( After his head was upon the block, [he] lift it up again, and gently\
drew his beard aside, and )Tj
T*
(said, This hath not offended the king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(In Francis Bacon \221Apophthegms New and Old\222 \(1625\) no. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( In good faith, I rejoiced, son, that I had given the devil a foul fa\
ll, and that with those Lords I )Tj
T*
(had gone so far, as without great shame I could never go back again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.42047 Tm
(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222 \(Early English Tex\
t Society: Original Series 197, p. 69\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.4624 Tm
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
(Indignatio principis mors est.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( \221Is that all, my Lord?\222 quoth he [to the Duke of Norfolk]. \221\
Then in good faith is there no more )Tj
T*
(difference between your grace and me, but that I shall die to-day, and y\
ou to-morrow.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.62831 Tm
(William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222 \(E. E. T. S. Original\
Series 197, p. 71\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.7124 Tm
( Son Roper, I thank our Lord the field is won.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.87831 Tm
(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222 \(E. E. T. S. Origi\
nal Series 197, p. 73\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.9624 Tm
( Is not this house [the Tower of London] as nigh heaven as my own?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.12831 Tm
(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222 \(E. E. T. S. Origi\
nal Series 197, p. 83\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.2124 Tm
( I pray you, master Lieutenant, see me safe up, and my coming down le\
t me shift for my self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.37831 Tm
(On mounting the scaffold, in William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas Mo\
re\222 \(E. E. T. S. Original Series 197, )Tj
T*
(p. 103\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.4624 Tm
( Pluck up thy spirits, man, and be not afraid to do thine office; my \
neck is very short; take heed )Tj
T*
(therefore thou strike not awry, for saving of thine honesty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.62831 Tm
(Words addressed to the executioner, in William Roper \221The Life of Sir\
Thomas More\222 \(E. E. T. S. Original )Tj
T*
(Series 197, p. 103\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.7124 Tm
( We may not look at our pleasure to go to heaven in feather-beds; it \
is not the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.87831 Tm
(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.9624 Tm
( Son Roper, I may tell thee I have no cause to be proud thereof [the \
King having entertained )Tj
T*
(him at Chelsea], for if my head could wish him a castle in France it sho\
uld not fail to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.12831 Tm
(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.2124 Tm
( If the parties will at my hands call for justice, then, all were it \
my father stood on the one side, )Tj
T*
(and the Devil on the other, his cause being good, the Devil should have \
right.)Tj
ET
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(In William Roper \221The Life of Sir Thomas More\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I cumber [burden] you goode Margaret muche, but I woulde be sorye, i\
f it shoulde be any )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lenger than to morrowe, for it is S. Thomas evin and the vtas of Sainte \
Peter and therefore to )Tj
T*
(morowe longe I to goe to God, it were a daye very meete and conveniente \
for me. I neuer liked )Tj
T*
(your maner towarde me better then when you kissed me laste for I loue wh\
en doughterly loue and )Tj
T*
(deere charitie hathe no laisor to looke to worldely curtesye. Fare well \
my deere childe and praye )Tj
T*
(for me, and I shall for you and all your freindes that we maie merily me\
ete in heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Last letter to Margaret Roper, his daughter, 5 July 1535 in E. F. Rogers\
\(ed.\) \221The Correspondence of Sir )Tj
T*
(Thomas More\222 \(1947\). More was beheaded the following morning.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 581.2124 Tm
( 1.168 Thomas Morell 1703-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See, the conquering hero comes!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sound the trumpets, beat the drums!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Judas Maccabeus\222 \(1747\) \221A chorus of youths\222 and \221Josh\
ua\222 \(1748\) pt. 3 \(to music by Handel\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 493.4624 Tm
( 1.169 Robin Morgan 1941\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sisterhood is powerful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.92047 Tm
(Title of book \(1970\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 423.7124 Tm
( 1.170 Christopher Morley 1890-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Life is a foreign language: all men mispronounce it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.17047 Tm
(\221Thunder on the Left\222 \(1925\) ch. 14.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 353.9624 Tm
( 1.171 Lord Morley \(John, Viscount Morley of Blackburn\) 1838-1923)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The whole of the golden Gospel of Silence is now effectively compres\
sed in thirty-five )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(volumes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Critical Miscellanies\222 \(1886\) \221Carlyle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( You have not converted a man, because you have silenced him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221On Compromise\222 \(1874\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 229.4624 Tm
( 1.172 Countess Morphy \(Marcelle Azra Forbes\) fl. 1930-50)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The tragedy of English cooking is that \221plain\222 cooking cannot \
be entrusted to \221plain\222 cooks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221English Recipes\222 \(1935\) p. 17)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.7124 Tm
( 1.173 Charles Morris 1745-1838)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( But a house is much more to my mind than a tree,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And for groves, O! a good grove of chimneys for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221Country and Town\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 71.9624 Tm
( 1.174 Desmond Morris 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The city is not a concrete jungle, it is a human zoo.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Human Zoo\222 \(1969\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( There are one hundred and ninety-three living species of monkeys and\
apes. One hundred and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ninety-two of them are covered with hair. The exception is a naked ape s\
elf-named Homo sapiens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Naked Ape\222 \(1967\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I enjoy laughter and good living and believe life is like a very sho\
rt visit to a toyshop between )Tj
T*
(birth and death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Express\222 3 November 1991)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 613.4624 Tm
( 1.175 George Pope Morris 1802-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Woodman, spare that tree!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Touch not a single bough!)Tj
T*
( In youth it sheltered me,)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll protect it now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221Woodman, Spare That Tree\222 \(1830\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 1.176 William Morris 1834-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What is this, the sound and rumour? What is this that all men hear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like the wind in hollow valleys when the storm is drawing near,)Tj
T*
( Like the rolling on of ocean in the eventide of fear?)Tj
T*
( \222Tis the people marching on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(\221Chants for Socialists\222 \(1885\) \221The March of the Workers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.25456 Tm
( Nor for my words shall ye forget your tears,)Tj
T*
( Or hope again for aught that I can say,)Tj
T*
( The idle singer of an empty day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(\221The Earthly Paradise\222 \(1868-70\) \221An Apology\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 304.50456 Tm
( Dreamer of dreams, born out of my due time,)Tj
T*
( Why should I strive to set the crooked straight?)Tj
T*
( Let it suffice me that my murmuring rhyme)Tj
T*
( Beats with light wing against the ivory gate,)Tj
T*
( Telling a tale not too importunate)Tj
T*
( To those who in the sleepy region stay,)Tj
T*
( Lulled by the singer of an empty day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221The Earthly Paradise\222 \(1868-70\) \221An Apology\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( Forget six counties overhung with smoke,)Tj
T*
( Forget the snorting steam and piston stroke,)Tj
T*
( Forget the spreading of the hideous town;)Tj
T*
( Think rather of the pack-horse on the down,)Tj
T*
( And dream of London, small and white and clean,)Tj
T*
( The clear Thames bordered by its gardens green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(\221The Earthly Paradise\222 \(1868-70\) \221Prologue: The Wanderers\222\
opening lines)Tj
ET
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( Had she come all the way for this,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To part at last without a kiss?)Tj
T*
( Yea, had she borne the dirt and rain)Tj
T*
( That her own eyes might see him slain)Tj
T*
( Beside the haystack in the floods?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221The Haystack in the Floods\222 \(1858\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( And ever she sung from noon to noon,)Tj
T*
( \221Two red roses across the moon.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Two Red Roses across the Moon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Fellowship is heaven, and lack of fellowship is hell: fellowship is \
life, and lack of fellowship is )Tj
T*
(death: and the deeds that ye do upon the earth, it is for fellowship\222\
s sake that ye do them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221A Dream of John Ball\222 \(1888\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or be\
lieve to be beautiful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Hopes and Fears for Art\222 \(1882\) \221Making the Best of It\222 \(\
a paper read before the Trades\222 Guild of Learning )Tj
T*
(and the Birmingham Society of Artists\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( The reward of labour is life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221News from Nowhere\222 \(1891\) ch. 15)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.9624 Tm
( 1.177 Herbert Morrison \(Baron Morrison of Lambeth\) 1888-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Work is the call. Work at war speed. Good-night\227and go to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(Broadcast as Minister of Supply, 22 May 1940, in \221Daily Herald\222 23\
May 1940)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.2124 Tm
( 1.178 Jim Morrison 1943-1971, Ray Manzarek 1935-, Robby Krieger 1946-, \
and John )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Densmore 1945\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( C\222mon, baby, light my fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221Light My Fire\222 \(1967 song\); attributed to Robby Krieger in John\
Densmore \221Riders on the Storm\222 \(1990\) ch. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 262.4624 Tm
( 1.179 R. F. Morrison)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Just a wee deoch-an-doris,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Just a wee yin, that\222s a\222.)Tj
T*
( Just a wee deoch-an-doris,)Tj
T*
( Before we gang awa\222.)Tj
T*
( There\222s a wee wifie waitin\222,)Tj
T*
( In a wee but-an-ben;)Tj
T*
( If you can say)Tj
T*
( \221It\222s a braw bricht moonlicht nicht\222,)Tj
T*
( Ye\222re a\222 richt, ye ken.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Just a Wee Deoch-an-Doris\222 \(1911 song\); popularized by Harry La\
uder)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 48.7124 Tm
( 1.180 Dwight Morrow 1873-1931)Tj
ET
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( The world is divided into people who do things and people who get th\
e credit. Try, if you can, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to belong to the first class. There\222s far less competition.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Letter to his son, in Harold Nicolson \221Dwight Morrow\222 \(1935\) ch.\
3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 1.181 John Mortimer 1923\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The law seems like a sort of maze through which a client must be led\
to safety, a collection of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reefs, rocks and underwater hazards through which he or she must be pilo\
ted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Clinging to the Wreckage\222 \(1982\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( They do you a very decent death on the hunting field.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Paradise Postponed\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( At school I never minded the lessons. I just resented having to work\
terribly hard at playing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221A Voyage Round My Father\222 \(1971\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( No brilliance is needed in the law. Nothing but common sense, and re\
latively clean finger nails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221A Voyage Round My Father\222 \(1971\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( All drama is conflict, and unless there\222s a war going on, marriag\
e is the great situation in )Tj
T*
(which conflict takes place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(Interviewed in \221Sunday Times\222 24 April 1988)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( A champagne socialist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(Describing himself; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 397.4624 Tm
( 1.182 J. B. Morton \(\221Beachcomber\222\) 1893-1975)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One disadvantage of being a hog is that at any moment some blunderin\
g fool may try to make )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a silk purse out of your wife\222s ear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(\221By the Way\222 \(1931\) p. 282)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.00456 Tm
( Hush, hush,)Tj
T*
( Nobody cares!)Tj
T*
( Christopher Robin)Tj
T*
( Has)Tj
T*
( Fallen)Tj
T*
( Down\227)Tj
T*
( Stairs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221By the Way\222 \(1931\) p. 367)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( The man with the false nose had gone to that bourne from which no ho\
llingsworth returns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(\221Gallimaufry\222 \(1936\) \221Another True Story\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( The Doctor is said also to have invented an extraordinary weapon whi\
ch will make war less )Tj
T*
(brutal. It is described as a very powerful liquid which rots braces at a\
distance of a mile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221Gallimaufry\222 \(1936\) \221Bracerot\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.75456 Tm
( Dr Strabismus \(Whom God Preserve\) of Utrecht has patented a new in\
vention. It is an )Tj
T*
(illuminated trouser-clip for bicyclists who are using main roads at nigh\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221Morton\222s Folly\222 \(1933\) p. 99)Tj
ET
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( 1.183 Rogers Morton 1914-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m not going to rearrange the furniture on the deck of the Titan\
ic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 711.17047 Tm
(Having lost five of the last six primaries as President Ford\222s campai\
gn manager, in \221Washington Post\222 16 May )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1976, p. C8)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 663.9624 Tm
( 1.184 Thomas Morton c.1764-1838)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Approbation from Sir Hubert Stanley is praise indeed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221A Cure for the Heartache\222 \(1797\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( I eat well, and I drink well, and I sleep well\227but that\222s all.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221A Roland for an Oliver\222 \(1819\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.75456 Tm
( Always ding, dinging Dame Grundy into my ears\227what will Mrs Grund\
y zay? What will Mrs )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Grundy think?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221Speed the Plough\222 \(1798\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 502.7124 Tm
( 1.185 Sir Oswald Mosley 1896-1980)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am not, and never have been, a man of the right. My position was o\
n the left and is now in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(centre of politics.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( Letter to \221The Times\222 26 April 1968)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( 1.186 John Lothrop Motley 1814-77)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As long as he lived, he was the guiding-star of a whole brave nation\
, and when he died the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(little children cried in the streets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.42047 Tm
(On William of Orange in \221The Rise of the Dutch Republic\222 \(1856\) \
pt. 6, ch. 7.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.50456 Tm
( Give us the luxuries of life, and we will dispense with its necessit\
ies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.67047 Tm
(In Oliver Wendell Holmes \221Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table\222 \(1857-\
8\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 287.4624 Tm
( 1.187 Peter Anthony Motteux 1660-1718)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The devil was sick, the devil a monk would be;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The devil was well, and the devil a monk he\222d be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.92047 Tm
(Translation of Rabelais Gargantua and Pantagruel \(1693\) bk. 4 \(1708 e\
d.\) ch. 24 \(version of a medieval Latin )Tj
T*
(proverb\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 184.7124 Tm
( 1.188 Lord Louis Mountbatten \(Viscount Mountbatten of Burma\) 1900-79)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The nuclear arms race has no military purpose. Wars cannot be fought\
with nuclear weapons. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Their existence only adds to our perils.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.17047 Tm
(Speech at Strasbourg, 11 May 1979, in P. Ziegler \221Mountbatten\222 \(1\
985\) ch. 52)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 96.9624 Tm
( 1.189 Robert Mugabe 1924\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cricket civilizes people and creates good gentlemen. I want everyone\
to play cricket in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Zimbabwe; I want ours to be a nation of gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.42047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Times\222 26 February 1984)Tj
ET
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( 1.190 Malcolm Muggeridge 1903-90)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I developed...a theory...that to succeed pre-eminently in English pu\
blic life it is necessary to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(conform either to the popular image of a bookie or of a clergyman; Churc\
hill being a perfect )Tj
T*
(example of the former, Halifax of the latter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.67047 Tm
(\221Chronicles of Wasted Time\222 vol. 2 \221The Infernal Grove\222 \(19\
73\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.75456 Tm
( An orgy looks particularly alluring seen through the mists of righte\
ous indignation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.92047 Tm
(\221The Most of Malcolm Muggeridge\222 \(1966\) \221Dolce Vita in a Cold\
Climate\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.00456 Tm
( Good taste and humour...are a contradiction in terms, like a chaste \
whore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.17047 Tm
(\221Time\222 14 September 1953)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.25456 Tm
( The orgasm has replaced the Cross as the focus of longing and the im\
age of fulfilment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.42047 Tm
(\221Tread Softly\222 \(1966\) p. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.50456 Tm
( He was not only a bore; he bored for England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.67047 Tm
(\221Tread Softly\222 \(1966\) p. 147 \(of Sir Anthony Eden\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.75456 Tm
( Human life in all its public or collective manifestations is only th\
eatre, and mostly cheap )Tj
T*
(melodrama at that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.92047 Tm
(In \221Guardian\222 15 November 1990)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.7124 Tm
( 1.191 Edwin Muir 1887-1959)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And without fear the lawless roads)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ran wrong through all the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.17047 Tm
(\221Journeys and Places\222 \(1937\) \221H\366lderlin\222s Journey\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 343.9624 Tm
( 1.192 Frank Muir)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The thinking man\222s crumpet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.42047 Tm
(Of Joan Bakewell \(English broadcaster\); attributed)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 274.2124 Tm
( 1.193 Herbert J. Muller 1905\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Few have heard of Fra Luca Pacioli, the inventor of double-entry boo\
k-keeping; but he has )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(probably had much more influence on human life than has Dante or Michela\
ngelo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.67047 Tm
(\221Uses of the Past\222 \(1957\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 186.4624 Tm
( 1.194 Wilhelm M\374ller 1794-1827)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Vom Abendrot zum Morgenlicht)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ward mancher Kopf zum Greise.)Tj
T*
( Wer glaubt\222s? Und meiner ward es nicht)Tj
T*
( Auf dieser ganzen Reise.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Between dusk and dawn many a head has turned white. Who can believe \
it? And mine has not )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(changed on all this long journey.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.17047 Tm
(\221Die Winterreise\222 bk. 2 \221Der greise Kopf\222)Tj
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( 1.195 Ethel Watts Mumford 1878-1940, Oliver Herford 1863-1935, and Addi\
son Mizner 1872-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1933)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In the midst of life we are in debt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Altogether New Cynic\222s Calendar\222 \(1907\).)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 1.196 Lewis Mumford 1895\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Every generation revolts against its fathers and makes friends with \
its grandfathers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Brown Decades\222 \(1931\) p. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Our national flower is the concrete cloverleaf.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Quote Magazine\222 8 October 1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 1.197 Iris Murdoch b. 1919)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Dora Greenfield left her husband because she was afraid of him. She \
decided six months later )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to return to him for the same reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221The Bell\222 \(1958\) opening lines)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( The Greeks said God was always doing geometry, modern physicists say\
he\222s playing roulette, )Tj
T*
(everything depends on the observer, the universe is a totality of observ\
ations, it\222s a work of art )Tj
T*
(created by us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221The Good Apprentice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( Only in our virtues are we original, because virtue is difficult...V\
ices are general, virtues are )Tj
T*
(particular.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Nuns and Soldiers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( One doesn\222t have to get anywhere in a marriage. It\222s not a pub\
lic conveyance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221A Severed Head\222 \(1961\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Anything thst consoles is fake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(In R. Harries \221Prayer and the Pursuit of Happiness\222 \(1985\) p. 11\
5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( We live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in l\
ife is to find reality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(In \221The Times\222 15 April 1983 \221Profile\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 233.2124 Tm
( 1.198 C. W. Murphy and Will Letters)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Has anybody here seen Kelly? Kelly from the Isle of Man?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(\221Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?\222 \(1909 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 163.4624 Tm
( 1.199 Fred Murray)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Ginger, you\222re balmy!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( I\222m Henery the Eighth, I am!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Henery the Eighth, I am, I am!)Tj
T*
( I got married to the widow next door,)Tj
T*
( She\222s been married seven times before.)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Every one was a Henery,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She wouldn\222t have a Willie or a Sam.)Tj
T*
( I\222m her eighth old man named Henery)Tj
T*
( I\222m Henery the Eighth, I am!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221I\222m Henery the Eighth, I Am!\222 \(1911 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.9624 Tm
( 1.200 Ed Murrow \(Edward Roscoe Murrow\) 1908-65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This\227is London.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Opening his broadcasts from London, 1938-45. E. R. Murrow \221In Search \
of Light\222 \(1967\) \2211938-1945\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( He [Winston Churchill] mobilized the English language and sent it in\
to battle to steady his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fellow countrymen and hearten those Europeans upon whom the long dark ni\
ght of tyranny had )Tj
T*
(descended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(Broadcast, 30 November 1954, in \221In Search of Light\222 \(1967\) p. 2\
76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( Anyone who isn\222t confused doesn\222t really understand the situat\
ion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(On the Vietnam War, in Walter Bryan \221The Improbable Irish\222 \(1969\)\
ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 1.201 Alfred De Musset 1810-57)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mon verre n\222est pas grand mais je bois dans mon verre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The glass I drink from is not large, but at least it is my own.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221La Coupe et les l\351vres\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( Malgr\350 moi l\222infini me tourmente.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( I can\222t help it, the idea of the infinite torments me.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Premi\351res Po\350sies\222 \221L\222Espoir en Dieu\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Le seul bien qui me rest au monde)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Est d\222avoir quelquefois pleur\350.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The only good thing left to me is that I have sometimes wept.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Po\351mes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.50456 Tm
( Je suis venu trop tard dans un monde trop vieux.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( I have come too late into a world too old.)Tj
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(\221Rollo\222 \(1833\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 186.7124 Tm
( 1.202 Benito Mussolini 1883-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Voglio partire in perfetto orario...D\222ora innanzi ogni cosa deve \
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We must leave exactly on time...From now on everything must function\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(Speaking to a station-master, in Giorgio Pini \221Mussolini\222 \(1939\)\
vol. 2, ch. 6, p. 251. HRH Infanta Eulalia of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Spain \221Courts and Countries after the War\222 \(1925\) ch. 13: \221T\
he first benefit of Benito Mussolini\222s direction in )Tj
T*
(Italy begins to be felt when one crosses the Italian Frontier and hears \
\223 Il treno arriva all\222orario [the train is )Tj
T*
(arriving on time]\224\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.2124 Tm
( 1.203 A. J. Muste 1885-1967)Tj
ET
EMC
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( There is no way to peace. Peace is the way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 16 November 1967, p. 46)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 702.78038 Tm
( 2.0 N)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 2.1 Vladimir Nabokov 1899-1977)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Her exotic daydreams do not prevent her from being small-town bourge\
ois at heart, clinging to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(conventional ideas or committing this or that conventional violation of \
the conventional, adultery )Tj
T*
(being a most conventional way to rise above the conventional.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221Lectures on Literature\222 \(1980\) \221Madame Bovary\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 574.50456 Tm
( Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-\
ta: the tip of the tongue taking )Tj
T*
(a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo\
. Lee. Ta.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221Lolita\222 \(1955\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( Life is a great surprise. I do not see why death should not be an ev\
en greater one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Pale Fire\222 \(1962\) p. 225.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( The cradle rocks above an abyss, and common sense tells us that our \
existence is but a brief )Tj
T*
(crack of light between two eternities of darkness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Speak, Memory\222 \(1951\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( I think like a genius, I write like a distinguished author, and I sp\
eak like a child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221Strong Opinions\222 \(1973\) foreword)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( A work of art has no importance whatever to society. It is only impo\
rtant to the individual, and )Tj
T*
(only the individual reader is important to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Strong Opinions\222 \(1973\) p. 33)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 325.4624 Tm
( 2.2 Ralph Nader 1934\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Unsafe at any speed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(Title of book \(1965\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 255.7124 Tm
( 2.3 Sarojini Naidu 1879-1949)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( If only Bapu [Gandhi] knew the cost of setting him up in poverty!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(In A. Campbell-Johnson \221Mission with Mountbatten\222 \(1951\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.9624 Tm
( 2.4 Ian Nairn 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( If what is called development is allowed to multiply at the present \
rate, then by the end of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(century Great Britain will consist of isolated oases of preserved monume\
nts in a desert of wire, )Tj
T*
(concrete roads, cosy plots and bungalows...Upon this new Britain the Rev\
iew bestows a name in )Tj
T*
(the hope that it will stick\227SUBTOPIA.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221Architectural Review\222 June 1955 p. 365)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.2124 Tm
( 2.5 Fridtjof Nansen 1861-1930)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never stop because you are afraid\227you are never so likely to be w\
rong. Never keep a line of )Tj
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(retreat: it is a wretched invention. The difficult is what takes a littl\
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0 -1.2 TD
(takes a little longer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(In \221Listener\222 14 December 1939, p. 1153.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.4624 Tm
( 2.6 Napoleon I 1769-1821)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Channel is a mere ditch, and will be crossed as soon as someone \
has the courage to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attempt it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.92047 Tm
(\221Correspondance de Napol\350on Ier\222 \(1854-69\) vol. 9 \(16 Novemb\
er 1803\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.00456 Tm
( A prince who gets a reputation for good nature in the first year of \
his reign, is laughed at in the )Tj
T*
(second.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.17047 Tm
(\221Correspondance de Napol\350on Ier\222 \(1854-69\) vol. 15 \(4 April \
1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.25456 Tm
( Religion is an all-important matter in a public school for girls. Wh\
atever people say, it is the )Tj
T*
(mother\222s safeguard, and the husband\222s. What we ask of education is\
not that girls should think, )Tj
T*
(but that they should believe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.42047 Tm
(\221Correspondance de Napol\350on Ier\222 \(1854-69\) vol. 15 \(15 May 1\
807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.50456 Tm
( A la guerre, les trois quarts sont des affaires morales, la balance \
des forces r\350elles n\222est que )Tj
T*
(pour un autre quart.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( In war, three-quarters turns on personal character and relations; th\
e balance of manpower and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.92047 Tm
(\221Correspondance de Napol\350on Ier\222 vol. 17 \(1865\) no.14276 \221\
Observations sur les affaires d\222Espagne, Saint-)Tj
T*
(Cloud, 27 ao\373t 1808\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.00456 Tm
( It is a matter of great interest what sovereigns are doing; but as t\
o what Grand Duchesses are )Tj
T*
(doing\227Who cares?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.17047 Tm
(\221Lettres in\350dits de Napol\350on I\222 \(1897\) vol. 2, p. 915 \(17\
December 1811\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.25456 Tm
( Les savants con\347urent une autre id\350e tout-\341-fait \350trang\351\
re au bienfait de l\222unit\350 de poids et de )Tj
T*
(mesures; ils y adapt\351rent la num\350ration d\350cimale, en prenant le\
m\351tre pour unit\350; ils supprim\351rent )Tj
T*
(tous les nombres complexes. Rien n\222est plus contraire \341 l\222organ\
isation de l\222esprit, de la m\350moire )Tj
T*
(et de l\222imagination...Le nouveau syst\351me de poids et mesures sera \
un sujet d\222embarras et de )Tj
T*
(difficult\350s pour plusieurs g\350n\350rations...C\222est tourmenter le\
peuple par des v\350tilles!!!)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( The scientists had another idea which was totally at odds with the b\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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othing is more contrary )Tj
T*
(to the organization of the mind, of the memory, and of the imagination..\
.The new system of )Tj
T*
(weights and measures will be a stumbling block and the source of difficu\
lties for several )Tj
T*
(generations...It\222s just tormenting the people with trivia!!!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.67047 Tm
(Referring to the introduction of the metric system, in \221M\350moires..\
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( It is easier to put up with unpleasantness from a man of one\222s ow\
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T*
(one who takes an entirely different point of view.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(\221M\350moires et Correspondance publiques et militaires du Roi Joseph\222\
\(1855\) vol. 3 \(14 April 1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.00456 Tm
( Du sublime au ridicule il n\222y a qu\222un pas.)Tj
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( There is only one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.42047 Tm
(To De Pradt, Polish ambassador, after the retreat from Moscow in 1812, i\
n D. G. De Pradt \221Histoire de )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(l\222Ambassade dans le grand-duch\350 de Varsovie en 1812\222 \(1815\) p\
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( Soldats, songez que, du haut de ces pyramides, quarante si\351cles v\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Think of it, soldiers; from the summit of these pyramids, forty cent\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Army of Egypt on 21 July 1798, before the Battle of the Py\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Guerre d\222Orient\222 1, p. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.00456 Tm
( Quant au courage moral, il avait trouv\350 fort rare, disait-il, cel\
ui de deux heures apr\351s minuit; )Tj
T*
(c\222est-\341-dire le courage de l\222improviste.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( As to moral courage, I have very rarely met with two o\222clock in t\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.42047 Tm
(In E. A. de Las Cases \221M\350morial de Ste-H\350l\351ne\222 \(1823\) v\
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15 0 0 15 10 531.50456 Tm
( An army marches on its stomach.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.67047 Tm
(Attributed, but probably condensed from a long passage in E. A. de Las C\
ases \221M\350morial de Ste-)Tj
T*
(H\350l\351ne\222 \(1823\) vol. 4, 14 November 1816. \221Windsor Magazine\
\222 1904 p. 268. Also attributed to Frederick the )Tj
T*
(Great, in \221Notes and Queries\222 10 March 1866, p. 196)Tj
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( On s\222engage, et apr\351s on voit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One engages [with the enemy]\227and then one sees.)Tj
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(Habitual mode of describing his system of warfare, in Caulincourt \221Co\
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( La carri\351re ouverte aux talents.)Tj
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( The career open to talents.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.67047 Tm
(In Barry E. O\222Meara \221Napoleon in Exile\222 \(1822\) vol. 1, p. 103\
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15 0 0 15 10 347.75456 Tm
( L\222Angleterre est une nation de boutiquiers.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( England is a nation of shopkeepers.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.17047 Tm
(Attributed by Barry E. O\222Meara \221Napoleon in Exile\222 \(1822\) vol\
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15 0 0 15 10 289.25456 Tm
( As though he had 200,000 men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.42047 Tm
(When asked how to treat the Pope, in J. M. Robinson \221Cardinal Consalv\
i\222 \(1987\) p. 65.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.50456 Tm
( Has he luck?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.67047 Tm
(Attributed. Habitually asked, to assess a man\222s probable practical va\
lue. A. J. P. Taylor \221Politics in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Wartime\222 \(1964\) ch. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 189.4624 Tm
( 2.7 Ogden Nash 1902-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The turtle lives \222twixt plated decks)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which practically conceal its sex.)Tj
T*
( I think it clever of the turtle)Tj
T*
( In such a fix to be so fertile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.92047 Tm
(\221Autres B\352tes, Autres Moeurs\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.00456 Tm
( The camel has a single hump;)Tj
T*
( The dromedary, two;)Tj
T*
( Or else the other way around,)Tj
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( I\222m never sure. Are you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Camel\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The cow is of the bovine ilk;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( One end is moo, the other, milk;)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Cow\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( One would be in less danger)Tj
T*
( From the wiles of the stranger)Tj
T*
( If one\222s own kin and kith)Tj
T*
( Were more fun to be with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Family Court\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Parsley)Tj
T*
( Is gharsley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Further Reflections on Parsley\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Beneath this slab)Tj
T*
( John Brown is stowed.)Tj
T*
( He watched the ads,)Tj
T*
( And not the road.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Lather as You Go\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( I have a bone to pick with Fate.)Tj
T*
( Come here and tell me, girlie,)Tj
T*
( Do you think my mind is maturing late,)Tj
T*
( Or simply rotted early?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Lines on Facing Forty\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( He tells you when you\222ve got on too much lipstick,)Tj
T*
( And helps you with your girdle when your hips stick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Perfect Husband\222 \(1949\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Any kiddie in school can love like a fool,)Tj
T*
( But hating, my boy, is an art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Plea for Less Malice Toward None\222 \(1933\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Candy)Tj
T*
( Is dandy)Tj
T*
( But liquor)Tj
T*
( Is quicker.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Reflections on Ice-breaking\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( I test my bath before I sit,)Tj
T*
( And I\222m always moved to wonderment)Tj
T*
( That what chills the finger not a bit)Tj
T*
( Is so frigid upon the fundament.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Samson Agonistes\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( I think that I shall never see)Tj
ET
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( A billboard lovely as a tree.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Perhaps, unless the billboards fall,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll never see a tree at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Song of the Open Road\222 \(1933\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Sure, deck your lower limbs in pants;)Tj
T*
( Yours are the limbs, my sweeting.)Tj
T*
( You look divine as you advance\227)Tj
T*
( Have you seen yourself retreating?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221What\222s the Use?\222 \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Professional men, they have no cares; whatever happens, they get the\
irs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221I Yield to my Learned Brother\222 \(1935\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 541.4624 Tm
( 2.8 Thomas Nashe 1567-1601)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O, tis a precious apothegmatical Pedant, who will find matter enough\
to dilate a whole day of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the first invention of Fy, fa, fum, I smell the blood of an English-man.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221Have with you to Saffron-walden\222 \(1596\) F3 recto)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( Brightness falls from the air;)Tj
T*
( Queens have died young and fair;)Tj
T*
( Dust hath closed Helen\222s eye.)Tj
T*
( I am sick, I must die.)Tj
T*
( Lord have mercy on us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.17047 Tm
(\221In Time of Pestilence\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 356.25456 Tm
( From winter, plague and pestilence, good lord, deliver us!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(Songs from \221Summer\222s Last Will and Testament\222 \(performed c.159\
2, published 1600\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( Spring, the sweet spring, is the year\222s pleasant king;)Tj
T*
( Then blooms each thing, then maids dance in a ring,)Tj
T*
( Cold doth not sting, the pretty birds do sing:)Tj
T*
( Cuckoo, jug-jug, pu-we, to-witta-woo)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221Summer\222s Last Will and Testament\222 \(1600\) Song)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 217.4624 Tm
( 2.9 Terry Nation)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Exterminate! Exterminate!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.92047 Tm
(The Daleks in \221Dr Who\222 \(BBC television series\) December 1963 onw\
ards)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 147.7124 Tm
( 2.10 James Ball Naylor 1860-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( King David and King Solomon)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Led merry, merry lives,)Tj
T*
( With many, many lady friends,)Tj
T*
( And many, many wives;)Tj
T*
( But when old age crept over them\227)Tj
ET
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( With many, many qualms!\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( King Solomon wrote the Proverbs)Tj
T*
( And King David wrote the Psalms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221King David and King Solomon\222 \(1935\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 2.11 Jawaharlal Nehru 1889-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The light has gone out of our lives and there is darkness everywhere\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(In a broadcast, 30 January 1948, following Gandhi\222s assassination; Ri\
chard J. Walsh \221Nehru on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Gandhi\222 \(1948\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 595.50456 Tm
( Democracy and socialism are means to an end, not the end itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 579.67047 Tm
(\221Basic Approach\222, written for private circulation and reprinted in\
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T*
(Power\222 \(1960\) p. 294)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 543.75456 Tm
( Normally speaking, it may be said that the forces of a capitalist so\
ciety, if left unchecked, tend )Tj
T*
(to make the rich richer and the poor poorer and thus increase the gap be\
tween them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.92047 Tm
(\221Basic Approach\222, reprinted in Vincent Shean \221Nehru: the Years \
of Power\222 \(1960\) p. 295)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 477.7124 Tm
( 2.12 Horatio, Lord Nelson 1758-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is my turn now; and if I come back, it is yours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(Exercising his privilege, as second lieutenant, to board a prize ship be\
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0 -1.2 TD
(of Nelson\222 \(1813\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( You must consider every man your enemy who speaks ill of your king: \
and...you must hate a )Tj
T*
(Frenchman as you hate the devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(In Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(1813\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Before this time to-morrow I shall have gained a peerage, or Westmin\
ster Abbey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(Before the battle of the Nile, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \
\(1813\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( I have only one eye,\227I have a right to be blind sometimes...I rea\
lly do not see the signal!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(At the battle of Copenhagen, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(\
1813\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( In honour I gained them, and in honour I will die with them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(When asked to cover the stars on his uniform, in Robert Southey \221Life\
of Nelson\222 \(1813\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( I believe my arrival was most welcome, not only to the Commander of \
the Fleet but almost to )Tj
T*
(every individual in it; and when I came to explain to them the \221Nelso\
n touch\222, it was like an )Tj
T*
(electric shock. Some shed tears, all approved\227\222It was new\227it wa\
s singular\227it was simple!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(Letter to Lady Hamilton, 1 October 1805, in Robert Southey \221Life of N\
elson\222 \(1813\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.50456 Tm
( England expects that every man will do his duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.67047 Tm
(At the battle of Trafalgar, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(1\
813\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.75456 Tm
( This is too warm work, Hardy, to last long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(At the battle of Trafalgar, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(1\
813\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( Thank God, I have done my duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(At the battle of Trafalgar, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(1\
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15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( Kiss me, Hardy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(At the battle of Trafalgar, in Robert Southey \221Life of Nelson\222 \(1\
813\) ch. 9)Tj
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( 2.13 Emperor Nero A.D. 37-68)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Qualis artifex pereo!)Tj
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( What an artist dies with me!)Tj
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(In Suetonius \221Lives of the Caesars\222 \221Nero\222 sect. 49)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 646.7124 Tm
( 2.14 G\350rard de Nerval 1808-55)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dieu est mort! le ciel est vide\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pleurez! enfants, vous n\222avez plus de p\351re.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( God is dead! Heaven is empty\227Weep, children, you no longer have a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.42047 Tm
(\221Les Chim\351res\222 \(1854\) \221Le Christ aux Oliviers\222 epigraph\
\(summarising a passage in Jean Paul\222s Blumen-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Frucht-und Dornst\374cke \(1796-7\) in which God\222s children are refer\
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15 0 0 15 10 533.50456 Tm
( Je suis le t\350n\350breux,\227le veuf,\227l\222inconsol\350,)Tj
T*
( Le prince d\222Aquitaine \341 la tour abolie:)Tj
T*
( Ma seule \350toile est morte, et mon luth constell\350)Tj
T*
( Porte le soleil noir de la m\350lancolie.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I am the darkly shaded, the bereaved, the inconsolate, the prince of\
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(tower. My only star is dead, and my star-strewn lute carries on it the b\
lack sun of melancholy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(\221El Desdichado\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.00456 Tm
( En quoi un homard est-il plus ridicule qu\222un chien...ou [que] tou\
te autre b\352te dont on se fait )Tj
T*
(suivre? J\222ai le go\373t des homards, qui sont tranquilles, s\350rieux\
, savent les secrets de la mer, )Tj
T*
(n\222aboient pas et n\222avalent pas la monade des gens comme les chiens\
, si antipathiques \341 Goethe, )Tj
T*
(lequel pourtant n\222\350tait pas fou.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Why should a lobster be any more ridiculous than a dog...or any othe\
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0 -1.2 TD
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ious creatures. They know )Tj
T*
(the secrets of the sea, they don\222t bark, and they don\222t gnaw upon \
one\222s monadic privacy like dogs )Tj
T*
(do. And Goethe had an aversion to dogs, and he wasn\222t mad.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.42047 Tm
(In justification of his walking a lobster, on a lead, in the gardens of \
the Palais Royal, in T. Gautier \221Portraits et )Tj
T*
(Souvenirs Litt\350raires\222 \(1875\) \(translated by Richard Holmes in \
T. Gautier \221My Phantoms\222 \(1976\) p. 149\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 210.2124 Tm
( 2.15 Allan Nevins 1890-1971)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The former Allies had blundered in the past by offering Germany too \
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0 -1.2 TD
(that too late, until finally Nazi Germany had become a menace to all man\
kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.67047 Tm
(In \221Current History\222 \(New York\) May 1935, p. 178)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 122.4624 Tm
( 2.16 Sir Henry Newbolt 1862-1938)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Take my drum to England, hang et by the shore,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Strike et when your powder\222s runnin\222 low;)Tj
T*
( If the Dons sight Devon, I\222ll quit the port o\222 Heaven,)Tj
T*
( An\222 drum them up the Channel as we drummed them long ago.\222)Tj
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(\221Drake\222s Drum\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Drake he\222s in his hammock till the great Armadas come.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(Capten, art tha sleepin\222 there below?\))Tj
T*
( Slung atween the round shot, listenin\222 for the drum,)Tj
T*
( An\222 dreamin\222 arl the time o\222 Plymouth Hoe.)Tj
T*
( Call him on the deep sea, call him up the Sound,)Tj
T*
( Call him when ye sail to meet the foe;)Tj
T*
( Where the old trade\222s plyin\222 an\222 the old flag flyin\222)Tj
T*
( They shall find him ware an\222 wakin\222, as they found him long ag\
o!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Drake\222s Drum\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Now the sunset breezes shiver,)Tj
T*
( And she\222s fading down the river,)Tj
T*
( But in England\222s song for ever)Tj
T*
( She\222s the Fighting T\350m\350raire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Fighting T\350m\350raire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( There\222s a breathless hush in the Close to-night\227)Tj
T*
( Ten to make and the match to win\227)Tj
T*
( A bumping pitch and a blinding light,)Tj
T*
( An hour to play and the last man in.)Tj
T*
( And it\222s not for the sake of a ribboned coat,)Tj
T*
( Or the selfish hope of a season\222s fame,)Tj
T*
( But his Captain\222s hand on his shoulder smote\227)Tj
T*
( \221Play up! play up! and play the game!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Vita\357 Lampada\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 306.7124 Tm
( 2.17 Anthony Newley 1931\227and Leslie Bricusse 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Stop the world, I want to get off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(Title of musical \(1961\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.9624 Tm
( 2.18 Cardinal Newman 1801-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( It is very difficult to get up resentment towards persons whom one h\
as never seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221Mr Kingsley\222s Method of Di\
sputation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( There is such a thing as legitimate warfare: war has its laws; there\
are things which may fairly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be done, and things which may not be done...He has attempted \(as I may \
call it\) to poison the )Tj
T*
(wells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221Mr Kingsley\222s Method of Di\
sputation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( I will vanquish, not my Accuser, but my judges.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221True Mode of meeting Mr Kings\
ley\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Two and two only supreme and luminously self-evident beings, myself \
and my Creator.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221History of My Religious Opini\
ons to the Year 1833\222)Tj
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( It would be a gain to the country were it vastly more superstitious,\
more bigoted, more gloomy, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(more fierce in its religion than at present it shows itself to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221History of My Religious Opini\
ons from 1833 to 1839\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( From the age of fifteen, dogma has been the fundamental principle of\
my religion: I know no )Tj
T*
(other religion; I cannot enter into the idea of any other sort of religi\
on; religion, as a mere )Tj
T*
(sentiment, is to me a dream and a mockery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221History of My Religious Opini\
ons from 1833 to 1839\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( This is what the Church is said to want, not party men, but sensible\
, temperate, sober, well-)Tj
T*
(judging persons, to guide it through the channel of no-meaning, between \
the Scylla and )Tj
T*
(Charybdis of Aye and No.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221History of My Religious Opini\
ons from 1833 to 1839\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Ten thousand difficulties do not make one doubt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221Position of my Mind since 184\
5\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( The all-corroding, all-dissolving scepticism of the intellect in rel\
igious enquiries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Apologia pro Vita Sua\222 \(1864\) \221Position of my Mind since 184\
5\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( It is almost a definition of a gentleman to say that he is one who n\
ever inflicts pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221The Idea of a University\222 \(1852\) \221Knowledge and Religious Du\
ty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( She [the Catholic Church] holds that it were better for sun and moon\
to drop from heaven, for )Tj
T*
(the earth to fail, and for all the many millions who are upon it to die \
of starvation in extremest )Tj
T*
(agony, as far as temporal affliction goes, than that one soul, I will no\
t say, should be lost, but )Tj
T*
(should commit one single venial sin, should tell one wilful untruth...or\
steal one poor farthing )Tj
T*
(without excuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Lectures on Anglican Difficulties\222 \(1852\) Lecture 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( And this is all that is known, and more than all\227yet nothing to w\
hat the angels know\227of the )Tj
T*
(life of a servant of God, who sinned and repented, and did penance and w\
ashed out his sins, and )Tj
T*
(became a Saint, and reigns with Christ in heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Lives of the English Saints\222 \(1844-5\) \221The Legend of Saint B\
ettelin\222; though attributed to Newman the )Tj
T*
(phrase \221and more than all\222 may have been added by J. A. Froude)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( It is as absurd to argue men, as to torture them, into believing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221The Usurpations of Reason\222 \(1831\), in \221Oxford University Ser\
mons\222 \(1843\) no. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( When men understand what each other mean, they see, for the most par\
t, that controversy is )Tj
T*
(either superfluous or hopeless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Faith and Reason, contrasted as Habits of Mind\222 \(Epiphany, 1839\)\
, in \221Oxford University Sermons\222 \(1843\) )Tj
T*
(no. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.50456 Tm
( May He support us all the day long, till the shades lengthen, and th\
e evening comes, and the )Tj
T*
(busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is don\
e! Then in His mercy may )Tj
T*
(He give us a safe lodging, and a holy rest, and peace at the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Wisdom and Innocence\222 \(19 February 1843\), in \221Sermons Bearin\
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( Firmly I believe and truly)Tj
T*
( God is Three, and God is One;)Tj
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( And I next acknowledge duly)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Manhood taken by the Son.)Tj
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(\221The Dream of Gerontius\222 \(1865\))Tj
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( Praise to the Holiest in the height,)Tj
T*
( And in the depth be praise;)Tj
T*
( In all his words most wonderful,)Tj
T*
( Most sure in all His ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Dream of Gerontius\222 \(1865\))Tj
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( Softly and gently, in my most loving arms)Tj
T*
( I now enfold thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Dream of Gerontius\222 \(1865\))Tj
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( Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,)Tj
T*
( Lead thou me on;)Tj
T*
( The night is dark, and I am far from home,)Tj
T*
( Lead thou me on.)Tj
T*
( Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see)Tj
T*
( The distant scene; one step enough for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Lead, kindly Light\222 \(1834\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( I loved the garish day, and spite of fears,)Tj
T*
( Pride ruled my will: remember not past years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Lead, kindly Light\222 \(1834\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( We can believe what we choose. We are answerable for what we choose \
to believe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mrs William Froude, 27 June 1848)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( If I am obliged to bring religion into after-dinner roasts \(which i\
ndeed does not seem quite the )Tj
T*
(thing\) I shall drink\227to the Pope, if you please\227still, to Conscie\
nce first, and to the Pope )Tj
T*
(afterwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(Letter to the Duke of Norfolk)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem.)Tj
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( From shadows and types to the reality.)Tj
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(Motto on his memorial tablet, in Owen Chadwick \221Newman\222 \(1983\) p\
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( Cor ad cor loquitur.)Tj
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T*
( Heart speaks to heart.)Tj
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(Motto adopted for his coat-of-arms as cardinal, 1879)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 133.4624 Tm
( 2.19 Huey Newton 1942\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I suggested [in 1966] that we use the panther as our symbol and call\
our political vehicle the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Black Panther Party. The panther is a fierce animal, but he will not att\
ack until he is backed into a )Tj
T*
(corner; then he will strike out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221Revolutionary Suicide\222 \(1973\) ch. 16)Tj
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( 2.20 Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1727)Tj
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( If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Letter to Robert Hooke, 5 February 1676.)Tj
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( Philosophy is such an impertinently litigous lady that a man has as \
good be engaged in law )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(suits as have to do with her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(Letter to Edmond Halley, 20 June 1685, in \221Correspondence\222 vol. 2,\
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( Whence is it that Nature does nothing in vain: and whence arises all\
that order and beauty )Tj
T*
(which we see in the world?...does it not appear from phenomena that ther\
e is a Being incorporeal, )Tj
T*
(living, intelligent, omnipresent, who in infinite space, as it were in h\
is Sensory, sees the things )Tj
T*
(themselves intimately, and thoroughly perceives them, and comprehends th\
em wholly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.92047 Tm
(\221Opticks\222 \(1730 ed.\) bk. 3, pt. 1, qu. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.00456 Tm
( The changing of bodies into light, and light into bodies, is very co\
nformable to the course of )Tj
T*
(Nature, which seems delighted with transmutations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.17047 Tm
(\221Opticks\222 \(1730 ed.\) bk. 3, pt. 1, qu. 30)Tj
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( Every body continues in its state of rest, or of uniform motion in a\
right line, unless it is )Tj
T*
(compelled to change that state by forces impressed upon it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.42047 Tm
(\221Principia Mathematica\222 \(1687\) Laws of Motion 1 \(translated by \
Andrew Motte, 1729\))Tj
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( To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction: or, the m\
utual actions of two bodies )Tj
T*
(upon each other are always equal, and directed to contrary parts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.67047 Tm
(\221Principia Mathematica\222 \(1687\) Laws of Motion 3)Tj
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( Hypotheses non fingo.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I do not feign hypotheses.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 347.17047 Tm
(\221Principia Mathematica\222 \(1713 ed.\) \221Scholium Generale\222)Tj
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( O Diamond! Diamond! thou little knowest the mischief done!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(Remark to a dog who knocked down a candle and so set fire to some papers\
and \221destroyed the almost )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(finished labours of some years\222, in Thomas Maude \221Wensley-Dale...a\
Poem\222 \(1772\) st. 23 n. \(probably )Tj
T*
(apocryphal. D. Gjertsen \221The Newton Handbook\222 \(1986\) p. 177)Tj
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( I don\222t know what I may seem to the world, but as to myself, I se\
em only to have been like a )Tj
T*
(boy playing on the sea-shore and diverting myself in now and then findin\
g a smoother pebble or a )Tj
T*
(prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all un\
discovered before me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(In Joseph Spence \221Anecdotes\222 \(ed. J. Osborn, 1966\) no. 1259)Tj
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( 2.21 Nicholas I 1796-1855)Tj
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( Turkey is a dying man. We may endeavour to keep him alive, but we sh\
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0 -1.2 TD
(will, he must die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(In F. Max M\374ller \(ed.\) \221Memoirs of Baron Stockmar\222 \(transla\
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( Russia has two generals in whom she can confide\227Generals Janvier \
[January] and F\350vrier )Tj
T*
([February].)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(Attributed. \221Punch\222 10 March 1855)Tj
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( 2.22 Vivian Nicholson 1936\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Spend, spend, spend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Title of television drama \(1977\) by Jack Rosenthal, based on her life;\
on arriving to collect her husband\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(football pools winnings of \243152,000 she told reporters, \221I want to\
spend, and spend, and spend\222; in \221Daily )Tj
T*
(Herald\222 28 September 1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 653.2124 Tm
( 2.23 Nicias c.470-413 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For a city consists in its men, and not in its walls nor ships empty\
of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(Speech to the defeated Athenian army at Syracuse, 413 B.C. in Thucydides\
\221History of the Peloponnesian )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Wars\222 bk. 7, sect. 77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 2.24 Sir Harold Nicolson 1886-1968)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ponderous and uncertain is that relation between pressure and resist\
ance which constitutes the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(balance of power. The arch of peace is morticed by no iron tenons: the m\
onoliths of which it is )Tj
T*
(composed are joined by no cement...One night a handful of dust will patt\
er from the vaulting: the )Tj
T*
(bats will squeak and wheel in sudden panic: nor can the fragile fingers \
of man then stay the rush )Tj
T*
(and rumble of destruction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221Public Faces\222 \(1932\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.00456 Tm
( We shall have to walk and live a Woolworth life hereafter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.17047 Tm
(Predicting the outcome of World War II, in Nigel Nicolson \(ed.\) \221H\
arold Nicolson: Diaries and Letters 1939-)Tj
T*
(45\222 \(1967\) 4 June 1941)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( I am haunted by mental decay such as I saw creeping over Ramsay MacD\
onald. A gradual )Tj
T*
(dimming of the lights.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(In Nigel Nicolson \(ed.\) \221Harold Nicolson: Diaries and Letters 1945\
-62\222 \(1968\) 28 April 1947)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( For seventeen years he did nothing at all but kill animals and stick\
in stamps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(On King George V, in Nigel Nicolson \(ed.\) \221Harold Nicolson: Diarie\
s and Letters 1945-62\222 \(1968\) 17 August )Tj
T*
(1949)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 268.4624 Tm
( 2.25 Reinhold Niebuhr 1892-1971)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( Man\222s capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man\222s\
inclination to injustice makes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(democracy necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221Children of Light and Children of Darkness\222 \(1944\) foreword)Tj
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( God, give us the serenity to accept what cannot be changed;)Tj
T*
( Give us the courage to change what should be changed;)Tj
T*
( Give us the wisdom to distinguish one from the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(In Richard Wightman Fox \221Reinhold Niebuhr\222 \(1985\) ch. 12 \(praye\
r said to have been first published in 1951\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 2.26 Carl Nielsen 1865-1931)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Musik er liv, som dette und slukkelig.)Tj
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( Music is life, and like it is inextinguishable.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\2214th Symphony\222 \(\221The Inextinguishable\222, 1916\) preface)Tj
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( 2.27 Martin Niem\366ller 1892-1984)Tj
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( When Hitler attacked the Jews I was not a Jew, therefore, I was not \
concerned. And when )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Hitler attacked the Catholics, I was not a Catholic, and therefore, I wa\
s not concerned. And when )Tj
T*
(Hitler attacked the unions and the industrialists, I was not a member of\
the unions and I was not )Tj
T*
(concerned. Then, Hitler attacked me and the Protestant church\227and the\
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T*
(concerned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 636.92047 Tm
(In \221Congressional Record\222 14 October 1968, p. 31636; often attribu\
ted in the form \221In Germany they came )Tj
T*
(first for the Communists, and I didn\222t speak up because I wasn\222t a\
Communist...\222 and so on)Tj
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( 2.28 Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-1900)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( Ich lehre euch den \334bermenschen. Der Mensch ist Etwas, das \374be\
rwunden werden soll.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I teach you the superman. Man is something to be surpassed.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.42047 Tm
(\221Also Sprach Zarathustra\222 \(1883\) prologue, sect. 3)Tj
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( Auf Andere warte ich...auf H\366here, St\344rkere, Sieghaftere, Wohl\
gemutere, Solche, die )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(rechtwinklig gebaut sind an Leib und Seele: lachende L\366wen m\374ssen \
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0 -1.44254 TD
( For others do I wait...for higher ones, stronger ones, more triumpha\
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0 -1.2 TD
(such as are built squarely in body and soul: laughing lions must come.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.92047 Tm
(\221Also Sprach Zarathustra\222 \(1883\) bk. 4 \221Die Begr\374ssung\222\
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( You are going to women? Do not forget the whip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 399.17047 Tm
(\221Also Sprach Zarathustra\222 \(1883\))Tj
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( Das Erbarmen Gottes mit der einzigen Not, die alle Paradiese an sich\
haben, kennt keine )Tj
T*
(Grenzen: er schuf alsbald noch andere Tiere. Erster Fehlgriff Gottes: de\
r Mensch fand die Tiere )Tj
T*
(nicht unterhaltend,\227er herrschte \374ber sie, er wollte nicht einmal \
\221Tier\222 sein.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( [Man found a solitary existence tedious.] There are no limits to God\
\222s compassion with )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Paradises over their one universally felt want: he immediately created o\
ther animals besides. )Tj
T*
(God\222s first blunder: Man didn\222t find the animals amusing,\227he do\
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T*
(want to be an \221animal\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.67047 Tm
(\221Umwerthung aller Werthe\222 \(1888\) bk. 1 \221Der Antichrist\222 ap\
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( Das Weib war der zweite Fehlgriff Gottes.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Woman was God\222s second blunder.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.17047 Tm
(\221Umwerthung aller Werthe\222 \(1888\) bk. 1 \221Der Antichrist\222 ap\
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( Wie ich den Philosophen verstehe, als einen furchtbaren Explosionsst\
off, vor dem Alles in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Gefahr ist.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What I understand by \221philosopher\222: a terrible explosive in th\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in danger.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.67047 Tm
(\221Ecce Homo\222 \(1908\) \221Die Unzeitgem\344ssen\222 sect. 3)Tj
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( Gott ist tot: aber so wie die Art der Menschen ist, wird es vielleic\
ht noch Jahrtausende lang )Tj
T*
(H\366hlen geben, in denen man seinen Schatten zeigt.)Tj
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( God is dead: but considering the state the species Man is in, there \
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(ages yet, in which his shadow will be shown.)Tj
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(\221Die fr\366hliche Wissenschaft\222 \(1882\) bk. 3, sect. 108)Tj
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( Moralit\344t ist Heerden-Instinkt in Einzelnen.)Tj
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( Morality is the herd-instinct in the individual.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Die fr\366hliche Wissenschaft\222 \(1882\) bk. 3, sect. 116)Tj
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( Der christliche Entschluss, die Welt h\344sslich und schlecht zu fin\
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(schlecht gemacht.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The Christian resolution to find the world ugly and bad has made the\
world ugly and bad.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Die fr\366hliche Wissenschaft\222 \(1882\) bk. 3, sect. 130)Tj
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( Glaubt es mir!\227das Geheimniss, um die gr\366sste Fruchtbarkeit un\
d den gr\366ssten Genuss vom )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Dasein einzuernten, heisst: gef\344hrlich leben!)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Believe me! The secret of reaping the greatest fruitfulness and the \
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0 -1.2 TD
(is to live dangerously!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221Die fr\366hliche Wissenschaft\222 \(1882\) bk. 4, sect. 283)Tj
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( Wer mit Ungeheuern k\344mpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Un\
geheuer wird. Und wenn )Tj
T*
(du lange in einen Abgrund blickst, blickt der Abgrund auch in dich hinei\
n.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a\
monster. And if you )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(\221Jenseits von Gut und B\366se\222 [Beyond Good and Evil] \(1886\) ch.\
4, no. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( Der Gedanke an den Selbstmord ist ein starkes Trostmittel: mit ihm k\
ommt man gut \374ber )Tj
T*
(manche b\366se Nacht hinweg.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The thought of suicide is a great source of comfort: with it a calm \
passage is to be made across )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(many a bad night.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Jenseits von Gut und B\366se\222 [Beyond Good and Evil] \(1886\) ch.\
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( Herren-Moral und Sklaven-Moral.)Tj
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( Master-morality and slave-morality.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Jenseits von Gut und B\366se\222 [Beyond Good and Evil] \(1886\) ch.\
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( Der Witz ist das Epigramm auf den Tod eines Gef\374hls.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Wit is the epitaph of an emotion.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Menschliches, Allzumenschliches\222 \(1867-80\) vol. 2, sect. 1, no.\
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( Auf dem Grunde aller dieser vornehmen Rassen ist das Raubtier, die p\
rachtvolle nach Beute )Tj
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(und Sieg l\374stern schweifende blonde Bestie nicht zu verkennen.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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(blond beast, avidly rampant for plunder and victory.)Tj
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(\221Zur Genealogie der Moral\222 \(1887\) 1st treatise, no. 11)Tj
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( 2.29 Florence Nightingale 1820-1910)Tj
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( Too kind, too kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On the Order of Merit being brought to her at her home, 5 December 1907;\
in E. Cook \221The Life of Florence )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Nightingale\222 \(1913\) vol. 2, pt. 7, ch. 9)Tj
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( 2.30 Richard Milhous Nixon 1913\227)Tj
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( You won\222t have Nixon to kick around any more because, gentlemen, \
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0 -1.2 TD
(conference.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 634.42047 Tm
(After losing the election for Governor of California, 5 November 1962, i\
n \221New York Times\222 8 November )Tj
T*
(1962, p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 598.50456 Tm
( It is time for the great silent majority of Americans to stand up an\
d be counted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.67047 Tm
(Election speech, October 1970)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 561.75456 Tm
( There can be no whitewash at the White House.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(Television speech on Watergate, 30 April 1973, in \221New York Times\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 525.00456 Tm
( I made my mistakes, but in all my years of public life, I have never\
profited, never profited )Tj
T*
(from public service. I\222ve earned every cent. And in all of my years i\
n public life I have never )Tj
T*
(obstructed justice...I welcome this kind of examination because people h\
ave got to know whether )Tj
T*
(or not their President is a crook. Well, I\222m not a crook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(Speech at press conference, 17 November 1973, in \221New York Times\222 \
18 November 1973, p. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 434.25456 Tm
( This country needs good farmers, good businessmen, good plumbers, go\
od carpenters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(Farewell address at White House, 9 August 1974, cited in \221New York Ti\
mes\222 10 August 1974, p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.50456 Tm
( When the President does it, that means that it is not illegal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(In David Frost \221I Gave Them a Sword\222 \(1978\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.75456 Tm
( I brought myself down. I gave them a sword. And they stuck it in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.92047 Tm
(Television interview, 19 May 1977, in David Frost \221I Gave Them a Swor\
d\222 \(1978\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 312.7124 Tm
( 2.31 Thomas Noel 1799-1861)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rattle his bones over the stones;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He\222s only a pauper, whom nobody owns!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.17047 Tm
(\221The Pauper\222s Drive\222 \(1841\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 224.9624 Tm
( 2.32 Charles Howard, Duke of Norfolk 1746-1815)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I cannot be a good Catholic; I cannot go to heaven; and if a man is \
to go to the devil, he may as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(well go thither from the House of Lords as from any other place on earth\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(In Henry Best \221Personal and Literary Memorials\222 \(1829\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 137.2124 Tm
( 2.33 Frank Norman 1931\227and Lionel Bart 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fings ain\222t wot they used t\222be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(Title of musical \(1959\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 67.4624 Tm
( 2.34 Christopher North \(Professor John Wilson\) 1785-1854)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Minds like ours, my dear James, must always be above national prejud\
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(companies it gives me true pleasure to declare, that, as a people, the E\
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0 -1.2 TD
(inferior to the Scotch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 28 \(October 1826\))Tj
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( His Majesty\222s dominions, on which the sun never sets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 20 \(April 1829\))Tj
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( Laws were made to be broken.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 24 \(May 1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Insultin\222 the sun, and quarrellin wi\222 the equawtor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 24 \(May 1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Animosities are mortal, but the Humanities live for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 35 \(August 1834\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( I cannot sit still, James, and hear you abuse the shopocracy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Noctes Ambrosianae\222 no. 39 \(February 1835\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 503.2124 Tm
( 2.35 Lord Northcliffe \(Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, Viscount Nor\
thcliffe\) 1865-1922)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When I want a peerage, I shall buy it like an honest man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 433.4624 Tm
( 2.36 Caroline Norton 1808-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( For death and life, in ceaseless strife,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beat wild on this world\222s shore,)Tj
T*
( And all our calm is in that balm\227)Tj
T*
( Not lost but gone before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(\221Not Lost but Gone Before\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 309.7124 Tm
( 2.37 Jack Norworth 1879-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, shine on, shine on, harvest moon)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Up in the sky.)Tj
T*
( I ain\222t had no lovin\222)Tj
T*
( Since April, January, June, or July.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221Shine On, Harvest Moon\222 \(1908 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.9624 Tm
( 2.38 Novalis \(Friedrich Von Hardenberg\) 1772-1801)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oft f\374hl ich jetzt...[und] je tiefer ich einsehe, dass Schicksal \
und Gem\374t Namen eines Begriffes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sind.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I often feel, and ever more deeply I realize, that fate and characte\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Heinrich von Ofterdingen\222 \(1802\) bk. 2. Often quoted as \221Cha\
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( Ein Gott-betrunkener Mensch.)Tj
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T*
( A God-intoxicated man.)Tj
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(On Spinoza; attributed)Tj
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( 2.39 Alfred Noyes 1880-1958)Tj
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( The wind was a torrent of darkness among the gusty trees,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The moon was a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas,)Tj
T*
( The road was a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor,)Tj
T*
( And the highwayman came riding\227)Tj
T*
( Riding\227riding\227)Tj
T*
( The highwayman came riding, up to the old inn-door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 620.42047 Tm
(\221The Highwayman\222 \(1907\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 599.50456 Tm
( He whistled a tune to the window, and who should be waiting there)Tj
T*
( The landlord\222s black-eyed daughter,)Tj
T*
( Bess, the landlord\222s daughter,)Tj
T*
( Plaiting a dark red love-knot into her long black hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 529.67047 Tm
( \221The Highwayman\222 \(1907\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 508.75456 Tm
( Look for me by moonlight;)Tj
T*
( Watch for me by moonlight;)Tj
T*
( I\222ll come to thee by moonlight, though hell should bar the way!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 456.92047 Tm
(\221The Highwayman\222 \(1907\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 424.7124 Tm
( 2.40 Bill Nye \(Edgar Wilson Nye\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have been told that Wagner\222s music is better than it sounds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.17047 Tm
(In Mark Twain \221Autobiography\222 \(1924\) vol. 1, p. 338)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 354.9624 Tm
( 2.41 Captain Lawrence Oates 1880-1912)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I am just going outside and may be some time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.42047 Tm
(Last words, in Scott\222s diary entry for 16-17 March 1912; \221Scott\222\
s Last Expedition\222 \(1913\) p. 593)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 285.2124 Tm
( 2.42 Edna O\222Brien 1932\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( August is a wicked month.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1965\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.4624 Tm
( 2.43 Flann O\222Brien \(Brian O\222Nolan or O Nuallain\) 1911-66)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The Pooka MacPhellimey, a member of the devil class, sat in his hut \
in the middle of a firwood )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(meditating on the nature of the numerals and segregating in his mind the\
odd ones from the even.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.92047 Tm
(\221At Swim-Two-Birds\222 \(1939\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 139.00456 Tm
( The conclusion of your syllogism, I said lightly, is fallacious, bei\
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T*
(premises.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.17047 Tm
(\221At Swim-Two-Birds\222 \(1939\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.25456 Tm
( A pint of plain is your only man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.42047 Tm
(\221At Swim-Two-Birds\222 \(1939\) \221The Workman\222s Friend\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.50456 Tm
( It is not that I half knew my mother. I knew half of her: the lower \
half\227her lap, legs, feet, her )Tj
ET
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(hands and wrists as she bent forward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Hard Life\222 \(1961\) p. 11)Tj
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( People who spend most of their natural lives riding iron bicycles ov\
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0 -1.2 TD
(this parish get their personalities mixed up with the personalities of t\
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T*
(the interchanging of the atoms of each of them and you would be surprise\
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T*
(people in these parts who nearly are half people and half bicycles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Third Policeman\222 \(1967\) p. 85)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 612.03038 Tm
( 3.0 O)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 578.2124 Tm
( 3.1 Sean O\222Casey 1884-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I killin\222 meself workin\222, an\222 he struttin\222 about from mo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( He\222s an oul\222 butty o\222 mine\227oh, he\222s a darlin\222 man,\
a daarlin\222 man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( The whole worl\222s in a state o\222 chassis!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( I often looked up at the sky an\222 assed meself the question\227wha\
t is the stars, what is the stars?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( Sacred Heart of the Crucified Jesus, take our hearts o\222 stone...a\
n\222 give us hearts o\222 flesh!...Take )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(away this murdherin\222 hate...an\222 give us Thine own eternal love!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( The Polis as Polis, in this city, is Null an\222 Void!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Juno and the Paycock\222 \(1925\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( There\222s no reason to bring religion into it. I think we ought to \
have as great a regard for )Tj
T*
(religion as we can, so as to keep it out of as many things as possible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221The Plough and the Stars\222 \(1926\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( It\222s my rule never to lose me temper till it would be dethrimenta\
l to keep it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Plough and the Stars\222 \(1926\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( English literature\222s performing flea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(On P. G. Wodehouse, in P. G. Wodehouse \221Performing Flea\222 \(1953\) \
p. 217)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
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( 3.2 William of Occam \(or Ockham\) c.1285-1347)Tj
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( Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.)Tj
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( No more things should be presumed to exist than are absolutely neces\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Occams\222s Razor\222, an ancient philosophical principle often attr\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in this form in his writings, though he frequently used similar expressi\
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T*
(necessitate [Plurality should not be assumed unnecessarily] in \221Quodl\
ibeta\222 \(c.1324\) no. 5, question 1, art. 2. )Tj
T*
(J. C. Way \(ed.\) \221Opera Theologica\222 \(1980\) vol. 9, p. 476)Tj
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( 3.3 Adolph S. Ochs 1858-1935)Tj
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( All the news that\222s fit to print.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(Motto of the New York Times, from 1896)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.2124 Tm
( 3.4 David Ogilvy 1911\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The consumer isn\222t a moron; she is your wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.67047 Tm
(\221Confessions of an Advertising Man\222 \(1963\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 632.4624 Tm
( 3.5 James Ogilvy, first Earl of Seafield 1664-1730)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Now there\222s ane end of ane old song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.92047 Tm
(As he signed the engrossed exemplification of the Act of Union, 1706, in\
\221The Lockhart Papers\222 \(1817\) vol. 1, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(p. 223)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 547.7124 Tm
(3.6 Geoffrey O\222Hara 1882-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( K-K-K-Katy, beautiful Katy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You\222re the only g-g-g-girl that I adore;\227)Tj
T*
( When the m-m-m-moon shines,)Tj
T*
( Over the cow shed,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll be waiting at the k-k-k-kitchen door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 438.17047 Tm
(\221K-K-K-Katy\222 \(1918 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 405.9624 Tm
( 3.7 John O\222Hara 1905-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( An artist is his own fault.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(\221The Portable F. Scott Fitzgerald\222 \(1945\) introduction)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 336.2124 Tm
( 3.8 Theodore O\222Hara 1820-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Sons of the dark and bloody ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.67047 Tm
(\221The Bivouac of the Dead\222 \(1847\) st. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 266.4624 Tm
( 3.9 Patrick O\222Keefe 1872-1934)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Say it with flowers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.92047 Tm
(Slogan for the Society of American Florists, in \221Florists\222 Exchang\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 196.7124 Tm
( 3.10 John O\222Keeffe 1747-1833)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Amo, amas, I love a lass,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As a cedar tall and slender;)Tj
T*
( Sweet cowslip\222s grace)Tj
T*
( Is her nom\222native case,)Tj
T*
( And she\222s of the feminine gender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.17047 Tm
(\221The Agreeable Surprise\222 \(1781\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.25456 Tm
( Fat, fair and forty were all the toasts of the young men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.42047 Tm
(\221The Irish Mimic\222 \(1795\) sc. 2)Tj
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( 3.11 Dennis O\222Kelly c.1720-87)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Eclipse first, the rest nowhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 710.67047 Tm
(Comment at Epsom, 3 May 1769, in \221Annals of Sporting\222 vol. 2 \(182\
2\) p. 271. \221Dictionary of National )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Biography\222 gives the occasion as the Queen\222s Plate at Winchester, \
1769)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 663.4624 Tm
( 3.12 Chauncey Olcott and George Graff Jr.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When Irish eyes are smiling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1912\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 593.7124 Tm
( 3.13 William Oldys 1696-1761)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Busy, curious, thirsty fly,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Gently drink, and drink as I;)Tj
T*
( Freely welcome to my cup.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.17047 Tm
(\221The Fly\222 \(1732\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 487.9624 Tm
( 3.14 Frederick Scott Oliver 1864-1934)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A wise politician will never grudge a genuflexion or a rapture if it\
is expected of him by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(prevalent opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.42047 Tm
(\221The Endless Adventure\222 \(1930\) vol. 1, pt. 1, ch. 20)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 400.2124 Tm
( 3.15 Laurence Olivier \(Baron Olivier of Brighton\) 1907-89)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The tragedy of a man who could not make up his mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.67047 Tm
(Introduction to his screen adaptation of Shakespeare\222s \221Hamlet\222\
\(1948 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.75456 Tm
( Shakespeare\227the nearest thing in incarnation to the eye of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.92047 Tm
(In \221Kenneth Harris Talking To\222 \221Sir Laurence Olivier\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.00456 Tm
( Acting is a masochistic form of exhibitionism. It is not quite the o\
ccupation of an adult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.17047 Tm
(In \221Time\222 3 July 1978, p. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.25456 Tm
( Can a muse of fire exist under a ceiling of commerce?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.42047 Tm
(Appealing on behalf of the Rose Theatre remains; in \221The Times\222 12\
July 1989, p. 24)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 220.2124 Tm
( 3.16 Frank Ward O\222Malley 1875-1932)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( See Elbert Hubbard \(8.146\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.17 Eugene O\222Neill 1888-1953)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For de little stealin\222 dey gits you in jail soon or late. For de \
big stealin\222 dey makes you )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Emperor and puts you in de Hall o\222 Fame when you croaks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.92047 Tm
(\221The Emperor Jones\222 \(1921\) sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.00456 Tm
( The iceman cometh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.17047 Tm
(Title of play \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 52.25456 Tm
( A long day\222s journey into night.)Tj
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(Title of play \(written 1940-1; published 1956\))Tj
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( Life is perhaps most wisely regarded as a bad dream between two awak\
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0 -1.2 TD
(is a life in miniature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Marco Millions\222 \(1928\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The sea hates a coward!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Mourning becomes Electra\222 \(1931\) pt. 2, act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( The only living life is in the past and future...the present is an i\
nterlude...strange interlude in )Tj
T*
(which we call on past and future to bear witness we are living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Strange Interlude\222 \(1928\) pt. 2, act 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 3.18 Brian O\222Nolan 1911-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Flann O\222Brien \(2.43\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.19 Yoko Ono 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Woman is the nigger of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.2124 Tm
( 3.20 John Opie 1761-1807)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I mix them with my brains, sir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(On being asked with what he mixed his colours; in Samuel Smiles \221Self\
-Help\222 \(1859\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 382.4624 Tm
( 3.21 J. Robert Oppenheimer 1904-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( In some sort of crude sense which no vulgarity, no humour, no overst\
atement can quite )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(extinguish, the physicists have known sin; and this is a knowledge which\
they cannot lose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(Lecture at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 25 November 1947; in \221\
Open Mind\222 \(1955\) ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.7124 Tm
( 3.22 Susie Orbach 1946\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fat is a feminist issue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1978\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 224.9624 Tm
( 3.23 Roy Orbison and Joe Melsom)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Only the lonely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1960\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 155.2124 Tm
( 3.24 Baroness Orczy 1865-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We seek him here, we seek him there,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Those Frenchies seek him everywhere.)Tj
T*
( Is he in heaven?\227Is he in hell?)Tj
T*
( That demmed, elusive Pimpernel?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Scarlet Pimpernel\222 \(1905\) ch. 12)Tj
ET
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( 3.25 David Ormsby Gore 1918-85)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Lord Harlech \(8.42\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 3.26 Jos\350 Ortega y Gasset 1883-1955)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Yo soy yo y mi circumstancia, y si no la salvo a ella no me salvo yo\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( I am I plus my surroundings and if I do not preserve the latter, I d\
o not preserve myself.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 638.92047 Tm
(\221Meditaciones del Quijote\222 \(1914\) in \221Obras Completas\222 \(1\
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15 0 0 15 10 618.00456 Tm
( La civilizaci\363n no es otra cosa que el ensayo de reducir la fuerz\
a a ultima ratio.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( Civilization is nothing more than the effort to reduce the use of fo\
rce to the last resort.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 580.42047 Tm
(\221La Rebeli\363n de las Masas\222 \(1930\) in \221Obras Completas\222 \
\(1947\) vol. 4, p. 191)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 548.2124 Tm
( 3.27 Joe Orton 1933-67)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222d the upbringing a nun would envy and that\222s the truth. Unti\
l I was fifteen I was more )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(familiar with Africa than my own body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 492.67047 Tm
(\221Entertaining Mr Sloane\222 \(1964\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 471.75456 Tm
( Kath: Can he be present at the birth of his child?...)Tj
T*
( Ed: It\222s all any reasonable child can expect if the dad is prese\
nt at the conception.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.92047 Tm
(\221Entertaining Mr Sloane\222 \(1964\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 417.00456 Tm
( Every luxury was lavished on you\227atheism, breast-feeding, circumc\
ision.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.17047 Tm
(\221Loot\222 \(1967\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.25456 Tm
( Policemen, like red squirrels, must be protected.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Loot\222 \(1967\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( Reading isn\222t an occupation we encourage among police officers. W\
e try to keep the paper )Tj
T*
(work down to a minimum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221Loot\222 \(1967\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( You were born with your legs apart. They\222ll send you to the grave\
in a Y-shaped coffin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.92047 Tm
(\221What the Butler Saw\222 \(1969\) act 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 240.7124 Tm
( 3.28 George Orwell \(Eric Blair\) 1903-50)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man is the only creature that consumes without producing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.17047 Tm
(\221Animal Farm\222 \(1945\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.25456 Tm
( Four legs good, two legs bad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(\221Animal Farm\222 \(1945\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Animal Farm\222 \(1945\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Attlee reminds me of nothing so much as a recently dead fish, before\
it has had time to stiffen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(Diary, 19 May 1942, in Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus \(eds.\) \221The Coll\
ected Essays, Journalism and Letters of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(George Orwell\222 \(1968\) vol. 2, p. 426)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.00456 Tm
( At 50, everyone has the face he deserves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.17047 Tm
(Last words in his notebook, 17 April 1949, in Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus\
\(eds.\) \221The Collected Essays, )Tj
ET
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(Journalism and Letters of George Orwell\222 \(1968\) vol. 4, p. 515)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Good prose is like a window-pane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Collected Essays\222 \(1968\) vol. 1 \221Why I Write\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( I\222m fat, but I\222m thin inside. Has it ever struck you that ther\
e\222s a thin man inside every fat man, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(just as they say there\222s a statue inside every block of stone?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Coming up For Air\222 \(1939\) pt. 1, ch. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( He was an embittered atheist \(the sort of atheist who does not so m\
uch disbelieve in God as )Tj
T*
(personally dislike Him\), and took a sort of pleasure in thinking that h\
uman affairs would never )Tj
T*
(improve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Down and Out in Paris and London\222 \(1933\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The deep, deep sleep of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Homage to Catalonia\222 \(1939\) ad fin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Whatever is funny is subversive, every joke is ultimately a custard \
pie...A dirty joke is a sort of )Tj
T*
(mental rebellion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Horizon\222 September 1941 \221The Art of Donald McGill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Most revolutionaries are potential Tories, because they imagine that\
everything can be put right )Tj
T*
(by altering the shape of society; once that change is effected, as it so\
metimes is, they see no need )Tj
T*
(for any other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Inside the Whale\222 \(1940\) \221Charles Dickens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Keep the aspidistra flying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( England...resembles a family, a rather stuffy Victorian family, with\
not many black sheep in it )Tj
T*
(but with all its cupboards bursting with skeletons. It has rich relation\
s who have to be kowtowed )Tj
T*
(to and poor relations who are horribly sat upon, and there is a deep con\
spiracy of silence about )Tj
T*
(the source of the family income \(ie the Empire\). It is a family in whi\
ch the young are generally )Tj
T*
(thwarted and most of the power is in the hands of irresponisble uncles a\
nd bed-ridden aunts. Still, )Tj
T*
(it is a family. It has its private language and its common memories, and\
at the approach of an )Tj
T*
(enemy it closes its ranks. A family with the wrong members in control.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Lion and the Unicorn\222 \(1941\) pt. 1 \221England Your England\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Probably the battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eto\
n, but the opening battles )Tj
T*
(of all subsequent wars have been lost there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Lion and the Unicorn\222 \(1941\) pt. 1 \221England Your England\
\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thir\
teen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Big brother is watching you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present \
controls the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 3)Tj
ET
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( Don\222t you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the ran\
ge of thought? In the end )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible, because there will be n\
o words in which to )Tj
T*
(express it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.67047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.75456 Tm
( Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that i\
s granted, all else follows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 1, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.00456 Tm
( Syme was not only dead, he was abolished, an un-person.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in \
one\222s mind )Tj
T*
(simultaneously, and accepting both of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 2, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.50456 Tm
( Power is not a means, it is an end. One does not establish a dictato\
rship in order to safeguard a )Tj
T*
(revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictators\
hip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 3, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a hu\
man face\227for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(\221Nineteen Eighty-Four\222 \(1949\) pt. 3, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.00456 Tm
( The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.17047 Tm
(\221Polemic\222 May 1946 \221Second Thoughts on James Burnham\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.25456 Tm
( A person of bourgeois origin goes through life with some expectation\
of getting what he wants, )Tj
T*
(within reasonable limits. Hence the fact that in times of stress \221edu\
cated\222 people tend to come to )Tj
T*
(the front.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( The typical Socialist is...a prim little man with a white-collar job\
, usually a secret teetotaller )Tj
T*
(and often with vegetarian leanings, with a history of Nonconformity behi\
nd him, and, above all, )Tj
T*
(with a social position which he has no intention of forfeiting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.67047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.75456 Tm
( To the ordinary working man, the sort you would meet in any pub on S\
aturday night, )Tj
T*
(Socialism does not mean much more than better wages and shorter hours an\
d nobody bossing you )Tj
T*
(about.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.92047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.00456 Tm
( The high-water mark, so to speak, of Socialist literature is W. H. A\
uden, a sort of gutless )Tj
T*
(Kipling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.25456 Tm
( We of the sinking middle class...may sink without further struggles \
into the working class )Tj
T*
(where we belong, and probably when we get there it will not be so dreadf\
ul as we feared, for, )Tj
T*
(after all, we have nothing to lose but our aitches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.50456 Tm
( Freedom is the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.67047 Tm
(\221The Road to Wigan Pier\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.75456 Tm
( In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defence of\
the indefensible.)Tj
ET
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(\221Shooting an Elephant\222 \(1950\) \221Politics and the English Langu\
age\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.00456 Tm
( The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a ga\
p between one\222s real and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(one\222s declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words\
and exhausted idioms, like a )Tj
T*
(cuttlefish squirting out ink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.17047 Tm
(\221Shooting an Elephant\222 \(1950\) \221Politics and the English Langu\
age\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.25456 Tm
( Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with \
hatred, jealousy, )Tj
T*
(boastfulness, and disregard of all the rules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.42047 Tm
(\221Shooting an Elephant\222 \(1950\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.50456 Tm
( Political language\227and with variations this is true of all politi\
cal parties, from Conservatives )Tj
T*
(to Anarchists\227is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder resp\
ectable, and to give an )Tj
T*
(appearance of solidity to pure wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.67047 Tm
(\221Shooting an Elephant\222 \(1950\) \221Politics and the English Langu\
age\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.75456 Tm
( Saints should always be judged guilty until they are proved innocent\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.92047 Tm
(\221Shooting an Elephant\222 \(1950\) \221Reflections on Gandhi\222)Tj
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( Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.17047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 448.9624 Tm
( 3.29 Dorothy Osborne 1627-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The heat of the day is spent in reading or working, and about six or\
seven o\222clock, I walk out )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(into a common that lies hard by the house, where a great many young wenc\
hes keep sheep and )Tj
T*
(cows and sit in the shade singing of ballads...I talk to them, and find \
they want nothing to make )Tj
T*
(them the happiest people in the world, but the knowledge that they are s\
o.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.42047 Tm
(\221The Letters of Dorothy Osborne to William Temple\222 \(ed. G. C. Moo\
re Smith, 1928\) June 1653)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.50456 Tm
( All letters, methinks, should be as free and easy as one\222s discou\
rse, not studied as an oration, )Tj
T*
(nor made up of hard words like a charm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.67047 Tm
(Letter to Sir William Temple, October 1653)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.75456 Tm
( I had rather agree to what you say than tell you that Dr Taylor \(wh\
ose devote you must know I )Tj
T*
(am\) says there is a great advantage to be gained in resigning up one\222\
s will to the command of )Tj
T*
(another, because the same action which in itself is wholly indifferent i\
f done upon our own )Tj
T*
(choice, becomes an act of duty and religion if done in obedience to the \
command of any person )Tj
T*
(whom nature, the laws, or our selves have given a power over us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.92047 Tm
(\221The Letters of Dorothy Osborne to William Temple\222 \(ed. G. C. Moo\
re Smith, 1928\) March 1654)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 161.7124 Tm
( 3.30 John Osborne 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Don\222t clap too hard\227it\222s a very old building.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.17047 Tm
(\221The Entertainer\222 \(1957\) no. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.25456 Tm
( Thank God we\222re normal, normal, normal,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thank God we\222re normal,)Tj
T*
( Yes, this is our finest shower!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.42047 Tm
(\221The Entertainer\222 \(1957\) no. 7)Tj
ET
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( But I have a go, lady, don\222t I? I \222ave a go. I do.)Tj
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(\221The Entertainer\222 \(1957\) no. 7)Tj
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( I\222m dead behind these eyes. I\222m dead, but just like the whole \
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0 -1.2 TD
(doesn\222t matter because I don\222t feel a thing, and neither do they.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Entertainer\222 \(1957\) no. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Oh heavens, how I long for a little ordinary human enthusiasm. Just \
enthusiaism\227that\222s all. I )Tj
T*
(want to hear a warm, thrilling voice cry out Hallelujah! Hallelujah! I\222\
m alive!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( His knowledge of life and ordinary human beings is so hazy, he reall\
y deserves some sort of )Tj
T*
(decoration for it\227a medal inscribed \221For Vaguery in the Field\222.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I don\222t think one \221comes down\222 from Jimmy\222s university. \
According to him, it\222s not even red )Tj
T*
(brick, but white tile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( They spend their time mostly looking forward to the past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( There aren\222t any good, brave causes left. If the big bang does co\
me, and we all get killed off, it )Tj
T*
(won\222t be in aid of the old-fashioned, grand design. It\222ll just be \
for the Brave New-nothing-very-)Tj
T*
(much-thank-you. About as pointless and inglorious as stepping in front o\
f a bus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( The old firm is selling out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( The eternal flaming racket of the female.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Look Back in Anger\222 \(1956\))Tj
T*
(She\222s like the old line about justice\227not only must be done, but m\
ust be seen to be done. \221Time Present\222 act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( This is a letter of hate. It is for you my countrymen, I mean those \
men of my country who have )Tj
T*
(defiled it. The men with manic fingers leading the sightless, feeble, be\
trayed body of my country )Tj
T*
(to its death...damn you England. You\222re rotting now, and quite soon y\
ou\222ll disappear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Tribune\222 18 August 1961)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Monarchy is the gold filling in the mouth of decay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(In Bernard Levin \221The Pendulum Years\222 \(1976\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 178.4624 Tm
( 3.31 Arthur O\222Shaughnessy 1844-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are the music makers,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We are the dreamers of dreams,)Tj
T*
( Wandering by lone sea-breakers,)Tj
T*
( And sitting by desolate streams;\227)Tj
T*
( World-losers and world-forsakers,)Tj
T*
( On whom the pale moon gleams:)Tj
T*
( We are the movers and shakers)Tj
ET
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( Of the world for ever, it seems.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Ode\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( For each age is a dream that is dying,)Tj
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( Or one that is coming to birth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Ode\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 3.32 Sir William Osler 1849-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( That man can interrogate as well as observe nature, was a lesson slo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(evolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(In \221Aphorisms from his Bedside Teachings\222 \(1961\) p. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( One finger in the throat and one in the rectum makes a good diagnost\
ician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(In \221Aphorisms from his Bedside Teachings\222 \(1961\) p. 104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( The natural man has only two primal passions, to get and beget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Science and Immortality\222 \(1904\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( The desire to take medicine is perhaps the greatest feature which di\
stinguishes man from )Tj
T*
(animals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(In H. Cushing \221Life of Sir William Osler\222 \(1925\) vol. 1, ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.2124 Tm
( 3.33 John L. O\222Sullivan 1813-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Understood as a central consolidated power, managing and directing t\
he various general )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(interests of the society, all government is evil, and the parent of evil\
...The best government is that )Tj
T*
(which governs least.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221The United States Magazine and Democratic Review\222 \(1837\) introd\
uction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.75456 Tm
( A spirit of hostile interference against us...checking the fulfilmen\
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T*
(overspread the continent allotted by Providence for the free development\
of our yearly )Tj
T*
(multiplying millions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(On opposition to the annexation of Texas, in \221The United States Magaz\
ine and Democratic Review\222 \(1837\) )Tj
T*
(vol. 17, July-August 1845, p. 5)Tj
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( A torchlight procession marching down your throat.)Tj
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(Describing some whisky, in G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollec\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 203.9624 Tm
( 3.34 James Otis 1725-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Taxation without representation is tyranny.)Tj
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(Watchword \(coined c.1761\) of the American Revolution. Samuel Eliot Mor\
ison \221James Otis\222 \221Dictionary of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(American Biography\222 vol. 14, p. 102)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.35 Thomas Otway 1652-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh woman! lovely woman! Nature made thee)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To temper man: we had been brutes without you;)Tj
T*
( Angels are painted fair, to look like you;)Tj
T*
( There\222s in you all that we belive of heaven,)Tj
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( Amazing brightness, purity, and truth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Eternal joy, and everlasting love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Venice Preserved\222 \(1682\) act 1, l. 337)Tj
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( No praying, it spoils business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Venice Preserved\222 \(1682\) act 2, l. 87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.36 Peter Demianovich Ouspensky 1878-1947)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Truths that become old become decrepit and unreliable; sometimes the\
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(\221A New Model of the Universe\222 \(2nd ed., 1934\) preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.37 Sir Thomas Overbury 1581-1613)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( He disdains all things above his reach, and preferreth all countries\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(\221Miscellaneous Works\222 \(1632\) \221An Affected Traveller\222.)Tj
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( You cannot name any example in any heathen author but I will better \
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(In \221Crumms Fal\222n From King James\222s Table\222 no. 10, in E. F. R\
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(Thomas Overbury\222 \(1856\) p. 257)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.38 Ovid 43 B.C.-A.D. 17)Tj
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( Procul omen abesto!)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Far be that fate from us!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.67047 Tm
(\221Amores\222 bk. 1, no. 14, l. 41)Tj
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( Procul hinc, procul este, severae!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Far hence, keep far from me, you grim women!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221Amores\222 bk. 2, no. 1, l. 3)Tj
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( Spectatum veniunt, veniunt spectentur ut ipsae.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The women come to see the show, they come to make a show themselves.\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Ars Amatoria\222 bk. 1, l. 99)Tj
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T*
( Jupiter from on high laughs at lovers\222 perjuries.)Tj
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(\221Ars Amatoria\222 bk. 1, l. 633)Tj
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( It is convenient that there be gods, and, as it is convenient, let u\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Ars Amatoria\222 bk. 1, l. 637)Tj
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( Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur istis.)Tj
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T*
( Perhaps my name too will be linked with theirs.)Tj
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(\221Ars Amatoria\222 bk. 3, l. 339)Tj
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( Add the fact that to have conscientiously studied the liberal arts r\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Epistulae Ex Ponto\222 bk. 2, no. 9, l. 47)Tj
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( Ut desint vires, tamen est laudanda voluntas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Though the strength is lacking, yet the willingness is to be praised\
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(\221Epistulae Ex Ponto\222 bk. 3, no. 4, l. 79)Tj
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( Gutta cavat lapidem, consumitur anulus usu.)Tj
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( Dripping water hollows out a stone, a ring is worn away by use.)Tj
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(\221Epistulae Ex Ponto\222 bk. 4, no. 10, l. 5.)Tj
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( Chaos, rudis indigestaque moles.)Tj
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T*
( Chaos, a rough and unordered mass.)Tj
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 1, l. 7)Tj
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T*
( A middle course is the safest for you to take.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 2, l. 137)Tj
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( Inopem me copia fecit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Plenty has made me poor.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 3, l. 466)Tj
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( Ipse docet quid agam; fas est et ab hoste doceri.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( He himself teaches what I should do; it is right to be taught by the\
enemy.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.17047 Tm
(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 4, l. 428)Tj
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( Deteriora sequor.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 7, l. 20)Tj
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( Tempus edax rerum.)Tj
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( Time the devourer of everything.)Tj
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 15, l. 234)Tj
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( Iamque opus exegi, quod nec Iovis ira, nec ignis,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nec poterit ferrum, nec edax abolere vetustas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And now I have finished the work, which neither the wrath of Jove, n\
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(\221Metamorphoses\222 bk. 15, l. 871)Tj
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T*
( Cum mala per longas convaluere moras.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Stop it at the start, it\222s late for medicine to be prepared when \
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(long delays.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Remedia Amoris\222 l. 91)Tj
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( Qui finem quaeris amoris,)Tj
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( You who seek an end of love, love will yield to business: be busy, \
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(\221Remedia Amoris\222 l. 143)Tj
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( Teque, rebellatrix, tandem, Germania, magni)Tj
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( How you, rebellious Germany, laid your wretched head beneath the fee\
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(\221Tristia\222 bk. 3, no. 12, l. 47)Tj
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( Sponte sua carmen numeros veniebat ad aptos,)Tj
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( Et quod temptabam dicere versus erat.)Tj
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( Of its own accord my song would come in the right rhythms, and what \
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(poetry.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 544.42047 Tm
(\221Tristia\222 bk. 4, no. 10, l. 25)Tj
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( Vergilium vidi tantum.)Tj
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( I just saw Virgil.)Tj
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(\221Tristia\222 bk. 4, no. 10, l. 51)Tj
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( 3.39 John Owen c.1560-1622)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( God and the doctor we alike adore)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But only when in danger, not before;)Tj
T*
( The danger o\222er, both are alike requited,)Tj
T*
( God is forgotten, and the Doctor slighted.)Tj
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(\221Epigrams\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 3.40 Robert Owen 1771-1858)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All the world is queer save thee and me, and even thou art a little \
queer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.42047 Tm
(To his partner W. Allen, on severing business relations at New Lanark, 1\
828; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 260.2124 Tm
( 3.41 Wilfred Owen 1893-1918)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( My subject is War, and the pity of War.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Poetry is in the pity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(Preface \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( All a poet can do today is warn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(Preface \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?)Tj
T*
( \227Only the monstrous anger of the guns.)Tj
T*
( Only the stuttering rifles\222 rapid rattle)Tj
T*
( Can patter out their hasty orisons.)Tj
T*
( No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells,)Tj
T*
( Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs,\227)Tj
T*
( The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;)Tj
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( And bugles calling for them from sad shires.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221Anthem for Doomed Youth\222 \(written 1917\))Tj
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( The pallor of girls\222 brows shall be their pall;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,)Tj
T*
( And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.)Tj
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(\221Anthem for Doomed Youth\222 \(written 1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( Move him into the sun\227)Tj
T*
( Gently its touch awoke him once,)Tj
T*
( At home, whispering of fields half-sown...)Tj
T*
( If anything might rouse him now)Tj
T*
( The kind old sun will know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221Futility\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( Was it for this the clay grew tall?)Tj
T*
( \227O what made fatuous sunbeams toil)Tj
T*
( To break earth\222s sleep at all?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(\221Futility\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.00456 Tm
( Red lips are not so red)Tj
T*
( As the stained stones kissed by the English dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221Greater Love\222 \(written 1917\))Tj
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( So secretly, like wrongs hushed-up, they went.)Tj
T*
( They were not ours:)Tj
T*
( We never heard to which front these were sent.)Tj
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( Nor there if they yet mock what women meant)Tj
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( Who gave them flowers.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.67047 Tm
(\221The Send-Off\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 292.75456 Tm
( It seemed that out of battle I escaped)Tj
T*
( Down some profound dull tunnel, long since scooped)Tj
T*
( Through granites which titanic wars had groined.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(\221Strange Meeting\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.00456 Tm
( \221Strange friend,\222 I said, \221here is no cause to mourn.\222)Tj
T*
( \221None,\222 said that other, \221save the undone years,)Tj
T*
( The hopelessness. Whatever hope is yours,)Tj
T*
( Was my life also; I went hunting wild)Tj
T*
( After the wildest beauty in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.17047 Tm
(\221Strange Meeting\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.25456 Tm
( Courage was mine, and I had mystery,)Tj
T*
( Wisdom was mine, and I had mastery:)Tj
T*
( To miss the march of this retreating world)Tj
T*
( Into vain citadels that are not walled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.42047 Tm
(\221Strange Meeting\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
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( I am the enemy you killed, my friend.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I knew you in this dark: for you so frowned)Tj
T*
( Yesterday through me as you jabbed and killed.)Tj
T*
( I parried; but my hands were loath and cold.)Tj
T*
( Let us sleep now...)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.67047 Tm
(\221Strange Meeting\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 630.4624 Tm
( 3.42 Count Oxenstierna 1583-1654)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Vet du icke, min son, med husu liten wishet verlden regeras?)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Dost thou not know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is gove\
rned?)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.17047 Tm
(Letter to his son, 1648, in J. F. af Lundblad \221Svensk Plutark\222 \(1\
826\) pt. 2, p. 95. John Selden, in \221Table )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Talk\222 \(1689\), quotes \221a certain Pope\222 \(possibly Julius III\)\
saying: \221Thou little thinkest what a little foolery )Tj
T*
(governs the whole world!\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 508.9624 Tm
( 3.43 Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford 1550-1604)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If women could be fair and yet not fond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.42047 Tm
(\221Women\222s Changeableness\222)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 437.03038 Tm
( 4.0 P)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 403.2124 Tm
( 4.1 Vance Packard 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The hidden persuaders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.67047 Tm
(Title of a study of the advertising industry \(1957\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 333.4624 Tm
( 4.2 William Tyler Page 1868-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I believe in the United States of America as a government of the peo\
ple, by the people, for the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(people, whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed; \
a democracy in a )Tj
T*
(republic; a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States; a perfect Union, \
one and inseparable, )Tj
T*
(established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice, and hum\
anity for which American )Tj
T*
(patriots sacrificed their lives and fortunes. I therefore believe it is \
my duty to my country to love )Tj
T*
(it, to support its Constitution, to obey its laws, to respect its flag, \
and to defend it against all )Tj
T*
(enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.92047 Tm
(\221American\222s Creed\222 \(prize-winning competition entry, 3 April 1\
918\) in \221Congressional Record\222 vol. 56, pt. 12 )Tj
T*
(\(appendix\), p. 286.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 140.7124 Tm
( 4.3 Thomas Paine 1737-1809)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is necessary to the happiness of man that he be mentally faithful\
to himself. Infidelity does )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(not consist in believing, or in disbelieving, it consists in professing \
to believe what one does not )Tj
T*
(believe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.17047 Tm
(\221The Age of Reason\222 pt. 1 \(1794\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.25456 Tm
( Any system of religion that has any thing in it that shocks the mind\
of a child cannot be a true )Tj
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(system.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Age of Reason\222 pt. 1 \(1794\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The sublime and the ridiculous are often so nearly related, that it \
is difficult to class them )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(separately. One step above the sublime, makes the ridiculous; and one st\
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T*
(makes the sublime again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Age of Reason\222 pt. 2 \(1795\) p. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its \
worst state, an intolerable one. )Tj
T*
(Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of k\
ings are built upon the )Tj
T*
(ruins of the bowers of paradise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Common Sense\222 \(1776\) ch. 1)Tj
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( As to religion, I hold it to be the indispensable duty of government\
to protect all conscientious )Tj
T*
(professors thereof, and I know of no other business which government hat\
h to do therewith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Common Sense\222 \(1776\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( These are the times that try men\222s souls. The summer soldier and \
the sunshine patriot will, in )Tj
T*
(this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stand\
s it now, deserves the love )Tj
T*
(and thanks of men and women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Crisis\222 \(December 1776\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( As he rose like a rocket, he fell like the stick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(On Edmund Burke losing the debate on the French Revolution to Charles Ja\
mes Fox, in the House of )Tj
T*
(Commons; \221Letter to the Addressers on the late Proclamation\222 \(179\
2\) p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( The religion of humanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Letter to the People of England on the Invasion of England\222 \(180\
4\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( [Edmund Burke] is not affected by the reality of distress touching h\
is heart, but by the showy )Tj
T*
(resemblance of it striking his imagination. He pities the plumage, but f\
orgets the dying bird.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 \(1791\) p. 26 \(on Burke\222s Reflections on \
the Revolution in France, 1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Lay then the axe to the root, and teach governments humanity. It is \
their sanguinary )Tj
T*
(punishments which corrupt mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 \(1791\) p. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( Titles are but nick-names, and every nick-name is a title.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 \(1791\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( [In France] All that class of equivocal generation, which in some co\
untries is called )Tj
T*
(aristocracy, and in others nobility, is done away, and the peer is exalt\
ed into MAN.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 \(1791\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Persecution is not an original feature of any religion; but it is al\
ways the strongly marked )Tj
T*
(feature of all law-religions, or religions established by law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 \(1791\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( All hereditary government is in its nature tyranny...To inherit a go\
vernment, is to inherit the )Tj
T*
(people, as if they were flocks and herds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 pt. 2 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( When, in countries that are called civilized, we see age going to th\
e workhouse and youth to )Tj
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(the gallows, something must be wrong in the system of government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 pt. 2 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I do not believe that any two men, on what are called doctrinal poin\
ts, think alike who think at )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(all. It is only those who have not thought that appear to agree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 pt. 2 \(1792\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( My country is the world, and my religion is to do good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Rights of Man\222 pt. 2 \(1792\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( A share in two revolutions is living to some purpose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Eric Foner \221Tom Paine and Revolutionary America\222 \(1976\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.7124 Tm
( 4.4 Jos\350 de Palafox 1780-1847)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( War to the knife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(On 4 August 1808, at the siege of Saragossa, the French general Verdier \
sent a one-word suggestion: )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221Capitulation\222. Palafox replied \221Guerra y cuchillo [War and the\
knife]\222, later reported as \221Guerra a cuchillo\222, )Tj
T*
(as above. It subsequently appeared, at the behest of Palafox himself, on\
survivors\222 medals. Jos\350 G\363mez de )Tj
T*
(Arteche y Moro \221Guerra de la Independencia\222 \(1875\) vol. 2, ch. 4\
.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 461.9624 Tm
( 4.5 William Paley 1743-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who can refute a sneer?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.42047 Tm
(\221Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy\222 \(1785\) bk. 5, ch.\
9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 392.2124 Tm
( 4.6 Michael Palin 1943\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See Graham Chapman et al. \(3.74\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.7 Lord Palmerston 1784-1865)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have no eternal allies and we have no perpetual enemies. Our inte\
rests are eternal and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(perpetual and these interests it is our duty to follow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(Speech on the Polish Question in the House of Commons, 1848)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( I therefore fearlessly challenge the verdict which this House...is t\
o give...whether, as the )Tj
T*
(Roman, in days of old, held himself free from indignity, when he could s\
ay Civis Romanus sum; )Tj
T*
(so also a British subject, in whatever land he may be, shall feel confid\
ent that the watchful eye )Tj
T*
(and the strong arm of England will protect him against injustice and wro\
ng.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(House of Commons, 25 June 1850, in the Don Pacifico debate.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( You may call it coalition, you may call it the accidental and fortui\
tous concurrence of atoms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(On a projected Palmerston-Disraeli coalition. House of Commons, 5 March \
1857)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( We do not want Egypt any more than any rational man with an estate i\
n the north of England )Tj
T*
(and a residence in the south, would have wished to possess the inns on t\
he north road. All he )Tj
T*
(could want would have been that the inns should be well kept, always acc\
essible, and furnishing )Tj
T*
(him, when he came, with mutton chops and post horses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(Letter to Earl Cowley, 25 November 1859, in Hon. Evelyn Ashley \221Life \
of Henry John Temple, Viscount )Tj
T*
(Palmerston 1846-65\222 \(1876\) vol. 2, p. 1245)Tj
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( What is merit? The opinion one man entertains of another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In Thomas Carlyle \221Shooting Niagara: and After?\222 \(1867\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The function of a government is to calm, rather than to excite agita\
tion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(In P. Guedella \221Gladstone and Palmerston\222 \(1928\) p. 281)Tj
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( Lord Palmerston, with characteristic levity had once said that only \
three men in Europe had )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ever understood [the Schleswig-Holstein] question, and of these the Prin\
ce Consort was dead, a )Tj
T*
(Danish statesman \(unnamed\) was in an asylum, and he himself had forgot\
ten it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(In R. W. Seton-Watson \221Britain in Europe 1789-1914\222 \(1945\) p. 43\
8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Die, my dear Doctor, that\222s the last thing I shall do!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Last words; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 4.8 Norman Panama 1914\227and Melvin Frank 1913-1988)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The pellet with the poison\222s in the vessel with the pestle. The c\
halice from the palace has the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(brew that is true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221The Court Jester\222 \(1955 film\); spoken by Danny Kaye)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 470.9624 Tm
( 4.9 Dame Christabel Pankhurst 1880-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Never lose your temper with the Press or the public is a major rule \
of political life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(\221Unshackled\222 \(1959\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( We are here to claim our right as women, not only to be free, but to\
fight for freedom. That it is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(our right as well as our duty. It is our privilege, as well as our pride\
and our joy, to take some part )Tj
T*
(in this militant movement which, as we believe, means the regeneration o\
f all humanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(Speech in London, 23 March 1911, in \221Votes for Women\222 31 March 191\
1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 328.4624 Tm
( 4.10 Emmeline Pankhurst 1858-1928)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There is something that Governments care far more for than human lif\
e, and that is the security )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of property, and so it is through property that we shall strike the enem\
y...I say to the Government: )Tj
T*
( You have not dared to take the leaders of Ulster for their incitement t\
o rebellion. Take me if you )Tj
T*
(dare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(Speech at Albert Hall, 17 October 1912, in \221My Own Story\222 \(1914\)\
p. 265)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.00456 Tm
( The argument of the broken window pane is the most important argumen\
t in modern politics.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(In George Dangerfield \221The Strange Death of Liberal England\222 \(191\
1\) \221The Women\222s Revolt\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.9624 Tm
( 4.11 Mitchell Parish)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When the deep purple crawls over sleepy garden walls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221Deep Purple\222 \(1939 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 98.2124 Tm
( 4.12 Charlie Parker 1920-55)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Music is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom. If you don\
\222t live it, it won\222t come )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(out of your horn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(In Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff \221Hear Me Talkin\222 to Ya\222 \(1955\)\
p. 358)Tj
ET
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( 4.13 Dorothy Parker 1893-1967)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Scratch a lover, and find a foe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 702.92047 Tm
(\221Ballade of a Great Weariness\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 682.00456 Tm
( Oh, life is a glorious cycle of song,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A medley of extemporanea;)Tj
T*
( And love is a thing that can never go wrong;)Tj
T*
( And I am Marie of Roumania.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.17047 Tm
(\221Comment\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.25456 Tm
( Woman wants monogamy;)Tj
T*
( Man delights in novelty.)Tj
T*
( Love is woman\222s moon and sun;)Tj
T*
( Man has other forms of fun.)Tj
T*
( Woman lives but in her lord;)Tj
T*
( Count to ten, and man is bored.)Tj
T*
( With this the gist and sum of it,)Tj
T*
( What earthly good can come of it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.42047 Tm
(\221General Review of the Sex Situation\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.50456 Tm
( Four be the things I\222d been better without:)Tj
T*
( Love, curiosity, freckles, and doubt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.67047 Tm
(\221Inventory\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.75456 Tm
( Men seldom make passes)Tj
T*
( At girls who wear glasses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.92047 Tm
(\221News Item\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.00456 Tm
( Why is it no one ever sent me yet)Tj
T*
( One perfect limousine, do you suppose?)Tj
T*
( Ah no, it\222s always just my luck to get)Tj
T*
( One perfect rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.17047 Tm
(\221One Perfect Rose\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.25456 Tm
( If, with the literate, I am)Tj
T*
( Impelled to try an epigram,)Tj
T*
( I never seek to take the credit;)Tj
T*
( We all assume that Oscar said it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.42047 Tm
(\221A Pig\222s-Eye View of Literature\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 137.50456 Tm
( Guns aren\222t lawful;)Tj
T*
( Nooses give;)Tj
T*
( Gas smells awful;)Tj
T*
( You might as well live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.67047 Tm
(\221R\350sum\350\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.75456 Tm
( By the time you say you\222re his,)Tj
ET
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( Shivering and sighing)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And he vows his passion is)Tj
T*
( Infinite, undying\227)Tj
T*
( Lady, make a note of this:)Tj
T*
( One of you is lying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Unfortunate Coincidence\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( And I\222ll stay off Verlaine too; he was always chasing Rimbauds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Here Lies\222 \(1939\) \221The Little Hours\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Sorrow is tranquillity remembered in emotion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Here Lies\222 \(1939\) \221Sentiment\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( She ran the whole gamut of the emotions from A to B.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Of Katherine Hepburn in a Broadway first night; attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( How do they know?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(On being told that Calvin Coolidge had died, in Malcolm Cowley \221Write\
rs at Work\222 1st Series \(1958\) p. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( As artists they\222re rot, but as providers they\222re oil wells; th\
ey gush.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(On lady novelists, in Malcolm Cowley \221Writers at Work\222 1st Series \
\(1958\) p. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Hollywood money isn\222t money. It\222s congealed snow, melts in you\
r hand, and there you are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(In Malcolm Cowley \221Writers at Work\222 1st Series \(1958\) p. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( House Beautiful is play lousy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(Review in \221New Yorker\222 \(1933\). Phyllis Hartnoll \221Plays and Pl\
ayers\222 \(1984\) p. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Brevity is the soul of lingerie, as the Petticoat said to the Chemis\
e.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(Caption written for \221Vogue\222 \(1916\) in John Keats \221You Might a\
s well Live\222 \(1970\) p. 32.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( You can lead a horticulture, but you can\222t make her think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(In John Keats \221You Might as well Live\222 \(1970\) p. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( It serves me right for putting all my eggs in one bastard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(On her abortion, in John Keats \221You Might as well Live\222 \(1970\) p\
t. 2, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( There\222s a hell of a distance between wise-cracking and wit. Wit h\
as truth in it; wise-cracking is )Tj
T*
(simply callisthenics with words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(In \221Paris Review\222 Summer 1956, p. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( Excuse My Dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(Suggested epitaph for herself \(1925\), in Alexander Woollcott \221While\
Rome Burns\222 \(1934\) \221Our Mrs Parker\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.9624 Tm
( 4.14 Martin Parker d.c.1656)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You gentlemen of England)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who live at home at ease,)Tj
T*
( How little do you think)Tj
T*
( On the dangers of the seas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Valiant Sailors\222. J. O. Halliwell \(ed.\) \221Early Naval Ba\
llads\222 \(Percy Society, 1841\) p. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( But all\222s to no end, for the times will not mend)Tj
T*
( Till the King enjoys his own again.)Tj
ET
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(\221Upon Defacing of Whitehall\222 \(1671\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 4.15 Ross Parker 1914-74 and Hugh Charles 1907\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There\222ll always be an England)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( While there\222s a country lane,)Tj
T*
( Wherever there\222s a cottage small)Tj
T*
( Beside a field of grain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221There\222ll always be an England\222 \(1939 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 4.16 C. Northcote Parkinson 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Expenditure rises to meet income.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221The Law and the Profits\222 \(1960\) opening sentence)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(\221Parkinson\222s Law\222 \(1958\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.00456 Tm
( Time spent on any item of the agenda will be in inverse proportion t\
o the sum involved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(\221Parkinson\222s Law\222 \(1958\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( The man who is denied the opportunity of taking decisions of importa\
nce begins to regard as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(important the decisions he is allowed to take.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(\221Parkinson\222s Law\222 \(1958\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( Men enter local politics solely as a result of being unhappily marri\
ed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221Parkinson\222s Law\222 \(1958\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 364.4624 Tm
( 4.17 Charles Stewart Parnell 1846-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No man has a right to fix the boundary of the march of a nation; no \
man has a right to say to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(his country\227thus far shalt thou go and no further.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(Speech at Cork, 21 January 1885; in \221The Times\222 22 January 1885)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 276.7124 Tm
( 4.18 Blaise Pascal 1623-62)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Je n\222ai fait celle-ci plus longue que parce que je n\222ai pas eu\
le loisir de la faire plus courte.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I have made this [letter] longer than usual, only because I have not\
had the time to make it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shorter.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Lettres Provinciales\222 \(1657\) no. 16)Tj
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( La derni\351re chose qu\222on trouve en faisant un ouvrage, est de s\
avoir celle qu\222il faut mettre la )Tj
T*
(premi\351re.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The last thing one knows in constructing a work is what to put first\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( Quand on voit le style naturel, on est tout \350tonn\350 et ravi, ca\
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0 -1.2 TD
(on trouve un homme.)Tj
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( When we see a natural style, we are quite surprised and delighted, f\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 29)Tj
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( Tout le malheur des hommes vient d\222une seule chose, qui est de ne\
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(repos dans une chambre.)Tj
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( All the misfortunes of men derive from one single thing, which is th\
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(a room.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 139)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 639.75456 Tm
( Le nez de Cl\350op\342tre: s\222il e\373t \350t\350 plus court, tout\
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( Had Cleopatra\222s nose been shorter, the whole face of the world wo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.17047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 162)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 581.25456 Tm
( Le silence \350ternel de ces espaces infinis m\222effraie.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The eternal silence of these infinite spaces [the heavens] terrifies\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 206)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.75456 Tm
( Le dernier acte est sanglant, quelque belle que soit la com\350die e\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The last act is bloody, however charming the rest of the play may be\
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 210)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( On mourra seul.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( We shall die alone.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 211)Tj
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( Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne conna\356t point.)Tj
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T*
( The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 277)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 347.25456 Tm
( L\222homme n\222est qu\222un roseau, le plus faible de la nature; ma\
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T*
( Man is only a reed, the weakest thing in nature; but he is a thinkin\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 347)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( Le moi est ha\357ssable.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The self is hateful.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 455)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( Console-toi, tu ne me chercherais pas si tu ne m\222avais trouv\350.\
)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Comfort yourself, you would not seek me if you had not found me.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es\222 \(1670\) no. 553)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( FEU. Dieu d\222Abraham, Dieu d\222Isaac, Dieu de Jacob, non des phil\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Certitude. Sentiment. Joie. Paix.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( FIRE. God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob, not of the philoso\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Certainty. Certainty. Feeling. Joy. Peace.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(On a paper, dated 23 November 1654, stitched into the lining of his coat\
and found after his death)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 65.9624 Tm
( 4.19 Louis Pasteur 1822-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dans les champs de l\222observation le hasard ne favorise que les es\
prits pr\350par\350s.)Tj
ET
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(Address given on the inauguration of the Faculty of Science, University \
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15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Il n\222existe pas de sciences appliqu\350es, mais seulement des app\
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( There are no such things as applied sciences, only applications of s\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.17047 Tm
(Address, 11 September 1872, in \221Comptes rendus des travaux du Congr\351\
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0 -1.2 TD
(septembre 1872\222 p. 49)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 630.9624 Tm
( 4.20 Walter Pater 1839-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hers is the head upon which all \221the ends of the world are come\222\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.42047 Tm
(On the Mona Lisa in \221Studies in the History of the Renaissance\222 \(\
1873\) \221Leonardo da Vinci\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.50456 Tm
( She [the Mona Lisa] is older than the rocks among which she sits; li\
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T*
(been dead many times, and learned the secrets of the grave; and has been\
a diver in deep seas, )Tj
T*
(and keeps their fallen day about her; and trafficked for strange webs wi\
th Eastern merchants: )Tj
T*
( and, as Leda, was the mother of Helen of Troy, and as Saint Anne, the m\
other of Mary; and all )Tj
T*
(this has been to her but as the sound of lyres and flutes, and lives onl\
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T*
(it has moulded the changing lineaments, and tinged the eyelids and the h\
ands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.67047 Tm
(\221Studies in the History of the Renaissance\222 \(1873\) \221Leonardo \
da Vinci\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.75456 Tm
( All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.92047 Tm
(\221Studies in the History of the Renaissance\222 \(1873\) \221The Schoo\
l of Giorgione\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.00456 Tm
( To burn always with this hard, gemlike flame, to maintain this ecsta\
sy, is success in life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.17047 Tm
(\221Studies in the History of the Renaissance\222 \(1873\) \221Conclusio\
n\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.25456 Tm
( Not to discriminate every moment some passionate attitude in those a\
bout us, and in the )Tj
T*
(brilliance of their gifts some tragic dividing of forces on their ways i\
s, on this short day of frost )Tj
T*
(and sun, to sleep before evening.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.42047 Tm
(\221Studies in the History of the Renaissance\222 \(1873\) \221Conclusio\
n\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 270.2124 Tm
( 4.21 \221Banjo\222 Paterson \(Andrew Barton Paterson\) 1864-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Once a jolly swagman camped by a billabong,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Under the shade of a coolibah tree;)Tj
T*
( And he sang as he watched and waited till his \221Billy\222 boiled:)Tj
T*
( \221You\222ll come a-waltzing, Matilda, with me.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.67047 Tm
(\221Waltzing Matilda\222 \(1903 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 146.4624 Tm
( 4.22 Coventry Patmore 1823-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Well, Heaven be thanked my first-love failed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As, Heaven be thanked, our first-loves do!)Tj
T*
( Thought I, when Fanny past me sailed,)Tj
T*
( Loved once, for what I never knew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.92047 Tm
(\221The County Ball\222)Tj
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( Her ball-dress seemed a breathing mist,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the fair form exhaled and shed,)Tj
T*
( Raised in the dance with arm and wrist)Tj
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( All warmth and light unbraceleted.)Tj
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(\221The County Ball\222)Tj
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( Ah, none but I discerned her looks,)Tj
T*
( When in the throng she passed me by,)Tj
T*
( For love is like a ghost, and brooks)Tj
T*
( Only the chosen seer\222s eye.)Tj
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(\221The County Ball\222)Tj
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T*
( With lonely feeling, like the smell)Tj
T*
( Of heath on mountains, filled my heart.)Tj
T*
( To see her seemed delight\222s full scope,)Tj
T*
( And her kind smile, so clear of care,)Tj
T*
( Even then, though darkening all my hope,)Tj
T*
( Gilded the cloud of my despair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Sahara\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Kind souls, you wonder why, love you,)Tj
T*
( When you, you wonder why, love none.)Tj
T*
( We love, Fool, for the good we do,)Tj
T*
( Not that which unto us is done!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221A Riddle Solved\222 in \221The Angel in the House\222 \(1854-62\) bk\
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( I drew my bride, beneath the moon,)Tj
T*
( Across my threshold; happy hour!)Tj
T*
( But, ah, the walk that afternoon)Tj
T*
( We saw the water-flags in flower!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Spirit\222s Epochs\222 in \221The Angel in the House\222 \(1854-\
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( \221I saw you take his kiss!\222 \221\222Tis true.\222)Tj
T*
( \221O modesty!\222 \221\222Twas strictly kept:)Tj
T*
( He thought me asleep; at least, I knew)Tj
T*
( He thought I thought he thought I slept.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221The Kiss\222 \(1856\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Some dish more sharply spiced than this)Tj
T*
( Milk-soup men call domestic bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Olympus\222, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( So, till to-morrow eve, my Own, adieu!)Tj
T*
( Parting\222s well-paid with soon again to meet,)Tj
T*
( Soon in your arms to feel so small and sweet,)Tj
T*
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0 -1.2 TD
( We two now part.)Tj
T*
( My Very Dear,)Tj
T*
( Our solace is, the sad road lies so clear.)Tj
T*
( It needs no art,)Tj
T*
( With faint, averted feet)Tj
T*
( And many a tear,)Tj
T*
( In our opposed paths to persevere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221A Farewell\222 in \221The Unknown Eros\222 \(1877\) bk. 1)Tj
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( He that but once too nearly hears)Tj
T*
( The music of forfended spheres)Tj
T*
( Is thenceforth lonely, and for all)Tj
T*
( His days as one who treads the Wall)Tj
T*
( Of China, and, on this hand, sees)Tj
T*
( Cities and their civilities)Tj
T*
( And, on the other, lions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221From Mrs. Graham\222 in \221The Victories of Love\222 bk. 1)Tj
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( 4.23 Alan Paton 1903\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cry, the beloved country.)Tj
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(Title of novel \(1948\))Tj
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( 4.24 Mark Pattison 1813-84)Tj
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( In research the horizon recedes as we advance, and is no nearer at s\
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0 -1.2 TD
(As the power of endurance weakens with age, the urgency of the pursuit g\
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T*
(And research is always incomplete.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(\221Isaac Casaubon\222 \(1875\) ch. 10)Tj
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( 4.25 Leslie Paul 1905\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Angry young man.)Tj
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(Title of book \(1951\))Tj
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( 4.26 James Payn 1830-98)Tj
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T*
( I had never had a piece of toast)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Particularly long and wide,)Tj
T*
( But fell upon the sanded floor,)Tj
T*
( And always on the buttered side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221Chambers\222s Journal\222 2 February 1884.)Tj
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( 4.27 J. H. Payne 1791-1852)Tj
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( Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam,)Tj
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T*
( A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there,)Tj
T*
( Which, seek through the world, is ne\222er met with elsewhere.)Tj
T*
( Home, home, sweet, sweet home!)Tj
T*
( There\222s no place like home! there\222s no place like home!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Clari, or, The Maid of Milan\222 \(1823 opera\) \221Home, Sweet Home\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.42047 Tm
(\221Crotchet Castle\222 \(1831\) ch. 7)Tj
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( A book that furnishes no quotations is, me judice, no book\227it is \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.67047 Tm
(\221Crotchet Castle\222 \(1831\) ch. 9)Tj
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( The march of mind has marched in through my back parlour shutters, a\
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T*
(silver spoons, in the dead of night. The policeman, who was sent down to\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221Crotchet Castle\222 \(1831\) ch. 17)Tj
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( A Sympathizer would seem to imply a certain degree of benevolent fee\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.17047 Tm
(\221Gryll Grange\222 \(1861\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 356.25456 Tm
( Marriage may often be a stormy lake, but celibacy is almost always a\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221Melincourt\222 \(1817\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( Laughter is pleasant, but the exertion is too much for me.)Tj
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(\221Nightmare Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 5)Tj
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( Sir, I have quarrelled with my wife; and a man who has quarrelled wi\
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T*
(from all duty to his country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Nightmare Abbey\222 \(1818\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Long night succeeds thy little day)Tj
T*
( Oh blighted blossom! can it be,)Tj
T*
( That this gray stone and grassy clay)Tj
T*
( Have closed our anxious care of thee?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(\221Epitaph on his Daughter\222 in Henry Cole \(ed.\) \221The Works of \
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T*
(Nicolls)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.25456 Tm
( But though first love\222s impassioned blindness)Tj
T*
( Has passed away in colder light,)Tj
T*
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T*
( And shall do, till our last good-night.)Tj
T*
( The ever-rolling silent hours)Tj
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( Will bring a time we shall not know,)Tj
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T*
( Will be an hundred years ago.)Tj
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(\221Love and Age\222 \(1860\))Tj
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( 4.29 Norman Vincent Peale 1898\227)Tj
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( The power of positive thinking.)Tj
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( Misquotation is, in fact, the pride and privilege of the learned. A \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(\221Common Misquotations\222 \(1934\) introduction)Tj
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( There is no stronger craving in the world than that of the rich for \
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T*
(the titled for riches.)Tj
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(\221The Pilgrim Daughters\222 \(1961\) ch. 6)Tj
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( Como \350 para o bem de todos e a felicidade geral da na\347\341o, e\
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(In response to a popular delegation, and in defiance of a decree from Li\
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T*
(1822; commonly rendered \221Fico [I\222m staying]\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.32 Sir Robert Peel 1788-1850)Tj
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( I may be a Tory. I may be an illiberal\227but...Tory as I am, I have\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(some mitigation of the criminal law; some prevention of abuse in the exe\
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T*
(security for its impartial administration.)Tj
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(House of Commons, 1 May 1827)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.33 George Peele c.1556-96)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Fair and fair, and twice so fair,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( The fairest shepherd on our green,)Tj
T*
( A love for any lady.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221The Arraignment of Paris\222 \(1584\) act 1, sc. 5 \221Song of Oenon\
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( What thing is love for \(well I wot\) love is a thing.)Tj
T*
( It is a prick, it is a sting,)Tj
T*
( It is a pretty, pretty thing;)Tj
T*
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( Whose flame creeps in at every hole.)Tj
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(\221The Hunting of Cupid\222 \(c.1591\))Tj
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( When as the rye reach to the chin,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And chopcherry, chopcherry ripe within,)Tj
T*
( Strawberries swimming in the cream,)Tj
T*
( And schoolboys playing in the stream,)Tj
T*
( Then O, then O, then O, my true love said,)Tj
T*
( Till that time come again,)Tj
T*
( She could not live a maid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221The Old Wive\222s Tale\222 \(1595\) l. 75 \221Song\222)Tj
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( His golden locks time hath to silver turned;)Tj
T*
( O time too swift, O swiftness never ceasing!)Tj
T*
( His youth \222gainst time and age hath ever spurned)Tj
T*
( But spurned in vain; youth waneth by increasing:)Tj
T*
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( His helmet now shall make a hive for bees,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And, lovers\222 sonnets turned to holy psalms,)Tj
T*
( A man-at-arms must now serve on his knees,)Tj
T*
( And feed on prayers, which are age his alms:)Tj
T*
( But though from court to cottage he depart,)Tj
T*
( His saint is sure of his unspotted heart...)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Goddess, allow this aged man his right,)Tj
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(\221Polyhymnia\222 \(1590\) ad fin. \221Sonnet\222)Tj
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( 4.34 Charles P\350guy 1873-1914)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Qui ne gueule pas la v\350rit\350, quand il sait la v\350rit\350, se\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( He who does not bellow the truth when he knows the truth makes himse\
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(\221Lettre du Provincial\222 21 December 1899, in \221Basic Verities\222\
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( La tyrannie est toujours mieux organis\350e que la libert\350.)Tj
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( Tyranny is always better organised than freedom.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(\221Basic Verities\222 \(1943\) \221War and Peace\222.)Tj
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( 4.35 1st Earl of Pembroke c.1501-70)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Out ye whores, to work, to work, ye whores, go spin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(In Andrew Clark \(ed.\) \221Brief Lives\222...by John Aubrey \(1898\) v\
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0 -1.2 TD
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( 4.36 2nd Earl of Pembroke c.1534-1601)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
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(Quoted by his son, the 4th Earl, in a speech on 11 April 1648, proving h\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Harleian Miscellany\222 \(1745\) vol. 5, p. 106)Tj
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( 4.37 10th Earl of Pembroke 1734-94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dr Johnson\222s sayings would not appear so extraordinary, were it n\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 618.92047 Tm
(In James Boswell \221The Life of Samuel Johnson\222 \(1934 ed.\) 27 Marc\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( 4.38 Vladimir Peniakoff 1897-1951)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( A message came on the wireless for me. It said: \221spread alarm and\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(1942.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 513.17047 Tm
(\221Private Army\222 \(1950\) pt. 2, ch. 5. See Army Act 42 & 43 Vict. 3\
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T*
(suffer penal servitude\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 4.39 William Penn 1644-1718)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No pain, no palm; no thorns, no throne; no gall, no glory; no cross,\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.42047 Tm
(\221No Cross, No Crown\222 \(1669 pamphlet\))Tj
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( It is a reproach to religion and government to suffer so much povert\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.67047 Tm
(\221Some Fruits of Solitude\222 pt. 1, no. 52)Tj
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( Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.92047 Tm
(\221Some Fruits of Solitude\222 pt. 1, no. 85)Tj
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( The taking of a bribe or gratuity, should be punished with as severe\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.17047 Tm
(\221Some Fruits of Solitude\222 pt. 1, no. 384)Tj
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( 4.40 William H. Penn)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Albert H. Fitz \(6.31\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 4.41 Samuel Pepys 1633-1703)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Strange the difference of men\222s talk!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.67047 Tm
(\221Diary\222 4 January 1660)Tj
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( I sat up till the bell-man came by with his bell just under my windo\
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0 -1.2 TD
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dy morning.\222)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 16 January 1660)Tj
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( And so to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.17047 Tm
(\221Diary\222 20 April 1660)Tj
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( I went out to Charing Cross, to see Major-general Harrison hanged, d\
rawn, and quartered; )Tj
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(which was done there, he looking as cheerful as any man could do in that\
condition.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 13 October 1660)Tj
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( A good honest and painful sermon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Diary\222 17 March 1661)Tj
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( If ever I was foxed it was now.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 23 April 1661)Tj
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( But methought it lessened my esteem of a king, that he should not be\
able to command the rain.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 19 July 1662)Tj
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( I see it is impossible for the King to have things done as cheap as \
other men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Diary\222 21 July 1662)Tj
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( But Lord! to see the absurd nature of Englishmen, that cannot forbea\
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0 -1.2 TD
(everything that looks strange.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 27 November 1662)Tj
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( My wife, who, poor wretch, is troubled with her lonely life.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 19 December 1662)Tj
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( A woman sober, and no high flyer, as he calls it.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 27 May 1663)Tj
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( Most of their discourse was about hunting, in a dialect I understand\
very little.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 22 November 1663)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( While we were talking came by several poor creatures carried by, by \
constables, for being at a )Tj
T*
(conventicle...I would to God they would either conform, or be more wise,\
and not be catched!)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 7 August 1664)Tj
T*
(Pretty witty Nell. \221Diary\222 3 April 1665 \(of Nell Gwynne\))Tj
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( Strange to see how a good dinner and feasting reconciles everybody.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 9 November 1665)Tj
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( Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor\
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T*
(condition.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 25 December 1665)Tj
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( Music and women I cannot but give way to, whatever my business is.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 9 March 1666)Tj
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( But it is pretty to see what money will do.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 21 March 1667)Tj
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( This day my wife made it appear to me that my late entertainment thi\
s week cost me above )Tj
T*
(\24312, an expense which I am almost ashamed of, though it is but once i\
n a great while, and is the )Tj
T*
(end for which, in the most part, we live, to have such a merry day once \
or twice in a man\222s life.)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 6 March 1669)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( And so I betake myself to that course, which is almost as much as to\
see myself go into my )Tj
T*
(grave\227for which, and all the discomforts that will accompany my being\
blind, the good God )Tj
T*
(prepare me!)Tj
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(\221Diary\222 31 May 1669, closing words)Tj
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( Crazy like a fox.)Tj
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(Title of book \(1944\))Tj
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( 4.43 Pericles c.495-429 B.C.)Tj
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( Our love of what is beautiful does not lead to extravagance; our lov\
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(Funeral Oration, Athens, 430 B.C., in Thucydides \221History of the Pelo\
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T*
(Rex Warner\))Tj
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( For famous men have the whole earth as their memorial.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 565.67047 Tm
(In Thucydides \221History of the Peloponnesian War\222 ii.43, 3 \(transl\
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( Your great glory is not to be inferior to what God has made you, and\
the greatest glory of a )Tj
T*
(woman is to be least talked about by men, whether they are praising you \
or criticizing you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 510.92047 Tm
(In Thucydides \221History of the Peloponnesian War\222 ii.45, 2 \(transl\
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( 4.44 Charles Perrault 1628-1703)Tj
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( \221Anne, ma soeur Anne, ne vois-tu rien venir?\222 )Tj
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( \221Anne, sister Anne, do you see nothing coming?\222 )Tj
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(green.\222)Tj
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(\221Histoires et contes du temps pass\350\222 \(1697\) \221La barbe bleu\
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( 4.45 Jimmy Perry and Derek Taverner)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Who do you think you are kidding Mister Hitler?)Tj
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(Title of song \(1971\))Tj
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( 4.46 Persius \(Aulus Persius Flaccus\) A.D. 34-62)Tj
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( Nec te quaesiveris extra.)Tj
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( And don\222t consult anyone\222s opinions but your own.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 1, l. 7)Tj
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( Virtutem videant intabescantque relicta.)Tj
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( Let them recognize virtue and rot for having lost it.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 38)Tj
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( Venienti occurrite morbo.)Tj
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( Confront disease at its onset.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 3, l. 64.)Tj
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( Tecum habita: noris quam sit tibi curta supellex.)Tj
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(\221Satires\222 no. 4, l. 52)Tj
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( 4.47 Marshal P\350tain \(Henri Philippe P\350tain\) 1856-1951)Tj
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( To write one\222s memoirs is to speak ill of everybody except onesel\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 26 May 1946)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 4.48 Laurence Peter 1919\227and Raymond Hull)Tj
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T*
( In a hierarchy every employee tends to rise to his level of incompet\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(\221The Peter Principle\222 \(1969\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 565.4624 Tm
( 4.49 Petronius \(Petronius Arbiter\) d. A.D. 65)Tj
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( Canis ingens, catena vinctus, in pariete erat pictus superque quadra\
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(\221Beware of the dog.\222)Tj
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(\221Satyricon\222 \221Cena Trimalchionis\222 ch. 29, sect. 1)Tj
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( Abiit ad plures.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( He\222s gone to join the majority [the dead].)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Satyricon\222 \221Cena Trimalchionis\222 ch. 42, sect. 5)Tj
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( Nam Sibyllam quidem Cumis ego ipse oculis meis vidi in ampulla pende\
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(dicerent: \221)Tj
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(Sibulla)Tj
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( )Tj
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(\225 )Tj
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(q)Tj
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(\225)Tj
/T1_1 1 Tf
(l)Tj
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(\225)Tj
/T1_1 1 Tf
(is)Tj
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(\222 respondebat illa \221\225)Tj
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(poqane)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
(\225)Tj
/T1_1 1 Tf
(n)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
( )Tj
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(q)Tj
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(\225)Tj
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(lw)Tj
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(\222.)Tj
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( She hung in a cage, and read her rune)Tj
T*
( To all the passers-by.)Tj
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( Said the boys, \223What wouldst thou, Sibyl?\224)Tj
T*
( She answered, \223I would die.\224\222)Tj
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(\221Satyricon\222 \221Cena Trimalchionis\222 ch. 48, sect. 8 \(translati\
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( Horatii curiosa felicitas.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Horace\222s careful felicity.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.41591 Tm
(\221Satyricon\222 ch. 118, sect. 5)Tj
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( Foeda est in coitu et brevis voluptas)Tj
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( Et taedet Veneris statim peractae.)Tj
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( Delight of lust is gross and brief)Tj
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( And weariness treads on desire.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.91591 Tm
(In A. Baehrens \221Poetae Latinae Minores\222 \(1882\) vol. 4, no. 101 \(\
translated by Helen Waddell\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 58.70784 Tm
( 4.50 Pheidippides \(or Philippides\) d. 490 B.C.)Tj
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( Greetings, we win!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Dying words, having run back to Athens from Marathon with news of victor\
y over the Persians; in Lucian bk. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(3, ch. 64 \221Pro Lapsu inter salutandum\222, para. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 689.9624 Tm
( 4.51 Kim Philby \(Harold Adrian Russell Philby\) 1912-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To betray, you must first belong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 652.42047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Times\222 17 December 1967, p. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 620.2124 Tm
( 4.52 Rear Admiral \221Jack\222 Philip 1840-1900)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Don\222t cheer, men; those poor devils are dying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.67047 Tm
(At the Battle of Santiago, 4 July 1898; in Dumas Malone \(ed.\) \221The\
Dictionary of American Biography\222 vol. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(14 \(1934\) \221John Woodward Philip\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 535.4624 Tm
( 4.53 Ambrose Philips c.1675-1749)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The flowers anew, returning seasons bring;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But beauty faded has no second spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221The First Pastoral\222 \(1708\) \221Lobbin\222 l. 47)Tj
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( There solid billows of enormous size,)Tj
T*
( Alps of green ice, in wild disorder rise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221A Winter-Piece\222 in \221The Tatler\222 \(7 May 1709\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( The stag in limpid currents with surprise,)Tj
T*
( Sees crystal branches on his forehead rise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221A Winter-Piece\222 in \221The Tatler\222 \(7 May 1709\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 338.2124 Tm
( 4.54 Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I don\222t think doing it [killing animals] for money makes it any m\
ore moral. I don\222t think a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(Speech in London, 6 Dec. 1988, comparing participation in blood sports t\
o selling slaughtered meat, in \221The )Tj
T*
(Times\222 7 Dec. 1988)Tj
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( I never see any home cooking. All I get is fancy stuff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 28 Oct. 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( If you stay here much longer you\222ll all be slitty-eyed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(Remark to Edinburgh University students in Peking, 16 Oct. 1986, in \221\
The Times\222 17 Oct. 1986)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Just at this moment we are suffering a national defeat comparable to\
any lost military )Tj
T*
(campaign, and, what is more, it is self-inflicted. I could use any one o\
f the several stock phrases )Tj
T*
(or platitudes about this. But I prefer one I picked up during the war. I\
t is brief and to the point: )Tj
T*
(Gentlemen, I think it is about time we \221pulled our fingers out\222...\
.If we want to be more prosperous )Tj
T*
(we\222ve simply got to get down to it and work for it. The rest of the w\
orld does not owe us a living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(Speech in London, 17 Oct. 1961, in \221Daily Mail\22218 Oct. 1961)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( We now look upon it [the English-Speaking Union] as including those \
countries which use )Tj
T*
(\221pidgin-English\222 in this even though I am referred to in that sple\
ndid language as \221Fella belong )Tj
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(Mrs Queen\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech to English-Speaking Union, Ottawa, 29 Oct. 1958, in \221Prince Ph\
ilip Speaks\222 \(1960\) pt. 2, ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 4.55 Morgan Phillips 1902-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Labour Party owes more to Methodism than to Marxism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(In James Callaghan \221Time and Chance\222 \(1987\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 4.56 Stephen Phillips 1864-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Behold me now)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A man not old, but mellow, like good wine.)Tj
T*
( Not over-jealous, yet an eager husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1902\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.4624 Tm
( 4.57 Eden Phillpotts 1862-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now old man\222s talk o\222 the days behind me;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( My darter\222s youngest darter to mind me;)Tj
T*
( A little dreamin\222, a little dyin\222,)Tj
T*
( A little lew corner of airth to lie in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.92047 Tm
(\221Gaffer\222s Song\222 \(1942\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 405.7124 Tm
( 4.58 Edith Piaf \(Edith Giovanna Gassion\) 1915-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La vie en rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1946\); piaf means \221sparrow\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.9624 Tm
( 4.59 Pablo Picasso 1881-1973)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We all know that Art is not truth. Art is a lie that makes us realiz\
e truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(In Dore Ashton \221Picasso on Art\222 \(1972\) \221Two statements by Pic\
asso\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( God is really only another artist. He invented the giraffe, the elep\
hant, and the cat. He has no )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(real style. He just goes on trying other things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(In Fran\347oise Gilot and Carlton Lake \221Life With Picasso\222 \(1964\)\
pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Every positive value has its price in negative terms...The genius of\
Einstein leads to Hiroshima.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(In Fran\347oise Gilot and Carlton Lake \221Life With Picasso\222 \(1964\)\
pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( I paint objects as I think them, not as I see them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(In John Golding \221Cubism\222 \(1959\) p. 60)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 137.9624 Tm
( 4.60 Pindar 518-438 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Water is best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Olympian Odes\222 bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( I have many swift arrows in my quiver which speak to the wise, but f\
or the crowd they need )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(interpreters. The skilled poet is one who knows much through natural gif\
t, but those who have )Tj
T*
(learned their art chatter turbulently, vainly, against the divine bird o\
f Zeus.)Tj
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(\221Olympian Odes\222 bk. 2, l. 150)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( My soul, do not seek immortal life, but exhaust the realm of the pos\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Pythian Odes\222 bk. 3, l. 109)Tj
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( Creatures of a day, what is a man? What is he not? Mankind is a drea\
m of a shadow. But when )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a god-given brightness comes, a radiant light rests on men, and a gentle\
life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Pythian Odes\222 bk. 8, l. 135)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 631.4624 Tm
( 4.61 Harold Pinter 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I said to this monk, here, I said, look here, mister...you haven\222\
t got a pair of shoes, have you, a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pair of shoes, I said, enough to help me on my way. Look at these, they\222\
re nearly out, I said, )Tj
T*
(they\222re no good to me. I heard you got a stock of shoes here. Piss of\
f, he said to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221The Caretaker\222 \(1960\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( Them bastards at the monastery let me down again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221The Caretaker\222 \(1960\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( If only I could get down to Sidcup! I\222ve been waiting for the wea\
ther to break. He\222s got my )Tj
T*
(papers, this man I left them with, it\222s got it all down there, I coul\
d prove everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221The Caretaker\222 \(1960\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( Apart from the known and the unknown, what else is there?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221The Homecoming\222 \(1965\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( The weasel under the cocktail cabinet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(When asked what his plays were about, in J. Russell Taylor \221Anger and\
After\222 \(1962\) p. 231)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 360.7124 Tm
( 4.62 Luigi Pirandello 1867-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sei personaggi in cerca d\222autore.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Six characters in search of an author.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(Title of play \(1921\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.2124 Tm
( 4.63 Robert M. Pirsig 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(Title of book \(1974\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( That\222s the classical mind at work, runs fine inside but looks din\
gy on the surface.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(\221Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance\222 \(1974\) pt. 3, ch. 25\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 162.7124 Tm
( 4.64 William Pitt, Earl of Chatham 1708-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The atrocious crime of being a young man...I shall neither attempt t\
o palliate nor deny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(House of Commons, 27 January 1741)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom: youth is the \
season of credulity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 88.42047 Tm
(Speech in \221Hansard\222 14 January 1766, col. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.50456 Tm
( Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(Speech in \221Hansard\222, House of Lords, 9 January 1770, col. 665.)Tj
ET
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( There is something behind the throne greater than the King himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(House of Lords, 2 March 1770)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( We have a Calvinistic creed, a Popish liturgy, and an Arminian clerg\
y.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(House of Lords, 19 May 1772)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( You cannot conquer America.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(House of Lords, 18 November 1777)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( I invoke the genius of the Constitution!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(House of Lords, 18 November 1777)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of\
the Crown. It may be frail)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\227its roof may shake\227the wind may blow through it\227the storm may \
enter\227the rain may enter\227)Tj
T*
(but the King of England cannot enter!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(In Lord Brougham \221Statesmen in the Time of George III\222 \(1839\) vo\
l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Our watchword is security.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( The parks are the lungs of London.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(Quoted in a speech by William Windham; \221Hansard\222 30 June 1808, col\
. 1124)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 448.4624 Tm
( 4.65 William Pitt 1759-1806)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom: it is\
the argument of tyrants; it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is the creed of slaves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(Speech in \221Hansard\222 18 November 1783, col. 1209)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( We must recollect...what it is we have at stake, what it is we have \
to contend for. It is for our )Tj
T*
(property, it is for our liberty, it is for our independence, nay, for ou\
r existence as a nation; it is for )Tj
T*
(our character, it is for our very name as Englishmen, it is for everythi\
ng dear and valuable to man )Tj
T*
(on this side of the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(House of Commons, 22 July 1803)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( England has saved herself by her exertions, and will, as I trust, sa\
ve Europe by her example.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(Speech at Guildhall, London, 1805)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Roll up that map; it will not be wanted these ten years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(On a map of Europe, on hearing of Napoleon\222s victory at Austerlitz, D\
ecember 1805; in Earl Stanhope \221Life )Tj
T*
(of the Rt. Hon. William Pitt\222 vol. 4 \(1862\) ch. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.75456 Tm
( Oh, my country! how I leave my country!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(Last words, in Earl Stanhope \221Life of the Rt. Hon. William Pitt\222 \(\
1879\) vol. 3, p. 397 \(\221How I love my )Tj
T*
(country\222 in the 1st ed. \(1862\) vol. 4, ch. 43\). G. Rose Diaries an\
d Correspondence 23 January 1806, quotes: )Tj
T*
(\221My country! oh, my country!\222, whereas oral tradition reports \221\
I think I could eat one of Bellamy\222s veal pies\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 114.7124 Tm
( 4.66 Pope Pius VII)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are prepared to go to the gates of Hell\227but no further.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(Attempting to reach an agreement with Napoleon, c.1800-1, in J. M. Robin\
son \221Cardinal Consalvi\222 \(1987\) p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(66)Tj
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( 4.67 Sylvia Plath 1932-63)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A living doll, everywhere you look.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It can sew, it can cook,)Tj
T*
( It can talk, talk, talk.)Tj
T*
( It works, there is nothing wrong with it.)Tj
T*
( You have a hole, it\222s a poultice.)Tj
T*
( You have an eye, it\222s an image.)Tj
T*
( My boy, it\222s your last resort.)Tj
T*
( Will you marry it, marry it, marry it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.42047 Tm
(\221The Applicant\222 \(1966\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.50456 Tm
( Is there no way out of the mind?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221Apprehensions\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( I have always been scared of you,)Tj
T*
( With your luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo)Tj
T*
( And your neat moustache)Tj
T*
( And your Aryan eye, bright blue.)Tj
T*
( Panzer-man, panzer-man, O You\227)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Daddy\222 \(1963\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( Every woman adores a Fascist,)Tj
T*
( The boot in the face, the brute)Tj
T*
( Brute heart of a brute like you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Daddy\222 \(1963\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Dying,)Tj
T*
( Is an art, like everything else.)Tj
T*
( I do it exceptionally well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Lady Lazarus\222 \(1963\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Love set you going like a fat gold watch.)Tj
T*
( The midwife slapped your footsoles, and your bald cry)Tj
T*
( Took its place among the elements.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Song\222 \(1965\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Widow. The word consumes itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Widow\222 \(1971\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 156.7124 Tm
( 4.68 Plato c.429-347 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is said that Socrates commits a crime by corrupting the young men\
and not recognizing the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gods that the city recognizes, but some other new religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Apologia\222 24b)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Socrates, I shall not accuse you as I accuse others, of getting angr\
y and cursing me when I tell )Tj
T*
(them to drink the poison imposed by the authorities. I know you on the c\
ontrary in your time here )Tj
T*
(to be the noblest and gentlest and best man of all who ever came here; a\
nd now I am sure you are )Tj
ET
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(not angry with me, for you know who are responsible, but with them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Spoken by Socrates\222 jailor in \221Phaedo\222 116c)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( This was the end, Echechrates, of our friend; a man of whom we may s\
ay that of all whom we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(met at that time he was the wisest and justest and best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(On the death of Socrates in \221Phaedo\222 118a)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( For our discussion is on no trifling matter, but on the right way to\
conduct our lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Republic\222 VIII, 352d)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( But, my dearest Agathon, it is truth which you cannot contradict; yo\
u can without any )Tj
T*
(difficulty contradict Socrates.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Symposium\222 201c)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 4.69 Plautus c.254-184 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Lupus est homo homini, non homo, quom qualis sit non novit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A man is a wolf rather than a man to another man, when he hasn\222t \
yet found out what he\222s like.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Asinaria\222 l. 495 \(often cited simply: Homo homini lupus A man i\
s a wolf to another man\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Dictum sapienti sat est.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( What\222s been said is enough for anyone with sense.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.92047 Tm
(\221Persa\222 l. 729 \(later proverbially: Verbum sapienti sat est A wo\
rd is enough for the wise\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 420.00456 Tm
( Labrax: Una littera plus sum quam medicus.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Gripus: Tum tu Mendicus es?)Tj
T*
( Labrax: Tetigisti acu.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Labrax: One letter more than a medical man, that\222s what I am. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Gripus: Then you\222re a mendicant?)Tj
T*
( Labrax: You\222ve hit the point.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221Rudens\222 l. 1305)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.2124 Tm
( 4.70 Pliny the Elder \(Gaius Plinius Secundus\) A.D. 23-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Bruta fulmina.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Harmless thunderbolts.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.92047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 2, ch. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.00456 Tm
( Hominem nihil scire nisi doctrina, non fari, non ingredi, non vesci,\
breviterque non aliud )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(naturae sponte quam flere!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Man is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing witho\
ut being taught. He can )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(neither speak nor walk nor eat, and in short he can do nothing at the pr\
ompting of nature only, but )Tj
T*
(weep.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 7, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.50456 Tm
( Semper aliquid novi Africam adferre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Africa always brings [us] something new.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 8, ch. 42; often quoted in the form Ex Af\
rica semper aliquid novi Always something )Tj
ET
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15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Ruinis imminentibus musculi praemigrant.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( When a building is about to fall down, all the mice desert it.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.67047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 8, ch. 103)Tj
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( Optimumque est, ut volgo dixere, aliena insania frui.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( And the best plan is, as the popular saying was, to profit by the fo\
lly of others.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 638.17047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 18, ch. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 617.25456 Tm
( Addito salis grano)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( With the addition of a grain of salt.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 579.67047 Tm
(\221Historia Naturalis\222 bk. 23, ch. 149; commonly quoted in the form \
Cum grano salis With a grain of salt)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 547.4624 Tm
( 4.71 William Plomer 1903-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Out of that bungled, unwise war)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An alp of unforgiveness grew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.92047 Tm
(\221The Boer War\222 \(1960\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 471.00456 Tm
( A family portrait not too stale to record)Tj
T*
( Of a pleasant old buffer, nephew to a lord,)Tj
T*
( Who believed that the bank was mightier than the sword,)Tj
T*
( And that an umbrella might pacify barbarians abroad:)Tj
T*
( Just like an old liberal)Tj
T*
( Between the wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 365.17047 Tm
(\221Father and Son: 1939\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 344.25456 Tm
( With first-rate sherry flowing into second-rate whores,)Tj
T*
( And third-rate conversation without one single pause:)Tj
T*
( Just like a young couple)Tj
T*
( Between the wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.42047 Tm
(\221Father and Son: 1939\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 253.50456 Tm
( On a sofa upholstered in panther skin)Tj
T*
( Mona did researches in original sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(\221Mews Flat Mona\222 \(1960\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.75456 Tm
( A rose-red sissy half as old as time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.92047 Tm
(\221Playboy of the Demi-World: 1938\222 \(1945\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 150.7124 Tm
( 4.72 Plutarch A.D. c.50-c.120)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He who cheats with an oath acknowledges that he is afraid of his ene\
my, but that he thinks )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(little of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221Parallel Lives\222 \221Lysander\222 ch. 8.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.9624 Tm
( 4.73 Edgar Allan Poe 1809-49)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This maiden she lived with no other thought)Tj
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( Than to love and be loved by me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Annabel Lee\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I was a child and she was a child,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In this kingdom by the sea;)Tj
T*
( But we loved with a love which was more than love\227)Tj
T*
( I and my Annabel Lee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Annabel Lee\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side)Tj
T*
( Of my darling, my darling, my life and my bride)Tj
T*
( In her sepulchre there by the sea,)Tj
T*
( In her tomb by the side of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Annabel Lee\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Keeping time, time, time,)Tj
T*
( In a sort of Runic rhyme,)Tj
T*
( To the tintinnabulation that so musically wells)Tj
T*
( From the bells, bells, bells, bells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Bells\222 \(1849\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( All that we see or seem)Tj
T*
( Is but a dream within a dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221A Dream within a Dream\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( The fever called \221Living\222)Tj
T*
( Is conquered at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221For Annie\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,)Tj
T*
( Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,)Tj
T*
( While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,)Tj
T*
( As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Raven\222 \(1845\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Eagerly I wished the morrow,\227vainly had I sought to borrow)Tj
T*
( From my books surcease of sorrow\227sorrow for the lost Lenore\227)Tj
T*
( For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore\227)Tj
T*
( Nameless here for evermore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221The Raven\222 \(1845\) st. 2)Tj
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( Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!\
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T*
( Quoth the Raven, \221Nevermore\222.)Tj
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(\221The Raven\222 \(1845\) st. 17)Tj
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( Helen, thy beauty is to me)Tj
T*
( Like those Nicean barks of yore,)Tj
T*
( That gently, o\222er a perfumed sea,)Tj
T*
( The weary, wayworn wanderer bore)Tj
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( To his own native shore.)Tj
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( On desperate seas long wont to roam,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy hyacinth hair, thy classic face,)Tj
T*
( Thy Naiad airs have brought me home,)Tj
T*
( To the glory that was Greece)Tj
T*
( And the grandeur that was Rome.)Tj
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(\221To Helen\222 \(1831\))Tj
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( 4.74 Henri Poincar\350 1854-1912)Tj
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( Science is built up of facts, as a house is built of stones; but an \
accumulation of facts is no )Tj
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(more a science than a heap of stones is a house.)Tj
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(\221Science and Hypothesis\222 \(1905\) ch. 9)Tj
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( Sociology is the science with the greatest number of methods and the\
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(\221Science and Hypothesis\222 \(1905\) ch. 9)Tj
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( 4.75 John Pomfret 1667-1702)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( We live and learn, but not the wiser grow.)Tj
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(\221Reason\222 \(1700\) l. 112)Tj
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( 4.76 Madame de Pompadour \(Antoinette Poisson, Marquise de Pompadour\) \
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T*
( Apr\351s nous le d\350luge.)Tj
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( After us the deluge.)Tj
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(In Madame de Hausset \221M\350moires\222 p. 19)Tj
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( 4.77 Georges Pompidou 1911-74)Tj
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(statesman who places the nation at his service.)Tj
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(In \221Observer\222 30 December 1973)Tj
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( 4.78 Alexander Pope 1688-1744)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Poetic Justice, with her lifted scale,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where, in nice balance, truth with gold she weighs,)Tj
T*
( And solid pudding against empty praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 1, l. 52)Tj
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( While pensive poets painful vigils keep,)Tj
T*
( Sleepless themselves, to give their readers sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 1, l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.50456 Tm
( Or where the pictures for the page atone,)Tj
T*
( And Quarles is saved by beauties not his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.67047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 1, l. 139)Tj
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( Gentle Dullness ever loves a joke.)Tj
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(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 2, l. 34)Tj
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( A brain of feathers, and a heart of lead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 2, l. 44)Tj
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( How little, mark! that portion of the ball,)Tj
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( Where, faint at best, the beams of science fall.)Tj
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(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, l. 83)Tj
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( All crowd, who foremost shall be damned to Fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, l. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Flow Welsted, flow! like thine inspirer, Beer,)Tj
T*
( Tho\222 stale, not ripe; tho\222 thin, yet never clear;)Tj
T*
( So sweetly mawkish, and so smoothly dull;)Tj
T*
( Heady, not strong; o\222erflowing tho\222 not full.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, l. 169)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Proceed, great days! \222till learning fly the shore,)Tj
T*
( \222Till birch shall blush with noble blood no more,)Tj
T*
( \222Till Thames see Eton\222s sons for ever play,)Tj
T*
( \222Till Westminster\222s whole year be holiday,)Tj
T*
( \222Till Isis\222 elders reel, their pupils\222 sport,)Tj
T*
( And Alma mater lie dissolved in port!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 3, l. 333)Tj
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( None need a guide, by sure attraction led,)Tj
T*
( And strong impulsive gravity of head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 75)Tj
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( A wit with dunces, and a dunce with wits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Whate\222er the talents, or howe\222er designed,)Tj
T*
( We hang one jingling padlock on the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 161)Tj
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( The Right Divine of Kings to govern wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 187)Tj
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( For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it,)Tj
T*
( And write about it, Goddess, and about it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 251)Tj
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( With the same cement, ever sure to bind,)Tj
T*
( We bring to one dead level ev\222ry mind.)Tj
T*
( Then take him to develop, if you can,)Tj
T*
( And hew the block off, and get out the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 267)Tj
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( Isles of fragrance, lily-silver\222d vales.)Tj
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( Love-whisp\222ring woods, and lute-resounding waves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 306)Tj
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( She marked thee there,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Stretched on the rack of a too easy chair,)Tj
T*
( And heard thy everlasting yawn confess)Tj
T*
( The pains and penalties of idleness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 341)Tj
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( Thy truffles, Perigord! thy hams, Bayonne!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 558)Tj
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( See skulking Truth to her old cavern fled,)Tj
T*
( Mountains of casuistry heaped o\222er her head!)Tj
T*
( Philosophy, that leaned on Heav\222n before,)Tj
T*
( Shrinks to her second cause, and is no more.)Tj
T*
( Physic of Metaphysic begs defence,)Tj
T*
( And Metaphysic calls for aid on Sense!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 641)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Religion blushing veils her sacred fires,)Tj
T*
( And unawares Morality expires.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 649)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Lo! thy dread empire, Chaos! is restored;)Tj
T*
( Light dies before thy uncreating word:)Tj
T*
( Thy hand, great Anarch! lets the curtain fall;)Tj
T*
( And universal darkness buries all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Dunciad\222 \(1742\) bk. 4, l. 653)Tj
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( Vital spark of heav\222nly flame!)Tj
T*
( Quit, oh quit this mortal frame:)Tj
T*
( Trembling, hoping, ling\222ring, flying,)Tj
T*
( Oh the pain, the bliss of dying!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Dying Christian to his Soul\222 \(1730\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( What beck\222ning ghost, along the moonlight shade)Tj
T*
( Invites my step, and points to yonder glade?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady\222 \(1717\) l. 1)Tj
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( Is it, in heav\222n, a crime to love too well?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady\222 \(1717\) l. 6)Tj
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( Is there no bright reversion in the sky,)Tj
T*
( For those who greatly think, or bravely die?)Tj
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(\221Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady\222 \(1717\) l. 9)Tj
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( Ambition first sprung from your blest abodes;)Tj
T*
( The glorious fault of angels and of gods.)Tj
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( On all the line a sudden vengeance waits,)Tj
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( And frequent hearses shall besiege your gates.)Tj
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(\221Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady\222 \(1717\) l. 37)Tj
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( Oh happy state! when souls each other draw,)Tj
T*
( When love is liberty, and nature, law:)Tj
T*
( All then is full, possessing and possessed,)Tj
T*
( No craving void left aching in the breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Eloisa to Abelard\222 \(1717\) l. 91)Tj
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( Of all affliction taught a lover yet,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis sure the hardest science to forget!)Tj
T*
( How shall I lose the sin, yet keep the sense,)Tj
T*
( And love th\222 offender, yet detest th\222 offence?)Tj
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(\221Eloisa to Abelard\222 \(1717\) l. 189.)Tj
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( How happy is the blameless Vestal\222s lot!)Tj
T*
( The world forgetting, by the world forgot.)Tj
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(\221Eloisa to Abelard\222 \(1717\) l. 207)Tj
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( You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come:)Tj
T*
( Knock as you please, there\222s nobody at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Epigram: \223You beat your pate\224\221 \(1732\))Tj
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( I am his Highness\222 dog at Kew;)Tj
T*
( Pray, tell me sir, whose dog are you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Epigram Engraved on the Collar of a Dog which I gave to his Royal Hi\
ghness\222 \(1738\))Tj
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( Sir, I admit your gen\222ral rule)Tj
T*
( That every poet is a fool:)Tj
T*
( But you yourself may serve to show it,)Tj
T*
( That every fool is not a poet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Epigram from the French\222 \(1732\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( To observations which ourselves we make,)Tj
T*
( We grow more partial for th\222 observer\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 1\
1)Tj
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( Like following life thro\222 creatures you dissect,)Tj
T*
( You lose it in the moment you detect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 3\
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( \222Tis from high life high characters are drawn;)Tj
T*
( A saint in crape is twice a saint in lawn.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 8\
7)Tj
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( \222Tis education forms the common mind,)Tj
T*
( Just as the twig is bent, the tree\222s inclined.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 1\
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( Search then the Ruling Passion: There, alone,)Tj
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( The wild are constant, and the cunning known;)Tj
T*
( The fool consistent, and the false sincere.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 1\
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( \221Odious! in woollen! \222twould a saint provoke!\222)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 2\
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( \221One would not, sure, be frightful when one\222s dead\227)Tj
T*
( And\227Betty\227give this cheek a little red.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 2\
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( Old politicians chew on wisdom past,)Tj
T*
( And totter on in business to the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Cobham\222 \(1734\) l. 2\
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( A very heathen in the carnal part,)Tj
T*
( Yet still a sad, good Christian at her heart.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 67)Tj
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( Chaste to her husband, frank to all beside,)Tj
T*
( A teeming mistress, but a barren bride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 71)Tj
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( Virtue she finds too painful an endeavour,)Tj
T*
( Content to dwell in decencies for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 163)Tj
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( Still round and round the ghosts of Beauty glide,)Tj
T*
( And haunt the places where their honour died.)Tj
T*
( See how the world its veterans rewards!)Tj
T*
( A youth of frolics, an old age of cards.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 241)Tj
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( And mistress of herself, though china fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 268)Tj
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( Woman\222s at best a contradiction still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To a Lady\222 \(1735\) l. 270)Tj
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( Who shall decide, when doctors disagree,)Tj
T*
( And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Bathurst\222 \(1733\) l.\
1)Tj
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( But thousands die, without or this or that,)Tj
T*
( Die, and endow a college, or a cat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Bathurst\222 \(1733\) l.\
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( The ruling passion, be it what it will,)Tj
T*
( The ruling passion conquers reason still.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Bathurst\222 \(1733\) l.\
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( Who sees pale Mammon pine amidst his store,)Tj
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( Sees but a backward steward for the poor;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This year a reservoir, to keep and spare,)Tj
T*
( The next a fountain, spouting through his heir,)Tj
T*
( In lavish streams to quench a country\222s thirst,)Tj
T*
( And men and dogs shall drink him \222till they burst.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Bathurst\222 \(1733\) l.\
173)Tj
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( In the worst inn\222s worst room, with mat half-hung,)Tj
T*
( The floors of plaister, and the walls of dung,)Tj
T*
( On once a flock-bed, but repaired with straw,)Tj
T*
( With tape-tied curtains, never meant to draw,)Tj
T*
( The George and Garter dangling from that bed)Tj
T*
( Where tawdry yellow strove with dirty red,)Tj
T*
( Great Villiers lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Bathurst\222 \(1733\) l.\
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( Consult the genius of the place in all.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Burlington\222 \(1731\) \
l. 57)Tj
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( Still follow sense, of ev\222ry art the soul,)Tj
T*
( Parts answering parts shall slide into a whole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Burlington\222 \(1731\) \
l. 65)Tj
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( To rest, the cushion and soft Dean invite,)Tj
T*
( Who never mentions Hell to ears polite.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Burlington\222 \(1731\) \
l. 149)Tj
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( Another age shall see the golden ear)Tj
T*
( Imbrown the slope, and nod on the parterre,)Tj
T*
( Deep harvests bury all his pride has planned,)Tj
T*
( And laughing Ceres re-assume the land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Burlington\222 \(1731\) \
l. 173)Tj
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( \222Tis use alone that sanctifies expense,)Tj
T*
( And splendour borrows all her rays from sense.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Lord Burlington\222 \(1731\) \
l. 179)Tj
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( Statesman, yet friend to Truth! of soul sincere,)Tj
T*
( In action faithful, and in honour clear;)Tj
T*
( Who broke no promise, served no private end,)Tj
T*
( Who gained no title, and who lost no friend.)Tj
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(\221Epistles to Several Persons\222 \221To Mr. Addison\222 \(1720\) l. 6\
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( Shut, shut the door, good John! fatigued I said,)Tj
T*
( Tie up the knocker, say I\222m sick, I\222m dead,)Tj
T*
( The dog-star rages!)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 1)Tj
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( You think this cruel? take it for a rule,)Tj
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( No creature smarts so little as a fool.)Tj
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T*
( Thou unconcerned canst hear the mighty crack.)Tj
T*
( Pit, box, and gall\222ry in convulsions hurled,)Tj
T*
( Thou stand\222st unshook amidst a bursting world.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 83.)Tj
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( Destroy his fib, or sophistry; in vain,)Tj
T*
( The creature\222s at his dirty work again.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 91)Tj
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( As yet a child, nor yet a fool to fame,)Tj
T*
( I lisped in numbers, for the numbers came.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 127.)Tj
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( The Muse but served to ease some friend, not wife,)Tj
T*
( To help me through this long disease, my life.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 131.)Tj
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( Pretty! in amber to observe the forms)Tj
T*
( Of hairs, or straws, or dirt, or grubs, or worms;)Tj
T*
( The things, we know, are neither rich nor rare,)Tj
T*
( But wonder how the devil they got there?)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 169)Tj
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( And he, whose fustian\222s so sublimely bad,)Tj
T*
( It is not poetry, but prose run mad.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 187)Tj
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( Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer,)Tj
T*
( And without sneering, teach the rest to sneer;)Tj
T*
( Willing to wound, and yet afraid to strike,)Tj
T*
( Just hint a fault, and hesitate dislike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 201 \(referring to Addiso\
n\).)Tj
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( But still the great have kindness in reserve,)Tj
T*
( He helped to bury whom he helped to starve.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 247 \(on a noble patron\)\
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( Let Sporus tremble\227\222What? that thing of silk,)Tj
T*
( Sporus, that mere white curd of ass\222s milk?)Tj
T*
( Satire or sense, alas! can Sporus feel?)Tj
T*
( Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 305 \(on Lord Hervey\))Tj
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( Yet let me flap this bug with gilded wings,)Tj
T*
( This painted child of dirt that stinks and stings.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 309 \(on Lord Hervey\))Tj
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( Eternal smiles his emptiness betray,)Tj
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( As shallow streams run dimpling all the way.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 315 \(on Lord Hervey\))Tj
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( And he himself one vile antithesis.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 325 \(on Lord Hervey\))Tj
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( A cherub\222s face, a reptile all the rest.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 331 \(on Lord Hervey\))Tj
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( Unlearn\222d, he knew no schoolman\222s subtle art,)Tj
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( No language, but the language of the heart.)Tj
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(\221An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot\222 \(1735\) l. 398 \(on his own father\)\
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( Such were the notes, thy once-loved Poet sung,)Tj
T*
( Till Death untimely stopped his tuneful tongue.)Tj
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(\221Epistle to Robert Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer\222 \(1721\) l. 1\
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( She went, to plain-work, and to purling brooks,)Tj
T*
( Old-fashioned halls, dull aunts, and croaking rooks:)Tj
T*
( She went from op\222ra, park, assembly, play,)Tj
T*
( To morning-walks, and prayers three hours a day;)Tj
T*
( To pass her time \222twixt reading and Bohea,)Tj
T*
( To muse, and spill her solitary tea,)Tj
T*
( Or o\222er cold coffee trifle with the spoon,)Tj
T*
( Court the slow clock, and dine exact at noon.)Tj
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(\221Epistle to Miss Blount, on her leaving the Town, after the Coronatio\
n\222 \(of King George I, 1715\) \(1717\))Tj
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( Nature, and Nature\222s laws lay hid in night.)Tj
T*
( God said, Let Newton be! and all was light.)Tj
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(\221Epitaph: Intended for Sir Isaac Newton\222 \(1730\).)Tj
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( Of manners gentle, of affections mild;)Tj
T*
( In wit, a man; simplicity, a child;)Tj
T*
( With native humour temp\222ring virtuous rage,)Tj
T*
( Formed to delight at once and lash the age.)Tj
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(\221Epitaph: On Mr Gay in Westminster Abbey\222 \(1733\))Tj
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( Some are bewildered in the maze of schools,)Tj
T*
( And some made coxcombs Nature meant but fools.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 26)Tj
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( Some have at first for wits, then poets passed,)Tj
T*
( Turned critics next, and proved plain fools at last.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 36)Tj
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( First follow Nature, and your judgement frame)Tj
T*
( By her just standard, which is still the same:)Tj
T*
( Unerring Nature, still divinely bright,)Tj
T*
( One clear, unchanged, and universal light,)Tj
T*
( Life, force and beauty must to all impart,)Tj
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( At once the source and end and test of art.)Tj
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( Great wits may sometimes gloriously offend,)Tj
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( From vulgar bounds with brave disorder part)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 152.)Tj
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( A little learning is a dangerous thing;)Tj
T*
( Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring:)Tj
T*
( There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,)Tj
T*
( And drinking largely sobers us again.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 215.)Tj
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( Hills peep o\222er hills, and Alps on Alps arise!)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 232)Tj
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( Whoever thinks a faultless piece to see,)Tj
T*
( Thinks what ne\222er was, nor is, nor e\222er shall be.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 253)Tj
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( Poets like painters, thus unskilled to trace)Tj
T*
( The naked nature and the living grace,)Tj
T*
( With gold and jewels cover ev\222ry part,)Tj
T*
( And hide with ornaments their want of art.)Tj
T*
( True wit is Nature to advantage dressed,)Tj
T*
( What oft was thought, but ne\222er so well expressed.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 293)Tj
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( As some to church repair,)Tj
T*
( Not for the doctrine, but the music there.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 342)Tj
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( And ten low words oft creep in one dull line.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 347)Tj
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( Then, at the last and only couplet fraught)Tj
T*
( With some unmeaning thing they call a thought,)Tj
T*
( A needless Alexandrine ends the song,)Tj
T*
( That, like a wounded snake, drags its slow length along.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 354)Tj
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( True ease in writing comes from art, not chance,)Tj
T*
( As those move easiest who have learned to dance.)Tj
T*
( \222Tis not enough no harshness gives offence,)Tj
T*
( The sound must seem an echo to the sense.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 362)Tj
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( But when loud surges lash the sounding shore,)Tj
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( The hoarse, rough verse should like the torrent roar.)Tj
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( The line too labours, and the words move slow.)Tj
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( Yet let not each gay turn thy rapture move,)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 390)Tj
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( What woeful stuff this madrigal would be,)Tj
T*
( In some starved hackney sonneteer, or me?)Tj
T*
( But let a Lord once own the happy lines,)Tj
T*
( How the wit brightens! how the style refines!)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 418)Tj
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( Some praise at morning what they blame at night;)Tj
T*
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 430)Tj
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( To err is human; to forgive, divine.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 525)Tj
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( All seems infected that th\222infected spy,)Tj
T*
( As all looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 558)Tj
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( Men must be taught as if you taught them not,)Tj
T*
( And things unknown proposed as things forgot.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 574)Tj
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( With loads of learned lumber in his head.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 612)Tj
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( For fools rush in where angels fear to tread.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Criticism\222 \(1711\) l. 625)Tj
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( Awake, my St John! leave all meaner things)Tj
T*
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T*
( Let us \(since Life can little more supply)Tj
T*
( Than just to look about us and to die\))Tj
T*
( Expatiate free o\222er all this scene of man;)Tj
T*
( A mighty maze! but not without a plan.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 1)Tj
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( Eye Nature\222s walks, shoot Folly as it flies,)Tj
T*
( And catch the Manners living as they rise.)Tj
T*
( Laugh where we must, be candid where we can;)Tj
T*
( But vindicate the ways of God to man.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 13)Tj
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T*
( A hero perish, or a sparrow fall,)Tj
T*
( Atoms or systems into ruin hurled,)Tj
T*
( And now a bubble burst, and now a world.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 95)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( Behind the cloud-topped hill, an humbler heav\222n.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 99)Tj
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( But thinks, admitted to that equal sky,)Tj
T*
( His faithful dog shall bear him company.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 111)Tj
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( Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes,)Tj
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( Men would be angels, angels would be gods.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 125)Tj
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( Why has not man a microscopic eye?)Tj
T*
( For this plain reason, man is not a fly.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 193)Tj
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( The spider\222s touch, how exquisitely fine!)Tj
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( Feels at each thread, and lives along the line.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 217)Tj
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( All are but parts of one stupendous whole,)Tj
T*
( Whose body, Nature is, and God the soul.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 267)Tj
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( All nature is but art, unknown to thee;)Tj
T*
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T*
( All discord, harmony, not understood;)Tj
T*
( All partial evil, universal good:)Tj
T*
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T*
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 1 \(1733\) l. 289)Tj
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
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T*
( In doubt to deem himself a gd, or beast;)Tj
T*
( In doubt his mind or body to prefer,)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
( Whether he thinks too little, or too much.)Tj
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T*
( Sole judge of truth, in endless error hurled;)Tj
T*
( The glory, jest, and riddle of the world!)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 2 \(1733\) l. 15)Tj
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( Go, teach Eternal Wisdom how to rule\227)Tj
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( Then drop into thyself, and be a fool!)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 2 \(1733\) l. 29)Tj
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( Fixed like a plant on his peculiar spot,)Tj
T*
( To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot.)Tj
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T*
( As, to be hated, needs but to be seen;)Tj
T*
( Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face,)Tj
T*
( We first endure, then pity, then embrace.)Tj
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T*
( The fool is happy that he knows no more.)Tj
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( Behold the child, by Nature\222s kindly law)Tj
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( Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 2 \(1733\) l. 275)Tj
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( Scarfs, garters, gold, amuse his riper stage;)Tj
T*
( And beads and pray\222r-books are the toys of age:)Tj
T*
( Pleased with this bauble still, as that before;)Tj
T*
( Till tired he sleeps, and life\222s poor play is o\222er!)Tj
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( For forms of government let fools contest;)Tj
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( Whate\222er is best administered is best:)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 3 \(1733\) l.303)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Oh Happiness! our being\222s end and aim!)Tj
T*
( Good, pleasure, ease, content! whate\222er thy name:)Tj
T*
( That something still which prompts th\222 eternal sigh,)Tj
T*
( For which we bear to live, or dare to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( A wit\222s a feather, and a chief a rod;)Tj
T*
( An honest man\222s the noblest work of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 247)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( If parts allure thee, think how Bacon shined,)Tj
T*
( The wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind:)Tj
T*
( Or ravished with the whistling of a name,)Tj
T*
( See Cromwell, damned to everlasting fame!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 281)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Slave to no sect, who takes no private road,)Tj
T*
( But looks thro\222 Nature, up to Nature\222s God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 331)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( True self-love and social are the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 396)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( All our knowledge is, ourselves to know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221An Essay on Man\222 Epistle 4 \(1734\) l. 398)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( For I, who hold sage Homer\222s rule the best,)Tj
T*
( Welcome the coming, speed the going guest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Satire 2 \(1734\) l. 159 \(\221\
speed the parting guest\222 in Pope\222s translation of )Tj
T*
(The Odyssey \(1725-6\) bk. 15, l. 84\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( Our Gen\222rals now, retired to their estates,)Tj
T*
( Hang their old trophies o\222er the garden gates,)Tj
T*
( In life\222s cool ev\222ning satiate of applause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 1, Epistle 1 \(1738\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( Not to go back, is somewhat to advance,)Tj
T*
( And men must walk at least before they dance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 1, Epistle 1 \(1738\) l. 53)Tj
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( Get place and wealth, if possible, with grace;)Tj
T*
( If not, by any means get wealth and place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 1, Epistle 1 \(1738\) l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Not to admire, is all the art I know,)Tj
T*
( To make men happy, and to keep them so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 1, Epistle 6 \(1738\) l. 1)Tj
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( The worst of madmen is a saint run mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 1, Epistle 6 \(1738\) l. 27)Tj
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( Shakespeare \(whom you and ev\222ry play-house bill)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Style the divine, the matchless, what you will\))Tj
T*
( For gain, not glory, winged his roving flight,)Tj
T*
( And grew immortal in his own despite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Who now reads Cowley? if he pleases yet,)Tj
T*
( His moral pleases, not his pointed wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The people\222s voice is odd,)Tj
T*
( It is, and it is not, the voice of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 89.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( But those who cannot write, and those who can,)Tj
T*
( All rhyme, and scrawl, and scribble, to a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Waller was smooth; but Dryden taught to join)Tj
T*
( The varying verse, the full-resounding line,)Tj
T*
( The long majestic march, and energy divine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Ev\222n copious Dryden, wanted, or forgot,)Tj
T*
( The last and greatest art, the art to blot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 280)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( There still remains, to mortify a wit,)Tj
T*
( The many-headed monster of the pit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Horace bk. 2, Epistle 1 \(1737\) l. 304)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Let humble Allen, with an awkward shame,)Tj
T*
( Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Epilogue to the Satires \(1738\) Dialogue 1\
, l. 135)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Ask you what provocation I have had?)Tj
T*
( The strong antipathy of good to bad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Epilogue to the Satires \(1738\) Dialogue 2\
, l. 197)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Yes, I am proud; I must be proud to see)Tj
T*
( Men not afraid of God, afraid of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(\221Imitations of Horace\222 Epilogue to the Satires \(1738\) Dialogue 2\
, l. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( Ye gods! annihilate but space and time,)Tj
T*
( And make two lovers happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Martinus Scriblerus...or The Art of Sinking in Poetry\222 ch. 11 \(M\
iscellanies, 1727\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Happy the man, whose wish and care)Tj
T*
( A few paternal acres bound,)Tj
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( Content to breathe his native air,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In his own ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on Solitude\222 \(written c.1700, when aged about twelve\))Tj
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( Thus let me live, unseen, unknown;)Tj
T*
( Thus unlamented let me die;)Tj
T*
( Steal from the world, and not a stone)Tj
T*
( Tell where I lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on Solitude\222 \(written c.1700\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Where\222er you walk, cool gales shall fan the glade,)Tj
T*
( Trees, where you sit, shall crowd into a shade:)Tj
T*
( Where\222er you tread, the blushing flow\222rs shall rise,)Tj
T*
( And all things flourish where you turn your eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Pastorals\222 \(1709\) \221Summer\222 l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( To wake the soul by tender strokes of art,)Tj
T*
( To raise the genius, and to mend the heart;)Tj
T*
( To make mankind, in conscious virtue bold,)Tj
T*
( Live o\222er each scene, and be what they behold:)Tj
T*
( For this the Tragic Muse first trod the stage.)Tj
T*
( Prologue to Addison\222s Cato \(1713\) l. 1)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( What dire offence from am\222rous causes springs,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What mighty contests rise from trivial things.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Now lap-dogs give themselves the rousing shake,)Tj
T*
( And sleepless lovers, just at twelve, awake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 1, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( With varying vanities, from ev\222ry part,)Tj
T*
( They shift the moving toyshop of their heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 1, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Here files of pins extend their shining rows,)Tj
T*
( Puffs, powders, patches, bibles, billet-doux.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 1, l. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( Bright as the sun, her eyes the gazers strike,)Tj
T*
( And, like the sun, they shine on all alike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 2, l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( If to her share some female errors fall,)Tj
T*
( Look on her face, and you\222ll forget \222em all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 2, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Fair tresses man\222s imperial race insnare,)Tj
T*
( And beauty draws us with a single hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 2, l. 27)Tj
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( Belinda smil\222d, and all the world was gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 2, l. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( Whether the nymph shall break Diana\222s law,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or some frail china jar receive a flaw,)Tj
T*
( Or stain her honour, or her new brocade,)Tj
T*
( Forget her pray\222rs, or miss a masquerade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 2, l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey,)Tj
T*
( Dost sometimes counsel take\227and sometimes tea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( At ev\222ry word a reputation dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( The hungry judges soon the sentence sign,)Tj
T*
( And wretches hang that jury-men may dine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.92047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.00456 Tm
( Let spades be trumps! she said, and trumps they were.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.25456 Tm
( Coffee, \(which makes the politician wise,)Tj
T*
( And see thro\222 all things with his half-shut eyes\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.42047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( Not louder shrieks to pitying heav\222n are cast,)Tj
T*
( When husbands or when lapdogs breathe their last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.67047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 3, l. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.75456 Tm
( Sir Plume, of amber snuff-box justly vain,)Tj
T*
( And the nice conduct of a clouded cane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 4, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( Beauties in vain their pretty eyes may roll;)Tj
T*
( Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape of the Lock\222 \(1714\) canto 5, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.25456 Tm
( Teach me to feel another\222s woe;)Tj
T*
( To hide the fault I see;)Tj
T*
( That mercy I to others show,)Tj
T*
( That mercy show to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.42047 Tm
(\221The Universal Prayer\222 \(1738\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.50456 Tm
( Here hills and vales, the woodland and the plain,)Tj
T*
( Here earth and water seem to strive again;)Tj
T*
( Not chaos-like together crushed and bruised,)Tj
T*
( But, as the world, harmoniously confused:)Tj
T*
( Where order in variety we see,)Tj
T*
( And where, though all things differ, all agree.)Tj
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(\221Windsor Forest\222 \(1711\) l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Party-spirit, which at best is but the madness of many for the gain \
of a few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Letter to Edward Blount, 27 August 1714, in George Sherburn \(ed.\) \221\
The Correspondence of Alexander )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Pope\222 \(1956\) vol. 1, p. 247)Tj
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( How often are we to die before we go quite off this stage? In every \
friend we lose a part of )Tj
T*
(ourselves, and the best part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Letter to Jonathan Swift, 5 December 1732, in George Sherburn \(ed.\) \221\
The Correspondence of Alexander )Tj
T*
(Pope\222 \(1956\) vol. 3, p. 335)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 612.75456 Tm
( To endeavour to work upon the vulgar with fine sense, is like attemp\
ting to hew blocks with a )Tj
T*
(razor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.92047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1727\) vol. 2 \221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.00456 Tm
( A man should never be ashamed to own he has been in the wrong, which\
is but saying, in other )Tj
T*
(words, that he is wiser to-day than he was yesterday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1727\) vol. 2 \221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( It is with narrow-souled people as with narrow-necked bottles: the l\
ess they have in them, the )Tj
T*
(more noise they make in pouring it out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1727\) vol. 2 \221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.50456 Tm
( When men grow virtuous in their old age, they only make a sacrifice \
to God of the devil\222s )Tj
T*
(leavings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1727\) vol. 2 \221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( The most positive men are the most credulous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(\221Miscellanies\222 \(1727\) vol. 2 \221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.00456 Tm
( All gardening is landscape-painting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(1734, in Joseph Spence \221Anecdotes\222 \(ed. J. Osborn, 1966\) no. 606\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( Here am I, dying of a hundred good symptoms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(To George, Lord Lyttelton, 15 May 1744, in Joseph Spence \221Anecdotes\222\
\(ed. J. Osborn, 1966\) no. 637)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 272.2124 Tm
( 4.79 Sir Karl Popper 1902\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Our belief in any particular natural law cannot have a safer basis t\
han our unsuccessful critical )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attempts to refute it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221Conjectures and Refutations\222 \(1963\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.75456 Tm
( I shall certainly admit a system as empirical or scientific only if \
it is capable of being tested by )Tj
T*
(experience. These considerations suggest that not the verifiability but \
the falsifiability of a system )Tj
T*
(is to be taken as a criterion of demarcation...It must be possible for a\
n empirical scientific system )Tj
T*
(to be refuted by experience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221The Logic of Scientific Discovery\222 \(1934\) ch. 1, sect. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( We may become the makers of our fate when we have ceased to pose as \
its prophets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221The Open Society and its Enemies\222 \(1945\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( We must plan for freedom, and not only for security, if for no other\
reason than that only )Tj
T*
(freedom can make security secure.)Tj
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(\221The Open Society and its Enemies\222 \(1945\) vol. 2, ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( There is no history of mankind, there are only many histories of all\
kinds of aspects of human )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(life. And one of these is the history of political power. This is elevat\
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T*
(world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Open Society and its Enemies\222 \(1945\) vol. 2, ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Our civilization...has not yet fully recovered from the shock of its\
birth\227the transition from )Tj
T*
(the tribal or \221closed society\222, with its submission to magical for\
ces, to the \221open society\222 which )Tj
T*
(sets free the critical powers of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Open Society and its Enemies\222 \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Piecemeal social engineering resembles physical engineering in regar\
ding the ends as beyond )Tj
T*
(the province of technology.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Poverty of Historicism\222 \(1957\) pt. 3, sect. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Science must begin with myths, and with the criticism of myths.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(In C. A. Mace \(ed.\) \221British Philosophy in the Mid-Century\222 \221\
The Philosophy of Science\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 485.9624 Tm
( 4.80 Cole Porter 1891-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But I\222m always true to you, darlin\222, in my fashion,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yes, I\222m always true to you, darlin\222, in my way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221Always True to You in My Fashion\222 \(1948 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( In olden days a glimpse of stocking)Tj
T*
( Was looked on as something shocking)Tj
T*
( Now, heaven knows,)Tj
T*
( Anything goes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221Anything Goes\222 \(1934 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.75456 Tm
( When they begin the Beguine)Tj
T*
( It brings back the sound of music so tender,)Tj
T*
( It brings back a night of tropical splendour,)Tj
T*
( It brings back a memory ever green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Begin the Beguine\222 \(1935 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Don\222t fence me in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( How strange the change from major to minor)Tj
T*
( Every time we say goodbye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Every Time We Say Goodbye\222 \(1944 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( I get no kick from champagne,)Tj
T*
( Mere alcohol doesn\222t thrill me at all,)Tj
T*
( So tell me why should it be true)Tj
T*
( That I get a kick out of you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221I Get a Kick Out of You\222 \(1934 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( I\222ve got you under my skin.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( So goodbye dear, and Amen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Here\222s hoping we meet now and then,)Tj
T*
( It was great fun,)Tj
T*
( But it was just one of those things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Just One of Those Things\222 \(1935 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Birds do it, bees do it,)Tj
T*
( Even educated fleas do it.)Tj
T*
( Let\222s do it, let\222s fall in love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Let\222s Do It\222 \(1954 song; words added to the 1928 original\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Miss Otis regrets \(she\222s unable to lunch today\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( My heart belongs to Daddy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1938\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Night and day, you are the one,)Tj
T*
( Only you beneath the moon and under the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Night and Day\222 \(1932 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Have you heard it\222s in the stars, )Tj
T*
( Next July we collide with Mars? )Tj
T*
( Well, did you evah! )Tj
T*
( What a swell party this is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Well, Did You Evah?\222 \(1940 song; revived for the film High Socie\
ty, 1956\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( You\222re the top.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 303.7124 Tm
( 4.81 Beilby Porteus 1731-1808)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One murder made a villain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Millions a hero.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Death\222 \(1759\) l. 154.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( War its thousands slays, Peace its ten thousands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Death\222 \(1759\) l. 179)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Teach him how to live,)Tj
T*
( And, oh! still harder lesson! how to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Death\222 \(1759\) l. 319)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 124.4624 Tm
( 4.82 Beatrix Potter 1866-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In the time of swords and periwigs and full-skirted coats with flowe\
red lappets\227when )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gentlemen wore ruffles, and gold-laced waistcoats of paduasoy and taffet\
a\227there lived a tailor in )Tj
T*
(Gloucester.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221The Tailor of Gloucester\222 \(1903\) p. 9)Tj
ET
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( I am worn to a ravelling...I am undone and worn to a thread-paper, f\
or I have no more twist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Tailor of Gloucester\222 \(1903\) p. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( It is said that the effect of eating too much lettuce is \221soporif\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies\222 \(1909\) p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Once upon a time there were four little Rabbits, and their names wer\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Cottontail, and Peter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Tale of Peter Rabbit\222 \(1902\) p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( You may go into the fields or down the lane, but don\222t go into Mr\
McGregor\222s garden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Tale of Peter Rabbit\222 \(1902\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Peter sat down to rest; he was out of breath and trembling with frig\
ht...After a time he began to )Tj
T*
(wander about, going lippity-lippity\227not very fast, and looking all ro\
und.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Tale of Peter Rabbit\222 \(1902\) p. 58)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 521.9624 Tm
( 4.83 Henry Codman Potter 1835-1908)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have exchanged the Washingtonian dignity for the Jeffersonian sim\
plicity, which was, in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(truth, only another name for the Jacksonian vulgarity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(Address, Washington Centennial, 30 April 1889, in \221Bishop Potter\222s\
Address\222 \(1890\) p. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.2124 Tm
( 4.84 Stephen Potter 1900-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A good general rule is to state that the bouquet is better than the \
taste, and vice versa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221One-Upmanship\222 \(1952\) ch. 14 \(on wine-tasting\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( How to be one up\227how to make the other man feel that something ha\
s gone wrong, however )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(slightly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(\221Lifemanship\222 \(1950\) p. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.00456 Tm
( Each of us can, by ploy or gambit, most naturally gain the advantage\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.17047 Tm
(\221Lifemanship\222 \(1950\) p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 284.25456 Tm
( \221Yes, but not in the South\222, with slight adjustments, will do \
for any argument about any place, )Tj
T*
(if not about any person.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221Lifemanship\222 \(1950\) p. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( If you have nothing to say, or, rather, something extremely stupid a\
nd obvious, say it, but in a )Tj
T*
(\221plonking\222 tone of voice\227i.e. roundly, but hollowly and dogmati\
cally.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(\221Lifemanship\222 \(1950\) p. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( In Newstatesmanship...definite pros and cons are barred: and they ar\
e difficult, anyway, )Tj
T*
(because pro-ing and conning is never the best way of going one better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.92047 Tm
(\221Lifemanship\222 \(1950\) p. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.00456 Tm
( The theory and practice of gamesmanship or The art of winning games \
without actually )Tj
T*
(cheating.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1947\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 53.9624 Tm
( 4.85 Eug\351ne Pottier 1816-87)Tj
ET
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( Debout! les damn\350s de la terre!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Debout! les for\347ats de la faim!)Tj
T*
( La raison tonne en son crat\351re,)Tj
T*
( C\222est l\222\350ruption de la fin.)Tj
T*
( Du pass\350 faisons table rase,)Tj
T*
( Foule esclave, debout, debout,)Tj
T*
( Le monde va changer de base,)Tj
T*
( Nous ne sommes rien, soyons tout!)Tj
T*
( C\222est la lutte finale)Tj
T*
( Groupons-nous, et, demain,)Tj
T*
( L\222Internationale)Tj
T*
( Sera le genre humain.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( On your feet, you damned souls of the earth! On your feet, inmates o\
f hunger\222s prison! Reason )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is rumbling in its crater, and its final eruption is on its way. Let us \
wipe clean the slate of the past)Tj
T*
(\227on your feet, you enslaved multitude, on your feet\227the world is t\
o undergo a fundamental )Tj
T*
(change: we are nothing, let us be everything! This is the final conflict\
: let us form up and, )Tj
T*
(tomorrow, the International will encompass the human race.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Internationale\222, in H. E. Piggot \221Songs that made History\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 413.2124 Tm
( 4.86 Ezra Pound 1885-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Winter is icummen in,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lhude sing Goddamm,)Tj
T*
( Raineth drop and staineth slop,)Tj
T*
( And how the wind doth ramm!)Tj
T*
( Sing: Goddamm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221Ancient Music\222 \(1917\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( With Usura)Tj
T*
( With usura hath no man a house of good stone)Tj
T*
( each block cut smooth and well fitting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(\221Cantos\222 \(1954\) no. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( Usura slayeth the child in the womb)Tj
T*
( It stayeth the young man\222s courting)Tj
T*
( It hath brought palsey to bed, lyeth)Tj
T*
( between the young bride and her bridegroom)Tj
T*
( contra naturam)Tj
T*
( They have brought whores for Eleusis)Tj
T*
( Corpses are set to banquet)Tj
T*
( at behest of usura.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Cantos\222 \(1954\) no. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( Tching prayed on the mountain and)Tj
ET
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( wrote make it new)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( on his bath tub.)Tj
T*
( Day by day make it new)Tj
T*
( cut underbrush,)Tj
T*
( pile the logs)Tj
T*
( keep it growing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Cantos\222 \(1954\) no. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Bah! I have sung women in three cities,)Tj
T*
( But it is all the same;)Tj
T*
( And I will sing of the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Cino\222 \(1908\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Hang it all, Robert Browning,)Tj
T*
( There can be but the one \221Sordello\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Draft of XXX Cantos\222 \(1930\) no. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( In the gloom, the gold gathers the light against it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Draft of XXX Cantos\222 \(1930\) no. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( And even I can remember)Tj
T*
( A day when the historians left blanks in their writings,)Tj
T*
( I mean for things they didn\222t know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Draft of XXX Cantos\222 \(1930\) no. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( And she is dying piece-meal)Tj
T*
( of a sort of emotional anaemia.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( And round about there is a rabble)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( of the filthy, sturdy, unkillable infants of the very poor.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221The Garden\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( For three years, out of key with his time,)Tj
T*
( He strove to resuscitate the dead art)Tj
T*
( Of poetry; to maintain \221the sublime\222)Tj
T*
( In the old sense. Wrong from the start\227)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( No, hardly, but seeing he had been born)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In a half-savage country, out of date;)Tj
T*
( Bent resolutely on wringing lilies from the acorns;)Tj
T*
( Capaneus; trout for factitious bait.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 128.25456 Tm
( His true Penelope was Flaubert,)Tj
T*
( He fished by obstinate isles;)Tj
T*
( Observed the elegance of Circe\222s hair)Tj
T*
( Rather than the mottoes on sundials.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
on de son s\350pulcre\222 pt. 1)Tj
ET
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( The age demanded an image)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of its accelerated grimace,)Tj
T*
( Something for the modern stage,)Tj
T*
( Not, at any rate, an Attic grace;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Not, not certainly, the obscure reveries)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of the inward gaze;)Tj
T*
( Better mendacities)Tj
T*
( Than the classics in paraphrase!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( The tea-rose tea-gown, etc.)Tj
T*
( Supplants the mousseline of Cos,)Tj
T*
( The pianola \221replaces\222)Tj
T*
( Sappho\222s barbitos.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Christ follows Dionysus,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Phallic and ambrosial)Tj
T*
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T*
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0 -1.45 TD
( All things are a flowing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sage Heracleitus says;)Tj
T*
( But a tawdry cheapness)Tj
T*
( Shall outlast our days.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Even the Christian beauty)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Defects\227after Samothrace;)Tj
T*
( We see)Tj
T*
( Decreed in the market place.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( O bright Apollo,)Tj
T*
( What god, man, or hero)Tj
T*
( Shall I place a tin wreath upon!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
on de son s\350pulcre\222 pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.75456 Tm
( Some quick to arm,)Tj
T*
( some for adventure,)Tj
T*
( some from fear of weakness,)Tj
T*
( some from fear of censure,)Tj
T*
( some for love of slaughter, in imagination,)Tj
T*
( learning later...)Tj
T*
( some in fear, learning love of slaughter;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Died some, pro patria,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( non \221dulce\222 non \221et decor\222...)Tj
ET
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( walked eye-deep in hell)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( believing in old men\222s lies, the unbelieving)Tj
T*
( came home, home to a lie.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( hysterias, trench confessions,)Tj
T*
( laughter out of dead bellies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( There died a myriad,)Tj
T*
( And of the best, among them,)Tj
T*
( For an old bitch gone in the teeth,)Tj
T*
( For a botched civilization,)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Charm, smiling at the good mouth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quick eyes gone under earth\222s lid,)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( For two gross of broken statues,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For a few thousand battered books.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.17047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221E. P. Ode pour l\222\350lecti\
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15 0 0 15 10 455.25456 Tm
( The tip\222s a good one, as for literature)Tj
T*
( It gives no man a sinecure.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And no one knows, at sight, a masterpiece.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And give up verse, my boy,)Tj
T*
( There\222s nothing in it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221Hugh Selwyn Mauberley\222 \(1920\) \221Mr Nixon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.75456 Tm
( The apparition of these faces in the crowd;)Tj
T*
( Petals on a wet, black bough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221In a Station of the Metro\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( O woe, woe,)Tj
T*
( People are born and die,)Tj
T*
( We also shall be dead pretty soon)Tj
T*
( Therefore let us act as if we were dead already.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221Mr Housman\222s Message\222 \(1911\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.25456 Tm
( The ant\222s a centaur in his dragon world.)Tj
T*
( Pull down thy vanity, it is not man)Tj
T*
( Made courage, or made order, or made grace,)Tj
T*
( Pull down thy vanity, I say pull down.)Tj
T*
( Learn of the green world what can be thy place)Tj
T*
( In scaled invention or true artistry,)Tj
T*
( Pull down thy vanity,)Tj
T*
( Paquin pull down!)Tj
T*
( The green casque has outdone your elegance.)Tj
ET
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(\221Pisan Cantos\222 \(1948\) no. 81)Tj
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( Pull down thy vanity)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou art a beaten dog beneath the hail,)Tj
T*
( A swollen magpie in a fitful sun,)Tj
T*
( Half black half white)Tj
T*
( Nor knowst\222ou wing from tail)Tj
T*
( Pull down thy vanity,)Tj
T*
( Paquin, pull down!)Tj
T*
( The green casque has outdone your elegance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Pisan Cantos\222 \(1948\) no. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Haie! Haie!)Tj
T*
( These were the swift to harry;)Tj
T*
( These were the keen-scented;)Tj
T*
( These were the souls of blood.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Slow on the leash,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( pallid the leash-men!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221The Return\222 \(1912\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( The leaves fall early this autumn, in wind.)Tj
T*
( The paired butterflies are already yellow with August)Tj
T*
( Over the grass in the West garden;)Tj
T*
( They hurt me. I grow older.)Tj
T*
( If you are coming down through the narrows of the river Kiang,)Tj
T*
( Please let me know beforehand,)Tj
T*
( And I will come out to meet you)Tj
T*
( As far as Cho-fu-sa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221The River Merchant\222s Wife\222 \(1915\) from the Chinese of Rihaku\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( He hath not heart for harping, nor in ring-having)Tj
T*
( Nor winsomeness to wife, nor world\222s delight)Tj
T*
( Nor any whit else save the wave\222s slash,)Tj
T*
( Yet longing comes upon him to fare forth on the water.)Tj
T*
( Bosque takes blossom, cometh beauty of berries,)Tj
T*
( Fields to fairness, land fares brisker,)Tj
T*
( All this admonisheth man eager of mood,)Tj
T*
( The heart turns to travel so that he then thinks)Tj
T*
( On flood-ways to be far departing.)Tj
T*
( Cuckoo calleth with gloomy crying,)Tj
T*
( He singeth summerward, bodeth sorrow,)Tj
T*
( The bitter heart\222s blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221The Seafarer\222 \(1912\) from the Anglo-Saxon)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( I had over-prepared the event,)Tj
ET
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( that much was ominous.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With middle-ageing care)Tj
T*
( I had laid out just the right books.)Tj
T*
( I had almost turned down the pages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Villanelle: the psychological hour\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( The author\222s conviction on this day of New Year is that music beg\
ins to atrophy when it )Tj
T*
(departs too far from the dance; that poetry begins to atrophy when it ge\
ts too far from music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The ABC of Reading\222 \(1934\) \221Warning\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Any general statement is like a cheque drawn on a bank. Its value de\
pends on what is there to )Tj
T*
(meet it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The ABC of Reading\222 \(1934\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Literature is news that STAYS news.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The ABC of Reading\222 \(1934\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Real education must ultimately be limited to one who insists on know\
ing, the rest is mere )Tj
T*
(sheep-herding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The ABC of Reading\222 \(1934\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Great literature is simply language charged with meaning to the utmo\
st possible degree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221How To Read\222 \(1931\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Artists are the antennae of the race, but the bullet-headed many wil\
l never learn to trust their )Tj
T*
(great artists.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Literary Essays\222 \(1954\)\222Henry James\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Poetry must be as well written as prose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(Letter to Harriet Monroe, January 1915, in D. D. Paige \(ed.\) \221Sele\
cted Letters of Ezra Pound\222 \(1950\) p. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Objectivity and again objectivity, and expression: no)Tj
T*
( hindside-before-ness, no straddled adjectives \(as \221addled mosses\
dank\222\), no Tennysonianness )Tj
T*
(of speech; nothing\227nothing that you couldn\222t, in some circumstance\
, in the stress of some )Tj
T*
(emotion, actually say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(Letter to Harriet Monroe, January 1915, in D. D. Paige \(ed.\) \221Sele\
cted Letters of Ezra Pound\222 \(1950\) p. 48)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 230.9624 Tm
( 4.87 Anthony Powell 1905\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He fell in love with himself at first sight and it is a passion to w\
hich he has always remained )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(faithful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221The Acceptance World\222 \(1955\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Self-love seems so often unrequited.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221The Acceptance World\222 \(1955\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Dinner at the Huntercombes\222 possessed \221only two dramatic featu\
res\227the wine was a farce and )Tj
T*
(the food a tragedy\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Acceptance World\222 \(1955\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Books do furnish a room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1971\).)Tj
ET
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( Parents\227especially step-parents\227are sometimes a bit of a disap\
pointment to their children. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(They don\222t fufil the promise of their early years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Buyer\222s Market\222 \(1952\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A dance to the music of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Title of novel sequence \(1951-75\), after \221Le 4 stagioni che ballano\
al suono del tempo\222, the title given by )Tj
T*
(Giovanni Pietro Bellori to a painting by Nicolas Poussin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( He\222s so wet you could shoot snipe off him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(\221A Question of Upbringing\222 \(1951\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( Growing old is like being increasingly penalized for a crime you hav\
en\222t committed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.92047 Tm
(\221Temporary Kings\222 \(1973\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 561.7124 Tm
( 4.88 Enoch Powell 1912\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History is littered with the wars which everybody knew would never h\
appen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(Speech to Conservative Party Conference, 19 October 1967, in \221The Tim\
es\222 20 October 1967)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding. Like the Roman, I seem\
to see \221the River Tiber )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(foaming with much blood\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(Speech at Annual Meeting of West Midlands Area Conservative Political Ce\
ntre, Birmingham, 20 April 1968, )Tj
T*
(in \221Observer\222 21 April 1968)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 422.2124 Tm
( 4.89 Sir John Powell 1645-1713)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Let us consider the reason of the case. For nothing is law that is n\
ot reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.67047 Tm
(Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Lord Raymond Reports, p. 911)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 352.4624 Tm
( 4.90 John O\222Connor Power)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The mules of politics: without pride of ancestry, or hope of posteri\
ty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.92047 Tm
(In H. H. Asquith \221Memories and Reflections\222 \(1928\) vol. 1, ch. 1\
6 \(referring to the Liberal Unionists\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 282.7124 Tm
( 4.91 Winthrop Mackworth Praed 1802-39)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Of science and logic he chatters)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As fine and as fast as he can;)Tj
T*
( Though I am no judge of such matters,)Tj
T*
( I\222m sure he\222s a talented man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Talented Man\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.9624 Tm
( 4.92 Elvis Presley 1935-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love me tender, love me true,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All my dreams fulfill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Love Me Tender\222 \(1956 song; with Vera Matson\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 71.2124 Tm
( 4.93 The Book of Common Prayer 1662)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It hath been the wisdom of the Church of England, ever since the fir\
st compiling of her Publick )Tj
ET
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(Liturgy, to keep the mean between the two extremes, of too much stiffnes\
s in refusing, and of too )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(much easiness in admitting any variation from it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Preface\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( There was never any thing by the wit of man so well devised, or so s\
ure established, which in )Tj
T*
(continuance of time hath not been corrupted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Preface\222 Concerning the Service of the Church)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Dearly beloved brethren, the Scripture moveth us in sundry places to\
acknowledge and confess )Tj
T*
(our manifold sins and wickedness; and that we should not dissemble nor c\
loke them before the )Tj
T*
(face of Almighty God our heavenly Father; but confess them with an humbl\
e, lowly, penitent, )Tj
T*
(and obedient heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, after the beginning Sentences)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( I pray and beseech you, as many as are here present, to accompany me\
with a pure heart, and )Tj
T*
(humble voice, unto the throne of the heavenly grace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, after the beginning Sentences)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( We have erred, and strayed from thy ways like lost sheep. We have fo\
llowed too much the )Tj
T*
(devices and desires of our own hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, General Confession)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( We have left undone those things which we ought to have done; And we\
have done those )Tj
T*
(things which we ought not to have done; And there is no health in us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, General Confession)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Restore thou them that are penitent; According to thy promises decla\
red unto mankind in )Tj
T*
(Christ Jesu our Lord. And grant, O most merciful Father, for his sake; T\
hat we may hereafter live )Tj
T*
(a godly, righteous, and sober life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, General Confession)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( And forgive us our trespasses, As we forgive them that trespass agai\
nst us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, The Lord\222s Prayer.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( Glory be to the Father, and to the Son: and to the Holy Ghost; As it\
was in the beginning, is )Tj
T*
(now, and ever shall be: world without end. Amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Gloria.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( We praise thee, O God: we acknowledge thee to be the Lord.)Tj
T*
( All the earth doth worship thee: the Father everlasting.)Tj
T*
( To thee all Angels cry aloud: the Heavens, and all the Powers therei\
n.)Tj
T*
( To thee Cherubin, and Seraphin: continually do cry,)Tj
T*
( Holy, Holy, Holy: Lord God of Sabaoth;)Tj
T*
( Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty: of thy Glory.)Tj
T*
( The glorious company of the Apostles: praise thee.)Tj
T*
( The goodly fellowship of the Prophets: praise thee.)Tj
T*
( The noble army of Martyrs: praise thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Te Deum.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death: thou didst open the\
)Tj
ET
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( Kingdom of Heaven to all believers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Te Deum.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Day by day: we magnify thee;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And we worship thy Name: ever world without end.)Tj
T*
( Vouchsafe, O Lord: to keep us this day without sin.)Tj
T*
( O Lord, have mercy upon us: have mercy upon us.)Tj
T*
( O Lord, let thy mercy lighten upon us: as our trust is in thee.)Tj
T*
( O Lord, in thee have I trusted: let me never be confounded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Te Deum.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( O all ye Works of the Lord, bless ye the Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( O ye Waters that be above the Firmament, bless ye the Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( O ye Showers, and Dew, bless ye the Lord: praise him, and magnify hi\
m for ever.)Tj
T*
( O ye Winds of God, bless ye the Lord: praise him, and magnify him fo\
r ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( O ye Dews, and Frosts, bless ye the Lord: praise him, and magnify hi\
m for ever.)Tj
T*
( O ye Frost and Cold, bless ye the Lord: praise him and magnify him f\
or ever.)Tj
T*
( O ye Ice and Snow, bless ye the Lord: praise him and magnify him for\
ever.)Tj
T*
( O ye Nights, and Days, bless ye the Lord: praise him, and magnify hi\
m for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( O let the Earth bless the Lord: yea, let it praise him, and magnify \
him for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( O all ye Green Things upon the Earth, bless ye the Lord: praise him,\
and magnify him for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( O ye Whales, and all that move in the Waters, bless ye the Lord: pra\
ise him, and magnify him )Tj
T*
(for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Benedicite)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth:)Tj
T*
( And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord, Who was conceived by the \
Holy Ghost, Born of the )Tj
T*
(Virgin Mary, Suffered under Pontius Pilate, Was crucified, dead, and bur\
ied, He descended into )Tj
T*
(hell; The third day he rose again from the dead, He ascended into heaven\
, And sitteth on the right )Tj
T*
(hand of God the Father Almighty; From thence he shall come to judge the \
quick and the dead.)Tj
T*
( I believe in the Holy Ghost; The holy Catholick Church; The Communio\
n of Saints; The )Tj
T*
(Forgiveness of sins; The Resurrection of the body, And the life everlast\
ing. Amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, The Apostles\222 Creed.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Give peace in our time, O Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Versicle)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( O God, who art the author of peace and lover of concord, in knowledg\
e of whom standeth our )Tj
T*
(eternal life, whose service is perfect freedom; Defend us thy humble ser\
vants in all assaults of our )Tj
ET
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(enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, The Second Collect, for Peace)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Grant that this day we fall into no sin, neither run into any kind o\
f danger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, The Third Collect, for Grace)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( In Quires and Places where they sing, here followeth the Anthem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, rubric after Third Collect)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Endue her plenteously with heavenly gifts; grant her in health and w\
ealth long to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Prayer for the Queen\222s Majesty)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Almighty God, the fountain of all goodness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Prayer for the Royal Family)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Almighty and everlasting God, who alone workest great marvels; Send \
down upon our )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Bishops, and Curates, and all Congregations committed to their charge, t\
he healthful Spirit of thy )Tj
T*
(grace; and that they may truly please thee, pour upon them the continual\
dew of thy blessing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Prayer for the Clergy and People)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Almighty God, who hast given us grace at this time with one accord t\
o make our common )Tj
T*
(supplications unto thee; and dost promise, that when two or three are ga\
thered together in thy )Tj
T*
(Name Fulfil now, O Lord, the desires and petitions of thy servants, as m\
ay be most expedient for )Tj
T*
(them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Morning Prayer\222, Prayer of St. Chrysostom)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( O God, from whom all holy desires, all good counsels, and all just w\
orks do proceed; Give )Tj
T*
(unto thy servants that peace which the world cannot give.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Evening Prayer\222 The Second Collect)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord; and by thy great merc\
y defend us from all )Tj
T*
(perils and dangers of this night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Evening Prayer\222 The Third Collect)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Whosoever will be saved: before all things it is necessary that he h\
old the Catholick Faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221At Morning Prayer\222 Athanasian Creed \221Quicunque vult\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( And the Catholick Faith is this: That we worship one God in Trinity,\
and Trinity in Unity;)Tj
T*
( Neither confounding the Persons: nor dividing the Substance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221At Morning Prayer\222 Athanasian Creed \221Quicunque vult\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( There are not three incomprehensibles, nor three uncreated: but one \
uncreated, and one )Tj
T*
(incomprehensible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221At Morning Prayer\222 Athanasian Creed \221Quicunque vult\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Perfect God, and perfect Man: of a reasonable soul and human flesh s\
ubsisting;)Tj
T*
( Equal to the Father, as touching his Godhead: and inferior to the Fa\
ther, as touching his )Tj
T*
(Manhood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221At Morning Prayer\222 Athanasian Creed \221Quicunque vult\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Have mercy upon us miserable sinners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( From all evil and mischief; from sin, from the crafts and assaults o\
f the devil; from thy wrath, )Tj
ET
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(and from everlasting damnation,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
T*
( From all blindness of heart; from pride, vain-glory, and hypocrisy; \
from envy, hatred, and )Tj
T*
(malice, and from all uncharitableness,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
T*
( From fornication, and all other deadly sin; and from all the deceits\
of the world, the flesh, and )Tj
T*
(the devil,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
T*
( From lightning and tempest; from plague, pestilence, and famine; fro\
m battle and murder, and )Tj
T*
(from sudden death,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.67047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.75456 Tm
( By thine Agony and bloody Sweat; by thy Cross and Passion; by thy pr\
ecious)Tj
T*
( Death and Burial; by thy glorious Resurrection and Ascension; and by\
the coming of the Holy )Tj
T*
(Ghost,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
T*
( In all time of our tribulation; in all time of our wealth; in the ho\
ur of death, and in the day of )Tj
T*
(judgement,)Tj
T*
( Good Lord, deliver us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.92047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.00456 Tm
( That it may please thee to illuminate all Bishops, Priests, and Deac\
ons, with true knowledge )Tj
T*
(and understanding of thy Word; and that both by their preaching and livi\
ng they may set it forth, )Tj
T*
(and show it accordingly;)Tj
T*
( We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.17047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.25456 Tm
( That it may please thee to strengthen such as do stand; and to comfo\
rt and help the weak-)Tj
T*
(hearted; and to raise up them that fall; and finally to beat down Satan \
under our feet;)Tj
T*
( We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.42047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.50456 Tm
( That it may please thee to preserve all that travel by land or by wa\
ter, all women labouring of )Tj
T*
(child, all sick persons, and young children; and to shew thy pity upon a\
ll prisoners and captives;)Tj
T*
( We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord.)Tj
T*
( That it may please thee to defend, and provide for, the fatherless c\
hildren, and widows, and all )Tj
T*
(that are desolate and oppressed;)Tj
T*
( We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.67047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.75456 Tm
( That it may please thee to give and preserve to our use the kindly f\
ruits of the earth, so as in )Tj
T*
(due time we may enjoy them;)Tj
T*
( We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.92047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
ET
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( O God, merciful Father, that despisest not the sighing of a contrite\
heart, not the desire of such )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as be sorrowful; Mercifully assist our prayers that we make before thee \
in all our troubles and )Tj
T*
(adversities, whensoever they oppress us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Litany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( O God, whose nature and property is ever to have mercy and to forgiv\
e, receive our humble )Tj
T*
(petitions; and though we be tied and bound with the chain of our sins, y\
et let the pitifulness of thy )Tj
T*
(great mercy loose us; for the honour of Jesus Christ, our Mediator and A\
dvocate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( O God, the Creator and Preserver of all mankind, we humbly beseech t\
hee for all sorts and )Tj
T*
(conditions of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222 \221Collect or\
Prayer for all Conditions of Men\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( We pray for the good estate of the Catholick Church; that it may be \
so guided and governed by )Tj
T*
(thy good Spirit, that all who profess and call themselves Christians may\
be led into the way of )Tj
T*
(truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222 \221Collect or\
Prayer for all Conditions of Men\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( We commend to thy fatherly goodness all those, who are any ways affl\
icted, or distressed, in )Tj
T*
(mind, body, or estate; that it may please thee to comfort and relieve th\
em, according to their )Tj
T*
(several necessities, giving them patience under their sufferings, and a \
happy issue out of all their )Tj
T*
(afflictions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222 \221Collect or\
Prayer for all Conditions of Men\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( We bless thee for our creation, preservation, and all the blessings \
of this life; but above all, for )Tj
T*
(thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus \
Christ; for the means of )Tj
T*
(grace, and for the hope of glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222 \221A General \
Thanksgiving\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( O God our heavenly Father, who by thy gracious providence dost cause\
the former and the )Tj
T*
(latter rain to descend upon the earth, that it may bring forth fruit for\
the use of man; We give thee )Tj
T*
(humble thanks that it hath pleased thee, in our great necessity, to send\
us at the last a joyful rain )Tj
T*
(upon thine inheritance, and to refresh it when it was dry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Prayers and Thanksgivings, upon Several Occasions\222 \221Thanksgivi\
ng for Rain\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Almighty God, give us grace that we may cast away the works of darkn\
ess, and put upon us the )Tj
T*
(armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which thy Son J\
esus Christ came to visit us )Tj
T*
(in great humility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The first Sunday in Advent\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Blessed Lord, who hast caused all holy Scriptures to be written for \
our learning; Grant that we )Tj
T*
(may in such wise hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them,\
that by patience, and )Tj
T*
(comfort of thy holy Word, we may embrace, and ever hold fast the blessed\
hope of everlasting )Tj
T*
(life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The second Sunday in Advent\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( That whereas, through our sins and wickedness, we are sore let and h\
indered in running the )Tj
T*
(race that is set before us, thy bountiful grace and mercy may speedily h\
elp and deliver us.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The fourth Sunday in Advent\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O Lord, we beseech thee mercifully to receive the prayers of thy peo\
ple which call upon thee; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and grant that they may both perceive and know what things they ought to\
do, and also may have )Tj
T*
(grace and power faithfully to fulfil the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The first Sunday after the Epiphany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( O God, who knowest us to be set in the midst of so many and great da\
ngers, that by reason of )Tj
T*
(the frailty of our nature we cannot always stand upright; Grant to us su\
ch strength and protection, )Tj
T*
(as may support us in all dangers, and carry us through all temptations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The fourth Sunday after the Epiphany\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Almighty God, who seest that we have no power of ourselves to help o\
urselves; Keep us both )Tj
T*
(outwardly in our bodies, and inwardly in our souls; that we may be defen\
ded from all adversities )Tj
T*
(which may happen to the body, and from all evil thoughts which may assau\
lt and hurt the soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The second Sunday in Lent\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( We humbly beseech thee, that, as by thy special grace preventing us \
thou dost put into our )Tj
T*
(minds good desires, so by thy continued help we may bring the same to go\
od effect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221Easter-Day\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Grant us so to put away the leaven of malice and wickedness, that we\
may alway serve thee in )Tj
T*
(pureness of living and truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The first Sunday after Easter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( O Almighty God, who alone canst order the unruly wills and affection\
s of sinful men; Grant )Tj
T*
(unto thy people, that they may love the thing which thou commandest, and\
desire that which thou )Tj
T*
(dost promise; that so, among the sundry and manifold changes of the worl\
d, our hearts may )Tj
T*
(surely there be fixed, where true joys are to be found.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The fourth Sunday after Easter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( We beseech thee, leave us not comfortless; but send to us thine Holy\
Ghost to comfort us, and )Tj
T*
(exalt us unto the same place whither our Saviour Christ is gone before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221Sunday after Ascension Day\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( God, who as at this time didst teach the hearts of thy faithful peop\
le, by the sending to them the )Tj
T*
(light of thy Holy Spirit; Grant us by the same)Tj
T*
( Spirit to have a right judgement in all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221Whit-Sunday\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Because through the weakness of our mortal nature we can do no good \
thing without thee, )Tj
T*
(grant us the help of thy grace, that in keeping of thy commandments we m\
ay please thee, both in )Tj
T*
(will and deed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The first Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( O God, the protector of all that trust in thee, without whom nothing\
is strong, nothing is holy; )Tj
T*
(Increase and multiply upon us thy mercy; that, thou being our ruler and \
guide, we may so pass )Tj
T*
(through things temporal, that we finally lose not the things eternal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The fourth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Grant, O Lord, we beseech thee, that the course of this world may be\
so peaceably ordered by )Tj
ET
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(thy governance, that thy Church may joyfully serve thee in all godly qui\
etness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The fifth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O God, who hast prepared for them that love thee such good things as\
pass man\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(understanding; Pour into our hearts such love toward thee, that we, lovi\
ng thee above all things, )Tj
T*
(may obtain thy promises, which exceed all that we can desire. _)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The sixth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Lord of all power and might, who art the author and giver of all goo\
d things; Graft in our )Tj
T*
(hearts the love of thy Name, increase in us true religion, nourish us wi\
th all goodness, and of thy )Tj
T*
(great mercy keep us in the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The seventh Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Pour down upon us the abundance of thy mercy; forgiving us those thi\
ngs whereof our )Tj
T*
(conscience is afraid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The twelfth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( O God, forasmuch as without thee we are not able to please thee;)Tj
T*
( Mercifully grant, that thy Holy Spirit may in all things direct and \
rule our hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The nineteenth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Grant, we beseech thee, merciful Lord, to thy faithful people pardon\
and peace, that they may )Tj
T*
(be cleansed from all their sins, and serve thee with a quiet mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The one and twentieth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Lord, we beseech thee to keep thy household the Church in continual \
godliness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The two and twentieth Sunday after Trinity\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Grant that those things which we ask faithfully we may obtain effect\
ually.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The three and twentieth Sunday after Trinity\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Stir up, we beseech thee, O Lord, the wills of thy faithful people; \
that they, plenteously )Tj
T*
(bringing forth the fruit of good works, may of thee be plenteously rewar\
ded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221The five and twentieth Sunday after Trinity\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( Give us grace, that, being not like children carried away with every\
blast of vain doctrine, we )Tj
T*
(may be established in the truth of thy holy Gospel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221St Mark\222s Day\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one communion \
and fellowship, in the )Tj
T*
(mystical body of thy Son Christ our Lord; Grant us grace so to follow th\
y blessed Saints in all )Tj
T*
(virtuous and godly living, that we may come to those unspeakable joys, w\
hich thou hast prepared )Tj
T*
(for them that unfeignedly love thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Collects\222 \221All Saints\222 Day\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( So many as intend to be partakers of the holy Communion shall signif\
y their names to the )Tj
T*
(Curate, at least some time the day before.)Tj
T*
( And if any of those be an open and notorious evil liver, or have don\
e any wrong to his )Tj
T*
(neighbours by word or deed, so that the Congregation be thereby offended\
; the Curate, having )Tj
T*
(knowledge thereof, shall call him and advertise him, that in any wise he\
presume not to come to )Tj
T*
(the Lord\222s Table, until he have openly declared himself to have truly\
repented and amended his )Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
(former naughty life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222, introductory rubric)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The Table, at the Communion-time having a fair white linen cloth upo\
n it, shall stand in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Body of the Church, or in the Chancel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222, introductory rubric)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Almighty God, unto whom all hearts be open, all desires known, and f\
rom whom no secrets are )Tj
T*
(hid; Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of thy Holy S\
pirit, that we may )Tj
T*
(perfectly love thee, and worthily magnify thy holy Name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Collect\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Incline our hearts to keep this law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222, response to \221The Ten Commandments\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Thou shalt do no murder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221The Ten Commandments\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( I believe in one God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth,\
And of all things visible )Tj
T*
(and invisible:)Tj
T*
( And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, Begotten\
of his Father before all )Tj
T*
(worlds, God of God, Light of Light, Very God of very God, Begotten, not \
made, Being of one )Tj
T*
(substance with the Father, By whom all things were made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Nicene Creed\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( And I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and giver of life, Who pro\
ceedeth from the Father )Tj
T*
(and the Son, Who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and \
glorified, Who spake )Tj
T*
(by the Prophets. And I believe one Catholick and Apostolick Church.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Nicene Creed\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Let us pray for the whole state of Christ\222s Church militant here \
in earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer for the Church Militant\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( We humbly beseech thee most mercifully to accept our alms and oblati\
ons, and to receive these )Tj
T*
(our prayers, which we offer unto thy Divine Majesty; beseeching thee to \
inspire continually the )Tj
T*
(universal Church with the spirit of truth, unity, and concord: And grant\
, that all they that do )Tj
T*
(confess thy holy Name may agree in the truth of thy holy Word, and live \
in unity, and godly love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer for the Church Militant\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Grant unto her [the Queen\222s] whole Council, and to all that are p\
ut in authority under her, that )Tj
T*
(they may truly and indifferently minister justice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer for the Church Militant\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Give grace, O heavenly Father, to all Bishops and Curates, that they\
may both by their life and )Tj
T*
(doctrine set forth thy true and lively Word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer for the Church Militant\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( We most humbly beseech thee of thy goodness, O Lord, to comfort and \
succour all them, who )Tj
T*
(in this transitory life are in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or any o\
ther adversity. And we also )Tj
T*
(bless thy holy Name for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith\
and fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer for the Church Militant\222)Tj
ET
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( Because it is requisite, that no man should come to the holy Communi\
on, but with a full trust )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in God\222s mercy, and with a quiet conscience; therefore if there be an\
y of you, who by this means )Tj
T*
(cannot quiet his own conscience herein, but requireth further comfort or\
counsel, let him come to )Tj
T*
(me, or to some other discreet and learned Minister of God\222s Word, and\
open his grief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221First Exhortation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Ye that do truly and earnestly repent you of your sins, and are in l\
ove and charity with your )Tj
T*
(neighbours, and intend to lead a new life, following the commandments of\
God, and walking )Tj
T*
(from henceforth in his holy ways;)Tj
T*
( Draw near with faith, and take this holy Sacrament to your comfort; \
and make your humble )Tj
T*
(confession to Almighty God, meekly kneeling upon your knees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221The Invitation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( We do earnestly repent, And are heartily sorry for these our misdoin\
gs;)Tj
T*
( The remembrance of them is grievous unto us; The burden of them is i\
ntolerable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221General Confession\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Hear what comfortable words our Saviour Christ saith unto all that t\
ruly turn to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221The Comfortable Words\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Lift up your hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222, versicles and responses.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( It is meet and right so to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222, versicles and responses)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( It is very meet, right, and our bounden duty, that we should at all \
times, and in all places, give )Tj
T*
(thanks unto thee, O Lord, Holy Father, Almighty, Everlasting God.)Tj
T*
( Therefore with Angels and Archangels, and with all the company of he\
aven, we laud and )Tj
T*
(magnify thy glorious Name; evermore praising thee, and saying,)Tj
T*
( Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts, heaven and earth are full of th\
y glory: Glory be to thee, O )Tj
T*
(Lord most High.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Hymn of Praise\222.)Tj
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( Almighty God, our heavenly Father, who of thy tender mercy didst giv\
e thine only Son Jesus )Tj
T*
(Christ to suffer death upon the cross for our redemption; who made there\
\(by his one oblation of )Tj
T*
(himself once offered\) a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblati\
on, and satisfaction, for the )Tj
T*
(sins of the whole world.)Tj
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(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer of Consecration\222)Tj
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( Who, in the same night that he was betrayed, took Bread; and, when h\
e had given thanks, he )Tj
T*
(brake it, and gave it to his disciples, saying, Take, eat, this is my Bo\
dy which is given for you: Do )Tj
T*
(this in remembrance of me.)Tj
T*
( Likewise after supper he took the Cup; and, when he had given thanks\
, he gave it to them, )Tj
T*
(saying, Drink ye all of this; for this is my Blood of the New Testament,\
which is shed for you and )Tj
T*
(for many for the remission of sins: Do this, as oft as ye shall drink it\
, in remembrance of me.)Tj
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(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Prayer of Consecration\222)Tj
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( Although we be unworthy, through our manifold sins, to offer unto th\
ee any sacrifice, yet we )Tj
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(beseech thee to accept this our bounden duty and service; not weighing o\
ur merits, but pardoning )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(our offences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221First Prayer of Oblation\222)Tj
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( We are very members incorporate in the mystical body of thy Son, whi\
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T*
(company of all faithful people; and are also heirs through hope of thy e\
verlasting kingdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Second \(alternative\) Prayer of Oblation\222\
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( The blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghos\
t, be amongst you and )Tj
T*
(remain with you always.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221The Blessing\222)Tj
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( Assist us mercifully, O Lord, in these our supplications and prayers\
, and dispose the way of thy )Tj
T*
(servants towards the attainment of everlasting salvation; that, among al\
l the changes and chances )Tj
T*
(of this mortal life, they may ever be defended by thy most gracious and \
ready help.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Collects after the Offertory [1]\222)Tj
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( Prevent us, O Lord, in all our doings with thy most gracious favour,\
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T*
(continual help; that in all our works, begun, continued, and ended in th\
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T*
(holy Name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Collects after the Offertory [4]\222)Tj
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( Those things, which for our unworthiness we dare not, and for our bl\
indness we cannot ask, )Tj
T*
(vouchsafe to give us, for the worthiness of thy Son Jesus Christ our Lor\
d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Holy Communion\222 \221Collects after the Offertory [5]\222)Tj
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( It is expedient that Baptism be administered in the vulgar tongue.)Tj
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(\221Publick Baptism of Infants\222, introductory rubric)Tj
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( O merciful God, grant that the old Adam in this Child may be so buri\
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T*
(be raised up in him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Publick Baptism of Infants\222, invocation of blessing on the child)Tj
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( Humbly we beseech thee to grant, that he, being dead unto sin, and l\
iving unto righteousness, )Tj
T*
(and being buried with Christ in his death, may crucify the old man, and \
utterly abolish the whole )Tj
T*
(body of sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Publick Baptism of Infants\222, thanksgiving)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( And as for you, who have now by Baptism put on Christ, it is your pa\
rt and duty also, being )Tj
T*
(made the children of God and of the light, by faith in Jesus Christ, to \
walk answerably to your )Tj
T*
(Christian calling, and as becometh the children of light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Baptism of Such as are of Riper Years\222 Priest\222s final address)Tj
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( Question: What is your Name?)Tj
T*
( Answer: N. or M.)Tj
T*
( Question: Who gave you this Name?)Tj
T*
( Answer: My Godfathers and Godmothers in my Baptism; wherein I was m\
ade a member of )Tj
T*
(Christ, the child of God, and an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven.)Tj
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(\221Catechism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( I should renounce the devil and all his works, the pomps and vanity \
of this wicked world, and )Tj
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(all the sinful lusts of the flesh.)Tj
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(\221Catechism\222)Tj
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( Question: What dost thou chiefly learn by these Commandments? )Tj
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( Answer: I learn two things: Neighbour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222)Tj
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( My duty towards my Neighbour, is to love him as myself, and to do to\
all men, as I would they )Tj
T*
(should do unto me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222)Tj
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( To submit myself to all my governors, teachers, spiritual pastors an\
d masters.)Tj
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(\221Catechism\222)Tj
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( To keep my hands from picking and stealing, and my tongue from evil-\
speaking, lying, and )Tj
T*
(slandering.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Not to covet nor desire other men\222s goods; but to learn and labou\
r truly to get mine own living, )Tj
T*
(and to do my duty in that state of life, unto which it shall please God \
to call me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Question: How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained in his Church? )Tj
T*
( Answer: Two only, as generally necessary to salvation, that is to s\
ay, Baptism, and the Supper )Tj
T*
(of the Lord.)Tj
T*
( Question: What meanest thou by this word Sacrament?)Tj
T*
( Answer: I mean an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritu\
al grace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Catechism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Our help is in the name of the Lord;)Tj
T*
( Who hath made heaven and earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Order of Confirmation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Lord, hear our prayers.)Tj
T*
( And let our cry come unto thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Order of Confirmation\222)Tj
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( Defend, O Lord, this thy Child [or this thy Servant] with thy heaven\
ly grace, that he may )Tj
T*
(continue thine for ever; and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and \
more, until he come unto )Tj
T*
(thy everlasting kingdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Order of Confirmation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( If any of you know cause, or just impediment, why these two persons \
should not be joined )Tj
T*
(together in holy Matrimony, ye are to declare it. This is the first [sec\
ond, or third] time of asking.)Tj
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(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, the Banns)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( Dearly beloved, we are gathered together here in the sight of God, a\
nd in the face of this )Tj
T*
(congregation, to join together this Man and this Woman in holy Matrimony\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, exhortation)Tj
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( Which holy estate Christ adorned and beautified with his presence, a\
nd first miracle that he )Tj
T*
(wrought, in Cana of Galilee; and is commended of Saint Paul to be honour\
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(and therefore not by any to be enterprised, nor taken in hand, unadvised\
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0 -1.2 TD
(satisfy men\222s carnal lusts and appetites, like brute beasts that have\
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(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, exhortation)Tj
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( First, It was ordained for the procreation of children, to be brough\
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T*
(the Lord, and to the praise of his holy Name.)Tj
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(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, exhortation)Tj
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( If any man can shew any just cause, why they may not lawfully be joi\
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T*
(speak, or else hereafter for ever hold his peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, exhortation)Tj
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( Wilt thou have this Woman to thy wedded wife, to live together after\
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T*
(holy estate of Matrimony? Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honour, and k\
eep her in sickness and )Tj
T*
(in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto her, so long as\
ye both shall live?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, betrothal)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( I N. take thee M. to my wedded husband, to have and to hold from thi\
s day forward, for better )Tj
T*
(for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love, ch\
erish, and to obey, till death )Tj
T*
(us do part, according to God\222s holy ordinance; and thereto I give the\
e my troth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, betrothal \(the man will have used t\
he words \221I plight thee my troth\222 and not )Tj
T*
(\221to obey\222\))Tj
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( With this Ring I thee wed, with my body I thee worship, and with all\
my worldly goods I thee )Tj
T*
(endow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, wedding)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( Those whom God hath joined together let no man put asunder.)Tj
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(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, wedding.)Tj
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( Forasmuch as M. and N. have consented together in holy wedlock, and \
have witnessed the )Tj
T*
(same before God and this company, and thereto have given and pledged the\
ir troth either to other, )Tj
T*
(and have declared the same by giving and receiving of a Ring, and by joi\
ning of hands; I )Tj
T*
(pronounce that they be Man and Wife together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Solemnization of Matrimony\222, minister\222s declaration)Tj
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( Peace be to this house, and to all that dwell in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221The Visitation of the Sick\222)Tj
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( Unto God\222s gracious mercy and protection we commit thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221The Visitation of the Sick\222)Tj
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( The Office ensuing is not to be used for any that die unbaptized, or\
excommunicate, or have )Tj
T*
(laid violent hands upon themselves.)Tj
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(\221The Burial of the Dead\222, introductory rubric)Tj
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( Man that is born of a woman hath but a short time to live, and is fu\
ll of misery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221The Burial of the Dead\222, first anthem.)Tj
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( In the midst of life we are in death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Burial of the Dead\222, first anthem)Tj
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( Forasmuch as it hath pleased Almighty God of his great mercy to take\
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(our dear brother here departed, we therefore commit his body to the grou\
nd; earth to earth, ashes )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to ashes, dust to dust; in sure and certain hope of the Resurrection to \
eternal life, through our )Tj
T*
(Lord Jesus Christ; who shall change our vile body, that it may be like u\
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T*
(according to the mighty working, whereby he is able to subdue all things\
to himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Burial of the Dead\222, interment)Tj
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( Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the counsel of the ungodl\
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T*
(sinners: and hath not sat in the seat of the scornful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Psalm 1, v. 1)Tj
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( Why do the heathen so furiously rage together: and why do the people\
imagine a vain thing?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Psalm 2, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Let us break their bonds asunder: and cast away their cords from us.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Psalm 2, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The Lord shall have them in derision.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Psalm 2, v. 4)Tj
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( Thou shalt bruise them with a rod of iron: and break them in pieces \
like a potter\222s vessel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(Psalm 2, v. 9)Tj
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( Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and so ye perish from the right way:\
if his wrath be kindled, )Tj
T*
(\(yea, but a little,\) blessed are all they that put their trust in him.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(Psalm 2, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Stand in awe, and sin not: commune with your own heart, and in your \
chamber, and be still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(Psalm 4, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Lord, lift thou up: the light of thy countenance upon us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(Psalm 4, v. 7)Tj
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( I will lay me down in peace, and take my rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(Psalm 4, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( The Lord will abhor both the bloodthirsty and deceitful man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(Psalm 5, v. 6)Tj
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( Make thy way plain before my face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(Psalm 5, v. 8)Tj
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( Let them perish through their own imaginations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(Psalm 5, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( I am weary of my groaning; every night wash I my bed: and water my c\
ouch with my tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(Psalm 6, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( Away from me, all ye that work vanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(Psalm 6, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.75456 Tm
( Out of the mouth of very babes and sucklings hast thou ordained stre\
ngth, because of thine )Tj
T*
(enemies: that thou mightest still the enemy, and the avenger.)Tj
T*
( For I will consider thy heavens, even the works of thy fingers: the \
moon and the stars, which )Tj
T*
(thou hast ordained.)Tj
T*
( What is man, that thou art mindful of him: and the son of man, that \
thou visitest him?)Tj
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( Thou madest him lower than the angels: to crown him with glory and w\
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(Psalm 8, v. 2)Tj
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( Up, Lord, and let not man have the upper hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(Psalm 9, v. 19)Tj
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( He that said in his heart, Tush, I shall never be cast down: there s\
hall no harm happen unto me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(Psalm 10, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( Upon the ungodly he shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, storm and\
tempest: this shall be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(their portion to drink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(Psalm 11, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( Help me, Lord, for there is not one godly man left: for the faithful\
are minished from among )Tj
T*
(the children of men.)Tj
T*
( They talk of vanity every one with his neighbour: they do but flatte\
r with their lips, and )Tj
T*
(dissemble in their double heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(Psalm 12, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.00456 Tm
( How long wilt thou forget me, O Lord, for ever: how long wilt thou h\
ide thy face from me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.17047 Tm
(Psalm 13, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.25456 Tm
( The fool hath said in his heart: There is no God.)Tj
T*
( They are corrupt, and become abominable in their doings: there is no\
ne that doeth good, no not )Tj
T*
(one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.42047 Tm
(Psalm 14, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( They are all gone out of the way, they are altogether become abomina\
ble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.67047 Tm
(Psalm 14, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.75456 Tm
( Lord, who shall dwell in thy tabernacle: or who shall rest upon thy \
holy hill?)Tj
T*
( Even he, that leadeth an uncorrupt life: and doeth the thing which i\
s right, and speaketh the )Tj
T*
(truth from his heart.)Tj
T*
( He that hath used no deceit in his tongue, nor done evil to his neig\
hbour: and hath not )Tj
T*
(slandered his neighbour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(Psalm 15, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.00456 Tm
( He that sweareth unto his neighbour, and disappointeth him not: thou\
gh it were to his own )Tj
T*
(hindrance.)Tj
T*
( He that hath not given his money upon usury: nor taken reward agains\
t the innocent.)Tj
T*
( Whoso doeth these things: shall never fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(Psalm 15, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.25456 Tm
( The lot is fallen unto me in a fair ground: yea, I have a goodly her\
itage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.42047 Tm
(Psalm 16, v. 7 \(the Authorized Version of the Bible \(Psalm 16, v. 6\) \
has \221The lines are fallen unto me in )Tj
T*
(pleasant places\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.50456 Tm
( Thou shalt not leave my soul in hell: neither shalt thou suffer thy \
Holy One to see corruption.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(Psalm 16, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.75456 Tm
( He rode upon the cherubims, and did fly: he came flying upon the win\
gs of the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.92047 Tm
(Psalm 18, v. 10)Tj
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( At the brightness of his presence his clouds removed: hailstones, an\
d coals of fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Psalm 18, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( With the help of my God I shall leap over the wall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Psalm 18, v. 29)Tj
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( The heavens declare the glory of God: and the firmament sheweth his \
handy-work.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( One day telleth another: and one night certifieth another.)Tj
T*
( There is neither speech nor language: but their voices are heard amo\
ng them.)Tj
T*
( Their sound is gone out into all lands: and their words into the end\
s of the world.)Tj
T*
( In them hath he set a tabernacle for the sun: which cometh forth as \
a bridegroom out of his )Tj
T*
(chamber, and rejoiceth as a giant to run his course.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Psalm 19, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( The law of the Lord is an undefiled law, converting the soul: the te\
stimony of the Lord is sure, )Tj
T*
(and giveth wisdom unto the simple.)Tj
T*
( The statutes of the Lord are right, and rejoice the heart: the comma\
ndment of the Lord is pure, )Tj
T*
(and giveth light unto the eyes.)Tj
T*
( The fear of the Lord is clean, and endureth for ever: the judgements\
of the Lord are true, and )Tj
T*
(righteous altogether.)Tj
T*
( More to be desired are they than gold, yea, than much fine gold: swe\
eter also than honey, and )Tj
T*
(the honey-comb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(Psalm 19, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Who can tell how oft he offendeth: O cleanse thou me from my secret \
faults.)Tj
T*
( Keep thy servant also from presumptuous sins, lest they get the domi\
nion over me: so shall I )Tj
T*
(be undefiled, and innocent from the great offence.)Tj
T*
( Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart: be alway \
acceptable in thy sight,)Tj
T*
( O Lord: my strength, and my redeemer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(Psalm 19, v. 12)Tj
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( Some put their trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will re\
member the Name of the )Tj
T*
(Lord our God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(Psalm 20, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( They intended mischief against thee: and imagined such a device as t\
hey are not able to )Tj
T*
(perform.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(Psalm 21, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( My God, my God, look upon me; why hast thou forsaken me: and art so \
far from my health, )Tj
T*
(and from the words of my complaint?)Tj
T*
( O my God, I cry in the day-time, but thou hearest not: and in the ni\
ght-season also I take no )Tj
T*
(rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(Psalm 22, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( But as for me, I am a worm, and no man: a very scorn of men, and the\
out-cast of the people.)Tj
T*
( All they that see me laugh me to scorn: they shoot out their lips, a\
nd shake their heads, saying,)Tj
T*
( He trusted in God, that he would deliver him: let him deliver him, i\
f he will have him.)Tj
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(Psalm 22, v. 6)Tj
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( Many oxen are come about me: fat bulls of Basan close me in on every\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Psalm 22, v. 12)Tj
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( I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: my he\
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(body is even like melting wax.)Tj
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(Psalm 22, v. 14)Tj
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( They pierced my hands and my feet; I may tell all my bones: they sta\
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T*
(upon me.)Tj
T*
( They part my garments among them: and cast lots upon my vesture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Psalm 22, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The Lord is my shepherd: therefore can I lack nothing.)Tj
T*
( He shall feed me in a green pasture: and lead me forth beside the wa\
ters of comfort.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(Psalm 23, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will\
fear no evil: for thou art )Tj
T*
(with me; thy rod and thy staff comfort me.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt prepare a table before me against them that trouble me: t\
hou hast anointed my head )Tj
T*
(with oil, and my cup shall be full.)Tj
T*
( But thy loving-kindness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my\
life: and I will dwell in )Tj
T*
(the house of the Lord for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Psalm 23, v. 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( The earth is the Lord\222s, and all that therein is: the compass of \
the world, and they that dwell )Tj
T*
(therein.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(Psalm 24, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting do\
ors: and the King of glory )Tj
T*
(shall come in.)Tj
T*
( Who is the King of glory: it is the Lord strong and mighty, even the\
Lord mighty in battle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(Psalm 24, v. 7)Tj
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( Even the Lord of hosts, he is the King of glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(Psalm 24, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( O remember not the sins and offences of my youth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(Psalm 25, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Deliver Israel, O God: out of all his troubles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(Psalm 25, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( Examine me, O Lord, and prove me: try out my reins and my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(Psalm 26, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( I will wash my hands in innocency, O Lord: and so will I go to thine\
altar;)Tj
T*
( That I may shew the voice of thanksgiving: and tell of all thy wondr\
ous works.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(Psalm 26, v. 6)Tj
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( My foot standeth right: I will praise the Lord in the congregation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.42047 Tm
(Psalm 26, v. 12)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
(life; of whom then shall I be afraid?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(Psalm 27, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( Teach me thy way, O Lord: and lead me in the right way, because of m\
ine enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.92047 Tm
(Psalm 27, v. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.00456 Tm
( I should utterly have fainted: but that I believe verily to see the \
goodness of the Lord in the )Tj
T*
(land of the living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(Psalm 27, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( The voice of the Lord breaketh the cedar-trees: yea, the Lord breake\
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T*
( He maketh them also to skip like a calf: Libanus also, and Sirion, l\
ike a young unicorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(Psalm 29, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.50456 Tm
( The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to bring forth young, and dis\
covereth the thick bushes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.67047 Tm
(Psalm 29, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.75456 Tm
( The Lord shall give strength unto his people: the Lord shall give hi\
s people the blessing of )Tj
T*
(peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(Psalm 29, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.00456 Tm
( Sing praises unto the Lord, O ye saints of his: and give thanks unto\
him for a remembrance of )Tj
T*
(his holiness.)Tj
T*
( For his wrath endureth but the twinkling of an eye, and in his pleas\
ure is life: heaviness may )Tj
T*
(endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.17047 Tm
(Psalm 30, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.25456 Tm
( Then cried I unto thee, O Lord: and gat me to my Lord right humbly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(Psalm 30, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( Into thy hands I commend my spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(Psalm 31, v. 6.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.75456 Tm
( Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth no sin: and in whose \
spirit there is no guile.)Tj
T*
( For while I held my tongue: my bones consumed away through my daily \
complaining.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(Psalm 32, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.00456 Tm
( For this shall every one that is godly make his prayer unto thee, in\
a time when thou mayest be )Tj
T*
(found: but in the great water-floods they shall not come nigh him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.17047 Tm
(Psalm 32, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.25456 Tm
( I will inform thee, and teach thee in the way wherein thou shalt go:\
and I will guide thee with )Tj
T*
(mine eye.)Tj
T*
( Be ye not like to horse and mule, which have no understanding: whose\
mouths must be held )Tj
T*
(with bit and bridle, lest they fall upon thee.)Tj
T*
( Great plagues remain for the ungodly: but whoso putteth his trust in\
the)Tj
T*
( Lord, mercy embraceth him on every side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.42047 Tm
(Psalm 32, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.50456 Tm
( Sing unto the Lord a new song: sing praises lustily unto him with a \
good courage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.67047 Tm
(Psalm 33, v. 3)Tj
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( A horse is counted but a vain thing to save a man: neither shall he \
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0 -1.2 TD
(strength.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.92047 Tm
(Psalm 33, v. 16)Tj
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( O taste and see, how gracious the Lord is: blessed is the man that t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.17047 Tm
(Psalm 34, v. 8)Tj
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( The lions do lack, and suffer hunger: but they who seek the Lord sha\
ll want no manner of thing )Tj
T*
(that is good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.42047 Tm
( Psalm 34, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.50456 Tm
( What man is he that lusteth to live: and would fain see good days?)Tj
T*
( Keep thy tongue from evil: and thy lips, that they speak no guile.)Tj
T*
( Eschew evil, and do good: seek peace, and ensue it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.67047 Tm
(Psalm 34, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.75456 Tm
( They rewarded me evil for good: to the great discomfort of my soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.92047 Tm
(Psalm 35, v. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.00456 Tm
( O deliver my soul from the calamities which they bring on me, and my\
darling from the lions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.17047 Tm
(Psalm 35, v. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.25456 Tm
( Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.42047 Tm
(Psalm 37, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.50456 Tm
( The meek-spirited shall possess the earth: and shall be refreshed in\
the multitude of peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.67047 Tm
(Psalm 37, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.75456 Tm
( I have been young, and now am old: and yet saw I never the righteous\
forsaken, nor his seed )Tj
T*
(begging their bread.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.92047 Tm
(Psalm 37, v. 25)Tj
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( I myself have seen the ungodly in great power: and flourishing like \
a green bay-tree.)Tj
T*
( I went by, and lo, he was gone: I sought him, but his place could no\
where be found.)Tj
T*
( Keep innocency, and take heed unto the thing that is right: for that\
shall bring a man peace at )Tj
T*
(the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.17047 Tm
(Psalm 37, v. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.25456 Tm
( I held my tongue, and spake nothing: I kept silence, yea, even from \
good words; but it was )Tj
T*
(pain and grief to me.)Tj
T*
( My heart was hot within me, and while I was thus musing the fire kin\
dled: and at the last I )Tj
T*
(spake with my tongue;)Tj
T*
( Lord, let me know mine end, and the number of my days: that I may be\
certified how long I )Tj
T*
(have to live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.42047 Tm
(Psalm 39, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.50456 Tm
( For man walketh in a vain shadow, and disquieteth himself in vain: h\
e heapeth up riches, and )Tj
T*
(cannot tell who shall gather them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.67047 Tm
(Psalm 39, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.75456 Tm
( I waited patiently for the Lord: and he inclined unto me, and heard \
my calling.)Tj
T*
( He brought me also out of the horrible pit, out of the mire and clay\
: and set my feet upon the )Tj
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(rock, and ordered my goings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Psalm 40, v. 1)Tj
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( Sacrifice, and meat-offering, thou wouldest not: but mine ears hast \
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0 -1.2 TD
( Burnt-offerings, and sacrifice for sin, hast thou not required: then\
said I, Lo, I come.)Tj
T*
( In the volume of the book it is written of me, that I should fulfil \
thy will, O my God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Psalm 40, v. 8)Tj
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( Thou art my helper and redeemer: make no long tarrying, O my God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Psalm 40, v. 21)Tj
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( Blessed is he that considereth the poor and needy: the Lord shall de\
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T*
(trouble.)Tj
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(Psalm 41, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Yea, even mine own familiar friend, whom I trusted: who did also eat\
of my bread, hath laid )Tj
T*
(great wait for me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Psalm 41, v. 9 \(the Authorized Version of the Bible has \221...hath lif\
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( Like as the hart desireth the water-brooks: so longeth my soul after\
thee, O God.)Tj
T*
( My soul is a thirst for God, yea, even for the living God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(Psalm 42, v. 1 \(the Authorized Version of the Bible has \221As the hart\
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T*
(my soul after thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God.\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Why art thou so full of heaviness, O my soul: and why art thou so di\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(Psalm 42, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( My God, my soul is vexed within me: therefore will I remember thee c\
oncerning the land of )Tj
T*
(Jordan, and the little hill of Hermon.)Tj
T*
( One deep calleth another, because of the noise of the water-pipes: a\
ll thy waves and storms are )Tj
T*
(gone over me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(Psalm 42, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( I will say unto the God of my strength, Why hast thou forgotten me: \
why go)Tj
T*
( I thus heavily, while the enemy oppresseth me?)Tj
T*
( My bones are smitten asunder as with a sword: while mine enemies tha\
t trouble me cast me in )Tj
T*
(the teeth;)Tj
T*
( Namely, while they say daily unto me: Where is now thy God?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(Psalm 42, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( Give sentence with me, O God, and defend my cause against the ungodl\
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T*
(from the deceitful and wicked man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(Psalm 43, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( O send out thy light and thy truth, that they may lead me: and bring\
me unto thy holy hill, and )Tj
T*
(to thy dwelling.)Tj
T*
( And that I may go unto the altar of God, even unto the God of my joy\
and gladness: and upon )Tj
T*
(the harp will I give thanks unto thee, O God, my God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(Psalm 43, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( O put thy trust in God: for I will yet give him thanks, which is the\
help of my countenance, and )Tj
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(Psalm 43, v. 6)Tj
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( We have heard with our ears, O God, our fathers have told us: what t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(time of old.)Tj
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(Psalm 44, v. 1)Tj
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( My heart is inditing of a good matter: I speak of the things which I\
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T*
( My tongue is the pen: of a ready writer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Psalm 45, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity: wherefore God, ev\
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T*
( God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Psalm 45, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Kings\222 daughters were among thy honourable women: upon thy right \
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T*
(in a vesture of gold, wrought about with divers colours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Psalm 45, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( The King\222s daughter is all glorious within: her clothing is of wr\
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T*
( She shall be brought unto the King in raiment of needlework: the vir\
gins that be her fellows )Tj
T*
(shall bear her company, and shall be brought unto thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(Psalm 45, v. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Instead of thy fathers thou shalt have children: whom thou mayest ma\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(Psalm 45, v. 17)Tj
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( God is our hope and strength: a very present help in trouble. Theref\
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T*
(the earth be moved: and though the hills be carried into the midst of th\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(Psalm 46, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( God is in the midst of her, therefore shall she not be removed: God \
shall help her, and that )Tj
T*
(right early.)Tj
T*
( The heathen make much ado, and the kingdoms are moved: but God hath \
shewed his voice, )Tj
T*
(and the earth shall melt away.)Tj
T*
( The Lord of hosts is with us: the God of Jacob is our refuge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(Psalm 46, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( He maketh wars to cease in all the world: he breaketh the bow, and k\
nappeth the spear in )Tj
T*
(sunder, and burneth the chariots in the fire.)Tj
T*
( Be still then, and know that I am God: I will be exalted among the h\
eathen, and I will be )Tj
T*
(exalted in the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(Psalm 46, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( O clap your hands together, all ye people: O sing unto God with the \
voice of melody.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(Psalm 47, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( He shall subdue the people under us: and the nations under our feet.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(Psalm 47, v. 3)Tj
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( God is gone up with a merry noise: and the Lord with the sound of th\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(Psalm 47, v. 5)Tj
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( For lo, the kings of the earth: are gathered, and gone by together.)Tj
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( They marvelled to see such things: they were astonished, and suddenl\
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(Psalm 48, v. 3)Tj
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( Thou shalt break the ships of the sea: through the east-wind.)Tj
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(Psalm 48, v. 6)Tj
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( Walk about Sion, and go round about her: and tell the towers thereof\
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T*
( Mark well her bulwarks, set up her houses: that ye may tell them tha\
t come after.)Tj
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(Psalm 48, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Wise men also die, and perish together: as well as the ignorant and \
foolish, and leave their )Tj
T*
(riches for other.)Tj
T*
( And yet they think that their houses shall continue for ever: and th\
at their dwelling-places shall )Tj
T*
(endure from one generation to another; and call the lands after their ow\
n names.)Tj
T*
( Nevertheless, man will not abide in honour: seeing he may be compare\
d unto the beasts that )Tj
T*
(perish; this is the way of them.)Tj
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(Psalm 49, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( They lie in the hell like sheep, death gnaweth upon them, and the ri\
ghteous shall have )Tj
T*
(domination over them in the morning: their beauty shall consume in the s\
epulchre out of their )Tj
T*
(dwelling.)Tj
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(Psalm 49, v. 14)Tj
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( All the beasts of the forest are mine: and so are the cattle upon a \
thousand hills.)Tj
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(Psalm 50, v. 10)Tj
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( Thinkest thou that I will eat bulls\222 flesh: and drink the blood o\
f goats?)Tj
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(Psalm 50, v. 13)Tj
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( Wash me throughly from my wickedness: and cleanse me from my sin.)Tj
T*
( For I acknowledge my faults: and my sin is ever before me.)Tj
T*
( Against thee only have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight.)Tj
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(Psalm 51, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Behold, I was shapen in wickedness: and in sin hath my mother concei\
ved me.)Tj
T*
( But lo, thou requirest truth in the inward parts: and shalt make me \
to understand wisdom )Tj
T*
(secretly.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: thou shalt wa\
sh me, and I shall be )Tj
T*
(whiter than snow.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt make me hear of joy and gladness: that the bones which th\
ou hast broken may )Tj
T*
(rejoice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(Psalm 51, v. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Make me a clean heart, O God: and renew a right spirit within me.)Tj
T*
( Cast me not away from thy presence: and take not thy holy Spirit fro\
m me.)Tj
T*
( O give me the comfort of thy help again: and stablish me with thy fr\
ee Spirit.)Tj
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(Psalm 51, v. 10)Tj
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( Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O God.)Tj
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(Psalm 51, v. 14)Tj
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( Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord: and my mouth shall shew thy praise.\
)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For thou desirest no sacrifice, else would I give it thee: but thou \
delightest not in burnt-)Tj
T*
(offerings.)Tj
T*
( The sacrifice of God is a troubled spirit: a broken and contrite hea\
rt, O God, shalt thou not )Tj
T*
(despise.)Tj
T*
( O be favourable and gracious unto Sion: build thou the walls of Jeru\
salem.)Tj
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(Psalm 51, v. 15)Tj
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( Then shall they offer young bullocks upon thine altar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Psalm 51, v. 19)Tj
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( O that I had wings like a dove: for then would I flee away, and be a\
t rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Psalm 55, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( It was even thou, my companion: my guide, and mine own familiar frie\
nd.)Tj
T*
( We took sweet counsel together: and walked in the house of God as fr\
iends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(Psalm 55, v. 14)Tj
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( The words of his mouth were softer than butter, having war in his he\
art: his words were )Tj
T*
(smoother than oil, and yet they be very swords.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(Psalm 55, v. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Thou tellest my flittings; put my tears into thy bottle: are not the\
se things noted in thy book?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(Psalm 56, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Under the shadow of thy wings shall be my refuge, until this tyranny\
be over-past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(Psalm 57, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( God shall send forth his mercy and truth: my soul is among lions.)Tj
T*
( And I lie even among the children of men, that are set on fire: whos\
e teeth are spears and )Tj
T*
(arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword.)Tj
T*
( Set up thyself, O God, above the heavens: and thy glory above all th\
e earth.)Tj
T*
( They have laid a net for my feet, and pressed down my soul: they hav\
e digged a pit before me, )Tj
T*
(and are fallen into the midst of it themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(Psalm 57, v. 4)Tj
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( Awake up, my glory; awake, lute and harp: I myself will awake right \
early.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(Psalm 57, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( They are as venomous as the poison of a serpent: even like the deaf \
adder that stoppeth her )Tj
T*
(ears;)Tj
T*
( Which refuseth to hear the voice of the charmer: charm he never so w\
isely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(Psalm 58, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.75456 Tm
( Gilead is mine, and Manasses is mine: Ephraim also is the strength o\
f my head; Judah is my )Tj
T*
(law-giver;)Tj
T*
( Moab is my wash-pot; over Edom will I cast out my shoe: Philistia, b\
e thou glad of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(Psalm 60, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( Their delight is in lies; they give good words with their mouth, but\
curse with their heart.)Tj
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(Psalm 62, v. 4)Tj
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( As for the children of men, they are but vanity: the children of men\
are deceitful upon the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(weights, they are altogether lighter than vanity itself.)Tj
T*
( O trust not in wrong and robbery, give not yourselves unto vanity: i\
f riches increase, set not )Tj
T*
(your heart upon them.)Tj
T*
( God spake once, and twice I have also heard the same: that power bel\
ongeth unto God;)Tj
T*
( And that thou, Lord, art merciful: for thou rewardest every man acco\
rding to his work.)Tj
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(Psalm 62, v. 9)Tj
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( My soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh also longeth after thee: in a b\
arren and dry land where no )Tj
T*
(water is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Psalm 63, v. 2)Tj
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( These also that seek the hurt of my soul: they shall go under the ea\
rth.)Tj
T*
( Let them fall upon the edge of the sword: that they may be a portion\
for foxes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(Psalm 63, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Thou, O God, art praised in Sion: and unto thee shall the vow be per\
formed in Jerusalem.)Tj
T*
( Thou that hearest the prayer: unto thee shall all flesh come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(Psalm 65, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Thou that art the hope of all the ends of the earth, and of them tha\
t remain in the broad sea.)Tj
T*
( Who in his strength setteth fast the mountains: and is girded about \
with power.)Tj
T*
( Who stilleth the raging of the sea: and the noise of his waves, and \
the madness of the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(Psalm 65, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Thou visitest the earth, and blessest it: thou makest it very plente\
ous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(Psalm 65, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Thou waterest her furrows, thou sendest rain into the little valleys\
thereof: thou makest it soft )Tj
T*
(with the drops of rain, and blessest the increase of it.)Tj
T*
( Thou crownest the year with thy goodness: and thy clouds drop fatnes\
s.)Tj
T*
( They shall drop upon the dwellings of the wilderness: and the little\
hills shall rejoice on every )Tj
T*
(side.)Tj
T*
( The folds shall be full of sheep: the valleys also shall stand so th\
ick with corn, that they shall )Tj
T*
(laugh and sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(Psalm 65, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( God be merciful unto us, and bless us: and shew us the light of his \
countenance, and be )Tj
T*
(merciful unto us;)Tj
T*
( That thy way may be known upon earth: thy saving health among all na\
tions.)Tj
T*
( Let the people praise thee, O God: yea, let all the people praise th\
ee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(Psalm 67, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Then shall the earth bring forth her increase: and God, even our own\
God, shall give us his )Tj
T*
(blessing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(Psalm 67, v. 6)Tj
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( Let God arise, and let his enemies be scattered: let them also that \
hate him flee before him.)Tj
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(Psalm 68, v. 1)Tj
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( O sing unto God, and sing praises unto his name: magnify him that ri\
deth upon the heavens, as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(it were upon an horse; praise him in his name JAH, and rejoice before hi\
m.)Tj
T*
( He is a Father of the fatherless, and defendeth the cause of the wid\
ows: even God in his holy )Tj
T*
(habitation.)Tj
T*
( He is the God that maketh men to be of one mind in an house, and bri\
ngeth the prisoners out of )Tj
T*
(captivity: but letteth the runagates continue in scarceness.)Tj
T*
( O God, when thou wentest forth before the people: when thou wentest \
through the wilderness,)Tj
T*
( The earth shook, and the heavens dropped at the presence of God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(Psalm 68, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( The Lord gave the word: great was the company of the preachers.)Tj
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( Kings with their armies did flee, kand were discomfited: and they of\
the household divided the )Tj
T*
(spoil.)Tj
T*
( Though ye have lien among the pots, yet shall ye be as the wings of \
a dove: that is covered )Tj
T*
(with silver wings, and her feathers like gold.)Tj
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(Psalm 68, v. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Why hop ye so, ye high hills? this is God\222s hill, in which it ple\
aseth him to dwell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(Psalm 68, v. 16)Tj
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( Thou art gone up on high, thou hast led captivity captive, and recei\
ved gifts for men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(Psalm 68, v. 18)Tj
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( The zeal of thine house hath even eaten me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(Psalm 69, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Thy rebuke hath broken my heart; I am full of heaviness: I looked fo\
r some to have pity on me, )Tj
T*
(but there was no man, neither found I any to comfort me.)Tj
T*
( They gave me gall to eat: and when I was thirsty they gave me vinega\
r to drink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(Psalm 69, v. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Let their habitation be void: and no man to dwell in their tents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(Psalm 69, v. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Let them be wiped out of the book of the living: and not be written \
among the righteous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(Psalm 69, v. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Let them be ashamed and confounded that seek after my soul: let them\
be turned backward and )Tj
T*
(put to confusion that wish me evil.)Tj
T*
( Let them for their reward be soon brought to shame: that cry over me\
, There, there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(Psalm 70, v. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( I am become as it were a monster unto many: but my sure trust is in \
thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(Psalm 71, v. 6)Tj
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( Cast me not away in the time of age: forsake me not when my strength\
faileth me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(Psalm 71, v. 8)Tj
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( Give the King thy judgements, O God: and thy righteousness unto the \
King\222s son.)Tj
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(Psalm 72, v. 1)Tj
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( The mountains also shall bring peace: and the little hills righteous\
ness unto the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Psalm 72, v. 3)Tj
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( His dominion shall be also from the one sea to the other: and from t\
he flood unto the world\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(end.)Tj
T*
( They that dwell in the wilderness shall kneel before him: his enemie\
s shall lick the dust.)Tj
T*
( The Kings of Tharsis and of the isles shall give presents: the kings\
of Arabia and Saba shall )Tj
T*
(bring gifts.)Tj
T*
( All kings shall fall down before him: all nations shall do him servi\
ce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(Psalm 72, v. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( He shall live, and unto him shall be given of the gold of Arabia.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Psalm 72, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Therefore fall the people unto them: and thereout suck they no small\
advantage.)Tj
T*
( Tush, say they, how should God perceive it: is there knowledge in th\
e most High?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(Psalm 73, v. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Then thought I to understand this: but it was too hard for me.)Tj
T*
( Until I went into the sanctuary of God: then understood I the end of\
these men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(Psalm 73, v. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( O deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove unto the multitude of the \
enemies: and forget not the )Tj
T*
(congregation of the poor for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Psalm 74, v. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( The earth is weak, and all the inhabiters thereof: I bear up the pil\
lars of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(Psalm 75, v. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( For promotion cometh neither from the east, nor from the west: nor y\
et lfrom the south.)Tj
T*
( And why? God is the Judge: he putteth down one, and setteth up anoth\
er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(Psalm 75, v. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( In Jewry is God known: his Name is great in Israel.)Tj
T*
( At Salem is his tabernacle: and his dwelling in Sion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(Psalm 76, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( I have considered the days of old: and the years that are past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(Psalm 77, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Hear my law, O my people: incline your ears unto the words of my mou\
th.)Tj
T*
( I will open my mouth in a parable: I will declare hard sentences of \
old;)Tj
T*
( Which we have heard and known: and such as our fathers have told us.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(Psalm 78, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Not to be as their forefathers, a faithless and stubborn generation:\
a generation that set not their )Tj
T*
(heart aright, and whose spirit cleaveth not stedfastly unto God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(Psalm 78, v. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( He divided the sea, and let them go through: he made the waters to s\
tand on an heap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(Psalm 78, v. 14)Tj
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( He rained down manna also upon them for to eat: and gave them food f\
rom heaven.)Tj
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( So man did eat angels\222 food: for he sent them meat enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Psalm 78, v. 25)Tj
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( So the Lord awaked as one out of sleep: and like a giant refreshed w\
ith wine.)Tj
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(Psalm 78, v. 66)Tj
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( Turn us again, O God: shew the light of thy countenance, and we shal\
l be whole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(Psalm 80, v. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Sing we merrily unto God our strength: make a cheerful noise unto th\
e God of Jacob.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Take the psalm, bring hither the tabret: the merry harp with the lut\
e.)Tj
T*
( Blow up the trumpet in the new-moon: even in the time appointed, and\
upon our solemn feast-)Tj
T*
(day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Psalm 81, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I have said, Ye are gods: and ye are all children of the most Highes\
t.)Tj
T*
( But ye shall die like men: and fall like one of the princes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Psalm 82, v. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( O how amiable are thy dwellings: thou Lord of hosts!)Tj
T*
( My soul hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lo\
rd: my heart and my flesh )Tj
T*
(rejoice in the living God.)Tj
T*
( Yea, the sparrow hath found her an house, and the swallow a nest whe\
re she may lay her )Tj
T*
(young: even thy altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(Psalm 84, v. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee: in whose heart are thy\
ways.)Tj
T*
( Who going through the vale of misery use it for a well: and the pool\
s are filled with water.)Tj
T*
( They will go from strength to strength: and unto the God of gods app\
eareth every one of them )Tj
T*
(in Sion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(Psalm 84, v. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( For one day in thy courts: is better than a thousand.)Tj
T*
( I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God: than to dwell \
in the tents of ungodliness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(Psalm 84, v. 10)Tj
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( Wilt thou not turn again, and quicken us: that thy people may rejoic\
e in thee?)Tj
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(Psalm 85, v. 6)Tj
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( Mercy and truth are met together: righteousness and peace have kisse\
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( Truth shall flourish out of the earth: and righteousness hath looked\
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(Psalm 85, v. 10)Tj
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( Very excellent things are spoken of thee: thou city of God.)Tj
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(Psalm 87, v. 2)Tj
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( Lord, thou hast been our refuge: from one generation to another.)Tj
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( Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever the earth and the w\
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T*
(God from everlasting, and world without end.)Tj
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(Psalm 90, v. 1)Tj
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( For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday: seeing that \
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( In the morning it is green, and groweth up: but in the evening it is\
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(Psalm 90, v. 4)Tj
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( The days of our age are threescore years and ten; and though men be \
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T*
(to fourscore years: yet is their strength then but labour and sorrow; so\
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T*
(we are gone.)Tj
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(Psalm 90, v. 10)Tj
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( So teach us to number our days: that we may apply our hearts unto wi\
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(Psalm 90, v. 12)Tj
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( For he shall deliver thee from the snare of the hunter: and from the\
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T*
( He shall defend thee under his wings, and thou shalt be safe under h\
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T*
(and truth shall be thy shield and buckler.)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt not be afraid for any terror by night: nor for the arrow \
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T*
( For the pestilence that walketh in darkness: nor for the sickness th\
at destroyeth in the noon-day.)Tj
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( A thousand shall fall beside thee, and ten thousand at thy right han\
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T*
(thee.)Tj
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(Psalm 91, v. 3)Tj
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( For thou, Lord, art my hope: thou hast set thine house of defence ve\
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( There shall no evil happen unto thee: neither shall any plague come \
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T*
( For he shall give his angels charge over thee: to keep thee in all t\
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T*
( They shall bear thee in their hands: that thou hurt not thy foot aga\
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T*
( Thou shalt go upon the lion and adder: the young lion and the dragon\
shalt thou tread under thy )Tj
T*
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(Psalm 91, v. 9)Tj
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( With long life will I satisfy him: and shew him my salvation.)Tj
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(Psalm 91, v. 16)Tj
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T*
(girded himself with strength.)Tj
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( He hath made the round world so sure: that it cannot be moved.)Tj
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(Psalm 93, v. 1)Tj
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( The floods are risen, O Lord, the floods have lift up their voice: t\
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T*
( The waves of the sea are mighty, and rage horribly: but yet the Lord\
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T*
(mightier.)Tj
T*
( Thy testimonies, O Lord, are very sure: holiness becometh thine hous\
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(Psalm 93, v. 4)Tj
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( He that planted the ear, shall he not hear: or he that made the eye,\
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(Psalm 94, v. 9)Tj
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( O come, let us sing unto the Lord: let us heartily rejoice in the st\
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( Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving: and shew ourselve\
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( For he is the Lord our God: and we are the people of his pasture, an\
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( To-day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts: as in the \
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T*
(of temptation in the wilderness;)Tj
T*
( When your fathers tempted me: proved me, and saw my works.)Tj
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(Psalm 95, v. 4)Tj
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( Ascribe unto the Lord the honour due unto his Name: bring presents, \
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( O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness: let the whole earth st\
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(Psalm 96, v. 8)Tj
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(Psalm 97, v. 1)Tj
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(Psalm 98, v. 1.)Tj
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( Praise the Lord upon the harp: sing to the harp with a psalm of than\
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( With trumpets also, and shawms: O shew yourselves joyful before the \
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(Psalm 98, v. 6)Tj
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(Psalm 98, v. 10)Tj
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(Psalm 99, v. 1)Tj
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T*
(presence with a song.)Tj
T*
( Be ye sure that the Lord he is God: it is he that hath made us, and \
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T*
(people, and the sheep of his pasture.)Tj
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(Psalm 100, v. 1.)Tj
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( I am become like a pelican in the wilderness: and like an owl that i\
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T*
( I have watched, and am even as it were a sparrow: that sitteth alone\
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(Psalm 102, v. 6)Tj
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( Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth: \
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(thy years shall not fail.)Tj
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(Psalm 102, v. 25)Tj
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(Psalm 103, v. 2)Tj
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(Psalm 103, v. 5)Tj
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( He will not alway be chiding: neither keepeth he his anger for ever.\
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(Psalm 103, v. 8)Tj
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( Look how wide also the east is from the west: so far hath he set our\
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T*
( Yea, like as a father pitieth his own children: even so is the Lord \
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T*
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( For he knoweth whereof we are made: he remembereth that we are but d\
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T*
( The days of man are but as grass: for he flourisheth as a flower of \
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T*
( For as soon as the wind goeth over it,o it is gone: and the place th\
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(Psalm 103, v. 11)Tj
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( Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters: and maketh the c\
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T*
(walketh upon the wings of the wind.)Tj
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( He maketh his angels spirits: and his ministers a flaming fire.)Tj
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( He laid the foundations of the earth: that it never should move at a\
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( Thou coveredst it with the deep like as with a garment: the waters s\
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(Psalm 104, v. 3)Tj
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( Thou hast set them their bounds which they shall not pass: neither t\
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T*
( He sendeth the springs into the rivers: which run among the hills.)Tj
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( All beasts of the field drink thereof: and the wild asses quench the\
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( Beside them shall the fowls of the air have their habitation: and si\
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(Psalm 104, v. 9)Tj
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( He bringeth forth grass for the cattle: and green herb for the servi\
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T*
( That he may bring food out of the earth, and wine that maketh glad t\
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T*
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T*
( The trees of the Lord also are full of sap: even the cedars of Liban\
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(Psalm 104, v. 14)Tj
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( The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats: and so are the stony\
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T*
( He appointed the moon for certain seasons: and the sun knoweth his g\
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( Thou makest darkness that it may be night: wherein all the beasts of\
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( The lions roaring after their prey: do seek their meat from God.)Tj
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( O Lord, how manifold are thy works, in wisdom hast thou made them al\
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( So is the great and wide sea also: wherein are creeping things innum\
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T*
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( There go the ships, and there is that Leviathan: whom thou hast made\
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( These wait all upon thee: that thou mayest give them meat in due sea\
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(Psalm 104, v. 18)Tj
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( The earth shall tremble at the look of him: if he do but touch the h\
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(Psalm 104, v. 32)Tj
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( He had sent a man before them: even Joseph, who was sold to be a bon\
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( Whose feet they hurt in the stocks: the iron entered into his soul.)Tj
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(Psalm 105, v. 17)Tj
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( The king sent, and delivered him: the prince of the people let him g\
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( He made him lord also of his house: and ruler of all his substance;)Tj
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( That he might inform his princes after his will: and teach his senat\
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(Psalm 105, v. 20)Tj
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( Yea, they thought scorn of that pleasant land: and gave no credence \
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( But murmured in their tents: and hearkened not unto the voice of the\
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(Psalm 106, v. 24)Tj
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( Thus were they stained with their own works: and went a whoring with\
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(Psalm 106, v. 38)Tj
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( O that men would therefore praise the Lord for his goodness: and dec\
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( For he satisfieth the empty soul: and filleth the hungry soul with g\
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( Such as sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death: being fast boun\
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T*
( Because they rebelled against the words of the Lord: and lightly reg\
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(most Highest.)Tj
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(Psalm 107, v. 8)Tj
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( Their soul abhorred all manner of meat: and they were even hard at d\
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( For he maketh the storm to cease: so that the waves thereof are stil\
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( Then are they glad, because they are at rest: and so he bringeth the\
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( The sea saw that, and fled: Jordan was driven back.)Tj
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( The mountains skipped like rams: and the little hills like young she\
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(Psalm 114, v. 1)Tj
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(Psalm 115, v. 1.)Tj
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( They have mouths, and speak not: eyes have they, and see not.)Tj
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( They have hands, and handle not: feet have they, and walk not: neith\
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(Psalm 115, v. 5)Tj
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(Psalm 116, v. 3)Tj
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(the death of his saints.)Tj
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(things to pass.)Tj
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(Psalm 118, v. 16)Tj
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(Psalm 118, v. 26)Tj
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(Psalm 119, v. 9)Tj
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( The law of thy mouth is dearer unto me: than thousands of gold and s\
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(Psalm 119, v. 72)Tj
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( Thy word is a lantern unto my feet: and a light unto my paths.)Tj
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(Psalm 119, v. 105)Tj
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( Woe is me that I am constrained to dwell with Mesech: and to have my\
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T*
(tents of Kedar.)Tj
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(Psalm 120, v. 4)Tj
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( I labour for peace, but when I speak unto them therof: they make the\
m ready to battle.)Tj
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(Psalm 120, v. 6)Tj
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( I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills: from whence cometh my help.\
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T*
( My help cometh even from the Lord: who hath made heaven and earth.)Tj
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( He will not suffer thy foot to be moved: and he that keepeth thee wi\
ll not sleep.)Tj
T*
( Behold, he that keepeth Israel: shall neither slumber not sleep.)Tj
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( The Lord himself is thy keeper: the Lord is thy defence upon thy rig\
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T*
( So that the sun shall not burn thee by day: neither the moon by nigh\
t.)Tj
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(Psalm 121, v. 1.)Tj
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( The Lord shall preserve thy going out, and thy coming in: from this \
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(Psalm 121, v. 8)Tj
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( I was glad when they said unto me: We will go into the house of the \
Lord.)Tj
T*
( Our feet shall stand in thy gates: O Jerusalem.)Tj
T*
( Jerusalem is built as a city: that is at unity in itself.)Tj
T*
( For thither the tribes go up, even the tribes of the Lord.)Tj
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(Psalm 122, v. 1)Tj
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( O pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee\
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( Peace be within thy walls: and plenteousness with thy palaces.)Tj
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( For my brethren and companions\222 sakes: I will wish thee prosperit\
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(Psalm 122, v. 6)Tj
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( If the Lord himself had not been on our side, now may Israel say: if\
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T*
(been on our side, when men rose up against us;)Tj
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( They had swallowed us up quick: when they were so wrathfully displea\
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(Psalm 124, v. 1)Tj
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( Our soul is escaped even as a bird out of the snare of the fowler: t\
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( Our help standeth in the Name of the Lord: who hath made heaven and \
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(Psalm 124, v. 6.)Tj
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( The hills stand about Jerusalem: even so standeth the Lord round abo\
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(time forth for evermore.)Tj
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(Psalm 125, v. 2)Tj
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( When the Lord turned again the captivity of Sion: then were we like \
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( Then was our mouth filled with laughter: and our tongue with joy.)Tj
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(Psalm 126, v. 1)Tj
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( Turn our captivity, O Lord: as the rivers in the south.)Tj
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( They that sow in tears: shall reap in joy.)Tj
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( He that now goeth on his way weeping, and beareth forth good seed: s\
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(again with joy, and bring his sheaves with him.)Tj
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(Psalm 126, v. 5)Tj
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( Except the Lord build the house: their labour is but lost that build\
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( Except the Lord keep the city: the watchman waketh but in vain.)Tj
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(Psalm 127, v. 1.)Tj
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( Like as the arrows in the hand of the giant: even so are the young c\
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( Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them: they shall not b\
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T*
(with their enemies in the gate.)Tj
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(Psalm 127, v. 5)Tj
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( Thy wife shall be as the fruitful vine: upon the walls of thine hous\
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T*
( Thy children like the olive-branches: round about thy table.)Tj
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(Psalm 128, v. 3)Tj
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( Many a time have they fought against me from my youth up: may Israel\
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(Psalm 129, v. 1)Tj
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( But they have not prevailed against me.)Tj
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( The plowers plowed upon my back: and made long furrows.)Tj
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(Psalm 129, v. 2)Tj
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( Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice\
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( O let thine ears consider well: the voice of my complaint.)Tj
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( If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss: O Lord, w\
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(Psalm 130, v. 1.)Tj
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( My soul fleeth unto the Lord: before the morning watch, I say, befor\
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(Psalm 130, v. 6)Tj
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( Lord, I am not high-minded: I have no proud looks.)Tj
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( I do not exercise myself in great matters: which are too high for me\
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(Psalm 131, v. 1)Tj
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( Behold, how good and joyful a thing it is: brethren, to dwell togeth\
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(Psalm 135, v. 10)Tj
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( O give thanks unto the Lord, for he is gracious: and his mercy endur\
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(Psalm 136, v. 1)Tj
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( By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept: when we remembered th\
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( As for our harps, we hanged them up: upon the trees that are therein\
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( For they that led us away captive required of us then a song, and me\
lody, in our heaviness: )Tj
T*
(Sing us one of the songs of Sion.)Tj
T*
( How shall we sing the Lord\222s song: in a strange land?)Tj
T*
( If I forget thee, O Jerusalem: let my right hand forget her cunning.\
)Tj
T*
( If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mo\
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T*
(Jerusalem in my mirth.)Tj
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(Psalm 137, v. 1)Tj
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( O Lord, thou hast searched me out, and known me: thou knowest my dow\
n-sitting, and mine )Tj
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(up-rising; thou understandest my thoughts long before.)Tj
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(Psalm 139, v. 1)Tj
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( Such knowledge is too wonderful and excellent for me: I cannot attai\
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( Whither shall I go then from thy Spirit: or whither shall I go then \
from thy presence?)Tj
T*
( If I climb up into the heaven, thou art there: if I go down to hell,\
thou art there also.)Tj
T*
( If I take the wings of the morning: and remain in the uttermost part\
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T*
( Even there also shall thy hand lead me: and thy right hand shall hol\
d me.)Tj
T*
( If I say, Peradventure the darkness shall cover me: then shall my ni\
ght be turned to day.)Tj
T*
( Yea, the darkness is no darkness with thee, but the night is as clea\
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T*
(light to thee are both alike.)Tj
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(Psalm 139, v. 5)Tj
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( I will give thanks unto thee, for I am fearfully and wonderfully mad\
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(Psalm 139, v. 13)Tj
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( Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being imperfect: and in thy boo\
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T*
(written;)Tj
T*
( Which day by day were fashioned: when as yet there were none of them\
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(Psalm 139, v. 15)Tj
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(Psalm 139, v. 23)Tj
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( Let the lifting up of my hands be an evening sacrifice.)Tj
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( Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth: and keep the door of my lips.)Tj
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(Psalm 141, v. 2)Tj
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( Let the ungodly fall into their own nets together: and let me ever e\
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( Enter not into judgement with thy servant: for in thy sight shall no\
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( That our sons may grow up as the young plants: and that our daughter\
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(corners of the temple.)Tj
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(Psalm 144, v. 11)Tj
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( That our sheep may bring forth thousands and ten thousands in our st\
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( That our oxen may be strong to labour, that there be no decay: no le\
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(complaining in our streets.)Tj
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(Psalm 144, v. 13)Tj
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( The Lord upholdeth all such as fall: and lifteth up all those that a\
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(Psalm 145, v. 14)Tj
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( Thou givest them their meat in due season.)Tj
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( Thou openest thine hand: and fillest all things living with plenteou\
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(Psalm 145, v. 15)Tj
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( O put not your trust in princes, nor in any child of man: for there \
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(Psalm 146, v. 2)Tj
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( The Lord looseth men out of prison: the Lord giveth sight to the bli\
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(Psalm 146, v. 7)Tj
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( The Lord careth for the strangers; he defendeth the fatherless and w\
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(ungodly, he turneth it upside down.)Tj
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(Psalm 146, v. 9)Tj
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( A joyful and pleasant thing it is to be thankful.)Tj
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( The Lord doth build up Jerusalem: and gather together the out-casts \
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( He healeth those that are broken in heart: and giveth medicine to he\
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( He telleth the number of the stars: and calleth them all by their na\
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(Psalm 147, v. 1)Tj
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( He hath no pleasure in the strength of an horse: neither delighteth \
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(Psalm 147, v. 10)Tj
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( He giveth snow like wool: and scattereth the hoar-frost like ashes.)Tj
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( He casteth forth his ice like morsels: who is able to abide his fros\
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(Psalm 147, v. 16)Tj
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( Praise the Lord upon earth: ye dragons, and all deeps;)Tj
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( Fire and hail, snow and vapours: wind and storm, fulfilling his word\
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(Psalm 148, v. 7)Tj
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(only is excellent, and his praise above heaven and earth.)Tj
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( Let every thing that hath breath: praise the Lord.)Tj
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(servants, and the Fleet in which we serve.)Tj
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( Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire,)Tj
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( And lighten with celestial fire.)Tj
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( Il a mis le lait)Tj
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( Dans le caf\350 au lait)Tj
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( Avec la petite cuiller)Tj
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( Il a tourn\350)Tj
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( Restez-y)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et nous nous resterons sur la terre)Tj
T*
( Qui est quelquefois si jolie.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Stay there)Tj
T*
( And we will stay on earth)Tj
T*
( Which is sometimes so pretty.)Tj
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(\221Pater Noster\222)Tj
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( 4.96 Richard Price 1723-91)Tj
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( Now, methinks, I see the ardour for liberty catching and spreading; \
a general amendment )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(beginning in human affairs; the dominion of kings changed for the domini\
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T*
(dominion of priests giving way to the dominion of reason and conscience.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221A Discourse on the Love of our Country\222 \(1790\))Tj
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( 4.97 J. B. Priestley 1894-1984)Tj
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( To say that these men paid their shillings to watch twenty-two hirel\
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0 -1.2 TD
(say that a violin is wood and catgut, that Hamlet is so much paper and i\
nk. For a shilling the )Tj
T*
(Bruddersford United AFC offered you Conflict and Art.)Tj
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(\221Good Companions\222 \(1929\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
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( I can\222t help feeling wary when I hear anything said about the mas\
ses.)Tj
T*
( First you take their faces from \222em by calling \222em the masses \
and then you accuse \222em of not )Tj
T*
(having any faces.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221Saturn Over the Water\222 ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( This little steamer, like all her brave and battered sisters, is imm\
ortal. She\222ll go sailing proudly )Tj
T*
(down the years in the epic of Dunkirk.)Tj
T*
( And our great-grand-children, when they learn how we began this war \
by snatching glory out )Tj
T*
(of defeat, and then swept on to victory, may also learn how the little h\
oliday steamers made an )Tj
T*
(excursion to hell and came back glorious.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 232.42047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 5 June 1940, in \221Listener\222 13 June 1940)Tj
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( God can stand being told by Professor Ayer and Marghanita Laski that\
He doesn\222t exist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(In \221Listener\222 1 July 1965, p. 12)Tj
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( 4.98 Joseph Priestley 1733-1804)Tj
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( Every man, when he comes to be sensible of his natural rights, and t\
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0 -1.2 TD
(will consider himself as fully equal to any other person whatever.)Tj
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(\221An Essay on the First Principles of Government\222 \(1768\) pt. 1)Tj
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( 4.99 Matthew Prior 1664-1721)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( I court others in verse: but I love thee in prose:)Tj
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( And they have my whimsies, but thou hast my heart.)Tj
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(\221A Better Answer\222)Tj
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( Be to her virtues very kind;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Let all her ways be unconfined;)Tj
T*
( And clap your padlock\227on her mind.)Tj
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(\221An English Padlock\222 l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Nobles and heralds, by your leave,)Tj
T*
( Here lies what once was Matthew Prior,)Tj
T*
( The son of Adam and of Eve,)Tj
T*
( Can Stuart or Nassau go higher?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph\222 \(1702\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( For the idiom of words very little she heeded,)Tj
T*
( Provided the matter she drove at succeeded,)Tj
T*
( She took and gave languages just as she needed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Jinny the Just\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Venus, take my votive glass;)Tj
T*
( Since I am not what I was,)Tj
T*
( What from this day I shall be,)Tj
T*
( Venus, let me never see.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady who Offers her Looking-Glass to Venus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( The merchant, to secure his treasure,)Tj
T*
( Conveys it in a borrowed name:)Tj
T*
( Euphelia serves to grace my measure;)Tj
T*
( But Chloe is my real flame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221An Ode\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( He ranged his tropes, and preached up patience;)Tj
T*
( Backed his opinion with quotations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Paulo Purganti and his Wife\222 l. 138)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Cured yesterday of my disease,)Tj
T*
( I died last night of my physician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Remedy Worse than the Disease\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( What is a King?\227a man condemned to bear)Tj
T*
( The public burden of the nation\222s care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Solomon\222 \(1718\) bk. 3, l. 275)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( For, as our different ages move,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis so ordained \(would Fate but mend it!\))Tj
T*
( That I shall be past making love,)Tj
T*
( When she begins to comprehend it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221To a Child of Quality of Five Years Old\222)Tj
ET
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( From ignorance our comfort flows,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The only wretched are the wise.)Tj
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(\221To the Hon. Charles Montague\222 st. 9.)Tj
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( No, no; for my virginity,)Tj
T*
( When I lose that, says Rose, I\222ll die:)Tj
T*
( Behind the elms last night, cried Dick,)Tj
T*
( Rose, were you not extremely sick?)Tj
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(\221A True Mind\222)Tj
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( They never taste who always drink;)Tj
T*
( They always talk, who never think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Upon this Passage in Scaligerana\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.100 V. S. Pritchett 1900\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The principle of procrastinated rape is said to be the ruling one in\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Living Novel\222 \(1946\) \221Clarissa\222)Tj
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( What Chekhov saw in our failure to communicate was something positiv\
e and precious: the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(private silence in which we live, and which enables us to endure our own\
solitude. We live, as his )Tj
T*
(characters do, beyond any tale we happen to enact.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Myth Makers\222 \(1979\) \221Chekhov, a doctor\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( The detective novel is the art-for-art\222s-sake of our yawning Phil\
istinism, the classic example of )Tj
T*
(a specialized form of art removed from contact with the life it pretends\
to build on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221New Statesman\222 16 June 1951 \221Books in General\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 344.2124 Tm
( 4.101 Adelaide Ann Procter 1825-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Seated one day at the organ,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I was weary and ill at ease,)Tj
T*
( And my fingers wandered idly)Tj
T*
( Over the noisy keys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.67047 Tm
(\221A Lost Chord\222 \(1858\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.75456 Tm
( But I struck one chord of music,)Tj
T*
( Like the sound of a great Amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(\221A Lost Chord\222 \(1858\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 165.7124 Tm
( 4.102 Propertius c.50-c.16 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Navita de ventis, de tauris narrat arator,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Enumerat miles vulnera, pastor oves.)Tj
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( The seaman tells stories of winds, the ploughman of bulls; the soldi\
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(\221Elegies\222 bk. 2, no. 1, l. 43)Tj
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( Quod si deficiant vires, audacia certe)Tj
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( Laus erit: in magnis et voluisse sat est.)Tj
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(the will is enough.)Tj
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(\221Elegies\222 bk. 2, no. 10, l. 5)Tj
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( Cedite Romani scriptores, cedite Grai!)Tj
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( Nescioquid maius nascitur Iliade.)Tj
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( 4.103 Protagoras c.485-c.415 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man is the measure of all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.17047 Tm
(In Plato \221Theaetetus\222 160d)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 4.104 Pierre-Joseph Proudhon 1809-65)Tj
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T*
( La propri\350t\350 c\222est le vol.)Tj
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( Property is theft.)Tj
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(\221Qu\222est-ce que la propri\350t\350?\222 \(1840\) ch.1)Tj
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( 4.105 Marcel Proust 1871-1922)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A la recherche du temps perdu.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( In search of lost time.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1913-27\), translated by C. K. Scott-Moncrieff and S. H\
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0 -1.2 TD
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15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( On devient moral d\351s qu\222on est malheureux.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( As soon as one is unhappy one becomes moral.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.67047 Tm
(\221A l\222ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs\222 \(Within a Budding Grov\
e, 1918, translated 1924 by C. K. Scott-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Moncrieff, vol. 1, p. 290\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Tout ce que nous connaissons de grand nous vient des nerveux. Ce son\
t eux et non pas d\222autres )Tj
T*
(qui ont fond\350 les religions et compos\350 les chefs-d\222oeuvre. Jama\
is le monde ne saura tout ce qu\222il )Tj
T*
(leur doit et surtout ce qu\222eux ont souffert pour le lui donner.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( All the greatest things we know have come to us from neurotics. It i\
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0 -1.2 TD
(have founded religions and created great works of art. Never will the wo\
rld be conscious of how )Tj
T*
(much it owes to them, nor above all of what they have suffered in order \
to bestow their gifts on it.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221Le c\364t\350 de Guermantes\222 \(Guermantes Way, 1921, translated 1\
925 by C. K. Scott-Moncrieff, vol. 1, p. 418\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.25456 Tm
( Il n\222y a rien comme le d\350sir pour emp\352cher les choses qu\222\
on dit d\222avoir aucune ressemblance )Tj
T*
(avec ce qu\222on a dans la pens\350e.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There is nothing like desire for preventing the thing one says from \
bearing any resemblance to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(what one has in mind.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.67047 Tm
(\221Le c\364t\350 de Guermantes\222 \(Guermantes Way, 1921, translated 1\
925 by C. K. Scott-Moncrieff, vol. 2, p. 60\))Tj
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( Un artiste n\222a pas besoin d\222exprimer directement sa pens\350e \
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0 -1.2 TD
(en refl\351te la qualit\350; on a m\352me pu dire que la louange la plus\
haute de Dieu est dans la n\350gation )Tj
T*
(de l\222ath\350e qui trouve la Cr\350ation assez parfaite pour se passer\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( An artist has no need to express his mind directly in his work for i\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(the atheist, who finds creation so perfect that it can dispense with a c\
reator.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.42047 Tm
(\221Le c\364t\350 de Guermantes\222 \(Guermantes Way, 1921, translated 1\
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( Longtemps, je me suis couch\350 de bonne heure.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For a long time I used to go to bed early.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.92047 Tm
(\221Du c\364t\350 de chez Swann\222 \(Swann\222s Way, 1913, translated 1\
922 by C. K. Scott-Moncrieff, vol. 1, p. 1\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 564.00456 Tm
( Je portai \341 mes l\351vres une cuiller\350e du th\350 o\373 j\222a\
vais laiss\350 s\222amollir un morceau de madeleine...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Et tout d\222un coup le souvenir m\222est apparu. Ce go\373t c\222\350ta\
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T*
(que le dimanche matin \341 Combray...ma tante L\350onie m\222offrait apr\
\351s l\222avoir tremp\350 dans son )Tj
T*
(infusion de th\350 ou de tilleul.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a mo\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the memory returns. The taste was that of the little crumb of madeleine \
which on Sunday )Tj
T*
(mornings at Combray...my aunt L\350onie used to give me, dipping it firs\
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T*
(of lime-flower tea.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 418.42047 Tm
(\221Du c\364t\350 de chez Swann\222 \(Swann\222s Way, 1913, translated 1\
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T*
(61\))Tj
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( Et il ne fut plus question de Swann chez les Verdurin.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( After which there was no more talk of Swann at the Verdurins\222.)Tj
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(\221Du c\364t\350 de chez Swann\222 \(Swann\222s Way, 1913, translated 1\
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15 0 0 15 10 324.00456 Tm
( Dire que j\222ai g\342ch\350 des ann\350es de ma vie, que j\222ai vo\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 -1.44254 TD
( To think that I have wasted years of my life, that I have longed for\
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0 -1.2 TD
(that I have ever known has been for a woman who did not please me, who w\
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221Du c\364t\350 de chez Swann\222 \(Swann\222s Way, 1913, translated 1\
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15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( Du reste, continua Mme de Cambremer, j\222ai horreur des couchers de\
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T*
(c\222est op\350ra.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( \221Anyhow,\222 Mme de Cambremer went on, \221I have a horror of sun\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Sodome et Gomorrhe\222 \(Cities of the Plain, 1922, translated by C.\
K. Scott-Moncrieff, vol. 1, p. 296\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Une de ces d\350p\352ches dont M. de Guermantes avait spirituellemen\
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T*
(venir, mensonge suit\222.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( One of those telegrams of which the model had been wittily invented \
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(\221Impossible to come, lie follows\222.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Le temps retrouv\350\222 \(Time Regained, 1926, translated 1931 by S\
. Hudson, ch. 1, p. 7\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Les vrais paradis sont les paradis qu\222on a perdus.)Tj
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( The true paradises are paradises we have lost.)Tj
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(\221Le temps retrouv\350\222 \(Time Regained, 1926, translated 1931 by S\
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( Le bonheur seul est salutaire pour le corps, mais c\222est le chagri\
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0 -1.2 TD
(l\222esprit.)Tj
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( Happiness is salutary for the body but sorrow develops the powers of\
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(\221Le temps retrouv\350\222 \(Time Regained, 1926, translated 1931 by S\
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( 4.106 Publilius Syrus)Tj
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( Formosa facies muta commendatio est.)Tj
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( A beautiful face is a mute recommendation.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.92047 Tm
(\221Sententiae\222 no. 199, in J. W. and A. M. Duff \221Minor Latin Poet\
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(Bacon in Apophthegms no. 12)Tj
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( Inopi beneficium bis dat qui dat celeriter.)Tj
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( He gives the poor man twice as much good who gives quickly.)Tj
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(\221Sententiae\222 no. 274, in J. W. and A. M. Duff \221Minor Latin Poet\
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(cito dat He gives twice who gives soon)Tj
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( Iudex damnatur ubi nocens absolvitur.)Tj
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( The judge is condemned when the guilty party is acquitted.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.92047 Tm
(\221Sententiae\222 no. 296, in J. W. and A. M. Duff \221Minor Latin Poet\
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( Necessitas dat legem non ipsa accipit.)Tj
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T*
( Necessity gives the law without itself acknowledging one.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.42047 Tm
(\221Sententiae\222 no. 444, in J. W. and A. M. Duff \221Minor Latin Poet\
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(non habet legem Necessity has no law)Tj
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( 4.107 John Pudney 1909-77)Tj
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( Do not despair)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Johnny-head-in-air;)Tj
T*
( He sleeps as sound)Tj
T*
( As Johnny underground.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Fetch out no shroud)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Johnny-in-the-cloud;)Tj
T*
( And keep your tears)Tj
T*
( For him in after years.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Better by far)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Johnny-the-bright-star,)Tj
T*
( To keep your head,)Tj
T*
( And see his children fed.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.17047 Tm
(\221For Johnny\222 \(1942\))Tj
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( 4.108 William Pulteney, Earl of Bath 1684-1764)Tj
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( For Sir Ph\227p well knows)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That innuendoes)Tj
T*
( Will serve him no longer in verse or in prose,)Tj
T*
( Since twelve honest men have decided the cause,)Tj
T*
( And were judges of fact, tho\222 not judges of laws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.42047 Tm
(\221The Honest Jury\222 \(1729\) st. 3 \(on Sir Philip Yorke\222s unsucc\
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15 0 0 15 10 611.2124 Tm
( 4.109 Punch 1841\227)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Advice to persons about to marry.\227\222Don\222t.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(vol. 8, p. 1 \(1845\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( You pays your money and you takes your choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(vol. 10, p. 17 \(1846\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( The Half-Way House to Rome, Oxford.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(vol. 16, p. 36 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( What is better than presence of mind in a railway accident? Absence \
of body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(vol. 16, p. 231 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Never do to-day what you can put off till to-morrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(vol. 17, p. 241 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Who\222s \222im, Bill? A stranger! \222Eave \222arf a brick at \222\
im.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(vol. 26, p. 82 \(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( What is Matter?\227Never mind. What is Mind?\227No matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(vol. 29, p. 19 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( It ain\222t the \222unting as \222urts \222im, it\222s the \222ammer\
, \222ammer, \222ammer along the \222ard \222igh road.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(vol. 30, p. 218 \(1856\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Mun, a had na\222 been the-erre abune two hours when\227bang\227went\
saxpence!!!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(vol. 54, p. 235 \(1868\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Cats is \221dogs\222 and rabbits is \221dogs\222 and so\222s Parrats\
, but this \222ere \221Tortis\222 is a insect, and there )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ain\222t no charge for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(vol. 56, p. 96 \(1869\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Nothink for nothink \222ere, and precious little for sixpence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(vol. 57, p. 152 \(1869\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( Sure, the next train has gone ten minutes ago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(vol. 60, p. 206 \(1871\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( It appears the Americans have taken umbrage. The deuce they have! Wh\
ereabouts is that?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(vol. 63, p. 189 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( Go directly\227see what she\222s doing, and tell her she mustn\222t.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.92047 Tm
(vol. 63, p. 202 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.00456 Tm
( There was one poor tiger that hadn\222t got a Christian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.17047 Tm
(vol. 68, p. 143 \(1875\))Tj
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( There was an old owl lived in an oak)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The more he heard, the less he spoke;)Tj
T*
( The less he spoke, the more he heard)Tj
T*
( O, if men were all like that wise bird!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(vol. 68, p. 155 \(1875\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( It\222s worse than wicked, my dear, it\222s vulgar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(Almanac \(1876\))Tj
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( I never read books\227I write them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.92047 Tm
(vol. 74, p. 210 \(1878\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.00456 Tm
( I am not hungry; but thank goodness, I am greedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(vol. 75, p. 290 \(1878\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( Bishop: Who is it that sees and hears all we do, and before whom ev\
en I am but as a crushed )Tj
T*
(worm?)Tj
T*
( Page: The Missus, my Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(vol. 79, p. 63 \(1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( Ah whiles hae ma doobts aboot the meenister.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(vol. 79, p. 275 \(1880\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( What sort of a doctor is he?)Tj
T*
( Oh, well, I don\222t know very much about his ability; but he\222s g\
ot a very good bedside manner!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.92047 Tm
(vol. 86, p. 121 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.00456 Tm
( I used your soap two years ago; since then I have used no other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.17047 Tm
(vol. 86, p. 197 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.25456 Tm
( Don\222t look at me, Sir, with\227ah\227in that tone of voice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.42047 Tm
(vol. 87, p. 38 \(1884\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 311.50456 Tm
( Wife of two years\222 standing: Oh yes! I\222m sure he\222s not so \
fond of me as at first. He\222s away so )Tj
T*
(much, neglects me dreadfully, and he\222s so cross when he comes home. W\
hat shall I do?)Tj
T*
( Widow: Feed the brute!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(vol. 89, p. 206 \(1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( Nearly all our best men are dead! Carlyle, Tennyson, Browning, Georg\
e Eliot!\227I\222m not )Tj
T*
(feeling very well myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.92047 Tm
(vol. 104, p. 210 \(1893\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.00456 Tm
( Botticelli isn\222t a wine, you Juggins! Botticelli\222s a cheese!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.17047 Tm
(vol. 106, p. 270 \(1894\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.25456 Tm
( I\222m afraid you\222ve got a bad egg, Mr Jones. )Tj
T*
( Oh no, my Lord, I assure you! Parts of it are excellent!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.42047 Tm
(vol. 109, p. 222 \(1895\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.50456 Tm
( Look here, Steward, if this is coffee, I want tea; but if this is te\
a, then I wish for coffee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(vol. 123, p. 44 \(1902\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.75456 Tm
( Sometimes I sits and thinks, and then again I just sits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.92047 Tm
(vol. 131, p. 297 \(1906\))Tj
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( 4.110 Israel Putnam 1718-90)Tj
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( Men, you are all marksmen\227don\222t one of you fire until you see \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.17047 Tm
(At Bunker Hill, 1775; in R. Frothingham \221History of the Siege of Bost\
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0 -1.2 TD
(William Prescott \(1726-95\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 652.9624 Tm
( 4.111 Mario Puzo 1920\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222ll make him an offer he can\222t refuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.42047 Tm
(\221The Godfather\222 \(1969\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 594.50456 Tm
( A lawyer with his briefcase can steal more than a hundred men with g\
uns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.67047 Tm
(\221The Godfather\222 \(1969\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 546.4624 Tm
( 4.112 Pyrrhus 319-272 B.C.)Tj
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T*
( One more such victory and we are lost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.92047 Tm
(After defeating the Romans at Asculum, 279 B.C., in Plutarch \221Paralle\
l Lives\222 \221Pyrrhus\222 ch. 21, sect. 9)Tj
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( 5.0 Q)Tj
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( )Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 5.1 Q)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch \(5.5\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 5.2 Francis Quarles 1592-1644)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I wish thee as much pleasure in the reading, as I had in the writing\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.67047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1635\) \221To the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.75456 Tm
( The heart is a small thing, but desireth great matters. It is not su\
fficient for a kite\222s dinner, yet )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the whole world is not sufficient for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.92047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1635\) bk. 1, no. 12 \221Hugo de Anima\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.00456 Tm
( We spend our midday sweat, our midnight oil;)Tj
T*
( We tire the night in thought, the day in toil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 217.17047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1635\) bk. 2, no. 2, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 196.25456 Tm
( Be wisely worldly, be not worldly wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.42047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1635\) bk. 2, no. 2, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.50456 Tm
( Man is Heaven\222s masterpiece.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.67047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1635\) bk. 2, no. 6, epigram 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.75456 Tm
( Thou art my way; I wander, if thou fly;)Tj
T*
( Thou art my light; if hid, how blind am I!)Tj
T*
( Thou art my life; if thou withdraw, I die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.92047 Tm
(\221Emblems\222 \(1643\) bk. 3, no. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.00456 Tm
( Our God and soldiers we alike adore)Tj
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( Ev\222n at the brink of danger; not before:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( After deliverance, both alike requited,)Tj
T*
( Our God\222s forgotten, and our soldiers slighted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Divine Fancies\222 \(1632\) \221Of Common Devotion\222.)Tj
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( My soul, sit thou a patient looker-on;)Tj
T*
( Judge not the play before the play is done:)Tj
T*
( Her plot hath many changes; every day)Tj
T*
( Speaks a new scene; the last act crowns the play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Epigram: Respice Finem\222)Tj
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( He teaches to deny that faintly prays.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221A Feast for Worms\222 \(1620\) sect. 7, Meditation 7, l. 2)Tj
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( Man is man\222s A.B.C. There is none that can)Tj
T*
( Read God aright, unless he first spell Man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Hieroglyphics of the Life of Man\222 \(1638\) no. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( He that begins to live, begins to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Hieroglyphics of the Life of Man\222 \(1638\) no. 1, epigram 1)Tj
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( Physicians of all men are most happy; what good success soever they \
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T*
(proclaimeth, and what faults they commit, the earth covereth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Hieroglyphics of the Life of Man\222 \(1638\) no. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( We\222ll cry both arts and learning down,)Tj
T*
( And hey! then up go we!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Oracles\222 \(1646\) Eclogue 11 \221Song of Anarch\
us\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 340.4624 Tm
( 5.3 Peter Quennell 1905\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( An elderly fallen angel travelling incognito.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Sign of the Fish\222 \(1960\) ch. 2 \(describing Andr\350 Gide\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 270.7124 Tm
( 5.4 Fran\347ois Quesnay 1694-1774)Tj
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( Vous ne connaissez qu\222une seule r\351gle du commerce; c\222est \(\
pour me servir de vos propres )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(termes\) de laisser passer et de laisser faire tous les acheteurs et tou\
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( You recognize but one rule of commerce; that is \(to avail myself of\
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0 -1.2 TD
(free passage and freedom of action to all buyers and sellers whoever the\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(Attributed in a letter to Quesnay from M. Alpha, but not found elsewhere\
. L. Salleron \221Fran\347ois Quesnay et la )Tj
T*
(Physiocratie\222 \(1958\) vol. 2, p. 940; attributed also to Marquis d\222\
Argenson.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.2124 Tm
( 5.5 Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch \(\221Q\222\) 1863-1944)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The best is the best, though a hundred judges have declared it so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Oxford Book of English Verse\222 \(1900\) preface)Tj
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( Simple this tale!\227but delicately perfumed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As the sweet roadside honeysuckle. That\222s why,)Tj
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( Difficult though its metre was to tackle,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I\222m glad I wrote it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Lady Jane. Sapphics\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( O pastoral heart of England! like a psalm)Tj
T*
( Of green days telling with a quiet beat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Ode upon Eckington Bridge\222)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
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(Abridgement of Debates of Congress vol. 4, p. 327, 14 January 1811.)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Satura quidem tota nostra est.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Verse satire indeed is entirely our own.)Tj
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(\221Institutio Oratoria\222 bk. 10, ch. 1, sect. 93 \(nostra meaning Rom\
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( 6.0 R)Tj
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( L\222app\350tit vient en mangeant.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( The appetite grows by eating.)Tj
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(\221Gargantua\222 \(1534\) 1, 5)Tj
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( Fay ce que vouldras.)Tj
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T*
( Do what you like.)Tj
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(\221Gargantua\222 \(1534\) 1, 57)Tj
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( Quaestio subtilissima, utrum chimera in vacuo bombinans possit comed\
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(intentiones.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A most subtle question: whether a chimera bombinating in a vacuum ca\
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(intentions.)Tj
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(\221Pantagruel\222 2, 7)Tj
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( Natura vacuum abhorret.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Nature abhors a vacuum.)Tj
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(\221Gargantua\222 \(1534\) 1, 5, quoting, in Latin, an article of ancien\
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0 -1.2 TD
(placitis philosophorum\222 1, 18)Tj
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( Je vais qu\350rir un grand peut-\352tre...Tirez le rideau, la farce \
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0 -1.44254 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
(that none of his contemporaries authenticated the remarks, which have be\
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( Je l\222ai trop aim\350 pour ne point ha\357r!)Tj
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(\221Andromaque\222 \(1667\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
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( C\222\350tait pendant l\222horreur d\222une profonde nuit.)Tj
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( It was during the horror of a deep night.)Tj
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(\221Athalie\222 \(1691\) act 2, sc. 5)Tj
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( Elle flotte, elle h\350site; en un mot, elle est femme.)Tj
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T*
( She floats, she hesitates; in a word, she\222s a woman.)Tj
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(\221Athalie\222 \(1691\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
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( Ce n\222est plus une ardeur dans mes veines cach\350e:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( C\222est V\350nus tout enti\351re \341 sa proie attach\350e.)Tj
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( It\222s no longer a warmth hidden in my veins: it\222s Venus entire \
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(\221Ph\351dre\222 \(1677\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
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( Tous les jours se levaient clairs et sereins pour eux.)Tj
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T*
( Every day dawns clear and untroubled for them.)Tj
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(\221Ph\351dre\222 \(1677\) act 4, sc. 6)Tj
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( Point d\222argent, point de Suisse, et ma porte \351tait close.)Tj
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T*
( No money, no service, and my door stayed shut.)Tj
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(\221Les Plaideurs\222 \(1668\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( Sans argent l\222honneur n\222est qu\222une maladie.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Honour, without money, is just a disease.)Tj
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(\221Les Plaideurs\222 \(1668\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( 6.3 James Rado 1939\227and Gerome Ragni 1942\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When the moon is in the seventh house,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And Jupiter aligns with Mars...)Tj
T*
( This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.92047 Tm
(\221Aquarius\222 \(1967 song; from the musical \221Hair\222\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 186.7124 Tm
( 6.4 John Rae 1931\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( War is, after all, the universal perversion...war stories, the porno\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221The Custard Boys\222 \(1960\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 116.9624 Tm
( 6.5 Thomas Rainborowe d. 1648)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The poorest he that is in England hath a life to live as the greates\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(During the Army debates at Putney, 29 October 1647, in C. H. Firth \(ed.\
\) \221The Clarke Papers\222 vol. 1, Camden )Tj
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(Society, new series 49 \(1891\) p. 301)Tj
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( 6.6 Sir Walter Ralegh c.1552-1618)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If all the world and love were young,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And truth in every shepherd\222s tongue,)Tj
T*
( These pretty pleasures might me move)Tj
T*
( To live with thee, and be thy love.)Tj
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(\221Answer to Marlow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.50456 Tm
( Now what is love? I pray thee, tell.)Tj
T*
( It is that fountain and that well,)Tj
T*
( Where pleasure and repentance dwell.)Tj
T*
( It is perhaps that sauncing bell,)Tj
T*
( That tolls all in to heaven or hell:)Tj
T*
( And this is love, as I hear tell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221A Description of Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( Go, Soul, the body\222s guest,)Tj
T*
( Upon a thankless arrant:)Tj
T*
( Fear not to touch the best;)Tj
T*
( The truth shall be thy warrant:)Tj
T*
( Go, since I needs must die,)Tj
T*
( And give the world the lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221The Lie\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( We die in earnest, that\222s no jest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221On the Life of Man\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,)Tj
T*
( My staff of faith to walk upon,)Tj
T*
( My scrip of joy, immortal diet,)Tj
T*
( My bottle of salvation,)Tj
T*
( My gown of glory, hope\222s true gage,)Tj
T*
( And thus I\222ll take my pilgrimage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Passionate Man\222s Pilgrimage\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( As you came from the holy land)Tj
T*
( Of Walsinghame,)Tj
T*
( Met you not with my true love)Tj
T*
( By the way as you came?)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( How shall I know your true love,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That have met many one)Tj
T*
( As I went to the holy land,)Tj
T*
( That have come, that have gone?)Tj
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(\221Walsinghame\222)Tj
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( Fain would I climb, yet fear I to fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.17047 Tm
(Line written on a window-pane, in Thomas Fuller \221The History of the W\
orthies of England\222 \(1662\) )Tj
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(\221Devonshire\222 p. 261.)Tj
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( Even such is Time, which takes in trust)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Our youth, our joys, and all we have,)Tj
T*
( And pays us but with age and dust;)Tj
T*
( Who in the dark and silent grave,)Tj
T*
( When we have wandered all our ways,)Tj
T*
( Shuts up the story of our days:)Tj
T*
( And from which earth, and grave, and dust,)Tj
T*
( The Lord shall raise me up, I trust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(Written the night before his death, and found in his Bible in the Gate-h\
ouse at Westminster. V. B. Heltzel )Tj
T*
(\221Ralegh\222s \223Even such is time\224\222 in \221Huntingdon Library \
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( [History] hath triumphed over time, which besides it nothing but ete\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221The History of the World\222 \(1614\) preface)Tj
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( Whosoever, in writing a modern history, shall follow truth too near \
the heels, it may haply )Tj
T*
(strike out his teeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.92047 Tm
(\221The History of the World\222 \(1614\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.00456 Tm
( O eloquent, just, and mighty Death!...thou hast drawn together all t\
he farstretched greatness, all )Tj
T*
(the pride, cruelty, and ambition of man, and covered it all over with th\
ese two narrow words, Hic )Tj
T*
(jacet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221The History of the World\222 \(1614\) bk. 5, ch. 6, 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( \222Tis a sharp remedy, but a sure one for all ills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(On feeling the edge of the axe prior to his execution, in David Hume \221\
History of Great Britain\222 \(1754\) vol. 1, )Tj
T*
(ch. 4, p. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 340.50456 Tm
( So the heart be right, it is no matter which way the head lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(At his execution, on being asked which way he preferred to lay his head,\
in William Stebbing \221Sir Walter )Tj
T*
(Raleigh\222 \(1891\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( I have a long journey to take, and must bid the company farewell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.92047 Tm
(Parting words, in Edward Thompson \221Sir Walter Raleigh\222 \(1935\) ch\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 240.7124 Tm
( 6.7 Sir Walter Raleigh 1861-1922)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In examinations those who do not wish to know ask questions of those\
who cannot tell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.17047 Tm
(\221Laughter from a Cloud\222 \(1923\) \221Some Thoughts on Examinations\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.25456 Tm
( We could not lead a pleasant life,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And \222twould be finished soon,)Tj
T*
( If peas were eaten with the knife,)Tj
T*
( And gravy with the spoon.)Tj
T*
( Eat slowly: only men in rags)Tj
T*
( And gluttons old in sin)Tj
T*
( Mistake themselves for carpet bags)Tj
T*
( And tumble victuals in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(\221Stans Puer ad Mensam\222 \(1923\))Tj
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( I wish I loved the Human Race;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I wish I loved its silly face;)Tj
T*
( I wish I liked the way it walks;)Tj
T*
( I wish I liked the way it talks;)Tj
T*
( And when I\222m introduced to one)Tj
T*
( I wish I thought What Jolly Fun!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(\221Wishes of an Elderly Man\222 \(1923\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 6.8 Srinivasa Ramanujan 1887-1920)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( No, it is a very interesting number; it is the smallest number expre\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in two different ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.92047 Tm
(Replying to G. H. Hardy\222s suggestion that the number of a cab\2271729\
\227was \221dull\222; in \221Proceedings of the )Tj
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(London Mathematical Society\222 26 May 1921, p. 57 \(the two ways being \
1)Tj
10 0 0 10 416.10001 542.83638 Tm
(3)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 421.10001 539.63638 Tm
(+12)Tj
10 0 0 10 440.64999 542.83638 Tm
(3)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 445.64999 539.63638 Tm
( and 9)Tj
10 0 0 10 476.2 542.83638 Tm
(3)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 481.2 539.63638 Tm
(+10)Tj
10 0 0 10 500.75 542.83638 Tm
(3)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 505.75 539.63638 Tm
(\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.42831 Tm
( 6.9 John Crowe Ransom 1888-1974)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Here lies a lady of beauty and high degree.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of chills and fever she died, of fever and chills,)Tj
T*
( The delight of her husband, her aunts, an infant of three,)Tj
T*
( And of medicos marvelling sweetly on her ills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.88638 Tm
(\221Here Lies a Lady\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 383.67831 Tm
( 6.10 Arthur Ransome 1884-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( better drowned than duffers if not duffers wont drown. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221Does that mean Yes?\222 asked Roger. )Tj
T*
( \221I think so.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.13638 Tm
(\221Swallows and Amazons\222 \(1930\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 277.92831 Tm
( 6.11 Frederic Raphael 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Your idea of fidelity is not having more than one man in the bed at \
the same time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.38638 Tm
(\221Darling\222 \(1965\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.47047 Tm
( [Cambridge] is the city of perspiring dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.63638 Tm
(\221The Glittering Prizes\222 \(1976\) ch. 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.72047 Tm
( Oh no, of course. That\222s the whole thing about England, isn\222t \
it? Everything\222s a preparation. A )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(preparation for nothing. It\222s not a preparation, it\222s a postponeme\
nt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.88638 Tm
(\221The Glittering Prizes\222 \(1976\) \221An Early Life\222 pt. 2, sect\
. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 127.97047 Tm
( I come from suburbia, Dan, personally, and I don\222t ever want to g\
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T*
( It\222s the one place in the world that\222s further away than anywh\
ere else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.13638 Tm
(\221The Glittering Prizes\222 \(1976\) \221A Sex Life\222 pt. 1, sect. 3\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 61.92831 Tm
( 6.12 Terence Rattigan 1911-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Do you know what \221le vice Anglais\222\227the English vice\227real\
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(pederasty\227whatever the French believe it to be. It\222s our refusal t\
o admit our emotions. We think )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(they demean us, I suppose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.38638 Tm
(\221In Praise of Love\222 \(1973\) act 2)Tj
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( You can be in the Horseguards and still be common, dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.63638 Tm
(\221Separate Tables\222 \(1954\) \221Table Number Seven\222 sc. 1)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 649.42831 Tm
( 6.13 Gwen Raverat 1885-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ladies were ladies in those days; they did not do things themselves.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.88638 Tm
(\221Period Piece\222 \(1952\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 579.67831 Tm
( 6.14 Irving Ravetch and Harriet Frank)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The long hot summer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.13638 Tm
(Title of film \(1958\); based on stories by William Faulkner. \221The Lo\
ng Summer\222 is the title of bk. 3 of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Faulkner\222s The Hamlet \(1940\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 494.92831 Tm
( 6.15 Sir Herbert Read 1893-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Do not judge this movement kindly. It is not just another amusing st\
unt. It is defiant\227the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(desperate act of men too profoundly convinced of the rottenness of our c\
ivilization to want to )Tj
T*
(save a shred of its respectability.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.38638 Tm
(International Surrealist Exhibition Catalogue, New Burlington Galleries,\
London, 11 June\2274 July 1936, )Tj
T*
(introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.47047 Tm
( [Art is] pattern informed by sensibility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.63638 Tm
(\221The Meaning of Art\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 337.42831 Tm
( 6.16 Charles Reade 1814-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Courage, mon ami, le diable est mort!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Take courage, my friend, the devil is dead!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.13638 Tm
(\221The Cloister and the Hearth\222 \(1861\) ch. 24, and passim)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 245.92831 Tm
( 6.17 Ronald Reagan 1911\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come\
to realize that it bears a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(very close resemblance to the first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.38638 Tm
(At a conference in Los Angeles, 2 March 1977, in Bill Adler \221Reagan W\
it\222 \(1981\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.47047 Tm
( You can tell a lot about a fellow\222s character by his way of eatin\
g jellybeans.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.63638 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 15 January 1981)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.72047 Tm
( So in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals, I urge you t\
o beware the temptation of )Tj
T*
(pride\227the temptation blithely to declare yourselves above it all and \
label both sides equally at )Tj
T*
(fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an \
evil empire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.88638 Tm
(Speech to National Association of Evangelicals, 8 March 1983, in \221New\
York Times\222 9 March 1983. The )Tj
T*
(phrase \221evil empire\222 was borrowed from the film \221Star Wars\222 \
\(1977\) written by George Lucas)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.97047 Tm
( We are especially not going to tolerate these attacks from outlaw st\
ates run by the strangest )Tj
ET
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(collection of misfits, Looney Tunes and squalid criminals since the adve\
nt of the Third Reich.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech following the hi-jack of a US plane, 8 July 1985, in \221New York\
Times\222 9 July 1985)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( This mad dog of the Middle East.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Of Col Gadaffi at a press conference, 9 April 1986; in \221New York Time\
s\222 10 April 1986, p. A 22)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 6.18 Erell Reaves)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Lady of Spain, I adore you.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Right from the night I first saw you,)Tj
T*
( Mu heart has been yearning for you,)Tj
T*
( What else could any heart do?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Lady of Spain\222 \(1913 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.4624 Tm
( 6.19 Henry Reed 1914-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As we get older we do not get any younger.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Seasons return, and today I am fifty-five,)Tj
T*
( And this time last year I was fifty-four,)Tj
T*
( And this time next year I shall be sixty-two.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221Chard Whitlow \(Mr Eliot\222s Sunday Evening Postscript\)\222 \(1946\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.00456 Tm
( It is, we believe,)Tj
T*
( Idle to hope that the simple stirrup-pump)Tj
T*
( Can extinguish hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221Chard Whitlow \(Mr Eliot\222s Sunday Evening Postscript\)\222 \(1946\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( Today we have naming of parts. Yesterday,)Tj
T*
( We had daily cleaning. And tomorrow morning,)Tj
T*
( We shall have what to do after firing. But today,)Tj
T*
( Today we have naming of parts. Japonica)Tj
T*
( Glistens like coral in all of the neighbour gardens,)Tj
T*
( And today we have naming of parts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Lessons of the War: 1, Naming of Parts\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.50456 Tm
( They call it easing the Spring: it is perfectly easy)Tj
T*
( If you have any strength in your thumb: like the bolt,)Tj
T*
( And the breech, and the cocking-piece, and the point of balance,)Tj
T*
( Which in our case we have not got; and the almond blossom)Tj
T*
( Silent in all of the gardens and the bees going backwards and forwar\
ds,)Tj
T*
( For today we have naming of parts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Lessons of the War: 1, Naming of Parts\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( And the various holds and rolls and throws and breakfalls)Tj
T*
( Somehow or other I always seemed to put)Tj
T*
( In the wrong place. And as for war, my wars)Tj
T*
( Were global from the start.)Tj
ET
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(\221Lessons of the War: 3, Unarmed Combat\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I think it may justly be said that English women in general are very\
common diatonic little )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(numbers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Emily Butler\222 \(radio play\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Henry has always led what could be called a sedentary life, if only \
he\222d ever got as far as )Tj
T*
(actually sitting up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Not a Drum was Heard: The War Memoirs of General Gland\222 \(radio p\
lay\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( In a civil war, a general must know\227and I\222m afraid it\222s a t\
hing rather of instinct than of )Tj
T*
(practice\227he must know exactly when to move over to the other side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Not a Drum was Heard: The War Memoirs of General Gland\222 \(radio p\
lay\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Gland: I would say it\222s somehow redolent, and full of vitality. \
)Tj
T*
( Hilda: Well, I would say it\222s got about as much life in it as a \
potted shrimp.)Tj
T*
( Gland: Well, I think we\222re probably both trying to say the same \
thing in different words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Primal Scene, as it were\222 \(radio play\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( And the sooner the tea\222s out of the way, the sooner we can get ou\
t the gin, eh?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Private Life of Hilda Tablet\222 \(1954 radio play\) in \221Hilda Ta\
blet and Others: four pieces for radio\222 \(1971\) p. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Of course we\222ve all dreamed of reviving the castrati; but it\222s\
needed Hilda to take the first )Tj
T*
(practical steps towards making them a reality...She\222s drawn up a list\
of well-known singers who )Tj
T*
(she thinks would benefit...It\222s only a question of getting them to ag\
ree.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Private Life of Hilda Tablet\222 \(1954 radio play\) in \221Hilda Ta\
blet and Others: four pieces for radio\222 \(1971\) p. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Modest? My word, no...He was an all-the-lights-on man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221A Very Great Man Indeed\222 \(radio play\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( I have known her pass the whole evening without mentioning a single \
book, or in fact anything )Tj
T*
(unpleasant at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221A Very Great Man Indeed\222 \(radio play\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.9624 Tm
( 6.20 John Reed 1887-1920)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ten days that shook the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1919\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.2124 Tm
( 6.21 Joseph Reed 1741-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am, the King of Great Brita\
in is not rich enough to do )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(US Congress, 11 August 1878, Reed having understood himself to have been\
offered a bribe on behalf of the )Tj
T*
(British Crown)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 112.4624 Tm
( 6.22 Max Reger 1873-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ich sitze in dem kleinsten Zimmer in meinem Hause. Ich habe Ihre Kri\
tik vor mir. Im n\344chsten )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Augenblick wird sie hinter mir sein.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am sitting in the smallest room of my house. I have your review be\
fore me. In a moment it )Tj
ET
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0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to Munich critic Rudolph Louis, responding to a savage review in \
\221M\374nchener Neueste Nachrichten\222, 7 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(February 1906; in Nicolas Slonimsky \221Lexicon of Musical Invective\222\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 689.9624 Tm
( 6.23 Charles A. Reich 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The greening of America.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 652.42047 Tm
(Title of book \(1970\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 620.2124 Tm
( 6.24 Keith Reid and Gary Brooker)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Her face, at first it seemed just ghostly Then turned a whiter shade\
of pale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.67047 Tm
(\221A Whiter Shade of Pale\222 \(1967 song\); performed by Procul Harum)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 550.4624 Tm
( 6.25 Erich Maria Remarque 1898-1970)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( All quiet on the western front.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 512.92047 Tm
(English title of his novel \221Im Westen nichts Neues\222 \(1929\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 480.7124 Tm
( 6.26 Jules Renard 1864-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Les bourgeois, ce sont les autres.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The bourgeois are other people.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(Journal, 28 January 1890)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.2124 Tm
( 6.27 Montague John Rendall 1862-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nation shall speak peace unto nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(Motto of the BBC, adapted from Micah ch. 4, v. 3 \221Nation shall not li\
ft up sword against nation\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 319.4624 Tm
( 6.28 Jean Renoir 1894-1979)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Is it possible to succeed without any act of betrayal?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221My Life and My Films\222 \(1974\) \221Nana\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 249.7124 Tm
( 6.29 Pierre Auguste Renoir 1841-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I paint with my prick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(In Whitney Chadwick \221Women, Art and Society\222 \(1990\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( C\222\350taient des fous, mais ils avaient cette petite flamme qui n\
e s\222\350teint pas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( They were madmen; but they had in them that little flame which is no\
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(On the men of the French Commune, in Jean Renoir \221Mon p\351re\222 \(t\
ranslated by R. and D. Weaver, 1962\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 121.4624 Tm
( 6.30 David Reuben 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Everything you always wanted to know about sex, but were afraid to a\
sk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(Title of book \(1969\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 51.7124 Tm
( 6.31 Charles Revson 1906-75)Tj
ET
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( In the factory we make cosmetics; in the store we sell hope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In A. Tobias \221Fire and Ice\222 \(1976\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 6.32 Frederic Reynolds 1764-1841)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is better to have written a damned play, than no play at all\227i\
t snatches a man from obscurity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(\221The Dramatist\222 \(1789\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 635.2124 Tm
( 6.33 Sir Joshua Reynolds 1723-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Few have been taught to any purpose who have not been their own teac\
hers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 597.67047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 2 \(11 December 1769\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( If you have great talents, industry will improve them: if you have b\
ut moderate abilities, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(industry will supply their deficiency.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 2 \(11 December 1769\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.00456 Tm
( A mere copier of nature can never produce anything great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 3 \(14 December 1770\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 485.25456 Tm
( Could we teach taste or genius by rules, they would be no longer tas\
te and genius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 3 \(14 December 1770\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.50456 Tm
( The whole beauty and grandeur of the art consists...in being able to\
get above all singular )Tj
T*
(forms, local customs, particularities, and details of every kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 3 \(14 December 1770\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( The value and rank of every art is in proportion to the mental labou\
r employed in it, or the )Tj
T*
(mental pleasure produced by it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 4 \(10 December 1771\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( Genius...is the child of imitation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 6 \(10 December 1774\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( The mind is but a barren soil; a soil which is soon exhausted, and w\
ill produce no crop, or only )Tj
T*
(one, unless it be continually fertilized and enriched with foreign matte\
r.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.42047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 6 \(10 December 1774\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 247.50456 Tm
( Art in its perfection is not ostentatious; it lies hid, and works it\
s effect, itself unseen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 6 \(10 December 1774\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( It is the very same taste which relishes a demonstration in geometry\
, that is pleased with the )Tj
T*
(resemblance of a picture to an original, and touched with the harmony of\
music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) no. 7 \(10 December 1776\
\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( I should desire that the last words which I should pronounce in this\
Academy, and from this )Tj
T*
(place, might be the name of\227Michael Angelo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Discourses on Art\222 \(ed. R. Wark, 1975\) \(10 December 1790\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 89.9624 Tm
( 6.34 Malvina Reynolds 1900-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Little boxes on the hillside...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And they\222re all made out of ticky-tacky)Tj
ET
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( And they all look just the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Little Boxes\222 \(1962 song\); on the tract houses in the hills to \
the south of San Francisco)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 6.35 Cecil Rhodes 1853-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( So little done, so much to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Said on the day of his death, in Lewis Michell \221Life of Rhodes\222 \(\
1910\) vol. 2, ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( Remember that you are an Englishman, and have consequently won first\
prize in the lottery of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(In Peter Ustinov \221Dear Me\222 \(1977\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 580.4624 Tm
( 6.36 Jean Rhys \(Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams\) c.1890-1979)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We can\222t all be happy, we can\222t all be rich, we can\222t all b\
e lucky\227and it would be so much )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(less fun if we were...Some must cry so that others may be able to laugh \
the more heartily.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(\221Good Morning, Midnight\222 \(1939\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.00456 Tm
( The perpetual hunger to be beautiful and that thirst to be loved whi\
ch is the real curse of Eve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(\221The Left Bank\222 \(1927\) \221Illusion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( Only the hopeless are starkly sincere and...only the unhappy can eit\
her give or take sympathy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221The Left Bank\222 \(1927\) \221In the Rue de l\222Arriv\350e\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.50456 Tm
( The feeling of Sunday is the same everywhere, heavy, melancholy, sta\
nding still. Like when )Tj
T*
(they say \221As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, worl\
d without end.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221Voyage in the Dark\222 \(1934\) ch. 4, pt. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 364.4624 Tm
( 6.37 Grantland Rice 1880-1954)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For when the One Great Scorer comes to mark against your name,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He writes\227not that you won or lost\227but how you played the Game\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221Alumnus Football\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( All wars are planned by old men)Tj
T*
( In council rooms apart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Sides of War\222 \(1955\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 233.25456 Tm
( Outlined against a blue-grey October sky, the Four Horsemen rode aga\
in. In dramatic lore they )Tj
T*
(were known as Famine, Pestilence, Destruction, and Death. These are only\
aliases. Their real )Tj
T*
(names are Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley, and Layden. They formed the cres\
t of the South Bend )Tj
T*
(cyclone before which another fighting Army football team was swept over \
the precipice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(Report of football match on 18 October 1924 between US Military Academy \
at West Point NY and )Tj
T*
(University of Notre Dame, in \221New York Tribune\222 19 October 1924)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 116.2124 Tm
( 6.38 Sir Stephen Rice 1637-1715)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I will drive a coach and six horses through the Act of Settlement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(In W. King \221State of the Protestants of Ireland\222 \(1672\) ch. 3, s\
ect. 8, p. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 46.4624 Tm
( 6.39 Tim Rice 1944\227)Tj
ET
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Prove to me that you\222re no fool)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Walk across my swimming pool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Herod\222s Song\222 \(1970; music by Andrew Lloyd Webber\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 6.40 Mandy Rice-Davies 1944\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He would, wouldn\222t he?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(At the trial of Stephen Ward, 29 June 1963, on being told that Lord Asto\
r had made a statement to the police )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that her allegations were untrue; in \221Guardian\222 1 July 1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 602.2124 Tm
( 6.41 Frank Richards \(Charles Hamilton\) 1876-1961)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The fat greedy owl of the Remove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.67047 Tm
( Describing Billy Bunter in the \221Magnet\222 \(1909\) vol. 3, no. 7\
2 \221The Greyfriars Photographer\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 532.4624 Tm
( 6.42 I. A. Richards 1893-1979)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( It [poetry] is capable of saving us; it is a perfectly possible mean\
s of overcoming chaos.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.92047 Tm
(\221Science and Poetry\222 \(1926\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 462.7124 Tm
( 6.43 Sir Ralph Richardson 1902-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Acting is merely the art of keeping a large group of people from cou\
ghing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Herald Tribune\222 19 May 1946, pt. 5, p. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 392.9624 Tm
( 6.44 Samuel Richardson 1689-1781)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I have known a bird actually starve itself, and die with grief, at i\
ts being caught and caged\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(But never did I meet with a lady who was so silly...And yet we must all \
own that it is more )Tj
T*
(difficult to catch a bird than a lady.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Clarissa\222 \(1747-8\) letter 170 \(Lovelace to Belford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Mine is the most plotting heart in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Clarissa\222 \(1747-8\) letter 171 \(Lovelace to Belford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( I love to write to the moment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Clarissa\222 \(1747-8\) letter 224 \(Lovelace to Belford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Let this expiate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Clarissa\222 \(1747-8\) letter 537 \(De La Tour to Belford\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( A verse may find him who a sermon flies)Tj
T*
( And turn delight into a sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Clarissa\222 \(1747-8\) postscript)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( What, my Lord, is ancestry? I live to my own heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221The History of Sir Charles Grandison\222 \(1754\) vol. 3, letter 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( A feeling heart is a blessing that no one, who has it, would be with\
out; and it is a moral )Tj
T*
(security of innocence; since the heart that is able to partake of the di\
stress of another, cannot )Tj
T*
(wilfully give it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221The History of Sir Charles Grandison\222 \(1754\) vol. 3, letter 32)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( This world, if we can enjoy it with innocent cheerfulness, and be se\
rviceable to our fellow-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(creatures, is not to be despised, even by a Philosopher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The History of Sir Charles Grandison\222 \(1754\) vol. 5, letter 37)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 6.45 Hans Richter 1843-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Up with your damned nonsense will I put twice, or perhaps once, but \
sometimes always, by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(God, never.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 599.2124 Tm
( 6.46 Johann Paul Friedrich Richter \(\221Jean Paul\222\) 1763-1825)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Providence has given to the French the empire of the land, to the En\
glish that of the sea, and to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the Germans that of\227the air!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.67047 Tm
(In Thomas Carlyle \221Jean Paul Friedrich Richter\222 in \221Edinburgh R\
eview\222 no. 91 \(1827\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 511.4624 Tm
( 6.47 George Ridding 1828-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I feel a feeling which I feel you all feel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 473.92047 Tm
(Sermon in the London Mission, 1885; in G. W. E. Russell \221Collections \
and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 29)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 441.7124 Tm
( 6.48 Rainer Maria Rilke 1875-1926)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Kunst-Werke sind von einer unendlichen Einsamkeit und mit nichts so \
wenig erreichbar als )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mit Kritik. Nur Liebe kann sie erfassen und halten und kann gerecht sein\
gegen sie.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Works of art are of an infinite solitariness, and nothing is less li\
kely to bring us near to them )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than criticism. Only love can apprehend and hold them, and can be just t\
owards them.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(\221Briefe an einem jungen Dichter\222 \(Letters to a Young Poet, 1929\)\
23 April 1903 \(translation by Reginald )Tj
T*
(Snell\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.50456 Tm
( Wer hat uns also umgedreht, dass wir, was wir auch tun, in jener Hal\
tung sind von einem, )Tj
T*
(welcher fortgeht? Wie er auf den letzten H\374gel, der ihm ganz sein Tal\
noch einmal zeigt, sich )Tj
T*
(wendet, anh\344lt, weilt\227, so leben wir und nehmen immer Abschied.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Who\222s turned us around like this, so that we always, do what we m\
ay, retain the attitude of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(someone who\222s departing? Just as he, on the last hill, that shows him\
all his valley for the last )Tj
T*
(time, will turn and stop and linger, we live our lives, for ever taking \
leave.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.92047 Tm
(\221Duineser Elegien\222 \(Duino Elegies, translated by J. B. Leishman a\
nd Stephen Spender, 1948\) no. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.00456 Tm
( Ich f\374r die h\366chste Aufgabe einer Verbindung zweier Menschen d\
iese halte: dass einer dem )Tj
T*
(andern seine Einsamkeit bewache.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I hold this to be the highest task for a bond between two people: th\
at each protects the solitude )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the other.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.42047 Tm
(Letter to Paula Modersohn-Becker, 12 February 1902, in \221Gesammelte Br\
iefe\222 \(Collected Letters, 1904\) vol. )Tj
T*
(1, p. 204)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 59.2124 Tm
( 6.49 Martin Rinkart 1586-1649)Tj
ET
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0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Nun danket alle Gott,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mit Herzen, Mund, und H\344nden,)Tj
T*
( Der grosse Dinge tut)Tj
T*
( An uns und allen Enden;)Tj
T*
( Der uns von Mutterleib)Tj
T*
( Und Kindesbeinen an)Tj
T*
( Unz\344hlig viel zu gut)Tj
T*
( Bis hieher hat getan.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Der ewig reiche Gott)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Woll\222 uns in diesem Leben)Tj
T*
( Ein immer fr\366hlich Herz)Tj
T*
( Und edlen Frieden geben,)Tj
T*
( Und uns in seiner Gnad)Tj
T*
( Erhalten fort und fort,)Tj
T*
( Und uns aus aller Not)Tj
T*
( Erl\366sen hier und dort.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
0 -1.45 TD
( Now thank we all our God,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With heart and hands and voices,)Tj
T*
( Who wondrous things hath done,)Tj
T*
( In whom his world rejoices;)Tj
T*
( Who from our mother\222s arms)Tj
T*
( Hath blessed us on our way)Tj
T*
( With countless gifts of love,)Tj
T*
( And still is ours to-day.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( O may this bounteous God)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Through all our life be near us,)Tj
T*
( With ever joyful hearts)Tj
T*
( And bless\351d peace to cheer us;)Tj
T*
( And keep us in his grace,)Tj
T*
( And guide us when perplexed,)Tj
T*
( And free us from all ills)Tj
T*
( In this world and the next.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221Nun danket alle Gott\222 \(c.1636\); translated by Catherine Winkwor\
th q.v. in her \221Lyrica Germanica\222 \(1858\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 135.7124 Tm
( 6.50 Arthur Rimbaud 1854-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Je m\222en allais, les poings dans mes poches crev\350es;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Mon paletot aussi devenait id\350al.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I was walking along, hands in holey pockets; my overcoat also was en\
tering the realms of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ideal.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 40.42047 Tm
(\221Ma Boh\351me\222)Tj
ET
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( \324 saisons, \364 ch\342teaux!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quelle \342me est sans d\350fauts?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O seasons, O castles! What soul is without fault?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 693.92047 Tm
(\221\324 saisons, \364 ch\342teaux\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 673.00456 Tm
( A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu: voyelles,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Je dirais quelque jour vos naissances latentes...)Tj
T*
( I, pourpres, sang crach\350, rire des l\351vres belles)Tj
T*
( Dans la col\351re ou les ivresses p\350nitentes.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A black, E white, I red, U green, O blue: vowels, some day I will te\
ll of the births that may be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(yours. I, purples, coughed-up blood, laughter of beautiful lips in anger\
or penitent drunkennesses.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 563.42047 Tm
(\221Voyelles\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 531.2124 Tm
( 6.51 Hal Riney 1932\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s morning again in America.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 493.67047 Tm
(Slogan for Ronald Reagan\222s election campaign, 1984, in \221Newsweek\222\
6 August 1984)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 461.4624 Tm
( 6.52 C\350sar Ritz 1850-1918)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Le client n\222a jamais tort.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The customer is never wrong.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 402.17047 Tm
(In R. Nevill and C. E. Jerningham \221Piccadilly to Pall Mall\222 \(1908\
\) p. 94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.9624 Tm
( 6.53 Antoine de Rivarol 1753-1801)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ce qui n\222est pas clair n\222est pas fran\347ais.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What is not clear is not French.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.67047 Tm
(\221Discours sur l\222Universalit\350 de la Langue Fran\347aise\222 \(17\
84\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.4624 Tm
( 6.54 Joan Riviere 1883\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Civilization and its discontents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(Title given to her translation of Sigmund Freud\222s \221Das Unbehagen i\
n der Kultur\222 \(1930\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 208.7124 Tm
( 6.55 Lord Robbins \(Lionel Charles Robbins, Baron Robbins\) 1898-1984)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Economics is the science which studies human behaviour as a relation\
ship between ends and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(scarce means which have alternative uses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.17047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science\222 \(1932\)\
ch. 1, sect. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 120.9624 Tm
( 6.56 Maximilien Robespierre 1758-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Toute loi qui viole les droits imprescriptibles de l\222homme, est e\
ssentiellement injuste et )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(tyrannique; elle n\222est point une loi.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Any law which violates the indefeasible rights of man is essentially\
unjust and tyrannical; it is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(not a law at all.)Tj
ET
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(\221D\350claration des droits de l\222homme\222 24 April 1793, article 6\
; this article, in slightly different form, is recorded )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as having figured in Robespierre\222s Projet of 21 April 1793)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 719.25456 Tm
( Toute institution qui ne suppose pas le peuple bon, et le magistrat \
corruptible, est vicieuse.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Any institution which does not suppose the people good, and the magi\
strate corruptible, is evil.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221D\350claration des droits de l\222homme\222 24 April 1793, article 2\
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15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Le salut public est la loi supr\352me.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The public good is the supreme law.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.17047 Tm
(Speech in Constituent Assembly, 23 August 1790; in A. Cobban \221Aspects\
of the French Revolution\222 \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 602.25456 Tm
( L\222immoralit\350 est la base du despotisme comme la ventu est l\222\
essence de la R\350publique.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Wickedness is the root of despotism as virtue is the essence of the \
Republic.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 564.67047 Tm
(In the Convention, 7 May 1794; in A. Cobban \221Aspects of the French Re\
volution\222 \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 543.75456 Tm
( Une volont\350 une.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( One single will.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(Private note, in S. A. Berville and J. F. Barri\351re \221Papiers in\350\
dits trouv\350s chez Robespierre\222 \(1828\); in A. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Cobban \221Aspects of the French Revolution\222 \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 470.25456 Tm
( La volont\350 g\350n\350rale gouverne la soci\350t\350 comme la volo\
nt\350 particuli\351re gouverne chaque )Tj
T*
(individu isol\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The general will rules in society as the private will governs each s\
eparate individual.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Lettres \341 ses commettans\222 \(2nd series\) 5 January 1793; in A.\
Cobban \221Aspects of the French )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Revolution\222 \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 378.75456 Tm
( Je ne suis pas ni le courtisan, ni le mod\350rateur, ni le tribun, n\
i le d\350fenseur du peuple, je sais )Tj
T*
(peuple moi-m\352me.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am no courtesan, nor moderator, nor Tribune, nor defender of my pe\
ople: I am myself the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(people.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.17047 Tm
(Speech in Jacobin Club, 27 April 1792; in A. Cobban \221Aspects of the F\
rench Revolution\222 \(1968\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 272.9624 Tm
( 6.57 Leo Robin 1900\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Diamonds are a girl\222s best friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1949\); music by Jule Styne)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 203.2124 Tm
( 6.58 Leo Robin 1900\227and Ralph Rainger)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Thanks for the memory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1937\); adopted by Bob Hope as his theme song)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 133.4624 Tm
( 6.59 Edwin Arlington Robinson 1869-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I shall have more to say when I am dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.92047 Tm
(\221John Brown\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.00456 Tm
( Miniver loved the Medici,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Albeit he had never seen one;)Tj
T*
( He would have sinned incessantly)Tj
ET
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( Could he have been one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221Miniver Cheevy\222 \(1910\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( So on we worked, and waited for the light,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And went without meat, and cursed the bread;)Tj
T*
( And Richard Cory, one calm summer night,)Tj
T*
( Went home and put a bullet through his head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.42047 Tm
(\221Richard Cory\222 \(1897\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.50456 Tm
( The world is not a \221prison house\222, but a kind of kindergarten,\
where millions of bewildered )Tj
T*
(infants are trying to spell God with the wrong blocks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221Literature in the Making\222 \(1917\) p. 266)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 557.4624 Tm
( 6.60 John Robinson 1919-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Honest to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.92047 Tm
(Title of book)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.00456 Tm
( I think Lawrence tried to portray this [sex] relation as in a real s\
ense an act of holy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(communion. For him flesh was sacramental of the spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.17047 Tm
(As defence witness in the case against Penguin Books for publishing \221\
Lady Chatterley\222s Lover\222; in \221The )Tj
T*
(Times\222 28 October 1960)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 417.9624 Tm
( 6.61 Mary Robinson 1758-1800)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pavement slippery, people sneezing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lords in ermine, beggars freezing;)Tj
T*
( Title gluttons dainties carving,)Tj
T*
( Genius in a garret starving.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.42047 Tm
(\221January, 1795\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 294.2124 Tm
( 6.62 Sir Boyle Roche 1743-1807)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He regretted that he was not a bird, and could not be in two places \
at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.67047 Tm
(Attributed. Thomas Jevon \221Devil of a Wife\222 \(1686\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.75456 Tm
( Mr Speaker, I smell a rat; I see him forming in the air and darkenin\
g the sky; but I\222ll nip him in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the bud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.92047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 169.7124 Tm
( 6.63 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester 1647-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tell me no more of constancy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( that frivolous pretence,)Tj
T*
( Of cold age, narrow jealousy,)Tj
T*
( disease and want of sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.17047 Tm
(\221Against Constancy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.25456 Tm
( Then bring my bath, and strew my bed,)Tj
T*
( as each kind night returns,)Tj
ET
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( I\222ll change a mistress till I\222m dead,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( and fate change me for worms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.42047 Tm
(\221Against Constancy\222 \(1676\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.50456 Tm
( Kindness only can persuade;)Tj
T*
( It gilds the lover\222s servile chain)Tj
T*
( And makes the slave grow pleased and vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.67047 Tm
(\221Give me leave to rail at you\222 \(1680\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.75456 Tm
( \221Is there then no more?\222 She cries. \221All this to love and r\
apture\222s due; Must we not pay a debt )Tj
T*
(to pleasure too?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.92047 Tm
(\221The Imperfect Enjoyment\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.00456 Tm
( May\222st thou ne\222er piss, who didst refuse to spend)Tj
T*
( When all my joys did on false thee depend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.17047 Tm
(\221The Imperfect Enjoyment\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.25456 Tm
( Here lies a great and mighty king)Tj
T*
( Whose promise none relies on;)Tj
T*
( He never said a foolish thing,)Tj
T*
( Nor ever did a wise one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.42047 Tm
(\221The King\222s Epitaph\222; an alternative first line reads: )Tj
T*
( \221Here lies our sovereign lord the King.\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.50456 Tm
( Love...That cordial drop heaven in our cup has thrown )Tj
T*
( To make the nauseous draught of life go down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.67047 Tm
(\221A Letter from Artemisia in the Town to Chloe in the Country\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.75456 Tm
( All my past life is mine no more:)Tj
T*
( The flying hours are gone)Tj
T*
( Like transitory dreams given o\222er,)Tj
T*
( Whose images are kept in store)Tj
T*
( By memory alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.92047 Tm
(\221Love and Life\222 \(1680\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.00456 Tm
( An age in her embraces passed)Tj
T*
( Would seem a winter\222s day,)Tj
T*
( Where life and light with envious haste)Tj
T*
( Are torn and snatched away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.17047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: A Song\222 \(1691\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.25456 Tm
( Kind jealous doubts, tormenting fears,)Tj
T*
( And anxious cares, when past,)Tj
T*
( Prove our hearts\222 trasure fixed and dear,)Tj
T*
( And make us blest at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.42047 Tm
(\221The Mistress: A Song\222 \(1691\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.50456 Tm
( Natural freedoms are but just:)Tj
T*
( There\222s something generous in mere lust.)Tj
ET
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(\221A Ramble in St James\222 Park\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Reason, an ignis fatuus of the mind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which leaves the light of nature, sense, behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221A Satire Against Mankind\222 \(1679\) l. 11)Tj
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( Then Old Age, and Experience, hand in hand,)Tj
T*
( Lead him to Death, and make him understand,)Tj
T*
( After a search so painful, and so long)Tj
T*
( That all his life he has been in the wrong.)Tj
T*
( Huddled in dirt the reasoning engine lies,)Tj
T*
( Who was so proud, so witty and so wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221A Satire Against Mankind\222 \(1679\) l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Wretched Man is still in arms for fear;)Tj
T*
( For fear he arms, and is of arms afraid,)Tj
T*
( By fear, to fear, successively betrayed)Tj
T*
( Base fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221A Satire Against Mankind\222 \(1679\) \(1679\) l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( For all men would be cowards if they durst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221A Satire Against Mankind\222 \(1679\) l. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( A merry monarch, scandalous and poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221A Satire on King Charles II\222 \(1697\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Ancient person, for whom I)Tj
T*
( All the flattering youth defy,)Tj
T*
( Long be it ere thou grow old,)Tj
T*
( Aching, shaking, crazy, cold;)Tj
T*
( But still continue as thou art,)Tj
T*
( Ancient person of my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221A Song of a Young Lady to her Ancient Lover\222 \(1691\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Love a woman? You\222re an ass!)Tj
T*
( \222Tis a most insipid passion)Tj
T*
( To choose out for your happiness)Tj
T*
( The silliest part of God\222s creation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Song\222 \(1680\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Nothing, thou elder brother even to shade!)Tj
T*
( Thou hadst a being ere the world was made,)Tj
T*
( And, well fixed, art alone of ending not afraid.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ere time and place were, time and place were not;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where primitive nothing something straight begot;)Tj
T*
( Then all proceeded from the great united what.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Upon Nothing\222 \(1680\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Matter, the wickedest offspring of thy race,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( By form assisted, flew from thy embrace,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And rebel light obscured thy reverend dusky face.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
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( With form and matter, time and place did join;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( To spoil thy peaceful realm, and ruin all thy line.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.92047 Tm
(\221Upon Nothing\222 \(1680\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 628.7124 Tm
( 6.64 John D. Rockefeller 1839-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The growth of a large business is merely a survival of the fittest..\
.The American beauty rose )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(can be produced in the splendour and fragrance which bring cheer to its \
beholder only by )Tj
T*
(sacrificing the early buds which grow up around it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.17047 Tm
(In W. J. Ghent \221Our Benevolent Feudalism\222 \(1902\) p. 29; \221Amer\
ican Beauty Rose\222 became the title of a song )Tj
T*
(\(1950\) by Hal David and others.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.9624 Tm
( 6.65 Knute Rockne 1888-1931)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Joseph P. Kennedy \(11.22\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.66 Gene Roddenberry 1921-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its five-year miss\
ion...to boldly go where no )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(man has gone before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.67047 Tm
(\221Star Trek\222 \(television series, from 1966\) introductory words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 376.75456 Tm
( Beam us up, Mr Scott.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.92047 Tm
(\221Star Trek\222 \(television series, from 1966\) \221Gamesters of Tris\
kelion\222; usually quoted: \221Beam me up, Scotty\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 328.7124 Tm
( 6.67 Theodore Roethke 1908-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.)Tj
T*
( I learn by going where I have to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.17047 Tm
(\221The Waking\222 \(1953\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 222.9624 Tm
( 6.68 Samuel Rogers 1763-1855)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Think nothing done while aught remains to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.42047 Tm
(\221Human Life\222 \(1819\) l. 49.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.50456 Tm
( But there are moments which he calls his own,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Then, never less alone than when alone,)Tj
T*
( Those whom he loved so long and sees no more,)Tj
T*
( Loved and still loves\227not dead\227but gone before,)Tj
T*
( He gathers round him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(\221Human Life\222 \(1819\) l. 755)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.75456 Tm
( By many a temple half as old as Time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.92047 Tm
(\221Italy. A Farewell\222 \(1828\) 2, 5.)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Go\227you may call it madness, folly;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You shall not chase my gloom away.)Tj
T*
( There\222s such a charm in melancholy,)Tj
T*
( I would not, if I could, be gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.17047 Tm
(\221To\227, 1814\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.25456 Tm
( It doesn\222t much signify whom one marries, for one is sure to find\
next morning that it was )Tj
T*
(someone else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.42047 Tm
(In Alexander Dyce \(ed.\) \221Table Talk\222 \(1860\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 592.2124 Tm
( 6.69 Thorold Rogers 1823-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sir, to be facetious it is not necessary to be indecent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.67047 Tm
(In imitation of Samuel Johnson; attributed also to Birkbeck Hill. John B\
ailey \221Dr Johnson and his Circle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.75456 Tm
( See, ladling butter from alternate tubs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Stubbs butters Freeman, Freeman butters Stubbs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.92047 Tm
(Attributed in W. H. Hutton \(ed.\) \221Letters of William Stubbs\222 \(\
1904\) p. 149)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.7124 Tm
( 6.70 Will Rogers 1879-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There is only one thing that can kill the movies, and that is educat\
ion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.17047 Tm
(\221Autobiography of Will Rogers\222 \(1949\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.25456 Tm
( The more you read and observe about this Politics thing, you got to \
admit that each party is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(worse than the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.42047 Tm
(\221The Illiterate Digest\222 \(1924\) \221Breaking into the Writing Gam\
e\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.50456 Tm
( Income Tax has made more Liars out of the American people than Golf.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.67047 Tm
(\221The Illiterate Digest\222 \(1924\) \221Helping the Girls with their \
Income Taxes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.75456 Tm
( Everything is funny as long as it is happening to Somebody Else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.92047 Tm
(\221The Illiterate Digest\222 \(1924\) \221Warning to Jokers: lay off th\
e prince\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.00456 Tm
( Communism is like prohibition, it\222s a good idea but it won\222t w\
ork.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.17047 Tm
(\221Weekly Articles\222 \(1981\) vol. 3, p. 93 \(first published 1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.25456 Tm
( Well, all I know is what I read in the papers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.42047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 30 September 1923)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.50456 Tm
( You know everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 31 August 1924)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.75456 Tm
( You can\222t say civilization don\222t advance, however, for in ever\
y war they kill you in a new way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.92047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 23 December 1929)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.00456 Tm
( Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time \
we have rushed through life )Tj
T*
(trying to save.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.17047 Tm
(Letter in \221New York Times\222 29 April 1930)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.25456 Tm
( Coolidge is a better example of evolution than either Bryan or Darro\
w, for he knows when not )Tj
T*
(to talk, which is the biggest asset the monkey possesses over the human.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.42047 Tm
(In \221Saturday Review\222 25 August 1962 \221A Rogers Thesaurus\222)Tj
ET
EMC
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( 6.71 Mme Roland 1754-93)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O libert\350! O libert\350! que de crimes on commet en ton nom!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O liberty! O liberty! what crimes are committed in thy name!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.92047 Tm
(In Alphonse de Lamartine \221Histoire des Girondins\222 \(1847\) bk. 51,\
ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 663.00456 Tm
( The more I see of men, the better I like dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 614.9624 Tm
( 6.72 Frederick William Rolfe \(\221Baron Corvo\222\) 1860-1913)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221There is no Holiness here,\222 George interrupted, in that cold,\
white, candent voice which was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(more caustic than silver nitrate and more thrilling than a scream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.42047 Tm
(\221Hadrian VII\222 \(1904\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 538.50456 Tm
( Pray for the repose of His soul. He was so tired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.67047 Tm
(\221Hadrian VII\222 \(1904\) ch. 24)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 490.4624 Tm
( 6.73 Richard Rolle de Hampole c.1290-1349)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When Adam dalfe and Eve spane)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So spire it thou may spede,)Tj
T*
( Where was than the pride of man)Tj
T*
( That now merres his mede?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.92047 Tm
(In G. G. Perry \221Religious Pieces\222 \(Early English Text Society, vo\
l. 88\); an altered form was taken by John )Tj
T*
(Ball \(d. 1381\): \221When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the ge\
ntleman?\222. J. R. Green \221A Short )Tj
T*
(History of the English People\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 336.7124 Tm
( 6.74 Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Pope John XXIII \(10.29\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.75 Pierre de Ronsard 1524-85)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mignonne, allons voir si la rose)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Qui ce matin avait d\350close)Tj
T*
( Sa robe de pourpre au soleil)Tj
T*
( A point perdu cette verspr\350e)Tj
T*
( Les plis de sa robe pourpr\350e,)Tj
T*
( Et son teint au v\364tre pareil.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Darling, let us go to see if the rose, which this morning had spread\
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0 -1.2 TD
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hat is like yours.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(\221Odes, \341 Cassandre\222 no. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( Quand vous serez bien vieille, au soir, \341 la chandelle,)Tj
T*
( Assise aupr\351s du feu, d\350vidant et filant,)Tj
T*
( Direz, chantant mes vers, en vous \350merveillant,)Tj
T*
( Ronsard me c\350l\350brait du temps que j\222\350tais belle.)Tj
ET
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( When you are very old, and sit in the candle-light at evening spinni\
ng by the fire, you will say, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as you murmur my verses, a wonder in your eyes, \221Ronsard sang of me i\
n the days when I was )Tj
T*
(fair.\222)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnets pour H\350l\351ne\222 \(1578\) bk. 2, no. 42)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 663.9624 Tm
( 6.76 Eleanor Roosevelt 1884-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(In \221Catholic Digest\222 August 1960, p. 102)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.2124 Tm
( 6.77 Franklin D. Roosevelt 1882-1945)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( These unhappy times call for the building of plans that...build from\
the bottom up and not from )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the top down, that put their faith once more in the forgotten man at the\
bottom of the economic )Tj
T*
(pyramid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.67047 Tm
(Radio address, 7 April 1932, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1938\) vol. 1, p\
. 625)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.75456 Tm
( I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Democratic Convention in Chicago, 2 July 1932, accepting t\
he presidential nomination; in )Tj
T*
(\221Public Papers\222 \(1938\) vol. 1, p. 647)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.00456 Tm
( The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.17047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 4 March 1933, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1938\) vol. \
2, p. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.25456 Tm
( In the field of world policy I would dedicate this Nation to the pol\
icy of the good neighbour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.42047 Tm
(Inaugural address, 4 March 1933, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1938\) vol. \
2, p. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.50456 Tm
( I have seen war...I hate war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.67047 Tm
(Speech at Chautauqua, NY, 14 August 1936, in \221Public Papers\222 \(193\
6\) vol. 5, p. 289)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.75456 Tm
( I see one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.92047 Tm
(Second inaugural address, 20 January 1937, in \221Public Papers\222 \(19\
41\) vol. 6, p. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 301.00456 Tm
( I have said this before, but I shall say it again and again and agai\
n: Your boys are not going to )Tj
T*
(be sent into any foreign wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.17047 Tm
(Speech in Boston, 30 October 1940, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1941\) vol\
. 9, p. 517)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.25456 Tm
( We have the men\227the skill\227the wealth\227and above all, the wil\
l...We must be the great )Tj
T*
(arsenal of democracy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.42047 Tm
(\221Fireside Chat\222 radio broadcast, 29 December 1940, in \221Public P\
apers\222 \(1941\) vol. 9, p. 643)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.50456 Tm
( We look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedom\
s. The first is freedom )Tj
T*
(of speech and expression\227everywhere in the world. The second is freed\
om of every person to )Tj
T*
(worship God in his own way\227everywhere in the world. The third is free\
dom from want...)Tj
T*
(everywhere in the world. The fourth is freedom from fear...anywhere in t\
he world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.67047 Tm
(Message to Congress, 6 January 1941, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1941\) v\
ol. 9, p. 672)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.75456 Tm
( Yesterday, December 7, 1941\227a date which will live in infamy\227t\
he United States of )Tj
T*
(America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces o\
f the Empire of Japan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.92047 Tm
(Address to Congress, 8 December 1941, in \221Public Papers\222 \(1950\) \
vol. 10, p. 514)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.00456 Tm
( The work, my friend, is peace. More than an end of this war\227an en\
d to the beginnings of all )Tj
ET
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(wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Undelivered address for Jefferson Day, 13 April 1945 \(the day after Roo\
sevelt died\) in \221Public Papers\222 \(1950\) )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vol. 13, p. 615)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( Books can not be killed by fire. People die, but books never die. No\
man and no force can )Tj
T*
(abolish memory...In this war, we know, books are weapons. And it is a pa\
rt of your dedication )Tj
T*
(always to make them weapons for man\222s freedom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Message to the Booksellers of America\222 6 May 1942, in \221Publish\
er\222s Weekly\222 9 May 1942)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( It is fun to be in the same decade with you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(Cable to Winston Churchill, replying to congratulations on Roosevelt\222\
s 60th birthday, in W. S. Churchill )Tj
T*
(\221Hinge of Fate\222 \(1950\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 565.4624 Tm
( 6.78 Theodore Roosevelt 1858-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I wish to preach, not the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the doctrine\
of the strenuous life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 527.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Hamilton Club, Chicago, 10 April 1899, in \221Works\222, M\
emorial edition \(1925\), vol. 15, p. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 507.00456 Tm
( There is a homely old adage which runs: \221Speak softly and carry a\
big stick; you will go far.\222 If )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the American nation will speak softly, and yet build and keep at a pitch\
of the highest training a )Tj
T*
(thoroughly efficient navy, the Monroe Doctrine will go far.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(Speech at Chicago, 3 April 1903, in \221New York Times\222 4 April 1903)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 434.25456 Tm
( A man who is good enough to shed his blood for the country is good e\
nough to be given a )Tj
T*
(square deal afterwards. More than that no man is entitled to, and less t\
han that no man shall have.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 400.42047 Tm
(Speech at the Lincoln Monument, Springfield, Illinois, 4 June 1903, in \221\
Addresses and Presidential Messages )Tj
T*
(1902-4\222 \(1904\) p. 224)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 364.50456 Tm
( The men with the muck-rakes are often indispensable to the well-bein\
g of society; but only if )Tj
T*
(they know when to stop raking the muck.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.67047 Tm
(Speech in Washington, 14 April 1906, in \221Works\222, Memorial edition \
\(1925\) vol. 18, p. 574.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.75456 Tm
( There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism...The on\
e absolutely certain way )Tj
T*
(of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its co\
ntinuing to be a nation at all, )Tj
T*
(would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(Speech in New York, 12 October 1915, in \221Works\222, Memorial edition \
\(1925\) vol. 20, p. 457)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.00456 Tm
( Foolish fanatics...the men who form the lunatic fringe in all reform\
movements.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1913\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.25456 Tm
( I am as strong as a bull moose and you can use me to the limit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mark Hanna, 27 June 1900, in \221Works\222 \(Memorial edition,\
1926\) vol. 23, p. 162; \221Bull Moose\222 )Tj
T*
(subsequently became the popular name of the Progressive Party)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 137.2124 Tm
( 6.79 Lord Rosebery \(Archibald Philip Primrose, fifth Earl of Rosebery\)\
1847-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Imperialism, sane Imperialism, as distinguished from what I may call\
wild-cat Imperialism, is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(nothing but this\227a larger patriotism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(Speech at a City Liberal Club dinner, 5 May 1899)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( It is beginning to be hinted that we are a nation of amateurs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(Rectorial Address at Glasgow University, 16 November 1900, in \221The Ti\
mes\222 17 November 1900)Tj
ET
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( I must plough my furrow alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech on remaining outside the Liberal Party leadership, 19 July 1901, \
in \221The Times\222 20 July 1901)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The fly-blown phylacteries of the Liberal Party.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Speech at Chesterfield, 16 December 1901)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.2124 Tm
( 6.80 Ethel Rosenberg 1916-53 and Julius Rosenberg 1918-53)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are innocent...To forsake this truth is to pay too high a price e\
ven for the priceless gift of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(Petition for executive clemency, filed 9 January 1953, in Ethel Rosenber\
g \221Death House Letters\222 \(1953\) p. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( We are the first victims of American Fascism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(Letter from Julius to Emanuel Bloch before the Rosenbergs\222 execution \
for espionage, 19 June 1953; in Ethel )Tj
T*
(Rosenberg \221Testament of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg\222 \(1954\) p. 18\
7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 528.7124 Tm
( 6.81 Alan S. C. Ross 1907-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are, it is true, still a few minor points of life which may se\
rve to demarcate the upper )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(class, but they are only minor ones...when drunk, gentlemen often become\
amorous or maudlin or )Tj
T*
(vomit in public, but they never become truculent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(\221U and Non-U. An essay in sociological linguistics\222, in \221Neuphi\
lologische Mitteilungen\222 \(1954\); later )Tj
T*
(incorporated into Nancy Mitford \(ed.\) \221Noblesse Oblige\222 \(1956\)\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 407.9624 Tm
( 6.82 Christina Rossetti 1830-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Because the birthday of my life)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is come, my love is come to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221A Birthday\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Come to me in the silence of the night;)Tj
T*
( Come in the speaking silence of a dream;)Tj
T*
( Come with soft rounded cheeks and eyes as bright)Tj
T*
( As sunlight on a stream;)Tj
T*
( Come back in tears,)Tj
T*
( O memory, hope, love of finished years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Echo\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( In the bleak mid-winter)Tj
T*
( Frosty wind made moan,)Tj
T*
( Earth stood hard as iron,)Tj
T*
( Water like a stone;)Tj
T*
( Snow had fallen, snow on snow,)Tj
T*
( Snow on snow,)Tj
T*
( In the bleak mid-winter,)Tj
T*
( Long ago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Mid-Winter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( The hope I dreamed of was a dream,)Tj
ET
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( Was but a dream; and now I wake,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Exceeding comfortless, and worn, and old,)Tj
T*
( For a dream\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Mirage\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Oh roses for the flush of youth,)Tj
T*
( And laurel for the perfect prime;)Tj
T*
( But pluck an ivy branch for me)Tj
T*
( Grown old before my time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Oh Roses for the Flush\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Remember me when I am gone away,)Tj
T*
( Gone far away into the silent land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Remember\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Better by far you should forget and smile)Tj
T*
( Than that you should remember and be sad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Remember\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( O Earth, lie heavily upon her eyes;)Tj
T*
( Seal her sweet eyes weary of watching, Earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Rest\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Silence more musical than any song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Rest\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Does the road wind up-hill all the way? )Tj
T*
( Yes, to the very end. )Tj
T*
( Will the day\222s journey take the whole long day? )Tj
T*
( From morn to night, my friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Up-Hill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( When I am dead, my dearest,)Tj
T*
( Sing no sad songs for me;)Tj
T*
( Plant thou no roses at my head,)Tj
T*
( Nor shady cypress tree:)Tj
T*
( Be the green grass above me)Tj
T*
( With showers and dewdrops wet;)Tj
T*
( And if thou wilt, remember,)Tj
T*
( And if thou wilt, forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221When I am Dead\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 123.7124 Tm
( 6.83 Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1828-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Like the sweet apple which reddens upon the topmost bough,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A-top on the topmost twig,\227which the pluckers forgot, somehow,\227\
)Tj
T*
( Forgot it not, nay, but got it not, for none could get it till now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221Beauty: A Combination from Sappho\222)Tj
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( The blessed damozel leaned out)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the gold bar of Heaven;)Tj
T*
( Her eyes were deeper than the depth)Tj
T*
( Of waters stilled at even;)Tj
T*
( She had three lilies in her hand,)Tj
T*
( And the stars in her hair were seven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Damozel\222 st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Her hair that lay along her back)Tj
T*
( Was yellow like ripe corn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Damozel\222 st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( As low as where this earth)Tj
T*
( Spins like a fretful midge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Damozel\222 st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( And the souls mounting up to God)Tj
T*
( Went by her like thin flames.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Damozel\222 st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( \221We two,\222 she said, \221will seek the groves)Tj
T*
( Where the lady Mary is,)Tj
T*
( With her five handmaidens, whose names)Tj
T*
( Are five sweet symphonies,)Tj
T*
( Cecily, Gertrude, Magdalen,)Tj
T*
( Margaret and Rosalys.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221The Blessed Damozel\222 st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( A sonnet is a moment\222s monument,\227)Tj
T*
( Memorial from the Soul\222s eternity)Tj
T*
( To one dead deathless hour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 1, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( \222Tis visible silence, still as the hour-glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 1 \221Silent Noon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Deep in the sun-searched growths the dragon-fly)Tj
T*
( Hangs like a blue thread loosened from the sky:\227)Tj
T*
( So this wing\222d hour is dropt to us from above.)Tj
T*
( Oh! clasp we to our hearts, for deathless dower,)Tj
T*
( This close-companioned inarticulate hour)Tj
T*
( When twofold silence was the song of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 1 \221Silent Noon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Lo! as that youth\222s eyes burned at thine, so went)Tj
T*
( Thy spell through him, and left his straight neck bent)Tj
T*
( And round his heart one strangling golden hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221Body\222s Beauty\222)Tj
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( They die not,\227for their life was death,\227but cease;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And round their narrow lips the mould falls close.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221The Choice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I do not see them here; but after death)Tj
T*
( God knows I know the faces I shall see,)Tj
T*
( Each one a murdered self, with low last breath.)Tj
T*
( \221I am thyself,\227what hast thou done to me?\222)Tj
T*
( \221And I\227and I\227thyself,\222 \(lo! each one saith,\))Tj
T*
( \221And thou thyself to all eternity!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221Lost Days\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Give honour unto Luke Evangelist;)Tj
T*
( For he it was \(the aged legends say\))Tj
T*
( Who first taught Art to fold her hands and pray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221Old and New Art\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( When vain desire at last and vain regret)Tj
T*
( Go hand in hand to death, and all is vain,)Tj
T*
( What shall assuage the unforgotten pain)Tj
T*
( And teach the unforgetful to forget?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221The One Hope\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Look in my face; my name is Might-have-been;)Tj
T*
( I am also called No-more, Too-late, Farewell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221A Superscription\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Sleepless with cold commemorative eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The House of Life\222 \(1881\) pt. 2 \221A Superscription\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Unto the man of yearning thought)Tj
T*
( And aspiration, to do nought)Tj
T*
( Is in itself almost an act.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Soothsay\222 st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( I have been here before,)Tj
T*
( But when or how I cannot tell:)Tj
T*
( I know the grass beyond the door,)Tj
T*
( The sweet keen smell,)Tj
T*
( The sighing sound, the lights around the shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Sudden Light\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 123.7124 Tm
( 6.84 Gioacchino Rossini 1792-1868)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Monsieur Wagner a de beaux moments, mais de mauvais quart d\222heure\
s.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Wagner has lovely moments but awful quarters of an hour.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(Said to Emile Naumann, April 1867, in Naumann \221Italienische Tondichte\
r\222 \(1883\) 4, 541)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.9624 Tm
( 6.85 Edmond Rostand 1868-1918)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Un grand nez est proprement l\222indice)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( D\222un homme affable, bon, courtois, spirituel,)Tj
T*
( Lib\350ral, courageux, tel que je suis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( A large nose is in fact the sign of an affable man, good, courteous,\
witty, liberal, courageous, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as I am.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 639.67047 Tm
(\221Cyrano de Bergerac\222 \(1897\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 618.75456 Tm
( Cyrano: Il y a malgr\350 vous quelque chose Que j\222emporte, et ce\
soir, quand j\222entrerai chez )Tj
T*
(Dieu, Mon salut balaiera largement le seuil bleu, Quelque chose que sans\
un pli, sans une tache, )Tj
T*
(J\222emporte malgr\350 vous...et c\222est...Mon panache!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Cyrano: There is, in spite of you, something which I shall take wit\
h me. And tonight, when I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(go into God\222s house, my bow will make a wide sweep across the blue th\
reshold. Something )Tj
T*
(which, with not a crease, not a mark, I\222m taking away in spite of you\
...and it\222s...My panache!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.17047 Tm
(\221Cyrano de Bergerac\222 \(1897\) act 5, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 488.25456 Tm
( Le seul r\352ve int\350resse,)Tj
T*
( Vivre sans r\352ve, qu\222est-ce?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The dream, alone, is of interest. What is life, without a dream?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.67047 Tm
(\221La Princesse Lointaine\222 \(1895\) act 1, sc. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 400.4624 Tm
( 6.86 Jean Rostand 1894-1977)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( On tue un homme, on est un assassin. On tue des millions d\222hommes\
, on est conqu\350rant. On les )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(tue tous, on est un dieu.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Kill a man, and you are an assassin. Kill millions of men, and you a\
re a conqueror. Kill )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(everyone, and you are a god.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.17047 Tm
(\221Pens\350es d\222un biologiste\222 \(1939\) p. 116.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 272.9624 Tm
( 6.87 Leo Rosten 1908\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The only thing I can say about W. C. Fields, whom I have admired sin\
ce the day he advanced )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(upon Baby LeRoy with an ice pick, is this: any man who hates dogs and ba\
bies can\222t be all bad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 217.42047 Tm
(Speech at Hollywood dinner in honour of W. C. Fields, 16 February 1939, \
in \221Saturday Review\222 12 June 1976)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.2124 Tm
( 6.88 Philip Roth 1933\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A Jewish man with parents alive is a fifteen-year-old boy, and will \
remain a fifteen-year-old )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(boy until they die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Portnoy\222s Complaint\222 \(1967\) p. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Doctor, my doctor, what do you say, LET\222S PUT THE ID BACK IN YID!\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221Portnoy\222s Complaint\222 \(1967\) p. 124)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 60.7124 Tm
( 6.89 Claude-Joseph Rouget de Lisle 1760-1836)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Allons, enfants de la patrie,)Tj
ET
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( Le jour de gloire est arriv\350...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Aux armes, citoyens!)Tj
T*
( Formez vos battaillons!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Come, children of our country, the day of glory has arrived...To arm\
s, citizens! Form your )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(battalions!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 659.42047 Tm
(\221La Marseillaise\222 \(25 April 1792\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 627.2124 Tm
( 6.90 Jean-Jacques Rousseau 1712-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222homme est n\350 libre, et partout il est dans les fers.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Man was born free, and everywhere he is in chains.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 567.92047 Tm
(\221Du Contrat social\222 \(1762\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 547.00456 Tm
( Laisse, mon ami, ces vains moralistes et rentre au fond de ton \342m\
e: c\222est l\341 que tu retrouveras )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(toujours la source de ce feu sacr\350 qui nous embrasa tant de fois de l\
\222amour des sublimes vertus; )Tj
T*
(c\222est l\341 que tu verras ce simulacre \350ternel du vrai beau dont l\
a contemplation nous anime d\222un )Tj
T*
(saint enthousiasme.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Leave those vain moralists, my friend, and return to the depth of yo\
ur soul: that is where you )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(will always rediscover the source of the sacred fire which so often infl\
amed us with love of the )Tj
T*
(sublime virtues; that is where you will see the eternal image of true be\
auty, the contemplation of )Tj
T*
(which inspires us with a holy enthusiasm.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.42047 Tm
(\221La Nouvelle H\350loise\222 \(1761, ed. M. Launay, 1967\) pt. 2, lett\
er 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.2124 Tm
( 6.91 Dr Routh 1755-1854)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You will find it a very good practice always to verify your referenc\
es, sir!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(In John William Burgon \221Lives of Twelve Good Men\222 \(1888 ed.\) vol\
. 1, p. 73)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 299.4624 Tm
( 6.92 Dan Rowan 1922-87 and Dick Martin 1923\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Sock it to me, baby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(\221Rowan and Martin\222s Laugh-In\222 \(American television series, 196\
7-73\) catch-phrase)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 229.7124 Tm
( 6.93 Nicholas Rowe 1674-1718)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Is this that haughty, gallant, gay Lothario?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.17047 Tm
(\221The Fair Penitent\222 \(1703\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.25456 Tm
( Like Helen, in the night when Troy was sacked,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Spectatress of the mischief which she made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.42047 Tm
(\221The Fair Penitent\222 \(1703\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.50456 Tm
( Death is the privilege of human nature,)Tj
T*
( And life without it were not worth our taking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.67047 Tm
(\221The Fair Penitent\222 \(1703\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 50.4624 Tm
( 6.94 Helen Rowland 1875-1950)Tj
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( A husband is what is left of a lover, after the nerve has been extra\
cted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Guide to Men\222 \(1922\) p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Somehow a bachelor never quite gets over the idea that he is a thing\
of beauty and a boy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(forever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221A Guide to Men\222 \(1922\) p. 25.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The follies which a man regrets most, in his life, are those which h\
e didn\222t commit when he )Tj
T*
(had the opportunity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221A Guide to Men\222 \(1922\) p. 87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 6.95 Richard Rowland c.1881-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The lunatics have taken charge of the asylum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(Comment on the take-over of United Artists by Charles Chaplin, Mary Pick\
ford, Douglas Fairbanks and D. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(W. Griffith, in Terry Ramsaye \221A Million and One Nights\222 \(1926\) \
vol. 2, ch. 79.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 510.7124 Tm
( 6.96 Maude Royden 1876-1956)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Church should go forward along the path of progress and be no lo\
nger satisfied only to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(represent the Conservative Party at prayer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 455.17047 Tm
(Address at Queen\222s Hall, London, 16 July 1917, in \221The Times\222 1\
7 July 1917)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 422.9624 Tm
( 6.97 Naomi Royde-Smith c.1875-1964)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I know two things about the horse)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And one of them is rather coarse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(\221Weekend Book\222 \(1928\) p. 231)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 335.2124 Tm
( 6.98 Matthew Roydon fl. 1580-1622)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A sweet attractive kind of grace,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A full assurance given by looks,)Tj
T*
( Continual comfort in a face,)Tj
T*
( The lineaments of Gospel books;)Tj
T*
( I trow that countenance cannot lie,)Tj
T*
( Whose thoughts are legible in the eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221An Elegy, or Friend\222s Passion, for his Astrophill\222 \(on Sir Ph\
ilip Sidney\) \(1593\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( Was never eye, did see that face,)Tj
T*
( Was never ear, did hear that tongue,)Tj
T*
( Was never mind, did mind his grace,)Tj
T*
( That ever thought the travel long\227)Tj
T*
( But eyes, and ears, and ev\222ry thought,)Tj
T*
( Were with his sweet perfections caught.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221An Elegy, or Friend\222s Passion, for his Astrophill\222 \(on Sir Ph\
ilip Sidney\) \(1593\) st. 19)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 48.7124 Tm
( 6.99 Paul Alfred Rubens 1875-1917)Tj
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( Oh! we don\222t want to lose you but we think you ought to go)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For your King and your Country both need you so;)Tj
T*
( We shall want you and miss you but with all our might and main)Tj
T*
( We shall cheer you, thank you, kiss you)Tj
T*
( When you come back again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Your King and Country Want You\222 \(1914 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 632.9624 Tm
( 6.100 Richard Rumbold c.1622-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into the wo\
rld, ready booted and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled to be ridden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.42047 Tm
(On the scaffold, in T. B. Macauley \221Histories of England\222 vol. 1 \(\
1849\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 545.2124 Tm
( 6.101 Damon Runyon 1884-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Guys and dolls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 507.67047 Tm
(Title of book \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 486.75456 Tm
( I do see her in tough joints more than somewhat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.92047 Tm
(\221Collier\222s\222 22 May 1930, \221Social Error\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.00456 Tm
( \221You are snatching a hard guy when you snatch Bookie Bob. A very \
hard guy, indeed. In fact,\222 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(I say, \221I hear the softest thing about him is his front teeth.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Collier\222s\222 26 September 1931, \221The Snatching of Bookie Bob\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( I always claim the mission workers came out too early to catch any s\
inners on this part of )Tj
T*
(Broadway. At such an hour the sinners are still in bed resting up from t\
heir sinning of the night )Tj
T*
(before, so they will be in good shape for more sinning a little later on\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221Collier\222s\222 28 January 1933, \221The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( I long ago come to the conclusion that all life is 6 to 5 against.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(\221Collier\222s\222 8 September 1934, \221A Nice Price\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( \221My boy,\222 he says, \221always try to rub up against money, for\
if you rub up against money long )Tj
T*
(enough, some of it may rub off on you.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.92047 Tm
(\221Cosmopolitan\222 August 1929, \221A Very Honourable Guy\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 219.7124 Tm
( 6.102 Dean Rusk 1909\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We\222re eyeball to eyeball, and I think the other fellow just blink\
ed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(On the Cuban missile crisis, 24 October 1962, in \221Saturday Evening Po\
st\222 8 December 1962)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 149.9624 Tm
( 6.103 John Ruskin 1819-1900)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( You hear of me, among others, as a respectable architectural man-mil\
liner; and you send for )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(me, that I may tell you the leading fashion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221The Crown of Wild Olive\222 \(1866\) 53, lecture 2 \221Traffic\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.50456 Tm
( Thackeray settled like a meat-fly on whatever one had got for dinner\
, and made one sick of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.67047 Tm
(\221Fors Clavigera\222 \(1871-84\) letter 31)Tj
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( I have seen, and heard, much of Cockney impudence before now; but ne\
ver expected to hear a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(coxcomb ask two hundred guineas for flinging a pot of paint in the publi\
c\222s face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Referring to Whistler\222s \221Nocturne in Black and Gold\222, in \221Fo\
rs Clavigera\222 \(1871-84\) letter 79, 18 June 1877.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( No person who is not a great sculptor or painter can be an architect\
. If he is not a sculptor or )Tj
T*
(painter, he can only be a builder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Lectures on Architecture and Painting\222 \(1853\) 61, addenda)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Life without industry is guilt, and industry without art is brutalit\
y.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Lectures on Art\222, 3 \221The Relation of Art to Morals\222 23 Febr\
uary 1870)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( What is poetry? The suggestion, by the imagination, of noble grounds\
for the noble emotions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Modern Painters\222 \(1888\) vol. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( All violent feelings...produce in us a falseness in all our impressi\
ons of external things, which I )Tj
T*
(would generally characterize as the \221Pathetic Fallacy\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Modern Painters\222 \(1888\) vol. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Mountains are the beginning and the end of all natural scenery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Modern Painters\222 \(1888\) vol. 4, pt. 5, ch. 20, 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( There was a rocky valley between Buxton and Bakewell...You enterpris\
ed a railroad...you )Tj
T*
(blasted its rocks away...And now, every fool in Buxton can be at Bakewel\
l in half-an-hour, and )Tj
T*
(every fool in Bakewell at Buxton.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Praeterita\222 \(1885-9\) 3, 4 \221Joanna\222s Cave\222 84, note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( All books are divisible into two classes: the books of the hour, and\
the books of all time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Sesame and Lilies\222 \(1865\) lecture 1 \221Of Kings\222 Treasuries\
\222 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Be sure that you go to the author to get at his meaning, not to find\
yours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Sesame and Lilies\222 \(1865\) lecture 1 \221Of Kings\222 Treasuries\
\222 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( Which of us...is to do the hard and dirty work for the rest\227and f\
or what pay? Who is to do the )Tj
T*
(pleasant and clean work, and for what pay?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Sesame and Lilies\222 \(1865\) lecture 1 \221Of Kings\222 Treasuries\
\222 30, note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( We call ourselves a rich nation, and we are filthy and foolish enoug\
h to thumb each other\222s )Tj
T*
(books out of circulating libraries!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Sesame and Lilies\222 \(1865\) lecture 1 \221Of Kings\222 Treasuries\
\222 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( I believe the right question to ask, respecting all ornament, is sim\
ply this: Was it done with )Tj
T*
(enjoyment\227was the carver happy while he was about it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Seven Lamps of Architecture\222 \(1849\) ch. 5 \221The Lamp of L\
ife\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Better the rudest work that tells a story or records a fact, than th\
e richest without meaning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221The Seven Lamps of Architecture\222 \(1849\) ch. 6 \221The Lamp of M\
emory\222 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( When we build, let us think that we build for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221The Seven Lamps of Architecture\222 \(1849\) ch. 6 \221The Lamp of M\
emory\222 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most us\
eless; peacocks and lilies )Tj
T*
(for instance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221The Stones of Venice\222 \(1851-3\) vol. 1, ch. 2, 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( Labour without joy is base. Labour without sorrow is base. Sorrow wi\
thout labour is base. Joy )Tj
ET
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(without labour is base.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Time and Tide\222 \(1867\) letter 5)Tj
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( Your honesty is not to be based either on religion or policy. Both y\
our religion and policy must )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(be based on it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221Time and Tide\222 \(1867\) letter 8)Tj
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( The first duty of a State is to see that every child born therein sh\
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T*
(and educated, till it attain years of discretion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221Time and Tide\222 \(1867\) letter 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( Fine art is that in which the hand, the head, and the heart of man g\
o together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221The Two Paths\222 \(1859\) lecture 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.75456 Tm
( Not only is there but one way of doing things rightly, but there is \
only one way of seeing them, )Tj
T*
(and that is, seeing the whole of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221The Two Paths\222 \(1859\) lecture 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.00456 Tm
( Nobody cares much at heart about Titian; only there is a strange und\
ercurrent of everlasting )Tj
T*
(murmur about his name, which means the deep consent of all great men tha\
t he is greater than )Tj
T*
(they.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Paths\222 \(1859\) lecture 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.25456 Tm
( It ought to be quite as natural and straightforward a matter for a l\
abourer to take his pension )Tj
T*
(from his parish, because he has deserved well of his parish, as for a ma\
n in higher rank to take his )Tj
T*
(pension from his country, because he has deserved well of his country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.42047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) preface, 6 \(4\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.50456 Tm
( The force of the guinea you have in your pocket depends wholly on th\
e default of a guinea in )Tj
T*
(your neighbour\222s pocket. If he did not want it, it would be of no use\
to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) essay 2, 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( Soldiers of the ploughshare as well as soldiers of the sword.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) essay 3, 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( Government and co-operation are in all things the laws of life; anar\
chy and competition the )Tj
T*
(laws of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) essay 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.25456 Tm
( Whereas it has long been known and declared that the poor have no ri\
ght to the property of the )Tj
T*
(rich, I wish it also to be known and declared that the rich have no righ\
t to the property of the poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.42047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) essay 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.50456 Tm
( There is no wealth but life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221Unto this Last\222 \(1862\) essay 4, 77)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 119.4624 Tm
( 6.104 Bertrand Russell \(Bertrand Arthur William, third Earl Russell\) \
1872-1970)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Men who are unhappy, like men who sleep badly, are always proud of t\
he fact.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.92047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.00456 Tm
( Boredom is...a vital problem for the moralist, since half the sins o\
f mankind are caused by the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fear of it.)Tj
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(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( One of the symptoms of approaching nervous breakdown is the belief t\
hat one\222s work is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of \
disaster. If I were a medical )Tj
T*
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important.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( One should as a rule respect public opinion in so far as is necessar\
y to avoid starvation and to )Tj
T*
(keep out of prison, but anything that goes beyond this is voluntary subm\
ission to an unnecessary )Tj
T*
(tyranny, and is likely to interfere with happiness in all kinds of ways.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( A sense of duty is useful in work, but offensive in personal relatio\
ns.)Tj
T*
( People wish to be liked, not to be endured with patient resignation.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Of all forms of caution, caution in love is perhaps the most fatal t\
o true happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( To be able to fill leisure intelligently is the last product of civi\
lization.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Conquest of Happiness\222 \(1930\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( To fear love is to fear life, and those who fear life are already th\
ree parts dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Marriage and Morals\222 \(1929\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Mathematics may be defined as the subject in which we never know wha\
t we are talking about, )Tj
T*
(nor whether what we are saying is true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Mysticism and Logic\222 \(1917\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( The law of causality, I believe, like mud that passes muster among p\
hilosophers, is a relic of a )Tj
T*
(bygone age, surviving, like the monarchy, only because it is erroneously\
supposed to do no harm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Mysticism and Logic\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Only on the firm foundation of unyielding despair, can the soul\222s\
habitation henceforth be )Tj
T*
(safely built.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Philosophical Essays\222 \(1910\) no. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Mathematics, rightly viewed, possesses not only truth, but supreme b\
eauty\227a beauty cold and )Tj
T*
(austere, like that of sculpture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Philosophical Essays\222 \(1910\) no. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Every man, wherever he goes, is encompassed by a cloud of comforting\
convictions, which )Tj
T*
(move with him like flies on a summer day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Sceptical Essays\222 \(1928\) \221Dreams and Facts\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to mor\
alists. That is why they )Tj
T*
(invented Hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221Sceptical Essays\222 \(1928\) \221On the Value of Scepticism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( It is obvious that \221obscenity\222 is not a term capable of exact \
legal definition; in the practice of )Tj
T*
(the Courts, it means \221anything that shocks the magistrate\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Sceptical Essays\222 \(1928\) \221Recrudescence of Puritanism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Next to enjoying ourselves, the next greatest pleasure consists in p\
reventing others from )Tj
ET
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(enjoying themselves, or, more generally, in the acquisition of power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221Sceptical Essays\222 \(1928\) \221Recrudescence of Puritanism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Fear is the main source of superstition, and one of the main sources\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221Unpopular Essays\222 \(1950\) \221Outline of Intellectual Rubbish\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( The linguistic philosophy, which cares onyl about language, and not \
about the world, is like )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the boy who preferred the clock without the pendulum because, although i\
t no longer told the )Tj
T*
(time, it went more easily than before and at a more exhilarating pace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(In Ernest Gellner \221Words and Things\222 \(1959\) introduction)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.9624 Tm
( 6.105 Dora Russell \(Countess Russell\) 1894-1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We want better reasons for having children than not knowing how to p\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.42047 Tm
(\221Hypatia\222 \(1925\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.2124 Tm
( 6.106 George William Russell)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See AE \(1.22\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 6.107 Lord John Russell 1792-1878)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is impossible that the whisper of a faction should prevail agains\
t the voice of a nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.92047 Tm
(Letter to T. Attwood, October 1831, after the rejection in the House of \
Lords of the Reform Bill \(7 October )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1831\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 397.00456 Tm
( If peace cannot be maintained with honour, it is no longer peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.17047 Tm
(Greenock, 19 September 1853.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.25456 Tm
( Among the defects of the Bill, which were numerous, one provision wa\
s conspicuous by its )Tj
T*
(presence and another by its absence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.42047 Tm
(Speech to the electors of the City of London, April 1859)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.50456 Tm
( A proverb is one man\222s wit and all men\222s wisdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.67047 Tm
(Ascribed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 257.4624 Tm
( 6.108 Sir William Howard Russell 1820-1907)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They dashed on towards that thin red line tipped with steel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.92047 Tm
(On the Russians charging the British, in \221The British Expedition to t\
he Crimea\222 \(1877\) p. 156. Russell\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(original dispatch to The Times, 25 October 1854, printed 14 November 185\
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T*
(with a line of steel\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.7124 Tm
( 6.109 Ernest Rutherford \(Baron Rutherford of Nelson\) 1871-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All science is either physics or stamp collecting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.17047 Tm
(In J. B. Birks \221Rutherford at Manchester\222 \(1962\) p. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.25456 Tm
( We haven\222t got the money, so we\222ve got to think!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.42047 Tm
(In \221Bulletin of the Institute of Physics\222 \(1962\) vol. 13, p. 102\
\(as recalled by R. V. Jones\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 51.2124 Tm
( 6.110 Gilbert Ryle 1900-76)Tj
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( A myth is, of course, not a fairy story. It is the presentation of f\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(re-allocate them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Concept of Mind\222 \(1949\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Philosophy is the replacement of category-habits by category-discipl\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Concept of Mind\222 \(1949\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The dogma of the Ghost in the Machine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Concept of Mind\222 \(1949\) ch. 1, on the mental-conduct concep\
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/TT1 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 593.28038 Tm
( 7.0 S)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 559.4624 Tm
( 7.1 Rafael Sabatini 1875-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He was born with a gift of laughter and a sense that the world was m\
ad.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And that was all his patrimony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Scaramouche\222 \(1921\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 7.2 Oliver Sacks 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The man who mistook his wife for a hat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1985\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 401.9624 Tm
( 7.3 Victoria \(\221Vita\222\) Sackville-West 1892-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The greater cats with golden eyes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Stare out between the bars.)Tj
T*
( Deserts are there, and different skies,)Tj
T*
( And night with different stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221King\222s Daughter\222 \(1929\) pt. 2, no. 1 \221The Greater Cats wi\
th Golden Eyes\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( The country habit has me by the heart,)Tj
T*
( For he\222s bewitched for ever who has seen,)Tj
T*
( Not with his eyes but with his vision, Spring)Tj
T*
( Flow down the woods and stipple leaves with sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(\221Winter\222)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 187.4624 Tm
( 7.4 Fran\347oise Sagan 1935\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rien n\222est plus affreux que le rire pour la jalousie.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To jealousy, nothing is more frightful than laughter.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.17047 Tm
(\221La Chamade\222 \(1965\) ch. 9)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 95.9624 Tm
( 7.5 Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve 1804-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Et Vigny plus secret,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Comme en sa tour d\222ivoire, avant midi rentrait.)Tj
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( And Vigny more discreet, as if in his ivory tower, returned before n\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Les Pens\350es d\222Ao\373t, \341 M. Villemain\222 \(1837\) p. 152)Tj
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( Le silence seul est le souverain m\350pris.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Silence alone is the sovereign contempt.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.67047 Tm
(\221Mes Poissons\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 646.4624 Tm
( 7.6 Antoine de Saint-Exup\350ry 1900-44)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Les grandes personnes ne comprennent jamais rien toutes seules, et c\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Grown-ups never understand anything for themselves, and it is tireso\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.17047 Tm
(\221Le Petit Prince\222 \(1943\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 530.25456 Tm
( On ne voit bien qu\222avec le coeur. L\222essentiel est invisible po\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essentia\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 492.67047 Tm
(\221Le Petit Prince\222 \(1943\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 471.75456 Tm
( L\222exp\350rience nous montre qu\222aimer ce n\222est point nous re\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Life has taught us that love does not consist in gazing at each othe\
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0 -1.2 TD
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0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(\221Terre des Hommes\222 \(translated as \221Wind, Sand and Stars\222, 1\
939\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.9624 Tm
( 7.7 Saki \(Hector Hugh Munro\) 1870-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is one of the consolations of middle-aged reformers that the good\
they inculcate must live )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(after them if it is to live at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221Beasts and Super-Beasts\222 \(1914\) \221The Byzantine Omelette\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( Waldo is one of those people who would be enormously improved by dea\
th.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.67047 Tm
(\221Beasts and Super-Beasts\222 \(1914\) \221The Feast of Nemesis\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.75456 Tm
( The people of Crete unfortunately make more history than they can co\
nsume locally.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221Chronicles of Clovis\222 \(1911\) \221The Jesting of Arlington Strin\
gham\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.00456 Tm
( All decent people live beyond their incomes nowadays, and those who \
aren\222t respectable live )Tj
T*
(beyond other peoples\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(\221Chronicles of Clovis\222 \(1911\) \221The Match-Maker\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 161.25456 Tm
( The young have aspirations that never come to pass, the old have rem\
iniscences of what never )Tj
T*
(happened.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221Reginald\222 \(1904\) \221Reginald at the Carlton\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 106.50456 Tm
( Every reformation must have its victims. You can\222t expect the fat\
ted calf to share the )Tj
T*
(enthusiasm of the angels over the prodigal\222s return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 72.67047 Tm
(\221Reginald\222 \(1904\) \221Reginald on the Academy\222)Tj
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( Addresses are given to us to conceal our whereabouts.)Tj
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(\221Reginald in Russia\222 \(1910\) \221Cross Currents\222)Tj
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( A little inaccuracy sometimes saves tons of explanation.)Tj
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( Children with Hyacinth\222s temperament don\222t know better as they\
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T*
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(\221Toys of Peace and Other Papers\222 \(1919\) \221Hyacinth\222)Tj
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T*
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(\221The Unbearable Bassington\222 \(1912\))Tj
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Catcher in the Rye\222 \(1951\) ch. 1)Tj
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( What really knocks me out is a book that, when you\222re all done re\
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221The Catcher in the Rye\222 \(1951\) ch. 3)Tj
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( Sex is something I really don\222t understand too hot. You never kno\
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T*
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way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221The Catcher in the Rye\222 \(1951\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Take most people, they\222re crazy about cars. They worry if they ge\
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T*
(they\222re always talking about how many miles they get to a gallon, and\
if they get a brand-new car )Tj
T*
(already they start thinking about trading it in for one that\222s even n\
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T*
(I mean they don\222t even interest me. I\222d rather have a goddam horse\
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T*
(God\222s sake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221The Catcher in the Rye\222 \(1951\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( I keep picturing all these little kids playing some game in this big\
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T*
(they\222re running and they don\222t look where they\222re going I have \
to come out from somewhere and )Tj
T*
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in the rye.)Tj
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(\221The Catcher in the Rye\222 \(1951\) ch. 22.)Tj
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( A confessional passage has probably never been written that didn\222\
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(\221Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: an Introduction\222\
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( 7.9 John of Salisbury d. 1180)Tj
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T*
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(\221Prologue to the Policraticus\222 \(ed. C. C. J. Webb\) vol. 1, p. 12\
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( English policy is to float lazily downstream, occasionally putting o\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(Letter to Earl of Lytton, 9 March 1877, in Lady Gwendolen Cecil \221Life\
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T*
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15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( A great deal of misapprehension arises from the popular use of maps \
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T*
(such maps you are able to put a thumb on India and a finger on Russia, s\
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T*
(think that the political situation is alarming and that India must be lo\
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T*
(would use a larger map\227say one on the scale of the Ordnance Map of En\
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T*
(that the distance between Russia and British India is not to be measured\
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T*
(but by a rule.)Tj
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(House of Commons, 11 June 1877)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.50456 Tm
( No lesson seems to be so deeply inculcated by the experience of life\
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T*
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T*
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Lytton, 15 June 1877, in Lady Gwendolen Cecil \221Life of\
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T*
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15 0 0 15 10 180.75456 Tm
( The agonies of a man who has to finish a difficult negotiation, and \
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.92047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Lyons, 5 June 1878, in Lady Gwendolen Cecil \221Life of R\
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T*
(275)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( What with deafness, ignorance of French, and Bismarck\222s extraordi\
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T*
(Beaconsfield has the dimmest idea of what is going on\227understands eve\
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T*
(imagines a perpetual conspiracy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(Letter to Lady Salisbury from the Congress of Berlin, 23 June 1878, in L\
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T*
(Robert, Marquis of Salisbury\222 vol. 2, p. 287)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Speech in House of Lords, 29 July 1897; in \221Hansard\222)Tj
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( I rank myself no higher in the scheme of things than a policeman\227\
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T*
(disappear if there were no criminals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
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T*
(Studies...of Robert, Third Marquess of Salisbury\222 p. 84)Tj
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( By office boys for office boys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Describing the Daily Mail, in H. Hamilton Fyfe \221Northcliffe, an Intim\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.11 Lord Salisbury \(Robert Arthur James Gascoyne-Cecil, fifth Marques\
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T*
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0 -1.44719 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Catiline\222 ch. 5)Tj
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(\221Jugurtha\222 108, 3 \(meaning treachery\))Tj
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( 7.13 Anthony Sampson 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Members [of civil service orders] rise from CMG \(known sometimes in\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(ambassadors\227the GCMG \(\221God Calls Me God\222\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Anatomy of Britain\222 \(1962\) ch. 18)Tj
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( 7.14 Lord Samuel \(Herbert Louis, first Viscount Samuel\) 1870-1963)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( A library is thought in cold storage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(\221A Book of Quotations\222 \(1947\) p. 10)Tj
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( Without doubt the greatest injury of all was done by basing morals o\
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T*
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Romanes Lecture\222 \(1947\) p. 14)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 610.4624 Tm
( 7.15 Carl Sandburg 1878-1967)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hog Butcher for the World,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,)Tj
T*
( Player with Railroads and the Nation\222s Freight Handler;)Tj
T*
( Stormy, husky, brawling,)Tj
T*
( City of the Big Shoulders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Chicago\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( When Abraham Lincoln was shovelled into the tombs,)Tj
T*
( he forgot the copperheads and the assassin...)Tj
T*
( in the dust, in the cool tombs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Cool Tombs\222 \(1918\))Tj
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( The fog comes)Tj
T*
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(\221Fog\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo.)Tj
T*
( Shovel them under and let me work\227)Tj
T*
( I am the grass; I cover all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221Grass\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( Why is there always a secret singing)Tj
T*
( When a lawyer cashes in?)Tj
T*
( Why does a hearse horse snicker)Tj
T*
( Hauling a lawyer away?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The Lawyers Know Too Much\222 \(1920\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( I tell you the past is a bucket of ashes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Prairie\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( I am an idealist. I don\222t know where I\222m going but I\222m on t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221Incidentals\222 \(1907\) p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( Little girl...Sometime they\222ll give a war and nobody will come.)Tj
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(\221The People, Yes\222 \(1936\); Charlotte Keyes wrote a piece for \221\
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T*
(Nobody Came?\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 703.00456 Tm
( Poetry is the opening and closing of a door, leaving those who look \
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T*
(what is seen during a moment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 669.17047 Tm
(\221Atlantic Monthly\222 March 1923 \221Poetry Considered\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 648.25456 Tm
( Poetry is the achievement of the synthesis of hyacinths and biscuits\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 632.42047 Tm
(\221Atlantic Monthly\222 March 1923 \221Poetry Considered\222)Tj
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( Slang is a language that rolls up its sleeves, spits on its hands an\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times\222 13 February 1959, p. 21)Tj
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( 7.16 Henry \221Red\222 Sanders)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sure, winning isn\222t everything. It\222s the only thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.92047 Tm
(In \221Sports Illustrated\222 26 December 1955; often attributed to Vinc\
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15 0 0 15 10 493.7124 Tm
( 7.17 Martha Sansom \(n\350e Fowke\) 1690-1736)Tj
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T*
( Foolish eyes, thy streams give over,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wine, not water, binds the lover:)Tj
T*
( At the table then be shining,)Tj
T*
( Gay coquette, and all designing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 402.17047 Tm
(\221Song\222 \(written c.1726\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 369.9624 Tm
( 7.18 William Sansom 1926-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A writer lives, at best, in a state of astonishment. Beneath any fee\
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0 -1.2 TD
(evil of the world lies a deeper one of wonder at it all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.42047 Tm
(\221Blue Skies, Brown Studies\222 \(1961\) \221From a Writer\222s Notebo\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 282.2124 Tm
( 7.19 George Santayana 1863-1952)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man who will\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.67047 Tm
(\221Dialogues in Limbo\222 \(1925\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.75456 Tm
( Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have forgotte\
n your aim.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.92047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 1, introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.00456 Tm
( Happiness is the only sanction of life; where happiness fails, exist\
ence remains a mad and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lamentable experiment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.17047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 1, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.25456 Tm
( Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.42047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 1, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.50456 Tm
( It takes patience to appreciate domestic bliss; volatile spirits pre\
fer unhappiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.67047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 2, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.75456 Tm
( An artist is a dreamer consenting to dream of the actual world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.92047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 4, ch. 3)Tj
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0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.00456 Tm
( Music is essentially useless, as life is: but both have an ideal ext\
ension which lends utility to its )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(conditions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.17047 Tm
(\221The Life of Reason\222 \(1905\) vol. 4, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.25456 Tm
( The truth is cruel, but it can be loved, and it makes free those who\
have loved it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.42047 Tm
(\221Little Essays\222 \(1920\) \221Ideal Immortality\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.50456 Tm
( England is the paradise of individuality, eccentricity, heresy, anom\
alies, hobbies, and humours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.67047 Tm
(\221Soliloquies in England\222 \(1922\) \221The British Character\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.75456 Tm
( There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.92047 Tm
(\221Soliloquies in England\222 \(1922\) \221War Shrines\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.00456 Tm
( Intolerance itself is a form of egoism, and to condemn egoism intole\
rantly is to share it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.17047 Tm
(\221Winds of Doctrine\222 \(1913\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 538.9624 Tm
( 7.20 \221Sapper\222 \(Herman Cyril MacNeile\) 1888-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hugh pulled out his cigarette-case. \221Turkish this side\227Virgini\
a that.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.42047 Tm
(\221Bull-dog Drummond\222 \(1920\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 469.2124 Tm
( 7.21 Sappho b. c.612 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( That man seems to me on a par with the gods who sits in your company\
and listens to you so )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(close to him speaking sweetly and laughing sexily, such a thing makes my\
heart flutter in my )Tj
T*
(breast, for when I see you even for a moment, then power to speak anothe\
r word fails me, instead )Tj
T*
(my tongue freezes into silence, and at once a gentle fire has caught thr\
oughout my flesh, and I see )Tj
T*
(nothing with my eyes, and there\222s a drumming in my ears, and sweat po\
urs down me, and )Tj
T*
(trembling seizes all of me, and I become paler than grass, and I seem to\
fail almost to the point of )Tj
T*
(death in my very self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.67047 Tm
(No. 199 in D. L. Page \(ed.\) \221Lyrica Graeca Selecta\222 \(1968\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.75456 Tm
( Just as the sweet-apple reddens on the high branch, high on the high\
est, and the apple-pickers )Tj
T*
(missed it, or rather did not miss it out, but dared not reach it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.92047 Tm
(No. 224 in D. L. Page \(ed.\) \221Lyrica Graeca Selecta\222 \(1968\) \(\
on a girl before her marriage\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.7124 Tm
( 7.22 John Singer Sargent 1856-1925)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Every time I paint a portrait I lose a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.17047 Tm
(In N. Bentley and E. Esar \221Treasury of Humorous Quotations\222 \(1951\
\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 166.9624 Tm
( 7.23 Leslie Sarony 1897-1985)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Ain\222t it grand to be blooming well dead?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1932\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 97.2124 Tm
( 7.24 Nathalie Sarraute 1902\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Radio and television...have succeeded in lifting the manufacture of \
banality out of the sphere )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of handicraft and placed it in that of a major industry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.67047 Tm
(\221Times Literary Supplement\222 10 June 1960)Tj
ET
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0 0 612 792 re
W* n
0 0 0 rg
0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 739.4624 Tm
( 7.25 Jean-Paul Sartre 1905-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Quand les riches se font la guerre ce sont les pauvres qui meurent.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( When the rich wage war it\222s the poor who die.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.17047 Tm
(\221Le Diable et le bon Dieu\222 \(1951\) act 1, tableau 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.25456 Tm
( L\222\350crivain doit donc refuser de se laisser transformer en inst\
itution.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( A writer must refuse to allow himself to be transformed into an inst\
itution.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 621.67047 Tm
(Refusing the Nobel Prize at Stockholm, 22 October 1964; in Michel Contat\
and Michel Rybalka \(eds.\) \221Les )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\310crits de Sartre\222 \(1970\) p. 403)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( L\222existence pr\350c\351de et commande l\222essence.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Existence precedes and rules essence.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.17047 Tm
(\221L\222\312tre et le n\350ant\222 \(1943\) pt. 4, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.25456 Tm
( Je suis condemn\350 \341 \352tre libre.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( I am condemned to be free.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221L\222\312tre et le n\350ant\222 \(1943\) pt. 4, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.75456 Tm
( L\222homme est une passion inutile.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Man is a useless passion.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221L\222\312tre et le n\350ant\222 \(1943\) pt. 4, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( Alors, c\222est \347a l\222Enfer. Je n\222aurais jamais cru...Vous v\
ous rappelez: le soufre, le b\373cher, le gril...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Ah! quelle plaisanterie. Pas besoin de gril, l\222Enfer, c\222est les Au\
tres.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So that\222s what Hell is: I\222d never have believed it...Do you re\
member, brimstone, the stake, the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gridiron?...What a joke! No need of a gridiron, Hell is other people.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Huis Clos\222 \(1944\) sc. 5.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Il n\222y a pas de bon p\351re, c\222est la r\351gle; qu\222on n\222\
en tienne pas grief aux hommes mais au lien de )Tj
T*
(paternit\350 qui est pourri. Faire des enfants, rien de mieux; en avoir \
, quelle iniquit\350!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There is no good father, that\222s the rule. Don\222t lay the blame \
on men but on the bond of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(paternity, which is rotten. To beget children, nothing better; to have t\
hem, what iniquity!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(\221Les Mots\222 \(1964\) \221Lire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.25456 Tm
( Les bons pauvres ne savent pas que leur office est d\222exercer notr\
e g\350n\350rosit\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The poor don\222t know that their function in life is to exercise ou\
r generosity.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(\221Les Mots\222 \(1964\) \221Lire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.75456 Tm
( Elle ne croyait \341 rien; seul, son scepticism l\222emp\352chait d\222\
\352tre ath\350e.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( She believed in nothing; only her scepticism kept her from being an \
atheist.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Les Mots\222 \(1964\) \221Lire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Comme tous les songe-creux, je confondis le d\350senchantement avec \
la v\350rit\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Like all dreamers, I mistook disenchantment for truth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Les Mots\222 \(1964\) \221\310crire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Je confondis les choses avec leurs noms: c\222est croire.)Tj
ET
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0 i
BT
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.11667 Tm
( I confused things with their names: that is belief.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Les Mots\222 \(1964\) \221\310crire\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( La vie humaine commence de l\222autre c\364t\350 du d\350sespoir.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Human life begins on the far side of despair.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 678.67047 Tm
(\221Les Mouches\222 \(1943\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.75456 Tm
( Ma pens\350e, c\222est moi : voil\341 pourquoi je ne peux pas m\222a\
rr\352ter. J\222existe par ce que je pense...et )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(je ne peux pas m\222emp\352cher de penser.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( My thought is me: that\222s why I can\222t stop. I exist by what I t\
hink...and I can\222t prevent myself )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(from thinking.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221La Naus\350e\222 \(1938\) \221Lundi\222 Je d\350teste les victimes q\
uand elles respectent leurs bourreaux.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( I hate victims who respect their executioners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 547.42047 Tm
(\221Les S\350questr\350s d\222Altona\222 \(1960\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 526.50456 Tm
( Je me m\350fie des incommunicables, c\222est la source de toute viol\
ence.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I distrust the incommunicable: it is the source of all violence.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.92047 Tm
(\221Qu\222est-ce que la litt\350rature?\222 in \221Les Temps Modernes\222\
July 1947, p. 106)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 456.7124 Tm
( 7.26 Siegfried Sassoon 1886-1967)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If I were fierce, and bald, and short of breath,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I\222d live with scarlet Majors at the Base,)Tj
T*
( And speed glum heroes up the line to death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.17047 Tm
(\221Base Details\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 362.25456 Tm
( I\222d like to see a Tank come down the stalls,)Tj
T*
( Lurching to rag-time tunes, or \221Home, sweet Home\222,\227)Tj
T*
( And there\222d be no more jokes in Music-halls)Tj
T*
( To mock the riddled corpses round Bapaume.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.42047 Tm
(\221Blighters\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.50456 Tm
( Does it matter?\227losing your legs?...)Tj
T*
( For people will always be kind,)Tj
T*
( And you need not show that you mind)Tj
T*
( When the others come in after hunting)Tj
T*
( To gobble their muffins and eggs.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Does it matter?\227losing your sight?...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( There\222s such splendid work for the blind;)Tj
T*
( And people will always be kind,)Tj
T*
( As you sit on the terrace remembering)Tj
T*
( And turning your face to the light.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Does it Matter?\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.00456 Tm
( Soldiers are citizens of death\222s grey land,)Tj
T*
( Drawing no dividend from time\222s tomorrows.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Dreamers\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Soldiers are dreamers; when the guns begin)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They think of firelit homes, clean beds, and wives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Dreamers\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Why do you lie with your legs ungainly huddled,)Tj
T*
( And one arm bent across your sullen cold)Tj
T*
( Exhausted face?...)Tj
T*
( You are too young to fall asleep for ever;)Tj
T*
( And when you sleep you remind me of the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Dug-Out\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Everyone suddenly burst out singing;)Tj
T*
( And I was filled with such delight)Tj
T*
( As prisoned birds must find in freedom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Everyone Sang\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The song was wordless; the singing will never be done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Everyone Sang\222 \(1919\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( \221Good-morning; good morning!\222 the General said)Tj
T*
( When we met him last week on our way to the line.)Tj
T*
( Now the soldiers he smiled at are most of \222em dead,)Tj
T*
( And we\222re cursing his staff for incompetent swine.)Tj
T*
( \221He\222s a cheery old card,\222 grunted Harry to Jack)Tj
T*
( As they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But he did for them both by his plan of attack.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221The General\222 \(1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( Splendid to eat and sleep and choose a wife,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Safe with his wound, a citizen of life.)Tj
T*
( He hobbled blithely through the garden gate,)Tj
T*
( And thought: \221Thank God they had to amputate!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221The One-Legged Man\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( Who will remember, passing through this Gate,)Tj
T*
( The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?)Tj
T*
( Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate,\227)Tj
T*
( Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221On Passing the New Menin Gate\222 \(1928\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Here was the world\222s worst wound. And here with pride)Tj
T*
( \221Their name liveth for ever\222 the Gateway claims.)Tj
T*
( Was ever an immolation so belied)Tj
T*
( As these intolerably nameless names?)Tj
T*
( Well might the Dead who struggled in the slime)Tj
T*
( Rise and devide this sepulchre of crime.)Tj
ET
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(\221On Passing the New Menin Gate\222 \(1928\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 7.27 George Savile, Marquis of Halifax)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Halifax \(8.13\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.28 Dorothy L. Sayers 1893-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I admit it is better fun to punt than to be punted, and that a desir\
e to have all the fun is nine-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(tenths of the law of chivalry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Gaudy Night\222 \(1935\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( As I grow older and older,)Tj
T*
( And totter towards the tomb,)Tj
T*
( I find that I care less and less)Tj
T*
( Who goes to bed with whom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221That\222s Why I Never Read Modern Novels\222, in Janet Hitchman \221\
Such a Strange Lady\222 \(1975\) ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 7.29 Al Scalpone)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The family that prays together stays together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(Slogan devised for the Roman Catholic Family Rosary Crusade, 1947)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.9624 Tm
( 7.30 Hugh Scanlon \(Baron Scanlon\) 1913\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Of course liberty is not licence. Liberty in my view is conforming t\
o majority opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 382.42047 Tm
(Television interview, 9 August 1977, in \221Listener\222 11 August 1977)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 350.2124 Tm
( 7.31 Arthur Scargill 1938\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Parliament itself would not exist in its present form had people not\
defied the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(Said in evidence to House of Commons Select Committee on Employment, 2 A\
pril 1980, in \221House of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Commons Paper no. 462 of Session 1979-80\222 p. 55)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 265.4624 Tm
( 7.32 Age Scarpelli et al.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il buono, il bruto, il cattivo.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The good, the bad, and the ugly.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(Title of film \(1966\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.9624 Tm
( 7.33 Friedrich von Schelling 1775-1854)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Architecture in general is frozen music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Philosophie der Kunst\222 \(1809\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 104.2124 Tm
( 7.34 Friedrich von Schiller 1759-1805)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Freude, sch\366ner G\366tterfunken,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tochter aus Elysium,)Tj
T*
( Wir betreten feuertrunken,)Tj
ET
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( Himmlische, dein Heiligtum.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Deine Zauber binden wieder,)Tj
T*
( Was die Mode streng geteilt,)Tj
T*
( Alle Menschen werden Br\374der)Tj
T*
( Wo dein sanfter Fl\374gel weilt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Joy, beautiful radiance of the gods, daughter of Elysium, we set foo\
t in your heavenly shrine )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(dazzled by your brilliance. Your charms re-unite what common use has har\
shly divided: all men )Tj
T*
(become brothers under your tender wing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221An die Freude\222 \(1785\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( Die Sonne geht in meinem Staat nicht unter.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The sun does not set in my dominions.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.92047 Tm
(\221Don Carlos\222 \(1787\) act 1, sc. 6 \(Philip II\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 528.00456 Tm
( Mit der Dummheit k\344mpfen G\366tter selbst vergebens.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( With stupidity the gods themselves struggle in vain.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.42047 Tm
(\221Die Jungfrau von Orleans\222 \(1801\) act 3, sc. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 469.50456 Tm
( Die Weltgeschichte ist das Weltgericht.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The world\222s history is the world\222s judgement.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(First lecture as Professor of History, Jena, 26 May 1789)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 7.35 Moritz Schlick)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The meaning of a proposition is the method of its verification.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(\221Philosophical Review\222 \(1936\) vol. 45, p. 341 \221Meaning and Ve\
rification\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 329.9624 Tm
( 7.36 Artur Schnabel 1882-1951)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I don\222t think there was ever a piece of music that changed a man\222\
s decision on how to vote.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 292.42047 Tm
(\221My Life and Music\222 \(1961\) pt. 2, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 271.50456 Tm
( I know two kinds of audiences only\227one coughing, and one not coug\
hing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(\221My Life and Music\222 \(1961\) pt. 2, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.75456 Tm
( The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses betw\
een the notes\227ah, that is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(where the art resides!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.92047 Tm
(In \221Chicago Daily News\222 11 June 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.00456 Tm
( The sonatas of Mozart are unique: they are too easy for children, an\
d too difficult for artists.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(In Ned Shapiro \221An Encyclopaedia of Quotations about Music\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 131.9624 Tm
( 7.37 Budd Schulberg 1914\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I could have had class. I could have been a contender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221On the Waterfront\222 \(1954 film\); words spoken by Marlon Brando)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.2124 Tm
( 7.38 Diane B. Schulder 1937\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Law is a reflection and a source of prejudice. It both enforces and \
suggests forms of bias.)Tj
ET
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(In Robin Morgan \221Sisterhood is Powerful\222 \(1970\) p. 139)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.4624 Tm
( 7.39 E. F. Schumacher 1911-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Call a thing immoral or ugly, soul-destroying or a degradation of ma\
n, a peril to the peace of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the world or to the well-being of future generations: as long as you ha\
ve not shown it to be )Tj
T*
(\221uneconomic\222 you have not really questioned its right to exist, gr\
ow, and prosper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.92047 Tm
(\221Small is Beautiful\222 \(1973\) pt. 1, ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.7124 Tm
( 7.40 Carl Schurz 1829-1906)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Our country, right or wrong! When right, to be kept right; when wron\
g, to be put right!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 579.17047 Tm
(Speech, US Senate, 1872.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 546.9624 Tm
( 7.41 Albert Schweitzer 1875-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Am Abend des dritten Tages, als wir bei Sonnenuntergang gerade durch\
eine Herde Nilpferde )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hindurchfuhren, stand urpl\366tzlich, von mir nicht geahnt und nicht ges\
ucht, das Wort \223Ehrfurcht )Tj
T*
(vor dem Leben\224 vor mir.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Late on the third day, at the very moment when, at sunset, we were m\
aking our way through a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(herd of hippopotamuses, there flashed upon my mind, unforeseen and unsou\
ght, the phrase, )Tj
T*
(\221Reverence for Life\222.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 415.67047 Tm
(\221Aus meinem Leben und Denken\222 \(My Life and Thought, 1933\) ch. 13\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.75456 Tm
( Die Wahrheit hat keine Stunde. Ihre Zeit ist immer und gerade dann w\
enn sie am )Tj
T*
(unzeitgem\344ssesten scheint.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Truth has no special time of its own. Its hour is now\227always, and\
indeed then most truly when )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(it seems most unsuitable to actual circumstances.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.17047 Tm
(\221Zwischen Wasser und Urwald\222 \(On the Edge of the Primeval Forest,\
1922\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 288.9624 Tm
( 7.42 Kurt Schwitters 1887-1948)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ich bin Maler, ich nagle meine Bilder.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am a painter and I nail my pictures together.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.67047 Tm
(In Raoul Hausmann \221Am Anfang war Dada\222 \(In the Beginning was Dada\
, 1972\) p. 63)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 197.4624 Tm
( 7.43 Alexander Scott c.1525-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love is ane fervent fire,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kindled without desire,)Tj
T*
( Short pleasure, long displeasure;)Tj
T*
( Repentance is the hire;)Tj
T*
( And pure treasure without measure.)Tj
T*
( Love is ane fervent fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.92047 Tm
(\221Lo, What it is to Love\222)Tj
ET
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(7.44 C. P. Scott 1846-1932)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A newspaper is of necessity something of a monopoly, and its first d\
uty is to shun the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(temptations of monopoly. Its primary office is the gathering of news. At\
the peril of its soul it )Tj
T*
(must see that the supply is not tainted. Neither in what it gives, nor i\
n what it does not give, nor )Tj
T*
(in the mode of presentation must the unclouded face of truth suffer wron\
g. Comment is free, but )Tj
T*
(facts are sacred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.42047 Tm
(\221Manchester Guardian\222 5 May 1921)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 611.2124 Tm
( 7.45 Robert Falcon Scott 1868-1912)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Great God! this is an awful place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Of the South Pole: Journal, 17 January 1912, in \221Scott\222s Last Expe\
dition\222 \(1913\) vol. 1, ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( For God\222s sake look after our people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(Last journal entry, 29 March 1912, in \221Scott\222s Last Expedition\222\
\(1913\) vol. 1, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Make the boy interested in natural history if you can; it is better \
than games.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(Last letter to his wife, in \221Scott\222s Last Expedition\222 \(1913\) \
vol. 1, ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Had we lived, I should have had a tale to tell of the hardihood, end\
urance, and courage of my )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(companions which would have stirred the heart of every Englishman. These\
rough notes and our )Tj
T*
(dead bodies must tell the tale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Message to the Public\222, in late edition of \221The Times\222 11 F\
ebruary 1913, and the following day: \221Scott\222s )Tj
T*
(Last Expedition\222 \(1913\) vol. 1, ch. 20)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 380.2124 Tm
( 7.46 Sir Walter Scott 1771-1832)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The valiant Knight of Triermain)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Rung forth his challenge-blast again,)Tj
T*
( But answer came there none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(\221The Bridal of Triermain\222 \(1813\) canto 3, st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( To the Lords of Convention \222twas Claver\222se who spoke,)Tj
T*
( \222Ere the King\222s crown shall fall there are crowns to be broke;\
)Tj
T*
( So let each cavalier who loves honour and me,)Tj
T*
( Come follow the bonnet of Bonny Dundee.)Tj
T*
( Come fill up my cup, come fill up my can,)Tj
T*
( Come saddle your horses, and call up your men;)Tj
T*
( Come open the West Port, and let me gang free,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s room for the bonnets of Bonny Dundee!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(\221The Doom of Devorgoil\222 \(1830\) act 2, sc. 2 \221Bonny Dundee\222\
.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.00456 Tm
( His ready speech flowed fair and free,)Tj
T*
( In phrase of gentlest courtesy;)Tj
T*
( Yet seemed that tone, and gesture bland,)Tj
T*
( Less used to sue than to command.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady of the Lake\222 \(1810\) canto 1, st. 21)Tj
ET
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( He is gone on the mountain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He is lost to the forest,)Tj
T*
( Like a summer-dried fountain,)Tj
T*
( When our need was the sorest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady of the Lake\222 \(1810\) canto 3, st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Respect was mingled with surprise,)Tj
T*
( And the stern joy which warriors feel)Tj
T*
( In foemen worthy of their steel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Lady of the Lake\222 \(1810\) canto 5, st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Vengeance, deep-brooding o\222er the slain,)Tj
T*
( Had locked the source of softer woe;)Tj
T*
( And burning pride and high disdain)Tj
T*
( Forbade the rising tear to flow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 1, st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( If thou would\222st view fair Melrose aright,)Tj
T*
( Go visit it by the pale moonlight;)Tj
T*
( For the gay beams of lightsome day)Tj
T*
( Gild, but to flout, the ruins grey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 2, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( For ne\222er)Tj
T*
( Was flattery lost on poet\222s ear:)Tj
T*
( A simple race! they waste their toil)Tj
T*
( For the vain tribute of a smile.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 4, ad fin.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( It is the secret sympathy,)Tj
T*
( The silver link, the silken tie,)Tj
T*
( Which heart to heart, and mind to mind,)Tj
T*
( In body and in soul can bind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 5, st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Breathes there the man, with soul so dead,)Tj
T*
( Who never to himself hath said,)Tj
T*
( This is my own, my native land!)Tj
T*
( Whose heart hath ne\222er within him burned,)Tj
T*
( As home his footsteps he hath turned)Tj
T*
( From wandering on a foreign strand!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 6, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Despite those titles, power, and pelf,)Tj
T*
( The wretch, concentred all in self,)Tj
T*
( Living, shall forfeit fair renown,)Tj
T*
( And, doubly dying, shall go down)Tj
ET
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( To the vile dust, from whence he sprung,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Unwept, unhonoured, and unsung.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( O Caledonia! stern and wild,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Meet nurse for a poetic child!)Tj
T*
( Land of brown heath and shaggy wood,)Tj
T*
( Land of the mountain and the flood,)Tj
T*
( Land of my sires! what mortal hand)Tj
T*
( Can e\222er untie the filial band)Tj
T*
( That knits me to thy rugged strand!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.42047 Tm
(\221The Lay of the Last Minstrel\222 \(1805\) canto 6, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.50456 Tm
( O! many a shaft, at random sent,)Tj
T*
( Finds mark the archer little meant!)Tj
T*
( And many a word, at random spoken,)Tj
T*
( May soothe or wound a heart that\222s broken.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221The Lord of the Isles\222 \(1813\) canto 5, st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( Had\222st thou but lived, though stripped of power,)Tj
T*
( A watchman on the lonely tower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) introduction to canto 1, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( Now is the stately column broke,)Tj
T*
( The beacon-light is quenched in smoke,)Tj
T*
( The trumpet\222s silver sound is still,)Tj
T*
( The warder silent on the hill!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) introduction to canto 1, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( And come he slow, or come he fast,)Tj
T*
( It is but Death who comes at last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 2, st. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( O, young Lochinvar is come out of the west,)Tj
T*
( Through all the wide Border his steed was the best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 5, st. 12 \(\221Lochinvar\222 st. 1\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( So faithful in love, and so dauntless in war,)Tj
T*
( There never was knight like the young Lochinvar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 5, st. 12 \(\221Lochinvar\222 st. 1\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( For a laggard in love, and a dastard in war,)Tj
T*
( Was to wed the fair Ellen of brave Lochinvar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 5, st. 12 \(\221Lochinvar\222 st. 2\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( O come ye in peace here, or come ye in war,)Tj
T*
( Or to dance at our bridal, young Lord Lochinvar?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 5, st. 12 \(\221Lochinvar\222 st. 3\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( And now I am come, with this lost love of mine,)Tj
T*
( To lead but one measure, drink one cup of wine.)Tj
ET
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(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 5, st. 12 \(\221Lochinvar\222 st. 4\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( O what a tangled web we weave,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When first we practise to deceive!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 6, st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( O Woman! in our hours of ease,)Tj
T*
( Uncertain, coy, and hard to please,)Tj
T*
( And variable as the shade)Tj
T*
( By the light quivering aspen made;)Tj
T*
( When pain and anguish wring the brow,)Tj
T*
( A ministering angel thou!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.17047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 6, st. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.25456 Tm
( The stubborn spear-men still made good)Tj
T*
( Their dark impenetrable wood,)Tj
T*
( Each stepping where his comrade stood,)Tj
T*
( The instant that he fell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.42047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 6, st. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.50456 Tm
( Still from the sire the son shall hear)Tj
T*
( Of the stern strife, and carnage drear,)Tj
T*
( Of Flodden\222s fatal field,)Tj
T*
( Where shivered was fair Scotland\222s spear,)Tj
T*
( And broken was her shield!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.67047 Tm
(\221Marmion\222 \(1808\) canto 6, st. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.75456 Tm
( O, Brignal banks are wild and fair,)Tj
T*
( And Greta woods are green,)Tj
T*
( And you may gather garlands there)Tj
T*
( Would grace a summer queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.92047 Tm
(\221Rokeby\222 \(1813\) canto 3, st. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.00456 Tm
( It\222s no fish ye\222re buying\227it\222s men\222s lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.17047 Tm
(\221The Antiquary\222 \(1816\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.25456 Tm
( Widowed wife, and married maid,)Tj
T*
( Betrothed, betrayer, and betrayed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.42047 Tm
(\221The Betrothed\222 \(1825\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.50456 Tm
( Vacant heart and hand, and eye,\227)Tj
T*
( Easy live and quiet die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.67047 Tm
(\221The Bride of Lammermoor\222 \(1819\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.75456 Tm
( I live by twa trades...fiddle, sir, and spade; filling the world, an\
d emptying of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(\221The Bride of Lammermoor\222 \(1819\) ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.00456 Tm
( Touch not the cat but a glove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.17047 Tm
(\221The Fair Maid of Perth\222 \(1828\) ch. 34 \(but without\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.25456 Tm
( It\222s ill taking the breeks aff a wild Highlandman.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Fortunes of Nigel\222 \(1822\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Gin by pailfuls, wine in rivers,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dash the window-glass to shivers!)Tj
T*
( For three wild lads were we, brave boys,)Tj
T*
( And three wild lads were we;)Tj
T*
( Thou on the land, and I on the sand,)Tj
T*
( And Jack on the gallows-tree!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Guy Mannering\222 \(1815\) ch. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( The hour is come, but not the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Heart of Midlothian\222 \(1818\) ch. 4 title)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The passive resistance of the Tolbooth-gate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Heart of Midlothian\222 \(1818\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Proud Maisie is in the wood,)Tj
T*
( Walking so early,)Tj
T*
( Sweet Robin sits in the bush,)Tj
T*
( Singing so rarely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Heart of Midlothian\222 \(1818\) ch. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( \221Pax vobiscum [Peace be with you]\222 will answer all queries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Ivanhoe\222 \(1819\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( His morning walk was beneath the elms in the churchyard; \221for dea\
th,\222 he said, \221had been his )Tj
T*
(next-door neighbour for so many years, that he had no apology for droppi\
ng the acquaintance.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221A Legend of Montrose\222 \(1819\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( March, march, Ettrick and Teviotdale,)Tj
T*
( Why the deil dinna ye march forward in order?)Tj
T*
( March, march, Eskdale and Liddesdale,)Tj
T*
( All the Blue Bonnets are bound for the Border.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221The Monastery\222 \(1820\) ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Ah! County Guy, the hour is nigh,)Tj
T*
( The sun has left the lea,)Tj
T*
( The orange flower perfumes the bower,)Tj
T*
( The breeze is on the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Quentin Durward\222 \(1823\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( And it\222s ill speaking between a fou man and a fasting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Redgauntlet\222 \(1824\) letter 11 \221Wandering Willie\222s Tale\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( The ae half of the warld thinks the tither daft.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Redgauntlet\222 \(1824\) \221Journal of Darsie Latimer\222 ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( But with the morning cool repentance came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Rob Roy\222 \(1817\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Come fill up my cup, come fill up my cann,)Tj
T*
( Come saddle my horses, and call up my man;)Tj
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( Come open your gates, and let me gae free,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I daurna stay langer in bonny Dundee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Rob Roy\222 \(1817\) ch. 23.)Tj
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( There\222s a gude time coming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Rob Roy\222 \(1817\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The play-bill, which is said to have announced the tragedy of Hamlet\
, the character of the )Tj
T*
(Prince of Denmark being left out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Talisman\222 \(1825\) introduction. For an earlier report of thi\
s anecdote see T. L. S. 3 June 1939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Rouse the lion from his lair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Talisman\222 \(1825\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The Big Bow-Wow strain I can do myself like any now going; but the e\
xquisite touch, which )Tj
T*
(renders ordinary commonplace things and characters interesting, from the\
truth of the description )Tj
T*
(and the sentiment, is denied to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(On the merits of Jane Austen, in W. E. K. Anderson \(ed.\) \221The Jour\
nals of Sir Walter Scott\222 \(1972\) 14 March )Tj
T*
(1826, p. 114.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( I would like to be there, were it but to see how the cat jumps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(In W. E. K. Anderson \(ed.\) \221The Journals of Sir Walter Scott\222 \(\
1972\) 7 October 1826, p. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( The blockheads talk of my being like Shakespeare\227not fit to tie h\
is brogues.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(In W. E. K. Anderson \(ed.\) \221The Journals of Sir Walter Scott\222 \(\
1972\) 11 December 1826, p. 252)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( Their factions have been so long envenomed and having so little grou\
nd to fight their battle in )Tj
T*
(that they are like people fighting with daggers in a hogshead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(Letter to Joanna Baillie, 12 October 1825, in H. J. C. Grierson \(ed.\) \
\221The Letters of Sir Walter Scott\222 vol. 9 )Tj
T*
(\(1935\) p. 238)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( All men who have turned out worth anything have had the chief hand i\
n their own education.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(Letter to J. G. Lockhart, c.16 June 1830, in H. J. C. Grierson \(ed.\) \
\221The Letters of Sir Walter Scott\222 vol. 11 )Tj
T*
(\(1936\) p. 365)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 287.25456 Tm
( We shall never learn to feel and respect our real calling and destin\
y, unless we have taught )Tj
T*
(ourselves to consider every thing as moonshine, compared with the educat\
ion of the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(To J. G. Lockhart, August 1825, quoted in Lockhart \221s \221Life of Sir\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.2124 Tm
( 7.47 Scottish Metrical Psalms 1650)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Lord\222s my shepherd, I\222ll not want.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He makes me down to lie)Tj
T*
( In pastures green: he leadeth me)Tj
T*
( the quiet waters by.)Tj
T*
( My soul he doth restore again;)Tj
T*
( and me to walk doth make)Tj
T*
( Within the paths of righteousness,)Tj
T*
( ev\222n for his own name\222s sake.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Yea, though I walk in death\222s dark vale,)Tj
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( yet will I fear none ill:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For thou art with me; and thy rod)Tj
T*
( and staff me comfort still.)Tj
T*
( My table thou hast furnished)Tj
T*
( in presence of my foes;)Tj
T*
( My head thou dost with oil anoint,)Tj
T*
( and my cup overflows.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(Psalm 23, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( How lovely is thy dwelling-place,)Tj
T*
( O Lord of hosts, to me!)Tj
T*
( The tabernacles of thy grace)Tj
T*
( how pleasant, Lord, they be!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(Psalm 84, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( I to the hills will lift mine eyes)Tj
T*
( from whence doth come mine aid.)Tj
T*
( My safety cometh from the Lord,)Tj
T*
( who heav\222n and earth hath made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(Psalm 121, v. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( The race that long in darkness pined)Tj
T*
( have seen a glorious light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(Paraphrase 19. Isaiah ch. 9, v. 2.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 360.7124 Tm
( 7.48 Edmund Hamilton Sears 1810-76)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It came upon the midnight clear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That glorious song of old,)Tj
T*
( From Angels bending near the earth)Tj
T*
( To touch their harps of gold;)Tj
T*
( \221Peace on the earth, good will to man)Tj
T*
( From Heaven\222s all gracious King.\222)Tj
T*
( The world in solemn stillness lay)Tj
T*
( To hear the angels sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221The Christian Register\222 \(1850\) \221That Glorious Song of Old\222\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 164.9624 Tm
( 7.49 Sir Charles Sedley c.1639-1701)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ah, Chloris! that I now could sit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As unconcerned as when)Tj
T*
( Your infant beauty could beget)Tj
T*
( No pleasure, nor no pain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.42047 Tm
(\221Child and Maiden\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 52.50456 Tm
( Love still has something of the sea)Tj
ET
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( From whence his mother rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Love still has something\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Phyllis, without frown or smile,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sat and knotted all the while.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Phyllis Knotting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Phyllis is my only joy,)Tj
T*
( Faithless as the winds or seas;)Tj
T*
( Sometimes coming, sometimes coy,)Tj
T*
( Yet she never fails to please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( She deceiving,)Tj
T*
( I believing;)Tj
T*
( What need lovers wish for more?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Song\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 486.7124 Tm
( 7.50 Alan Seeger 1888-1916)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have a rendezvous with Death)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( At some disputed barricade,)Tj
T*
( When Spring comes round with rustling shade)Tj
T*
( And apple blossoms fill the air.)Tj
T*
( I have a rendezvous with Death)Tj
T*
( When Spring brings back blue days and fair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221I Have a Rendezvous with Death\222 \(1916\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 326.9624 Tm
( 7.51 Pete Seeger 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where have all the flowers gone?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1961\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 257.2124 Tm
( 7.52 Sir John Seeley 1834-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We [the English] seem, as it were, to have conquered and peopled hal\
f the world in a fit of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(absence of mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 201.67047 Tm
(\221The Expansion of England\222 \(1883\) Lecture 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 180.75456 Tm
( History is past politics, and politics present history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.92047 Tm
(\221The Growth of British Policy\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 132.7124 Tm
( 7.53 Erich Segal 1937\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Love means not ever having to say you\222re sorry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221Love Story\222 \(1970\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 62.9624 Tm
( 7.54 John Selden 1584-1654)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Scrutamini scripturas [Let us look at the scriptures]. These two wor\
ds have undone the world.)Tj
ET
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(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Bible Scripture\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Old friends are best. King James used to call for his old shoes; the\
y were easiest for his feet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Friends\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( \222Tis not the drinking that is to be blamed, but the excess.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Humility\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Ignorance of the law excuses no man; not that all men know the law, \
but because \222tis an excuse )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(every man will plead, and no man can tell how to confute him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Law\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Take a straw and throw it up into the air, you shall see by that whi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Libels\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( Marriage is nothing but a civil contract.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Marriage\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( A king is a thing men have made for their own sakes, for quietness\222\
sake.)Tj
T*
( Just as in a family one man is appointed to buy the meat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Of a King\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( There never was a merry world since the fairies left off dancing, an\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Parson\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( There is not anything in the world so much abused as this sentence, \
Salus populi suprema lex )Tj
T*
(esto.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221People\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( Pleasure is nothing else but the intermission of pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Pleasure\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Syllables govern the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Power: State\222)Tj
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( Preachers say, Do as I say, not as I do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221Table Talk\222 \(1689\) \221Preaching\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 264.7124 Tm
( 7.55 W. C. Sellar 1898-1951 and R. J. Yeatman 1898-1968)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For every person who wants to teach there are approximately thirty w\
ho don\222t want to learn\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(much.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221And Now All This\222 \(1932\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( History is not what you thought. It is what you can remember.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) \221Compulsory Preface\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( The Roman Conquest was, however, a Good Thing, since the Britons wer\
e only natives at the )Tj
T*
(time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Edward III had very good manners...and made the memorable epitaph: \221\
Honi soie qui mal y )Tj
T*
(pense\222 \(\221Honey, your silk stocking\222s hanging down\222\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 24.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( The cruel Queen died and a post-mortem examination revealed the word\
\221callous\222 engraved on )Tj
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(her heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 32.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The Cavaliers \(Wrong but Wromantic\) and the Roundheads \(Right but\
Repulsive\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The Rump Parliament\227so called because it had been sitting for suc\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Charles II was always very merry and was therefore not so much a kin\
g as a Monarch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( The National Debt is a very Good Thing and it would be dangerous to \
pay it off, for fear of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Political Economy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Napoleon\222s armies always used to march on their stomachs shouting\
: \221Vive l\222Int\350rieur!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 48.)Tj
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( Most memorable...was the discovery \(made by all the rich men in Eng\
land at once\) that women )Tj
T*
(and children could work twenty-five hours a day in factories without man\
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T*
(becoming excessively deformed. This was known as the Industrial Revoluti\
on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Gladstone...spent his declining years trying to guess the answer to \
the Irish Question; )Tj
T*
(unfortunately whenever he was getting warm, the Irish secretly changed t\
he Question.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( America was thus clearly top nation, and History came to a .)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\2211066 and All That\222 \(1930\) ch. 62)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 338.9624 Tm
( 7.56 Seneca c.4 B.C.-A.D. 65)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Ignoranti, quem portum petat, nullus suus ventus est.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favour\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Epistulae ad Lucilium\222 letter 71, sect. 3)Tj
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( Homines dum docent discunt.)Tj
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T*
( Even while they teach, men learn.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(\221Epistulae Morales\222 letter 7, sect. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.25456 Tm
( Eternal law has arranged nothing better than this, that it has given\
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0 -1.2 TD
(many ways out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.42047 Tm
(\221Epistulae Morales\222 letter 70, sect. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.50456 Tm
( Anyone can stop a man\222s life, but no one his death; a thousand do\
ors open on to it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(\221Phoenissae\222 l. 152)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.75456 Tm
( Illi mors gravis incubat)Tj
T*
( Qui notus nimis omnibus)Tj
T*
( Ignotus moritur sibi.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( On him does death lie heavily who, but too well known to all, dies t\
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(\221Thyestes\222 sc. 2, chorus \(translation by Miller\))Tj
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( 7.57 Robert W. Service 1874-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A promise made is a debt unpaid, and the trail has its own stern cod\
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(\221The Cremation of Sam McGee\222 \(1907\))Tj
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( Ah! the clock is always slow;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It is later than you think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.67047 Tm
(\221It Is Later Than You Think\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( This is the law of the Yukon, that only the Strong shall thrive;)Tj
T*
( That surely the Weak shall perish, and only the Fit survive.)Tj
T*
( Dissolute, damned and despairful, crippled and palsied and slain,)Tj
T*
( This is the Will of the Yukon,\227Lo, how she makes it plain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221The Law of the Yukon\222 \(1907\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( When we, the Workers, all demand: \221What are WE fighting for?\222 \
...)Tj
T*
( Then, then we\222ll end that stupid crime, that devil\222s madness\227\
War.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Michael\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( A bunch of the boys were whooping it up in the Malamute saloon;)Tj
T*
( The kid that handles the music-box was hitting a jag-time tune;)Tj
T*
( Back of the bar, in a solo game, sat Dangerous Dan McGrew,)Tj
T*
( And watching his luck was his light-o\222-love, the lady that\222s k\
nown as Lou.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221The Shootings of Dan McGrew\222 \(1907\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 362.2124 Tm
( 7.58 William Seward 1801-72)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Constitution devotes the domain to union, to justice, to defence\
, to welfare, and to liberty. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(But there is a higher law than the Constitution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(US Senate, 11 March 1850)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( I know, and all the world knows, that revolutions never go backward.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(At Rochester on the Irrepressible Conflict, October 1858)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 237.7124 Tm
( 7.59 Edward Sexby d. 1658)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Killing no murder briefly discourst in three questions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(Title of pamphlet \(1657\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.9624 Tm
( 7.60 Anne Sexton 1928-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( In a dream you are never eighty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221Old\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 98.2124 Tm
( 7.61 James Seymour and Rian James 1899\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( You\222re going out a youngster but you\222ve got to come back a sta\
r.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\22142nd Street\222 \(1933 film\))Tj
ET
EMC
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 752.9624 Tm
( 7.62 Thomas Shadwell c.1642-92)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Words may be false and full of art,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sighs are the natural language of the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Psyche\222 \(1675\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( And wit\222s the noblest frailty of the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221A True Widow\222 \(1679\) act 2, sc. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 639.75456 Tm
( The haste of a fool is the slowest thing in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.92047 Tm
(\221A True Widow\222 \(1679\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.00456 Tm
( Every man loves what he is good at.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.17047 Tm
(\221A True Widow\222 \(1679\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 566.25456 Tm
( Instantly, in the twinkling of a bed-staff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 550.42047 Tm
(\221The Virtuoso\222 \(1676\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 518.2124 Tm
( 7.63 Peter Shaffer 1926\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All my wife has ever taken from the Mediterranean\227from that whole\
vast intuitive culture\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(are four bottles of Chianti to make into lamps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Equus\222 \(1973\) act 1, sc. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( The Normal is the good smile in a child\222s eyes\227all right. It i\
s also the dead stare in a million )Tj
T*
(adults. It both sustains and kills\227like a God. It is the Ordinary mad\
e beautiful; it is also the )Tj
T*
(Average made lethal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Equus\222 \(1973\) act 1, sc. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Passion, you see, can be destroyed by a doctor. It cannot be created\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Equus\222 \(1973\) act 2, sc. 35)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 320.9624 Tm
( 7.64 Anthony Ashley Cooper, first Earl of Shaftesbury 1621-83)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221People differ in their discourse and profession about these matt\
ers, but men of sense are really )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(but of one religion.\222...\222Pray, my lord, what religion is that whic\
h men of sense agree in?\222 )Tj
T*
(\221Madam,\222 says the earl immediately, \221men of sense never tell it\
.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(In Bishop Gilbert Burnet \221The History of My Own Time\222 vol. 1 \(172\
4\) bk. 2, ch. 1, note by Onslow)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.2124 Tm
( 7.65 Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury 1671-1713)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Truth, \222tis supposed, may bear all lights; and one of those princ\
ipal lights or natural mediums )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(by which things are to be viewed in order to a thorough recognition is r\
idicule itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour\222 \(1709\) pt. 1, sect. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning\
, and are so afraid to )Tj
T*
(stand the test of ridicule?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221A Letter Concerning Enthusiasm\222 \(1708\) sect. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.7124 Tm
( 7.66 William Shakespeare 1564-1616)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The line number is given without brackets where the scene is all ver\
se up to the quotation and )Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
(the line number is certain, and in square brackets where prose makes it \
variable. All references )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(are to the Oxford Standard Authors Shakespeare in one volume.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 703.04173 Tm
( 7.66.1 All\222s Well that Ends Well)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 681.75456 Tm
( It were all one)Tj
T*
( That I should love a bright particular star)Tj
T*
( And think to wed it, he is so above me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.92047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [97])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.00456 Tm
( The hind that would be mated with the lion)Tj
T*
( Must die of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.17047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [103])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.25456 Tm
( Your virginity, your old virginity, is like one of our French wither\
ed pears; it looks ill, it eats )Tj
T*
(drily.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [176])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( Our remedies oft in ourselves do lie)Tj
T*
( Which we ascribe to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [235])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( It is like a barber\222s chair that fits all buttocks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [18])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( A young man married is a man that\222s marred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [315])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I know a man that had this trick of melancholy sold a goodly manor f\
or a song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [8])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together: our\
virtues would be proud if )Tj
T*
(our faults whipped them not; and our crimes would despair if they were n\
ot cherished by our own )Tj
T*
(virtues.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( The flowery way that leads to the broad gate and the great fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 5, sc. 5, l. [58].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Praising what is lost)Tj
T*
( Makes the remembrance dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221All\222s Well that Ends Well\222 \(1603-4\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 19)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 160.04173 Tm
( 7.66.2 Antony And Cleopatra)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( The triple pillar of the world transformed)Tj
T*
( Into a strumpet\222s fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc.1, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Cleopatra: If it be love indeed, tell me how much.)Tj
T*
( Antony: There\222s beggary in the love that can be reckoned. )Tj
T*
( Cleopatra: I\222ll set a bourn how far to be belov\222d.)Tj
ET
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( Antony: Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Kingdoms are clay; our dungy earth alike)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Feeds beast as man; the nobleness of life)Tj
T*
( Is to do thus; when such a mutual pair)Tj
T*
( And such a twain can do\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( O excellent! I love long life better than figs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [34])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( But a worky-day fortune.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [57])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( On the sudden)Tj
T*
( A Roman thought hath struck him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and CLeopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [90])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( The nature of bad news infects the teller.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7 act 1, sc. 2, l. [103])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( There\222s a great spirit gone!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [131])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( I have seen her die twenty times upon far poorer moment. I do think \
there is mettle in death )Tj
T*
(which commits some loving act upon her, she hath such a celerity in dyin\
g.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7 act 1, sc. 2, l. [150])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( O sir! you had then left unseen a wonderful piece of work which not \
to have been blessed )Tj
T*
(withal would have discredited your travel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [164])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Indeed the tears live in an onion that should water this sorrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [181])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( If you find him sad,)Tj
T*
( Say I am dancing; if in mirth, report)Tj
T*
( That I am sudden sick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Charmian: In each thing give him way, cross him in nothing.)Tj
T*
( Cleopatra: Thou teachest like a fool; the way to lose him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( In time we hate that which we often fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Eternity was in our lips and eyes,)Tj
T*
( Bliss in our brows bent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( Courteous lord, one word.)Tj
T*
( Sir, you and I must part, but that\222s not it:)Tj
ET
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( Sir, you and I have loved, but there\222s not it;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That you know well: something it is I would,\227)Tj
T*
( O! my oblivion is a very Antony,)Tj
T*
( And I am all forgotten.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 3?, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.75456 Tm
( Give me to drink mandragora...)Tj
T*
( That I might sleep out this great gap of time)Tj
T*
( My Antony is away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.00456 Tm
( O happy horse, to bear the weight of Antony!)Tj
T*
( Do bravely, horse, for wot\222st thou whom thou mov\222st?)Tj
T*
( The demi-Atlas of this earth, the arm)Tj
T*
( And burgonet of men. He\222s speaking now,)Tj
T*
( Or murmuring \221Where\222s my serpent of old Nile?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.25456 Tm
( Think on me,)Tj
T*
( That am with Phoebus\222 amorous pinches black,)Tj
T*
( And wrinkled deep in time? Broad-fronted Caesar,)Tj
T*
( When thou wast here above the ground I was)Tj
T*
( A morsel for a monarch, and great Pompey)Tj
T*
( Would stand and make his eyes grow in my brow;)Tj
T*
( There would he anchor his aspect and die)Tj
T*
( With looking on his life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.50456 Tm
( My salad days,)Tj
T*
( When I was green in judgment, cold in blood,)Tj
T*
( To say as I said then!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.75456 Tm
( I do not much dislike the matter, but)Tj
T*
( The manner of his speech.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.00456 Tm
( The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne,)Tj
T*
( Burned on the water; the poop was beaten gold,)Tj
T*
( Purple the sails, and so perfumed, that)Tj
T*
( The winds were love-sick with them, the oars were silver,)Tj
T*
( Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke, and made)Tj
T*
( The water which they beat to follow faster,)Tj
T*
( As amorous of their strokes. For her own person,)Tj
T*
( It beggared all description; she did lie)Tj
T*
( In her pavilion,\227cloth-of-gold of tissue,\227)Tj
ET
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( O\222er-picturing that Venus where we see)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The fancy outwork nature; on each side her)Tj
T*
( Stood pretty-dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids,)Tj
T*
( With divers-coloured fans, whose wind did seem)Tj
T*
( To glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool,)Tj
T*
( And what they undid did.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [199])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Her gentlewomen, like the Nereides,)Tj
T*
( So many mermaids, tended her i\222 the eyes,)Tj
T*
( And made their bends adornings; at the helm)Tj
T*
( A seeming mermaid steers; the silken tackle)Tj
T*
( Swell with the touches of those flower-soft hands,)Tj
T*
( That yarely frame the office. From the barge)Tj
T*
( A strange invisible perfume hits the sense)Tj
T*
( Of the adjacent wharfs. The city cast)Tj
T*
( Her people out upon her, and Antony,)Tj
T*
( Enthroned i\222 the market-place, did sit alone,)Tj
T*
( Whistling to the air; which, but for vacancy,)Tj
T*
( Had gone to gaze on Cleopatra too)Tj
T*
( And made a gap in nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [214])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( I saw her once)Tj
T*
( Hop forty paces through the public street;)Tj
T*
( And having lost her breath, she spoke, and panted)Tj
T*
( That she did make defect perfection,)Tj
T*
( And, breathless, power breathe forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [236])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.75456 Tm
( Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale)Tj
T*
( Her infinite variety; other women cloy)Tj
T*
( The appetites they feed, but she makes hungry)Tj
T*
( Where most she satisfies; for vilest things)Tj
T*
( Become themselves in her, that the holy priests)Tj
T*
( Bless her when she is riggish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [243])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( I have not kept the square, but that to come)Tj
T*
( Shall all be done by the rule.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( I\222 the east my pleasure lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Attendants: The music, ho!)Tj
ET
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( Cleopatra: Let it alone; let\222s to billiards: come, Charmian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Give me mine angle; we\222ll to the river: there\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( My music playing far off\227I will betray)Tj
T*
( Tawny-finned fishes; my bended hook shall pierce)Tj
T*
( Their slimy jaws; and, as I draw them up,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll think them every one an Antony,)Tj
T*
( And say, \221Ah, ha!\222 you\222re caught.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( I laughed him out of patience; and that night)Tj
T*
( I laughed him into patience: and next morn,)Tj
T*
( Ere the ninth hour, I drunk him to his bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Though it be honest, it is never good)Tj
T*
( To bring bad news; give to a gracious message)Tj
T*
( A host of tongues, but let ill tidings tell)Tj
T*
( Themselves when they be felt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( I will praise any man that will praise me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 6, l. [88])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Lepidus: What manner o\222 thing is your crocodile?)Tj
T*
( Antony: It is shaped, sir, like itself, and it is as broad as it ha\
th breadth; it is just so high as it )Tj
T*
(is, and moves with its own organs; it lives by that which nourisheth it;\
and the elements once out )Tj
T*
(of it, it transmigrates.)Tj
T*
( Lepidus: What colour is it of?)Tj
T*
( Antony: Of its own colour too.)Tj
T*
( Lepidus: \222Tis a strange serpent.)Tj
T*
( Antony: \222Tis so; and the tears of it are wet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 2, sc. 7, l. [47])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( He sends so poor a pinion of his wing,)Tj
T*
( Which had superfluous kings for messengers)Tj
T*
( Not many moons gone by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 10, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( He wears the rose)Tj
T*
( Of youth upon him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Against the blown rose may they stop their nose,)Tj
T*
( That kneel\222d unto the buds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Yet he that can endure)Tj
ET
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( To follow with allegiance a fall\222n lord,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Does conquer him that did his master conquer,)Tj
T*
( And earns a place i\222 the story.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I found you as a morsel, cold upon)Tj
T*
( Dead Caesar\222s trencher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 116)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( To let a fellow that will take rewards)Tj
T*
( And say \221God quit you!\222 be familiar with)Tj
T*
( My playfellow, your hand; this kingly seal)Tj
T*
( And plighter of high hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Let\222s have one other gaudy night: call to me)Tj
T*
( All my sad captains; fill our bowls once more;)Tj
T*
( Let\222s mock the midnight bell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l. 182)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Since my lord)Tj
T*
( Is Antony again, I will be Cleopatra.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 3, sc. 11, l.185)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( To business that we love we rise betime,)Tj
T*
( And go to \222t with delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( O! my fortunes have)Tj
T*
( Corrupted honest men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( I am alone the villain of the earth,)Tj
T*
( And feel I am so most.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 6, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Cleopatra: Lord of lords!)Tj
T*
( O infinite virtue! com\222st thou smiling from)Tj
T*
( The world\222s great snare uncaught?)Tj
T*
( Antony: My nightingale,)Tj
T*
( We have beat them to their beds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 8, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( O sovereign mistress of true melancholy,)Tj
T*
( The poisonous damp of night disponge upon me,)Tj
T*
( That life, a very rebel to my will,)Tj
T*
( May hang no longer on me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 9, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( The hearts)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( That spanieled me at heels, to whom I gave)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their wishes, do discandy, melt their sweets)Tj
T*
( On blossoming Caesar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 10, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The soul and body rive not more in parting)Tj
T*
( Than greatness going off.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 11, l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Sometimes we see a cloud that\222s dragonish;)Tj
T*
( A vapour sometime like a bear or lion,)Tj
T*
( A towered citadel, a pendant rock,)Tj
T*
( A forked mountain, or blue promontory)Tj
T*
( With trees upon \222t, that nod unto the world)Tj
T*
( And mock our eyes with air: thou hast seen these signs;)Tj
T*
( They are black vesper\222s pageants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 12, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( That which is now a horse, even with a thought)Tj
T*
( The rack dislimns, and makes it indistinct,)Tj
T*
( As water is in water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 12, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Unarm, Eros; the long day\222s task is done,)Tj
T*
( And we must sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 12, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Lie down, and stray no further. Now all labour)Tj
T*
( Mars what it does; yea, very force entangles)Tj
T*
( Itself with strength...)Tj
T*
( Stay for me:)Tj
T*
( Where souls do couch on flowers, we\222ll hand in hand,)Tj
T*
( And with our sprightly port make the ghosts gaze;)Tj
T*
( Dido and her Aeneas shall want troops,)Tj
T*
( And all the haunt be ours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 12, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( I will be)Tj
T*
( A bridegroom in my death, and run into \222t)Tj
T*
( As to a lover\222s bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 12, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( All strange and terrible events are welcome,)Tj
T*
( But comforts we despise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Antony: Not Caesar\222s valour hath o\222erthrown Antony)Tj
T*
( But Antony\222s hath triumphed on itself.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Cleopatra: So it should be, that none but Antony)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Should conquer Antony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I am dying, Egypt, dying; only)Tj
T*
( I here importune death awhile, until)Tj
T*
( Of many thousand kisses the poor last)Tj
T*
( I lay upon thy lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( The miserable change now at my end)Tj
T*
( Lament nor sorrow at; but please your thoughts)Tj
T*
( In feeding them with those my former fortunes)Tj
T*
( Wherein I lived, the greatest prince o\222 the world,)Tj
T*
( The noblest; and do now not basely die,)Tj
T*
( Not cowardly put off my helmet to)Tj
T*
( My countryman; a Roman by a Roman)Tj
T*
( Valiantly vanquished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Hast thou no care of me? shall I abide)Tj
T*
( In this dull world, which in thy absence is)Tj
T*
( No better than a sty? O! see my women,)Tj
T*
( The crown o\222 the earth doth melt. My lord!)Tj
T*
( O! withered is the garland of the war,)Tj
T*
( The soldier\222s pole is fall\222n; young boys and girls)Tj
T*
( Are level now with men; the odds is gone,)Tj
T*
( And there is nothing left remarkable)Tj
T*
( Beneath the visiting moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( No more, but e\222en a woman and commanded)Tj
T*
( By such poor passion as the maid that milks)Tj
T*
( And does the meanest chares.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( What\222s brave, what\222s noble,)Tj
T*
( Let\222s do it after the high Roman fashion,)Tj
T*
( And make death proud to take us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 4, sc. 13, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( A rarer spirit never)Tj
T*
( Did steer humanity; but you, gods, will give us)Tj
T*
( Some faults to make us men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( My desolation does begin to make)Tj
ET
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( A better life. \222Tis paltry to be Caesar;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not being Fortune, he\222s but Fortune\222s knave,)Tj
T*
( A minister of her will; and it is great)Tj
T*
( To do that thing that ends all other deeds,)Tj
T*
( Which shackles accidents, and bolts up change,)Tj
T*
( Which sleeps, and never palates more the dug,)Tj
T*
( The beggar\222s nurse and Caesar\222s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( His legs bestrid the ocean; his reared arm)Tj
T*
( Crested the world; his voice was propertied)Tj
T*
( As all the tuned spheres, and that to friends;)Tj
T*
( But when he meant to quail and shake the orb,)Tj
T*
( He was as rattling thunder. For his bounty,)Tj
T*
( There was no winter in\222t; an autumn was)Tj
T*
( That grew the more by reaping; his delights)Tj
T*
( Were dolphin-like, they showed his back above)Tj
T*
( The element they lived in; in his livery)Tj
T*
( Walked crowns and crownets, realms and islands were)Tj
T*
( As plates dropped from his pocket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( He words me, girls, he words me, that I should not)Tj
T*
( Be noble to myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 190)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Finish, good lady; the bright day is done,)Tj
T*
( And we are for the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( Antony)Tj
T*
( Shall be brought drunken forth, and I shall see)Tj
T*
( Some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness)Tj
T*
( I\222 the posture of a whore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 217)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( My resolution\222s placed, and I have nothing)Tj
T*
( Of woman in me; now from head to foot)Tj
T*
( I am marble-constant, now the fleeting moon)Tj
T*
( No planet is of mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( His biting is immortal; those that do die of it do seldom or never r\
ecover.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [246])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( A very honest woman, but something given to lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [251])Tj
ET
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( I wish you all joy of the worm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [260])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Indeed there is no goodness in the worm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [267])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( I know that a woman is a dish for the gods, if the devil dress her n\
ot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [274])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Give me my robe, put on my crown; I have)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Immortal longings in me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [282])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Husband, I come:)Tj
T*
( Now to that name my courage prove my title!)Tj
T*
( I am fire and air; my other elements)Tj
T*
( I give to baser life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [289])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( If thou and nature can so gently part,)Tj
T*
( The stroke of death is as a lover\222s pinch,)Tj
T*
( Which hurts, and is desired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [296])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( If thus thou vanishest, thou tell\222st the world)Tj
T*
( It is not worth leave-taking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [299])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Cleopatra: If she first meet the curl\351d Antony,)Tj
T*
( He\222ll make demand of her, and spend that kiss)Tj
T*
( Which is my heaven to have. Come, thou mortal wretch,)Tj
T*
( With thy sharp teeth this knot intrinsicate)Tj
T*
( Of life at once untie; poor venomous fool,)Tj
T*
( Be angry, and dispatch. O! couldst thou speak,)Tj
T*
( That I might hear thee call great Caesar ass)Tj
T*
( Unpolicied.)Tj
T*
( Charmian: O eastern star!)Tj
T*
( Cleopatra: Peace! peace!)Tj
T*
( Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,)Tj
T*
( That sucks the nurse asleep?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [303])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Now boast thee, death, in thy possession lies)Tj
T*
( A lass unparalleled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [317])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( It is well done, and fitting for a princess)Tj
T*
( Descended of so many royal kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [328])Tj
ET
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( She looks like sleep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As she would catch a second Antony)Tj
T*
( In her strong toil of grace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [347])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( She hath pursued conclusions infinite)Tj
T*
( Of easy ways to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [356])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( She shall be buried by her Antony:)Tj
T*
( No grave upon the earth shall clip in it)Tj
T*
( A pair so famous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Antony and Cleopatra\222 \(1606-7\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [359])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 542.54173 Tm
( 7.66.3 As You Like It)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( Fleet the time carelessly, as they did in the golden world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [126])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( Let us sit and mock the good housewife Fortune from her wheel, that \
her gifts may henceforth )Tj
T*
(be bestowed equally.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( How now, wit! whither wander you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.00456 Tm
( Sir, you have wrestled well, and overthrown)Tj
T*
( More than your enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [271])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.25456 Tm
( Hereafter, in a better world than this,)Tj
T*
( I shall desire more love and knowledge of you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [301])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.50456 Tm
( Thus must I from the smoke into the smother;)Tj
T*
( From tyrant duke unto a tyrant brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [304])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.75456 Tm
( O, how full of briers is this working-day world!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( We\222ll have a swashing and a martial outside,)Tj
T*
( As many other mannish cowards have)Tj
T*
( That do outface it with their semblances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [123])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( Hath not old custom made this life more sweet)Tj
T*
( Than that of painted pomp? Are not these woods)Tj
T*
( More free from peril than the envious court?)Tj
T*
( Here feel we but the penalty of Adam,)Tj
T*
( The seasons\222 difference; as, the icy fang)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( And churlish chiding of the winter\222s wind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which, when it bites and blows upon my body,)Tj
T*
( Even till I shrink with cold, I smile and say,)Tj
T*
( \221This is no flattery.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Sweet are the uses of adversity,)Tj
T*
( Which like the toad, ugly and venomous,)Tj
T*
( Wears yet a precious jewel in his head;)Tj
T*
( And this our life, exempt from public haunt,)Tj
T*
( Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,)Tj
T*
( Sermons in stones, and good in everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( The big round tears)Tj
T*
( Coursed one another down his innocent nose,)Tj
T*
( In piteous chase.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Unregarded age in corners thrown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Therefore my age is as a lusty winter,)Tj
T*
( Frosty, but kindly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( O good old man! how well in thee appears)Tj
T*
( The constant service of the antique world,)Tj
T*
( When service sweat for duty, not for meed!)Tj
T*
( Thou art not for the fashion of these times,)Tj
T*
( Where none will sweat but for promotion,)Tj
T*
( And having that, do choke their service up)Tj
T*
( Even with the having.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Ay, now am I in Arden; the more fool I. When I was at home I was in \
a better place; but )Tj
T*
(travellers must be content.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [16])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( In thy youth thou wast as true a lover)Tj
T*
( As ever sighed upon a midnight pillow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [26])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( If thou remember\222st not the slightest folly)Tj
T*
( That ever love did make thee run into,)Tj
T*
( Thou hast not loved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [34])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( We that are true lovers run into strange capers.)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 0 0 rg
0 i
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [53])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Thou speakest wiser than thou art ware of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [57])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( I shall ne\222er be ware of mine own wit till I break my shins again\
st it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [59])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Under the greenwood tree)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who loves to lie with me,)Tj
T*
( And turn his merry note)Tj
T*
( Unto the sweet bird\222s throat,)Tj
T*
( Come hither, come hither, come hither:)Tj
T*
( Here shall he see)Tj
T*
( No enemy)Tj
T*
( But winter and rough weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( I can suck melancholy out of a song as a weasel sucks eggs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Who doth ambition shun)Tj
T*
( And loves to live i\222 the sun,)Tj
T*
( Seeking the food he eats,)Tj
T*
( And pleased with what he gets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [38])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( I\222ll go to sleep if I can; if I cannot, I\222ll rail against all \
the first-born of Egypt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( And so, from hour to hour, we ripe and ripe,)Tj
T*
( And then from hour to hour, we rot and rot:)Tj
T*
( And thereby hangs a tale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( My lungs began to crow like chanticleer,)Tj
T*
( That fools should be so deep-contemplative,)Tj
T*
( And I did laugh sans intermission)Tj
T*
( An hour by his dial. O noble fool!)Tj
T*
( A worthy fool! Motley\222s the only wear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( O worthy fool! One that hath been a courtier,)Tj
T*
( And says, if ladies be but young and fair,)Tj
T*
( They have the gift to know it: and in his brain,\227)Tj
T*
( Which is as dry as the remainder biscuit)Tj
T*
( After a voyage,\227he hath strange places crammed)Tj
T*
( With observation, the which he vents)Tj
T*
( In mangled forms.)Tj
ET
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Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I must have liberty)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Withal, as large a charter as the wind,)Tj
T*
( To blow on whom I please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( All the world\222s a stage,)Tj
T*
( And all the men and women merely players:)Tj
T*
( They have their exits and their entrances;)Tj
T*
( And one man in his time plays many parts,)Tj
T*
( His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,)Tj
T*
( Mewling and puking in the nurse\222s arms.)Tj
T*
( And then the whining schoolboy, with his satchel,)Tj
T*
( And shining morning face, creeping like snail)Tj
T*
( Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,)Tj
T*
( Sighing like furnace, with a woful ballad)Tj
T*
( Made to his mistress\222 eyebrow. Then a soldier,)Tj
T*
( Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard,)Tj
T*
( Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,)Tj
T*
( Seeking the bubble reputation)Tj
T*
( Even in the cannon\222s mouth. And then the justice,)Tj
T*
( In fair round belly with good capon lined,)Tj
T*
( With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut,)Tj
T*
( Full of wise saws and modern instances;)Tj
T*
( And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts)Tj
T*
( Into the lean and slippered pantaloon,)Tj
T*
( With spectacles on nose and pouch on side,)Tj
T*
( His youthful hose well saved a world too wide)Tj
T*
( For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,)Tj
T*
( Turning again towards childish treble, pipes)Tj
T*
( And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,)Tj
T*
( That ends this strange eventful history,)Tj
T*
( Is second childishness, and mere oblivion,)Tj
T*
( Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 139)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Blow, blow, thou winter wind,)Tj
T*
( Thou art not so unkind)Tj
T*
( As man\222s ingratitude:)Tj
T*
( Thy tooth is not so keen,)Tj
T*
( Because thou art not seen,)Tj
T*
( Although thy breath be rude.)Tj
ET
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Q
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q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Heigh-ho! sing, heigh-ho! unto the green holly:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly.)Tj
T*
( Then heigh-ho! the holly!)Tj
T*
( This life is most jolly.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Freeze, freeze, thou bitter sky,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That dost not bite so nigh)Tj
T*
( As benefits forgot:)Tj
T*
( Though thou the waters warp,)Tj
T*
( Thy sting is not so sharp)Tj
T*
( As friend remembered not.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 174)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( Run, run, Orlando: carve on every tree)Tj
T*
( The fair, the chaste, and unexpressive she.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( He that wants money, means, and content is without three good friend\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [25])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( I earn that I eat, get that I wear, owe no man hate, envy no man\222\
s happiness, glad of other )Tj
T*
(men\222s good, content with my harm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( From the east to western Ind,)Tj
T*
( No jewel is like Rosalind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [94])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Let us make an honourable retreat; though not with bag and baggage, \
yet with scrip and )Tj
T*
(scrippage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [170])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( O wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful wonderful! and yet again \
wonderful, and after )Tj
T*
(that, out of all whooping!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [202])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( It is as easy to count atomies as to resolve the propositions of a l\
over.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [246])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 203.25456 Tm
( Do you not know I am a woman? when I think, I must speak.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [265])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.50456 Tm
( I do desire we may be better strangers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [276])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.75456 Tm
( Jacques: I do not like her name.)Tj
T*
( Orlando: There was no thought of pleasing you when she was christen\
ed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [283])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.00456 Tm
( Rosalind: Time travels in divers paces with divers persons... )Tj
T*
( Orlando: Who stays it still withal?)Tj
T*
( Rosalind: With lawyers in the vacation; for they sleep between term \
and term.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [328])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.25456 Tm
( There were none principal; they were all like one another as half-pe\
nce are; every one fault )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(seeming monstrous till his fellow fault came to match it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [376] \(referring to wo\
men\222s offences.\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.50456 Tm
( Truly, I would the gods had made thee poetical.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [16])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 640.75456 Tm
( I am not a slut, though I thank the gods I am foul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 624.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.00456 Tm
( Down on your knees,)Tj
T*
( And thank heaven, fasting, for a good man\222s love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( I pray you, do not fall in love with me,)Tj
T*
( For I am falser than vows made in wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [72])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.50456 Tm
( Dead shepherd, now I find thy saw of might:)Tj
T*
( \221Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [81].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( Jaques: Nay then, God be wi\222 you, an you talk in blank verse. \(\
Exit\) )Tj
T*
( Rosalind: Farewell, Monsieur Traveller: look you lisp and wear str\
ange suits, disable all the )Tj
T*
(benefits of your own country, be out of love with your nativity, and alm\
ost chide God for making )Tj
T*
(you the countenance you are, or I will scarce think you have swam in a g\
ondola.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [33])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.00456 Tm
( Come, woo me, woo me; for now I am in a holiday humour, and like eno\
ugh to consent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [70])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( You were better speak first, and when you were gravelled for lack of\
matter, you might take )Tj
T*
(occasion to kiss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [75])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.50456 Tm
( Men are April when they woo, December when they wed: maids are May w\
hen they are maids, )Tj
T*
(but the sky changes when they are wives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [153])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.75456 Tm
( O coz, coz, coz, my pretty little coz, that thou didst know how many\
fathom deep I am in love!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [217])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.00456 Tm
( The horn, the horn, the lusty horn)Tj
T*
( Is not a thing to laugh to scorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [17])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.25456 Tm
( Oh! how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another \
man\222s eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [48])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 74.50456 Tm
( Phebe: Good shepherd, tell this youth what \222tis to love. )Tj
T*
( Silvius: It is to be all made of sighs and tears...)Tj
T*
( It is to be all made of faith and service...)Tj
ET
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( It is to be all made of fantasy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All made of passion, and all made of wishes;)Tj
T*
( All adoration, duty, and observance;)Tj
T*
( All humbleness, all patience, and impatience;)Tj
T*
( All purity, all trial, all obeisance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [90])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.75456 Tm
( \222Tis like the howling of Irish wolves against the moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [120])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.00456 Tm
( It was a lover and his lass,)Tj
T*
( With a hey, and a ho, and a hey nonino,)Tj
T*
( That o\222er the green cornfield did pass,)Tj
T*
( In the spring time, the only pretty ring time,)Tj
T*
( When birds do sing, hey ding a ding, ding;)Tj
T*
( Sweet lovers love the spring.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Between the acres of the rye,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With a hey, and a ho, and a hey nonino,)Tj
T*
( These pretty country folks would lie,)Tj
T*
( In the spring time, &c.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( This carol they began that hour,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With a hey, and a ho, and a hey nonino,)Tj
T*
( How that a life was but a flower,)Tj
T*
( In the spring time, &c.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( And therefore take the present time,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With a hey, and a ho, and a hey nonino;)Tj
T*
( For love is crown\351d with the prime)Tj
T*
( In the spring time, &c.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 271.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [18])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 251.00456 Tm
( Here comes a pair of very strange beasts, which in all tongues are c\
alled fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.25456 Tm
( A poor virgin, sir, an ill-favoured thing, sir, but mine own: a poor\
humour of mine, sir, to take )Tj
T*
(that that no man else will. Rich honesty dwells like a miser, sir, in a \
poor house, as your pearl in )Tj
T*
(your foul oyster.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.50456 Tm
( The retort courteous...the quip modest...the reply churlish...the re\
proof valiant...the )Tj
T*
(countercheck quarrelsome...the lie circumstantial...the lie direct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.67047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [96]. \(referring to th\
e degrees of the lie.\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.75456 Tm
( Your \221if\222 is the only peace-maker; much virtue in \221if\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.92047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 50.00456 Tm
( He uses his folly like a stalking-horse, and under the presentation \
of that he shoots his wit.)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [112])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( If it be true that \221good wine needs no bush\222, \222tis true tha\
t a good play needs no epilogue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221As You Like It\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, epilogue l. [3])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 687.29173 Tm
( 7.66.4 The Comedy of Errors)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.00456 Tm
( They brought one Pinch, a hungry, lean-faced villain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A mere anatomy, a mountebank,)Tj
T*
( A threadbare juggler, and a fortune-teller,)Tj
T*
( A needy, hollow-eyed, sharp-looking wretch,)Tj
T*
( A living-dead man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.17047 Tm
(\221The Comedy of Errors\222 \(1594\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 238)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 547.04173 Tm
( 7.66.5 Coriolanus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.75456 Tm
( He\222s a very dog to the commonalty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.92047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 489.00456 Tm
( The kingly crown\351d head, the vigilant eye,)Tj
T*
( The counsellor heart, the arm our soldier,)Tj
T*
( Our steed the leg, the tongue our trumpeter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [121])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 416.25456 Tm
( What\222s the matter, you dissentious rogues,)Tj
T*
( That, rubbing the poor itch of your opinion,)Tj
T*
( Make yourselves scabs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [170])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( They threw their caps)Tj
T*
( As they would hang them on the horns o\222 the moon,)Tj
T*
( Shouting their emulation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.67047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [218])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.75456 Tm
( I am known to be...one that loves a cup of hot wine with not a drop \
of allaying Tiber in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [52])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.00456 Tm
( Bid them wash their faces,)Tj
T*
( And keep their teeth clean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [65])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( My gracious silence, hail!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [194])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 142.50456 Tm
( Custom calls me to \222t:)Tj
T*
( What custom wills, in all things should we do\222t,)Tj
T*
( The dust on antique time would lie unswept,)Tj
T*
( And mountainous error be too highly heaped)Tj
T*
( For truth to o\222erpeer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 54.67047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [124])Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Hear you this Triton of the minnows? mark you)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His absolute \221shall\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( You common cry of curs! whose breath I hate)Tj
T*
( As reek o\222 the rotten fens, whose loves I prize)Tj
T*
( As the dead carcases of unburied men)Tj
T*
( That do corrupt my air,\227I banish you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Despising,)Tj
T*
( For you, the city, thus I turn my back:)Tj
T*
( There is a world elsewhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The beast)Tj
T*
( With many heads butts me away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Thou hast a grim appearance, and thy face)Tj
T*
( Bears a command in\222t; though thy tackle\222s torn,)Tj
T*
( Thou show\222st a noble vessel. What\222s thy name?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [66])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Let me have war, say I; it exceeds peace as far as day does night; i\
t\222s spritely, waking, audible, )Tj
T*
(and full of vent. Peace is a very apoplexy, lethargy: mulled, deaf, slee\
py, insensible; a getter of )Tj
T*
(more bastard children than war\222s a destroyer of men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [237])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( I think he\222ll be to Rome)Tj
T*
( As is the osprey to the fish, who takes it)Tj
T*
( By sovereignty of nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( I\222ll never,)Tj
T*
( Be such a gosling to obey instinct, but stand)Tj
T*
( As if a man were author of himself)Tj
T*
( And knew no other kin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Like a dull actor now,)Tj
T*
( I have forgot my part, and I am out,)Tj
T*
( Even to a full disgrace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( O! a kiss)Tj
T*
( Long as my exile, sweet as my revenge!)Tj
T*
( Now, by the jealous queen of heaven, that kiss)Tj
T*
( I carried from thee, dear, and my true lip)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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( Hath virgined it e\222er since.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Chaste as the icicle)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That\222s curdied by the frost from purest snow,)Tj
T*
( And hangs on Dian\222s temple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The god of soldiers,)Tj
T*
( With the consent of supreme Jove, inform)Tj
T*
( Thy thoughts with nobleness; that thou mayst prove)Tj
T*
( To shame unvulnerable, and stick i\222 the wars)Tj
T*
( Like a great sea-mark, standing every flaw,)Tj
T*
( And saving those that eye thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Thou hast never in thy life)Tj
T*
( Showed thy dear mother any courtesy;)Tj
T*
( When she\227poor hen! fond of no second brood\227)Tj
T*
( Has clucked thee to the wars, and safely home,)Tj
T*
( Loaden with honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( If you have writ your annals true, \222tis there,)Tj
T*
( That, like an eagle in a dove-cote, I)Tj
T*
( Fluttered your Volscians in Corioli:)Tj
T*
( Alone I did it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Coriolanus\222 \(1608\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 114)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 307.04173 Tm
( 7.66.6 Cymbeline)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( If she be furnished with a mind so rare,)Tj
T*
( She is alone the Arabian bird, and I)Tj
T*
( Have lost the wager. Boldness be my friend!)Tj
T*
( Arm me, audacity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 1, sc. 6, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.00456 Tm
( Cytherea,)Tj
T*
( How bravely thou becom\222st thy bed! fresh lily,)Tj
T*
( And whiter than the sheets! That I might touch!)Tj
T*
( But kiss: one kiss! Rubies unparagoned,)Tj
T*
( How dearly they do\222t! \222Tis her breathing that)Tj
T*
( Perfumes the chamber thus; the flame of the taper)Tj
T*
( Bows toward her, and would under-peep her lids)Tj
T*
( To see the enclosed lights, now canopied)Tj
T*
( Under these windows, white and azure laced)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( With blue of heaven\222s own tinct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( On her left breast)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A mole cinque-spotted, like the crimson drops)Tj
T*
( I\222 the bottom of a cowslip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Hark! hark! the lark at heaven\222s gate sings,)Tj
T*
( And Phoebus \222gins arise,)Tj
T*
( His steeds to water at those springs)Tj
T*
( On chaliced flowers that lies;)Tj
T*
( And winking Mary-buds begin)Tj
T*
( To ope their golden eyes:)Tj
T*
( With everything that pretty is,)Tj
T*
( My lady sweet, arise!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [22])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Is there no way for men to be, but women)Tj
T*
( Must be half-workers?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( I thought her)Tj
T*
( As chaste as unsunned snow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( The natural bravery of your isle, which stands)Tj
T*
( As Neptune\222s park, ribbed and paled in)Tj
T*
( With rocks unscalable, and roaring waters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( O, for a horse with wings!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [49])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( What should we speak of)Tj
T*
( When we are old as you? when we shall hear)Tj
T*
( The rain and wind beat dark December, how,)Tj
T*
( In this our pinching cave, shall we discourse)Tj
T*
( The freezing hours away? We have seen nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Some jay of Italy,)Tj
T*
( Whose mother was her painting, hath betrayed him:)Tj
T*
( Poor I am stale, a garment out of fashion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Hath Britain all the sun that shines?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [139])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Weariness)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Can snore upon the flint when resty sloth)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Finds the down pillow hard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 3, sc. 6, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Great griefs, I see, medicine the less.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 243)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Though mean and mighty rotting)Tj
T*
( Together, have one dust, yet reverence\227)Tj
T*
( That angel of the world\227doth make distinction)Tj
T*
( Of place \222tween high and low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 246)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Thersites\222 body is as good as Ajax\222)Tj
T*
( When neither are alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 252)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Fear no more the heat o\222 the sun,)Tj
T*
( Nor the furious winter\222s rages;)Tj
T*
( Thou thy worldly task hast done,)Tj
T*
( Home art gone and ta\222en thy wages:)Tj
T*
( Golden lads and girls all must,)Tj
T*
( As chimney-sweepers, come to dust.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Fear no more the frown o\222 the great,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou art past the tyrant\222s stroke:)Tj
T*
( Care no more to clothe and eat;)Tj
T*
( To thee the reed is as the oak:)Tj
T*
( The sceptre, learning, physic, must)Tj
T*
( All follow this, and come to dust.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Fear no more the lightning flash,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor the all-dreaded thunder-stone;)Tj
T*
( Fear not slander, censure rash;)Tj
T*
( Thou hast finished joy and moan:)Tj
T*
( All lovers young, all lovers must)Tj
T*
( Consign to thee, and come to dust.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( No exorciser harm thee!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor no witchcraft charm thee!)Tj
T*
( Ghost unlaid forbear thee!)Tj
T*
( Nothing ill come near thee!)Tj
T*
( Quiet consummation have:)Tj
T*
( And renowned be thy grave!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.92047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 258)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 54.00456 Tm
( Every good servant does not all commands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.17047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 6)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 747.25456 Tm
( He that sleeps feels not the toothache.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 731.42047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [176])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 710.50456 Tm
( He spake of her as Dian had hot dreams,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And she alone were cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 676.67047 Tm
(\221Cymbeline\222 \(1609-10\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 181)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 645.54173 Tm
( 7.66.7 Hamlet)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( You come most carefully upon your hour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( For this relief much thanks; \222tis bitter cold)Tj
T*
( And I am sick at heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( Not a mouse stirring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.00456 Tm
( Bernardo: What! is Horatio there?)Tj
T*
( Horatio: A piece of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.25456 Tm
( What! has this thing appeared again to-night?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.50456 Tm
( Look, where it comes again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.75456 Tm
( But in the gross and scope of my opinion,)Tj
T*
( This bodes some strange eruption to our state.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.00456 Tm
( This sweaty haste)Tj
T*
( Doth make the night joint-labourer with the day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.25456 Tm
( In the most high and palmy state of Rome,)Tj
T*
( A little ere the mightiest Julius fell,)Tj
T*
( The graves stood tenantless and the sheeted dead)Tj
T*
( Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.50456 Tm
( I\222ll cross it, though it blast me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( And then it started like a guilty thing)Tj
T*
( Upon a fearful summons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( It faded on the crowing of the cock.)Tj
T*
( Some say that ever \222gainst that season comes)Tj
T*
( Wherein our Saviour\222s birth is celebrated,)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( The bird of dawning singeth all night long;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And then, they say, no spirit can walk abroad;)Tj
T*
( The nights are wholesome; then no planets strike,)Tj
T*
( No fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm,)Tj
T*
( So hallowed and so gracious is the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 157)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.25456 Tm
( But, look, the morn, in russet mantle clad,)Tj
T*
( Walks o\222er the dew of yon high eastern hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.50456 Tm
( Though yet of Hamlet our dear brother\222s death)Tj
T*
( The memory be green...)Tj
T*
( Therefore our sometime sister, now our queen,...)Tj
T*
( Have we, as \222twere with a defeated joy,)Tj
T*
( With one auspicious and one dropping eye,)Tj
T*
( With mirth in funeral and with dirge in marriage,)Tj
T*
( In equal scale weighing delight and dole,)Tj
T*
( Taken to wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.75456 Tm
( The head is not more native to the heart,)Tj
T*
( The hand more instrumental to the brain,)Tj
T*
( Than is the throne of Denmark to thy father.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.00456 Tm
( A little more than kin, and less than kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.25456 Tm
( Not so, my lord; I am too much i\222 the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.50456 Tm
( Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off,)Tj
T*
( And let thine eye look like a friend on Denmark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.75456 Tm
( Queen: Thou know\222st \222tis common; all that live must die,)Tj
T*
( Passing through nature to eternity.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Ay, madam, it is common.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.00456 Tm
( Seems, madam! Nay, it is; I know not \221seems\222.)Tj
T*
( \222Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother,)Tj
T*
( Nor customary suits of solemn black,)Tj
T*
( Nor windy suspiration of forced breath,)Tj
T*
( No, nor the fruitful river in the eye,)Tj
T*
( Nor the dejected \222haviour of the visage,)Tj
T*
( Together with all forms, modes, shows of grief,)Tj
ET
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( That can denote me truly; these indeed seem,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For they are actions that a man might play:)Tj
T*
( But I have that within which passeth show;)Tj
T*
( These but the trappings and the suits of woe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( But to persever)Tj
T*
( In obstinate condolement is a course)Tj
T*
( Of impious stubbornness; \222tis unmanly grief;)Tj
T*
( It shows a will most incorrect to heaven,)Tj
T*
( A heart unfortified, a mind impatient.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Hamlet: I shall in all my best obey you, madam.)Tj
T*
( King: Why, \222tis a loving and a fair reply.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 120)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( O! that this too too solid flesh would melt,)Tj
T*
( Thaw, and resolve itself into a dew;)Tj
T*
( Or that the Everlasting had not fixed)Tj
T*
( His canon \222gainst self-slaughter! O God! O God!)Tj
T*
( How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable)Tj
T*
( Seem to me all the uses of this world.)Tj
T*
( Fie on\222t! O fie! \222tis an unweeded garden,)Tj
T*
( That grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature)Tj
T*
( Possess it merely. That it should come to this!)Tj
T*
( But two months dead: nay, not so much, not two:)Tj
T*
( So excellent a king; that was, to this,)Tj
T*
( Hyperion to a satyr: so loving to my mother,)Tj
T*
( That he might not beteem the winds of heaven)Tj
T*
( Visit her face too roughly. Heaven and earth!)Tj
T*
( Must I remember? Why, she would hang on him,)Tj
T*
( As if increase of appetite had grown)Tj
T*
( By what it fed on; and yet, within a month,)Tj
T*
( Let me not think on\222t: Frailty, thy name is woman!)Tj
T*
( A little month; or ere those shoes were old)Tj
T*
( With which she followed my poor father\222s body,)Tj
T*
( Like Niobe, all tears; why she, even she,\227)Tj
T*
( O God! a beast, that wants discourse of reason,)Tj
T*
( Would have mourned longer,\227married with mine uncle,)Tj
T*
( My father\222s brother, but no more like my father)Tj
T*
( Than I to Hercules.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 129)Tj
ET
EMC
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( It is not, nor it cannot come to good;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But break, my heart, for I must hold my tongue!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A truant disposition, good my lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 169)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( We\222ll teach you to drink deep ere you depart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 175)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Thrift, thrift, Horatio! the funeral baked meats)Tj
T*
( Did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables.)Tj
T*
( Would I had met my dearest foe in heaven)Tj
T*
( Ere I had ever seen that day, Horatio!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 180)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( He was a man, take him for all in all,)Tj
T*
( I shall not look upon his like again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( In the dead vast and middle of the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 198)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( These hands are not more like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 212)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( But answer made it none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 215)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( A countenance more in sorrow than in anger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 231)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( While one with moderate haste might tell a hundred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Hamlet: His beard was grizzl\351d, no?)Tj
T*
( Horatio: It was, as I have seen it in his life,)Tj
T*
( A sable silvered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 239)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Give it an understanding, but no tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( All is not well;)Tj
T*
( I doubt some foul play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 254)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Foul deeds will rise,)Tj
T*
( Though all the earth o\222erwhelm them, to men\222s eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 256)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( And keep you in the rear of your affection,)Tj
T*
( Out of the shot and danger of desire.)Tj
T*
( The chariest maid is prodigal enough)Tj
ET
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( If she unmask her beauty to the moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Do not, as some ungracious pastors do,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Show me the steep and thorny way to heaven,)Tj
T*
( Whiles, like a puffed and reckless libertine,)Tj
T*
( Himself the primrose path of dalliance treads,)Tj
T*
( And recks not his own rede.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.00456 Tm
( And these few precepts in thy memory)Tj
T*
( Look thou character. Give thy thoughts no tongue,)Tj
T*
( Nor any unproportioned thought his act.)Tj
T*
( Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar;)Tj
T*
( The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,)Tj
T*
( Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel;)Tj
T*
( But do not dull thy palm with entertainment)Tj
T*
( Of each new-hatched, unfledged comrade. Beware)Tj
T*
( Of entrance to a quarrel; but, being in,)Tj
T*
( Bear\222t that th\222 oppos\351d may beware of thee.)Tj
T*
( Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice;)Tj
T*
( Take each man\222s censure, but reserve thy judgment.)Tj
T*
( Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy,)Tj
T*
( But not expressed in fancy; rich, not gaudy;)Tj
T*
( For the apparel oft proclaims the man,)Tj
T*
( And they in France of the best rank and station)Tj
T*
( Are most select and generous, chief in that.)Tj
T*
( Neither a borrower, nor a lender be;)Tj
T*
( For loan oft loses both itself and friend,)Tj
T*
( And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry,)Tj
T*
( This above all: to thine own self be true,)Tj
T*
( And it must follow, as the night the day,)Tj
T*
( Thou canst not then be false to any man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.25456 Tm
( You speak like a green girl,)Tj
T*
( Unsifted in such perilous circumstance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.50456 Tm
( Ay, springes to catch woodcocks. I do know,)Tj
T*
( When the blood burns, how prodigal the soul)Tj
T*
( Lends the tongue vows: these blazes, daughter,)Tj
T*
( Giving more light than heat, extinct in both,)Tj
T*
( Even in their promise, as it is a-making,)Tj
ET
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( You must not take for fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Hamlet: The air bites shrewdly; it is very cold.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Horatio: It is a nipping and an eager air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( But to my mind,\227though I am native here,)Tj
T*
( And to the manner born,\227it is a custom)Tj
T*
( More honoured in the breach than the observance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Angels and ministers of grace defend us!)Tj
T*
( Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned,)Tj
T*
( Bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell,)Tj
T*
( Be thy intents wicked or charitable,)Tj
T*
( Thou com\222st in such a questionable shape)Tj
T*
( That I will speak to thee: I\222ll call thee Hamlet,)Tj
T*
( King, father; royal Dane, O! answer me:)Tj
T*
( Let me not burst in ignorance; but tell)Tj
T*
( Why thy canonized bones hears\351d in death,)Tj
T*
( Have burst their cerements; why the sepulchre,)Tj
T*
( Wherein we saw thee quietly inurned,)Tj
T*
( Hath oped his ponderous and marble jaws,)Tj
T*
( To cast thee up again. What may this mean,)Tj
T*
( That thou, dead corse again in complete steel)Tj
T*
( Revisit\222st thus the glimpses of the moon,)Tj
T*
( Making night hideous; and we fools of nature)Tj
T*
( So horridly to shake our disposition)Tj
T*
( With thoughts beyond the reaches of our souls?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( I do not set my life at a pin\222s fee;)Tj
T*
( And for my soul, what can it do to that,)Tj
T*
( Being a thing immortal as itself?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Unhand me, gentlemen,)Tj
T*
( By heaven! I\222ll make a ghost of him that lets me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Alas! poor ghost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( I am thy father\222s spirit;)Tj
ET
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( Doomed for a certain term to walk the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( But that I am forbid)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To tell the secrets of my prison-house,)Tj
T*
( I could a tale unfold whose lightest word)Tj
T*
( Would harrow up thy soul, freeze thy young blood,)Tj
T*
( Make thy two eyes, like stars, start from their spheres,)Tj
T*
( Thy knotted and combin\351d locks to part,)Tj
T*
( And each particular hair to stand an end,)Tj
T*
( Like quills upon the fretful porpentine:)Tj
T*
( But this eternal blazon must not be)Tj
T*
( To ears of flesh and blood. List, list, O, list!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Murder most foul, as in the best it is;)Tj
T*
( But this most foul, strange, and unnatural.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( And duller shouldst thou be than the fat weed)Tj
T*
( That rots itself in ease on Lethe wharf,)Tj
T*
( Wouldst thou not stir in this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( O my prophetic soul!)Tj
T*
( My uncle!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( But, soft! methinks I scent the morning air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( In the porches of mine ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Thus was I, sleeping, by a brother\222s hand,)Tj
T*
( Of life, of crown, of queen, at once dispatched;)Tj
T*
( Cut off even in the blossoms of my sin,)Tj
T*
( Unhouseled, disappointed, unaneled,)Tj
T*
( No reckoning made, but sent to my account)Tj
T*
( With all my imperfections on my head:)Tj
T*
( O, horrible! O, horrible! most horrible!)Tj
T*
( If thou hast nature in thee, bear it not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Leave her to heaven,)Tj
T*
( And to those thorns that in her bosom lodge,)Tj
ET
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( To prick and sting her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The glow-worm shows the matin to be near,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And \222gins to pale his uneffectual fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Remember thee!)Tj
T*
( Ay, thou poor ghost, while memory holds a seat)Tj
T*
( In this distracted globe. Remember thee!)Tj
T*
( Yea, from the table of my memory)Tj
T*
( I\222ll wipe away all trivial fond records,)Tj
T*
( All saws of books, all forms, all pressures past,)Tj
T*
( That youth and observation copied there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( O most pernicious woman!)Tj
T*
( O villain, villain, smiling, damn\351d villain!)Tj
T*
( My tables,\227meet it is I set it down,)Tj
T*
( That one may smile, and smile, and be a villain;)Tj
T*
( At least I\222m sure it may be so in Denmark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Hamlet: There\222s ne\222er a villain dwelling in all Denmark,)Tj
T*
( But he\222s an arrant knave.)Tj
T*
( Horatio: There needs no ghost, my lord, come from the grave,)Tj
T*
( To tell us this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( These are but wild and whirling words, my lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( It is an honest ghost, that let me tell you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 138)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Hic et ubique? then we\222ll shift our ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Well said, old mole! canst work i\222 the earth so fast?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 162)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( O day and night, but this is wondrous strange!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 164)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,)Tj
T*
( Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( To put an antic disposition on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( Rest, rest, perturb\351d spirit.)Tj
ET
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(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 182)Tj
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( The time is out of joint; O curs\351d spite,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That ever I was born to set it right!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 188)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( By indirections find directions out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Lord Hamlet, with his doublet all unbraced;)Tj
T*
( No hat upon his head; his stockings fouled,)Tj
T*
( Ungartered, and down-gyv\351d to his ancle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( This is the very ecstasy of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( Brevity is the soul of wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( To define true madness,)Tj
T*
( What is\222t but to be nothing else but mad?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( More matter with less art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 95)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( That he is mad, \222tis true; \222tis true \222tis pity;)Tj
T*
( And pity \222tis \222tis true: a foolish figure;)Tj
T*
( But farewell it, for I will use no art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( That\222s an ill phrase, a vile phrase; \221beautified\222 is a vile\
phrase.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [110])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Doubt thou the stars are fire;)Tj
T*
( Doubt that the sun doth move;)Tj
T*
( Doubt truth to be a liar;)Tj
T*
( But never doubt I love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [115])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Lord Hamlet is a prince, out of thy star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [141])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( And he, repuls\351d,\227a short tale to make,\227)Tj
T*
( Fell into a sadness, then into a fast,)Tj
T*
( Thence to a watch, thence into a weakness,)Tj
T*
( Thence to a lightness; and by this declension)Tj
T*
( Into the madness wherein now he raves,)Tj
T*
( And all we wail for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [146])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( Let me be no assistant for a state,)Tj
ET
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( But keep a farm, and carters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [166])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Polonius: Do you know me, my lord?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hamlet: Excellent well; you are a fishmonger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [173])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Ay, sir; to be honest, as this world goes, is to be one man picked o\
ut of ten thousand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [179])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Still harping on my daughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [190])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Polonius: What do you read, my lord?)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Words, words, words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [195])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( The satirical rogue says here that old men have grey beards, that th\
eir faces are wrinkled, their )Tj
T*
(eyes purging thick amber and plum-tree gum, and that they have a plentif\
ul lack of wit, together )Tj
T*
(with most weak hams: all of which, sir, though I most potently and power\
fully believe, yet I hold )Tj
T*
(it not honesty to have it thus set down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [201])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Though this be madness, yet there is method in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [211])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Polonius: My honourable lord, I will most humbly take my leave of y\
ou. )Tj
T*
( Hamlet: You cannot, sir, take from me any thing that I will more wi\
llingly part withal; except )Tj
T*
(my life, except my life, except my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [221])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Guildenstern: On Fortune\222s cap we are not the very button. )Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Nor the soles of her shoe?)Tj
T*
( Rosencrantz: Neither, my lord.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Then you live about her waist, or in the middle of her favo\
urs? )Tj
T*
( Guildenstern: Faith, her privates, we.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: In the secret parts of Fortune? O! most true; she is a stru\
mpet. What news?)Tj
T*
( Rosencrantz: None, my lord, but that the world\222s grown honest. )Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Then is doomsday near.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [237])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [259])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( O God! I could be bounded in a nut-shell, and count myself a king of\
infinite space, were it not )Tj
T*
(that I have bad dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [263])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Beggar that I am, I am poor even in thanks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [286])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( It goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the e\
arth, seems to me a sterile )Tj
ET
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(promontory; this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o\222\
erhanging firmament, this )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(majestical roof fretted with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing\
to me but a foul and )Tj
T*
(pestilent congregation of vapours. What a piece of work is a man! How no\
ble in reason! how )Tj
T*
(infinite in faculty! in form, in moving, how express and admirable! in a\
ction how like an angel! )Tj
T*
(in apprehension how like a god! the beauty of the world! the paragon of \
animals! And yet, to me, )Tj
T*
(what is this quintessence of dust? man delights not me; no, nor woman ne\
ither, though, by your )Tj
T*
(smiling, you seem to say so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [316])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( He that plays the king shall be welcome; his majesty shall have trib\
ute of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [341])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( There is something in this more than natural, if philosophy could fi\
nd it out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [392])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( I am but mad north-north-west; when the wind is southerly, I know a \
hawk from a handsaw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [405])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The best actors in the world, either for tragedy, comedy, history, p\
astoral, pastoral-comical, )Tj
T*
(historical-pastoral, tragical-historical, tragical-comical-historical-pa\
storal, scene individable, or )Tj
T*
(poem unlimited. Seneca cannot be too heavy, nor Plautus too light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [424])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( One fair daughter and no more,)Tj
T*
( The which he loved passing well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [435])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Come, give us a taste of your quality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [460])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The play, I remember, pleased not the million; \222twas caviare to t\
he general.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [465])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Good my lord, will you see the players well bestowed? Do you hear, l\
et them be well used; for )Tj
T*
(they are the abstracts and brief chronicles of the time: after your deat\
h you were better have a bad )Tj
T*
(epitaph than their ill report while you live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [553])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Use every man after his desert, and who should \222scape whipping?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [561])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I:)Tj
T*
( Is it not monstrous that this player here,)Tj
T*
( But in a fiction, in a dream of passion,)Tj
T*
( Could force his soul so to his own conceit)Tj
T*
( That from her working all his visage wanned,)Tj
T*
( Tears in his eyes, distraction in \222s aspect,)Tj
T*
( A broken voice, and his whole function suiting)Tj
T*
( With forms to his conceit? and all for nothing!)Tj
T*
( For Hecuba!)Tj
ET
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( What\222s Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That he should weep for her?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [584])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( He would drown the stage with tears,)Tj
T*
( And cleave the general ear with horrid speech,)Tj
T*
( Make mad the guilty, and appal the free,)Tj
T*
( Confound the ignorant, and amaze, indeed,)Tj
T*
( The very faculties of eyes and ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [596])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( I,)Tj
T*
( A dull and muddy-mettled rascal, peak,)Tj
T*
( Like John-a-dreams, unpregnant of my cause,)Tj
T*
( And can say nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [601])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Am I a coward?)Tj
T*
( Who calls me villain? breaks my pate across?)Tj
T*
( Plucks off my beard and blows it in my face?)Tj
T*
( Tweaks me by the nose? gives me the lie i\222 the throat,)Tj
T*
( As deep as to the lungs?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [606])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( But I am pigeon-livered, and lack gall)Tj
T*
( To make oppression bitter, or ere this)Tj
T*
( I should have fatted all the region kites)Tj
T*
( With this slave\222s offal. Bloody, bawdy villain!)Tj
T*
( Remorseless, treacherous, lecherous, kindless villain!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [613])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( I have heard,)Tj
T*
( That guilty creatures sitting at a play)Tj
T*
( Have by the very cunning of the scene)Tj
T*
( Been struck so to the soul that presently)Tj
T*
( They have proclaimed their malefactions;)Tj
T*
( For murder, though it have no tongue, will speak)Tj
T*
( With most miraculous organ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [625])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( The play\222s the thing)Tj
T*
( Wherein I\222ll catch the conscience of the king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [641])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( \222Tis too much proved\227that with devotion\222s visage)Tj
T*
( And pious action, we do sugar o\222er)Tj
T*
( The devil himself.)Tj
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(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( To be, or not to be: that is the question:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whether \222tis nobler in the mind to suffer)Tj
T*
( The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,)Tj
T*
( Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,)Tj
T*
( And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep;)Tj
T*
( No more; and, by a sleep to say we end)Tj
T*
( The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks)Tj
T*
( That flesh is heir to, \222tis a consummation)Tj
T*
( Devoutly to be wished. To die, to sleep;)Tj
T*
( To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there\222s the rub;)Tj
T*
( For in that sleep of death what dreams may come)Tj
T*
( When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,)Tj
T*
( Must give us pause. There\222s the respect)Tj
T*
( That makes calamity of so long life;)Tj
T*
( For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,)Tj
T*
( The oppressor\222s wrong, the proud man\222s contumely,)Tj
T*
( The pangs of disprized love, the law\222s delay,)Tj
T*
( The insolence of office, and the spurns)Tj
T*
( That patient merit of the unworthy takes,)Tj
T*
( When he himself might his quietus make)Tj
T*
( With a bare bodkin? Who would fardels bear,)Tj
T*
( To grunt and sweat under a weary life,)Tj
T*
( But that the dread of something after death,)Tj
T*
( The undiscovered country from whose bourn)Tj
T*
( No traveller returns, puzzles the will,)Tj
T*
( And makes us rather bear those ills we have,)Tj
T*
( Than fly to others that we know not of?)Tj
T*
( Thus conscience doth make cowards of us all;)Tj
T*
( And thus the native hue of resolution)Tj
T*
( Is sicklied o\222er with the pale cast of thought,)Tj
T*
( And enterprises of great pith and moment)Tj
T*
( With this regard their currents turn awry,)Tj
T*
( And lose the name of action.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( Nymph, in thy orisons)Tj
T*
( Be all my sins remembered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( For, to the noble mind,)Tj
T*
( Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind.)Tj
ET
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(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners? I a\
m myself indifferent )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(honest; but yet I could accuse me of such things that it were better my \
mother had not borne me. I )Tj
T*
(am very proud, revengeful, ambitious; with more offences at my beck than\
I have thoughts to put )Tj
T*
(them in, imagination to give them shape, or time to act them in. What sh\
ould such fellows as I do )Tj
T*
(crawling between heaven and earth? We are arrant knaves, all; believe no\
ne of us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [124])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow, thou shalt not escape cal\
umny.)Tj
T*
( Get thee to a nunnery, go; farewell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [142])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( I have heard of your paintings too, well enough. God hath given you \
one face and you make )Tj
T*
(yourselves another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [150])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( I say, we will have no more marriages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [156])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( O! what a noble mind is here o\222erthrown:)Tj
T*
( The courtier\222s, soldier\222s, scholar\222s, eye, tongue, sword;)Tj
T*
( The expectancy and rose of the fair state,)Tj
T*
( The glass of fashion, and the mould of form,)Tj
T*
( The observ\351d of all observers, quite, quite, down!)Tj
T*
( And I, of ladies most deject and wretched,)Tj
T*
( That sucked the honey of his music vows,)Tj
T*
( Now see that noble and most sovereign reason,)Tj
T*
( Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh;)Tj
T*
( That unmatched form and figure of blown youth,)Tj
T*
( Blasted with ecstasy: O! woe is me,)Tj
T*
( To have seen what I have seen, see what I see!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [159])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Speak the speech, I pray you, as I pronounced it to you, trippingly \
on the tongue; but if you )Tj
T*
(mouth it, as many of your players do, I had as lief the town-crier spoke\
my lines. Nor do not saw )Tj
T*
(the air too much with your hand, thus; but use all gently: for in the ve\
ry torrent, tempest, and\227as )Tj
T*
(I may say\227whirlwind of passion, you must acquire and beget a temperan\
ce, that may give it )Tj
T*
(smoothness. O! it offends me to the soul to hear a robustious periwig-pa\
ted fellow tear a passion )Tj
T*
(to tatters, to very rags, to split the ears of the groundlings, who for \
the most part are capable of )Tj
T*
(nothing but inexplicable dumb-shows and noise: I would have such a fello\
w whipped for )Tj
T*
(o\222erdoing Termagant; it out-herods Herod: pray you, avoid it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Be not too tame neither, but let your own discretion be your tutor: \
suit the action to the word, )Tj
T*
(the word to the action; with this special observance, that you o\222erst\
ep not the modesty of nature; )Tj
T*
(for anything so overdone is from the purpose of playing, whose end, both\
at the first and now, )Tj
ET
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(was and is, to hold, as \222twere, the mirror up to nature; to show virt\
ue her own feature, scorn her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(own image, and the very age and body of the time his form and pressure. \
Now, this overdone, or )Tj
T*
(come tardy off, though it make the unskilful laugh, cannot but make the \
judicious grieve; the )Tj
T*
(censure of which one must in your allowance o\222erweigh a whole theatre\
of others. O! there be )Tj
T*
(players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and that highly,\
not to speak it profanely, )Tj
T*
(that, neither having the accent of Christians nor the gait of Christian,\
pagan, nor man, have so )Tj
T*
(strutted and bellowed that I have thought some of nature\222s journeymen\
had made men and not )Tj
T*
(made them well, they imitated humanity so abominably.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( Give me that man)Tj
T*
( That is not passion\222s slave, and I will wear him)Tj
T*
( In my heart\222s core, ay, in my heart of heart,)Tj
T*
( As I do thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [76])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( It is a damn\351d ghost we have seen,)Tj
T*
( And my imaginations are as foul)Tj
T*
( As Vulcan\222s stithy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [87])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( The chameleon\222s dish: I eat the air, promise-crammed; you cannot \
feed capons so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [98])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Here\222s metal more attractive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [117])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( That\222s a fair thought to lie between maids\222 legs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [126])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Die two months ago, and not forgotten yet? Then there\222s hope a gr\
eat man\222s memory may )Tj
T*
(outlive his life half a year; but, by\222r lady, he must build churches \
then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [140])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( For, O! for, O! the hobby-horse is forgot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [145])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Marry, this is miching mallecho; it means mischief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Ophelia: \222Tis brief, my lord.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: As woman\222s love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [165])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( The lady doth protest too much, methinks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [242])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( Hamlet: No, no, they do but jest, poison in jest; no offence i\222 \
the world.)Tj
T*
( King: What do you call the play?)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: The Mouse-trap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [247])Tj
ET
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( We that have free souls, it touches us not: let the galled jade winc\
e, our withers are unwrung.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [255])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( What! frighted with false fire?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [282])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Why, let the stricken deer go weep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The hart ungall\351d play;)Tj
T*
( For some must watch, while some must sleep:)Tj
T*
( So runs the world away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [287])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( O wonderful son, that can so astonish a mother!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [347])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( The proverb is something musty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [366])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( It will discourse most eloquent music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [381])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( You would play upon me; you would seem to know my stops; you would p\
luck out the heart of )Tj
T*
(my mystery; you would sound me from my lowest note to the top of my comp\
ass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [387])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Do you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? Call me what i\
nstrument you will, )Tj
T*
(though you can fret me, you cannot play upon me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [393])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Hamlet: Do you see yonder cloud that\222s almost in shape of a came\
l? )Tj
T*
( Polonius: By the mass, and \222tis like a camel, indeed.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Methinks it is like a weasel.)Tj
T*
( Polonius: It is backed like a weasel.)Tj
T*
( haMlet: Or like a whale?)Tj
T*
( Polonius: Very like a whale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [400])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( They fool me to the top of my bent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [408])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( By and by is easily said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [411])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( \222Tis now the very witching time of night,)Tj
T*
( When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out)Tj
T*
( Contagion to this world: now could I drink hot blood,)Tj
T*
( And do such bitter business as the day)Tj
T*
( Would quake to look on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [413])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Let me be cruel, not unnatural;)Tj
T*
( I will speak daggers to her, but use none.)Tj
ET
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(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [420])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O! my offence is rank, it smells to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Now might I do it pat, now he is praying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( He took my father grossly, full of bread,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May;)Tj
T*
( And how his audit stands who knows save heaven?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( My words fly up, my thoughts remain below:)Tj
T*
( Words without thoughts never to heaven go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( You go not, till I set you up a glass)Tj
T*
( Where you may see the inmost part of you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( How now! a rat? Dead, for a ducat, dead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( A bloody deed! almost as bad, good mother,)Tj
T*
( As kill a king, and marry with his brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Thou wretched, rash, intruding fool, farewell!)Tj
T*
( I took thee for thy better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.25456 Tm
( Ay me! what act,)Tj
T*
( That roars so loud, and thunders in the index?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( Look here, upon this picture, and on this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed,)Tj
T*
( And batten on this moor?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( You cannot call it love, for at your age)Tj
T*
( The hey-day in the blood is tame, it\222s humble,)Tj
T*
( And waits upon the judgment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Speak no more;)Tj
T*
( Thou turn\222st mine eyes into my very soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( Nay, but to live)Tj
T*
( In the rank sweat of an enseam\351d bed,)Tj
ET
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( Stewed in corruption, honeying and making love)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Over the nasty sty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( A cut-purse of the empire and the rule,)Tj
T*
( That from a shelf the precious diadem stole,)Tj
T*
( And put it in his pocket!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.00456 Tm
( A king of shreds and patches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.25456 Tm
( Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.50456 Tm
( Mother, for love of grace,)Tj
T*
( Lay not that flattering unction to your soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 142)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( Confess yourself to heaven;)Tj
T*
( Repent what\222s past; avoid what is to come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( For in the fatness of these pursy times,)Tj
T*
( Virtue itself of vice must pardon beg.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( Queen: O Hamlet! thou hast cleft my heart in twain.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: O! throw away the worser part of it,)Tj
T*
( And live the purer with the other half.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.50456 Tm
( Assume a virtue, if you have it not.)Tj
T*
( That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat,)Tj
T*
( Of habits devil, is angel yet in this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.75456 Tm
( And when you are desirous to be blessed,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll blessing beg of you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.00456 Tm
( I must be cruel only to be kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.25456 Tm
( For \222tis the sport to have the enginer)Tj
T*
( Hoist with his own petar: and it shall go hard)Tj
T*
( But I will delve one yard below their mines,)Tj
T*
( And blow them at the moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 206)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.50456 Tm
( I\222ll lug the guts into the neighbour room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 212)Tj
ET
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( Indeed this counsellor)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is now most still, most secret, and most grave,)Tj
T*
( Who was in life a foolish prating knave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.00456 Tm
( He keeps them, like an ape doth nuts, in the corner of his jaw; firs\
t mouthed, to be last )Tj
T*
(swallowed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.25456 Tm
( Diseases desperate grown,)Tj
T*
( By desperate appliances are relieved,)Tj
T*
( Or not at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.50456 Tm
( A certain convocation of politic worms are e\222en at him. Your worm\
is your only emperor for )Tj
T*
(diet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [21])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.75456 Tm
( A man may fish with the worm that hath eat of a king, and eat of the\
fish that hath fed of that )Tj
T*
(worm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.00456 Tm
( We go to gain a little patch of ground,)Tj
T*
( That hath in it no profit but the name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.25456 Tm
( How all occasions do inform against me,)Tj
T*
( And spur my dull revenge! What is a man,)Tj
T*
( If his chief good and market of his time)Tj
T*
( Be but to sleep and feed? a beast, no more.)Tj
T*
( Sure he that made us with such large discourse,)Tj
T*
( Looking before and after, gave us not)Tj
T*
( That capability and god-like reason)Tj
T*
( To fust in us unused.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.50456 Tm
( Some craven scruple)Tj
T*
( Of thinking too precisely on the event.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.75456 Tm
( Rightly to be great)Tj
T*
( Is not to stir without great argument,)Tj
T*
( But greatly to find quarrel in a straw)Tj
T*
( When honour\222s at the stake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.00456 Tm
( How should I your true love know)Tj
T*
( From another one?)Tj
T*
( By his cockle hat and staff,)Tj
ET
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( And his sandal shoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [23])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He is dead and gone, lady,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He is dead and gone,)Tj
T*
( At his head a grass-green turf;)Tj
T*
( At his heels a stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( White his shroud as the mountain snow...)Tj
T*
( Larded with sweet flowers;)Tj
T*
( Which bewept to the grave did go)Tj
T*
( With true-love showers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Lord! we know what we are, but know not what we may be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [43])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Come, my coach! Good-night, ladies; good-night, sweet ladies; good n\
ight, good-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [72])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( When sorrows come, they come not single spies,)Tj
T*
( But in battalions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( We have done but greenly)Tj
T*
( In hugger-mugger to inter him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( There\222s such divinity doth hedge a king,)Tj
T*
( That treason can but peep to what it would.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [123])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( They bore him barefaced on the bier;)Tj
T*
( Hey non nonny, nonny, hey nonny;)Tj
T*
( And in his grave rained many a tear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [163])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( There\222s rosemary, that\222s for remembrance; pray, love, remember\
: and there is pansies, that\222s )Tj
T*
(for thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [174])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( There\222s fennel for you, and columbines; there\222s rue for you; a\
nd here\222s some for me; we may )Tj
T*
(call it herb of grace o\222 Sundays. O! you must wear your rue with a di\
fference. There\222s a daisy; I )Tj
T*
(would give you some violets, but they withered all when my father died. \
They say he made a )Tj
T*
(good end,\227For bonny sweet Robin is all my joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [179])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( No, no, he is dead;)Tj
T*
( Go to thy death-bed,)Tj
T*
( He never will come again.)Tj
ET
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(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [191])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( He is gone, he is gone,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And we cast away moan;)Tj
T*
( God ha\222 mercy on his soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [196])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( His means of death, his obscure burial,)Tj
T*
( No trophy, sword, nor hatchment o\222er his bones,)Tj
T*
( No noble rite nor formal ostentation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [213])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( And where the offence is let the great axe fall.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 5, l. [218])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( A very riband in the cap of youth,)Tj
T*
( Yet needful too; for youth no less becomes)Tj
T*
( The light and careless livery that it wears)Tj
T*
( Than settled age his sables and his weeds,)Tj
T*
( Importing health and graveness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( No place, indeed should murder sanctuarize.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( There is a willow grows aslant a brook,)Tj
T*
( That shows his hoar leaves in the glassy stream;)Tj
T*
( There with fantastic garlands did she come,)Tj
T*
( Of crow-flowers, nettles, daisies, and long purples,)Tj
T*
( That liberal shepherds give a grosser name,)Tj
T*
( But our cold maids do dead men\222s fingers call them:)Tj
T*
( There, on the pendent boughs her coronet weeds)Tj
T*
( Clambering to hang, an envious sliver broke,)Tj
T*
( When down her weedy trophies and herself)Tj
T*
( Fell in the weeping brook. Her clothes spread wide,)Tj
T*
( And, mermaid-like, awhile they bore her up;)Tj
T*
( Which time she chanted snatches of old tunes,)Tj
T*
( As one incapable of her own distress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 167)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Too much of water hast thou, poor Ophelia,)Tj
T*
( And therefore I forbid my tears; but yet)Tj
T*
( It is our trick, nature her custom holds,)Tj
T*
( Let shame say what it will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Is she to be buried in Christian burial that wilfully seeks her own \
salvation?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
ET
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( There is no ancient gentlemen but gardeners, ditchers and grave-make\
rs; they hold up Adam\222s )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [32])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( First Clown: What is he that builds stronger than either the mason,\
the shipwright, or the )Tj
T*
(carpenter?)Tj
T*
( Second Clown: The gallows-maker; for that frame outlives a thousand\
tenants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [44])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Cudgel thy brains no more about it, for your dull ass will not mend \
his pace with beating.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [61])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( The houses that he makes last till doomsday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [64])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( This might be the pate of a politician...one that would circumvent G\
od, might it not?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [84])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( How absolute the knave is! we must speak by the card, or equivocatio\
n will undo us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [147])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( The age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near\
the heel of the courtier, he )Tj
T*
(galls his kibe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [150])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( First Clown: He that is mad, and sent into England.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Ay, marry; why was he sent into England?)Tj
T*
( First Clown: Why, because he was mad; he shall recover his wits the\
re; or, if he do not, \222tis no )Tj
T*
(great matter there.)Tj
T*
( Hamlet: Why?)Tj
T*
( First Clown: \222Twill not be seen in him there; there the men are \
as mad as he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [160])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio; a fellow of infinite jest, o\
f most excellent fancy; he )Tj
T*
(hath borne me on his back a thousand times; and now, how abhorred in my \
imagination it is! my )Tj
T*
(gorge rises at it. Here hung those lips that I have kissed I know not ho\
w oft. Where be your gibes )Tj
T*
(now? your gambols? your songs? your flashes of merriment, that were won\
t to set the table on a )Tj
T*
(roar? Not one now, to mock your own grinning? quite chap-fallen? Now ge\
t you to my lady\222s )Tj
T*
(chamber, and tell her, let her paint an inch thick, to this favour she m\
ust come; make her laugh at )Tj
T*
(that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [201])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( To what base uses we may return, Horatio!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [222])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Imperious Caesar, dead, and turned to clay,)Tj
T*
( Might stop a hole to keep the wind away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [235])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( Lay her i\222 the earth;)Tj
T*
( And from her fair and unpolluted flesh)Tj
ET
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( May violets spring! I tell thee, churlish priest,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A ministering angel shall my sister be,)Tj
T*
( When thou liest howling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [260])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Sweets to the sweet: farewell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [265])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I thought thy bride-bed to have decked, sweet maid,)Tj
T*
( And not have strewed thy grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [267])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( I loved Ophelia: forty thousand brothers)Tj
T*
( Could not, with all their quantity of love,)Tj
T*
( Make up my sum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [291])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( This grave shall have a living monument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [319])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( There\222s a divinity that shapes our ends,)Tj
T*
( Rough-hew them how we will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( I once did hold it, as our statists do,)Tj
T*
( A baseness to write fair, and laboured much)Tj
T*
( How to forget that learning; but, sir, now)Tj
T*
( It did me yeoman\222s service.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( But thou wouldst not think how ill all\222s here about my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [222])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Not a whit, we defy augury; there\222s a special providence in the f\
all of a sparrow. If it be now, )Tj
T*
(\222tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be not \
now, yet it will come: the )Tj
T*
(readiness is all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [232])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( I have shot mine arrow o\222er the house,)Tj
T*
( And hurt my brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Now the king drinks to Hamlet!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [292])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( A hit, a very palpable hit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [295])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Why, as a woodcock to mine own springe, Osric;)Tj
T*
( I am justly killed with my own treachery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [320])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( The point envenomed too!\227)Tj
ET
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( Then, venom, to thy work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [335])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( This fell sergeant, death,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is swift in his arrest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [350])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Report me and my cause aright)Tj
T*
( To the unsatisfied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [353])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( I am more an antique Roman than a Dane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [355])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart,)Tj
T*
( Absent thee from felicity awhile,)Tj
T*
( And in this harsh world draw thy breath in pain,)Tj
T*
( To tell my story.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [360])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( The potent poison quite o\222ercrows my spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [367])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( The rest is silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [372])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Now cracks a noble heart. Good-night, sweet prince,)Tj
T*
( And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [373])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( The ears are senseless that should give us hearing,)Tj
T*
( To tell him his commandment is fulfilled,)Tj
T*
( That Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [383])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( Let four captains)Tj
T*
( Bear Hamlet, like a soldier, to the stage;)Tj
T*
( For he was likely, had he been put on,)Tj
T*
( To have proved most royally.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [409])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Go, bid the soldiers shoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Hamlet\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [417])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 140.54173 Tm
( 7.66.8 Henry IV, Part 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( So shaken as we are, so wan with care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( Let us be Diana\222s foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions of t\
he moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Falstaff: And is not my hostess of the tavern a most sweet wench? )Tj
ET
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( Prince: As the honey of Hybla, my old lad of the castle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [44])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( What, in thy quips and thy quiddities?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [50])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Shall there be gallows standing in England when thou art king, and r\
esolution thus fobbed as it )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is with the rusty curb of old father antick, the law?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [66])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Thou hast the most unsavoury similes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [89])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( I would to God thou and I knew where a commodity of good names were \
to be bought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [92])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( O! thou hast damnable iteration, and art, indeed, able to corrupt a \
saint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [101])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( Now am I, if a man should speak truly, little better than one of the\
wicked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [105])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( I\222ll be damned for never a king\222s son in Christendom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( Why, Hal, \222tis my vocation, Hal; \222tis no sin for a man to labo\
ur in his vocation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [116]. \(referring to\
stealing\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( If he fight longer than he sees reason, I\222ll forswear arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [206])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( If all the year were playing holidays,)Tj
T*
( To sport would be as tedious as to work;)Tj
T*
( But when they seldom come, they wished for come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [226])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( And as the soldiers bore dead bodies by,)Tj
T*
( He called them untaught knaves, unmannerly,)Tj
T*
( To bring a slovenly, unhandsome corpse)Tj
T*
( Betwixt the wind and his nobility.)Tj
T*
( With many holiday and lady terms)Tj
T*
( He questioned me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( So pestered with a popinjay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( It was great pity, so it was,)Tj
T*
( This villainous saltpetre should be digged)Tj
T*
( Out of the bowels of the harmless earth,)Tj
T*
( Which many a good tall fellow had destroyed)Tj
T*
( So cowardly; and but for these vile guns,)Tj
T*
( He would himself have been a soldier.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( To put down Richard, that sweet lovely rose,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And plant this thorn, this canker, Bolingbroke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 175)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( O! the blood more stirs)Tj
T*
( To rouse a lion than to start a hare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 197)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( By heaven methinks it were an easy leap)Tj
T*
( To pluck bright honour from the pale-faced moon,)Tj
T*
( Or dive into the bottom of the deep,)Tj
T*
( Where fathom-line could never touch the ground,)Tj
T*
( And pluck up drown\351d honour by the locks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Why, what a candy deal of courtesy)Tj
T*
( This fawning greyhound then did proffer me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 251)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( I know a trick worth two of that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( At hand, quoth pick-purse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [53])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( We have the receipt of fern-seed, we walk invisible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( I am bewitched with the rogue\222s company. If the rascal have not g\
iven me medicines to make )Tj
T*
(me love him, I\222ll be hanged.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Go hang thyself in thine own heir-apparent garters!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [49])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( On, bacons, on!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [99])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( It would be argument for a week, laughter for a month, and a good je\
st for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [104])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( Falstaff sweats to death)Tj
T*
( And lards the lean earth as he walks along.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [119])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [11])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( A good plot, good friends, and full of expectation; an excellent plo\
t, very good friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [21])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( Away, you trifler! Love! I love thee not,)Tj
T*
( I care not for thee, Kate: this is no world)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 751.75456 Tm
( To play with mammets and to tilt with lips:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We must have bloody noses and cracked crowns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( Constant you are,)Tj
T*
( But yet a woman: and for secrecy,)Tj
T*
( No lady closer; for I well believe)Tj
T*
( Thou wilt not utter what thou dost not know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [113])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.25456 Tm
( I am not yet of Percy\222s mind, the Hotspur of the North; he that k\
ills me some six or seven )Tj
T*
(dozen of Scots at a breakfast, washes his hands, and says to his wife, \221\
Fie upon this quiet life! I )Tj
T*
(want work.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [116])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.50456 Tm
( There live not three good men unhanged in England, and one of them i\
s fat and grows old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [146])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.75456 Tm
( Call you that backing of your friends? A plague upon such backing! g\
ive me them that will )Tj
T*
(face me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [168])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( A plague of all cowards, still say I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [175])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.25456 Tm
( I am a Jew else; an Ebrew Jew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [201])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.50456 Tm
( Nay that\222s past praying for: I have peppered two of them: two I a\
m sure I have paid, two )Tj
T*
(rogues in buckram suits. I tell thee what, Hal, if I tell thee a lie, sp\
it in my face, call me horse. )Tj
T*
(Thou knowest my old ward; here I lay, and thus I bore my point. Four rog\
ues in buckram let )Tj
T*
(drive at me,\227)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [214])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.75456 Tm
( O monstrous! eleven buckram men grown out of two.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [247])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.00456 Tm
( These lies are like the father that begets them; gross as a mountain\
, open, palpable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [253])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.25456 Tm
( Give you a reason on compulsion! if reasons were as plentiful as bla\
ckberries I would give no )Tj
T*
(man a reason upon compulsion, I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [267])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.50456 Tm
( Mark now, how a plain tale shall put you down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [285])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.75456 Tm
( What a slave art thou, to hack thy sword as thou hast done, and then\
say it was in fight!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [292])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( Instinct is a great matter, I was a coward on instinct.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [304])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.25456 Tm
( What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight?)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [328])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.50456 Tm
( A plague of sighing and grief! it blows a man up like a bladder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [370])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 695.75456 Tm
( I will do it in King Cambyses\222 vein.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [430])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.00456 Tm
( Peace, good pint-pot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [443])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.25456 Tm
( Shall the blessed sun of heaven prove a micher and eat blackberries?\
a question not to be asked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [454])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.50456 Tm
( There is a devil haunts thee in the likeness of a fat old man; a tun\
of man is thy companion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [498])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 548.75456 Tm
( That roasted Manningtree ox with the pudding in his belly, that reve\
rend vice, that grey )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(iniquity, that father ruffian, that vanity in years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [504])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.00456 Tm
( If sack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [524])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.25456 Tm
( No, my good lord; banish Peto, banish Bardolph, banish Poins; but fo\
r sweet Jack Falstaff, )Tj
T*
(kind Jack Falstaff, true Jack Falstaff, valiant Jack Falstaff, and there\
fore more valiant, being, as )Tj
T*
(he is, old Jack Falstaff, banish not him thy Harry\222s company: banish \
not him thy Harry\222s )Tj
T*
(company: banish plump Jack and banish all the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [528])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 366.50456 Tm
( Play out the play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [539])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 329.75456 Tm
( O monstrous! but one half-pennyworth of bread to this intolerable de\
al of sack!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [598])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.00456 Tm
( Glendower: At my nativity)Tj
T*
( The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes,)Tj
T*
( Of burning cressets; and at my birth)Tj
T*
( The frame and huge foundation of the earth)Tj
T*
( Shaked like a coward.)Tj
T*
( Hotspur: Why, so it would have done at the same season, if your mot\
her\222s cat had but kittened.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.25456 Tm
( And all the courses of my life do show)Tj
T*
( I am not in the roll of common men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [42])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.50456 Tm
( Glendower: I can call spirits from the vasty deep.)Tj
T*
( hoTspur: Why, so can I, or so can any man;)Tj
T*
( But will they come when you do call for them?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [53])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.75456 Tm
( I had rather be a kitten and cry mew)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 750.75456 Tm
( Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [128])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.00456 Tm
( That would set my teeth nothing on edge,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nothing so much as mincing poetry:)Tj
T*
( \222Tis like the forced gait of a shuffling nag.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [132])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.25456 Tm
( And such a deal of skimble-skamble stuff)Tj
T*
( As puts me from my faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [153])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( O! he\222s as tedious)Tj
T*
( As a tired horse, a railing wife;)Tj
T*
( Worse than a smoky house. I had rather live)Tj
T*
( With cheese and garlic in a windmill, far,)Tj
T*
( Than feed on cates and have him talk to me)Tj
T*
( In any summer-house in Christendom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [158])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( I understand thy kisses, and thou mine,)Tj
T*
( And that\222s a feeling disputation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [204])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Thy tongue)Tj
T*
( Makes Welsh as sweet as ditties highly penned,)Tj
T*
( Sung by a fair queen in a summer\222s bower,)Tj
T*
( With ravishing division, to her lute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [207])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Now I perceive the devil understands Welsh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [233])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( You swear like a comfit-maker\222s wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [252])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Swear me, Kate, like a lady as thou art,)Tj
T*
( A good mouth-filling oath.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( The skipping king, he ambled up and down)Tj
T*
( With shallow jesters and rash bavin wits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( Being daily swallowed by men\222s eyes,)Tj
T*
( They surfeited with honey and began)Tj
T*
( To loathe the taste of sweetness, whereof a little)Tj
T*
( More than a little is by much too much.)Tj
T*
( So, when he had occasion to be seen,)Tj
T*
( He was but as the cuckoo is in June,)Tj
ET
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( Heard, not regarded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( My near\222st and dearest enemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Well, I\222ll repent, and that suddenly, while I am in some liking; \
I shall be out of heart shortly, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and then I shall have no strength to repent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [5])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Company, villanous company, hath been the spoil of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [10])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Come, sing me a bawdy song; make me merry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [15])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn but I shall have my pocket pi\
cked?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [91])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( Thou knowest in the state of innocency Adam fell; and what should po\
or)Tj
T*
( Jack Falstaff do in the days of villany. Thou seest I have more fles\
h than another man, and )Tj
T*
(therefore more frailty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [184])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Where is his son,)Tj
T*
( That nimble-footed madcap Prince of Wales,)Tj
T*
( And his comrades, that daffed the world aside,)Tj
T*
( And bid it pass?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( I saw young Harry, with his beaver on,)Tj
T*
( His cushes on his thighs, gallantly armed,)Tj
T*
( Rise from the ground like feathered Mercury,)Tj
T*
( And vaulted with such ease into his seat,)Tj
T*
( As if an angel dropped down from the clouds,)Tj
T*
( To turn and wind a fiery Pegasus,)Tj
T*
( And witch the world with noble horsemanship.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Doomsday is near; die all, die merrily.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( I have misused the king\222s press damnably.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [13])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( The cankers of a calm world and a long peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [32])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( I am as vigilant as a cat to steal cream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [64])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( Tut, tut; good enough to toss; food for powder, food for powder; the\
y\222ll fill a pit as well as )Tj
T*
(better: tush, man, mortal men, mortal men.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [72])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Greatness knows itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( For mine own part, I could be well content)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To entertain the lag-end of my life)Tj
T*
( With quiet hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Rebellion lay in his way, and he found it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( I do not think a braver gentleman,)Tj
T*
( More active-valiant or more valiant-young,)Tj
T*
( More daring or more bold, is now alive)Tj
T*
( To grace this latter age with noble deeds.)Tj
T*
( For my part, I may speak it to my shame,)Tj
T*
( I have a truant been to chivalry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Falstaff: I would it were bed-time, Hal, and all well.)Tj
T*
( Prince: Why, thou owest God a death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [125].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Honour pricks me on. Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come\
on? how then? Can )Tj
T*
(honour set-to a leg? No. Or an arm? No. Or take away the grief of a woun\
d? No. Honour hath no )Tj
T*
(skill in surgery, then? No. What is honour? A word. What is that word, \
honour? Air. A trim )Tj
T*
(reckoning! Who hath it? He that died o\222 Wednesday. Doth he feel it? \
No. Doth he hear it? No. It )Tj
T*
(is insensible then? Yea, to the dead. But will it not live with the liv\
ing? No. Why? Detraction )Tj
T*
(will not suffer it. Therefore I\222ll none of it: honour is a mere scutc\
heon: and so ends my catechism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [131])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( O gentlemen! the time of life is short;)Tj
T*
( To spend that shortness basely were too long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Now, Esperance! Percy! and set on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( I like not such grinning honour as Sir Walter hath: give me life; wh\
ich if)Tj
T*
( I can save, so; if not, honour comes unlooked for, and there\222s an\
end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [61])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Two stars keep not their motion in one sphere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( But thought\222s the slave of life, and life time\222s fool;)Tj
T*
( And time, that takes survey of all the world,)Tj
T*
( Must have a stop.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [81])Tj
ET
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( Fare thee well, great heart!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ill-weaved ambition, how much art thou shrunk!)Tj
T*
( When that this body did contain a spirit,)Tj
T*
( A kingdom for it was too small a bound;)Tj
T*
( But now two paces of the vilest earth)Tj
T*
( Is room enough: this earth, that bears thee dead,)Tj
T*
( Bears not alive so stout a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [87])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Thy ignominy sleep with thee in the grave,)Tj
T*
( But not remembered in thy epitaph!)Tj
T*
( What! old acquaintance! could not all this flesh)Tj
T*
( Keep in a little life? Poor Jack, farewell!)Tj
T*
( I could have better spared a better man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [100])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( Lord, Lord, how this world is given to lying! I grant you I was down\
and out of breath; and so )Tj
T*
(was he; but we rose both at an instant, and fought a long hour by Shrews\
bury clock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( For my part, if a lie may do thee grace,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll gild it with the happiest terms I have.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [161])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( I\222ll purge, and leave sack, and live cleanly, as a nobleman shoul\
d do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 1\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 4, l. [168])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 343.04173 Tm
( 7.66.9 Henry IV, Part 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( Rumour is a pipe)Tj
T*
( Blown by surmises, jealousies, conjectures,)Tj
T*
( And of so easy and so plain a stop)Tj
T*
( That the blunt monster with uncounted heads,)Tj
T*
( The still-discordant wavering multitude,)Tj
T*
( Can play upon it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) induction, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.00456 Tm
( Yet the first bringer of unwelcome news)Tj
T*
( Hath but a losing office, and his tongue)Tj
T*
( Sounds ever after as a sullen bell,)Tj
T*
( Remembered knolling a departed friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( The brain of this foolish-compounded clay, man, is not able to inven\
t anything that tends to )Tj
T*
(laughter, more than I invent or is invented on me: I am not only witty i\
n myself, but the cause )Tj
T*
(that wit is in other men. I do here walk before thee like a sow that hat\
h overwhelmed all her litter )Tj
T*
(but one.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [7])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A rascally yea-forsooth knave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Your lordship, though not clean past your youth, hath yet some smack\
of age in you, some )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(relish of the saltness of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [111])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( This apoplexy is, as I take it, a kind of lethargy, an\222t please y\
our lordship; a kind of sleeping in )Tj
T*
(the blood, a whoreson tingling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [127])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking, that \
I am troubled withal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [139])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( I am as poor as Job, my lord, but not so patient.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [145])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( Have you not a moist eye, a dry hand, a yellow cheek, a white beard,\
a decreasing leg, an )Tj
T*
(increasing belly? Is not your voice broken, your wind short, your chin d\
ouble, your wit single, )Tj
T*
(and every part about you blasted with antiquity, and will you yet call y\
ourself young? Fie, fie, fie, )Tj
T*
(Sir John!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [206])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( My lord, I was born about three of the clock in the afternoon, with \
a white head, and something )Tj
T*
(of a round belly. For my voice, I have lost it with hollaing, and singin\
g of anthems.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [213])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Chief Justice: God send the prince a better companion!)Tj
T*
( Falstaff: God send the companion a better prince! I cannot rid my h\
ands of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [227])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( It was always yet the trick of our English nation, if they have a go\
od thing, to make it too )Tj
T*
(common.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [244])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( I would to God my name were not so terrible to the enemy as it is: I\
were better to be eaten to )Tj
T*
(death with rust than to be scoured to nothing with perpetual motion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [247])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( I can get no remedy against this consumption of the purse: borrowing\
only lingers and lingers )Tj
T*
(it out, but the disease is incurable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [268])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( When we mean to build,)Tj
T*
( We first survey the plot, then draw the model;)Tj
T*
( And when we see the figure of the house,)Tj
T*
( Then we must rate the cost of the erection;)Tj
T*
( Which if we find outweighs ability,)Tj
T*
( What do we then but draw anew the model)Tj
T*
( In fewer offices, or at last desist)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( To build at all?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [41])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A hundred mark is a long one for a poor lone woman to bear; and I ha\
ve borne, and borne, and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(borne; and have been fubbed off, and fubbed off, and fubbed off, from th\
is day to that day, that it )Tj
T*
(is a shame to be thought on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Away, you scullion! you rampallion! you fustilarian! I\222ll tickle \
your catastrophe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [67])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Thou didst swear to me upon a parcel-gilt goblet, sitting in my)Tj
T*
( Dolphin-chamber, at the round table, by a sea-coal fire, upon Wednes\
day in)Tj
T*
( Wheeson week.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [97])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Doth it not show vilely in me to desire small beer?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [7])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( I do now remember the poor creature, small beer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Let the end try the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [52])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( He was indeed the glass)Tj
T*
( Wherein the noble youth did dress themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Shall pack-horses,)Tj
T*
( And hollow pampered jades of Asia,)Tj
T*
( Which cannot go but thirty miles a day,)Tj
T*
( Compare with Caesars, and with Cannibals,)Tj
T*
( And Trojan Greeks? nay, rather damn them with)Tj
T*
( King Cerberus; and let the welkin roar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [176].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( By my troth, captain, these are very bitter words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [183])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Thou whoreson little tidy Bartholomew boar-pig, when wilt thou leave\
fighting o\222 days, and )Tj
T*
(foining o\222 nights, and begin to patch up thine old body for heaven?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [249])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( Is it not strange that desire should so many years outlive performan\
ce?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [283])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( O sleep! O gentle sleep!)Tj
T*
( Nature\222s soft nurse, how have I frighted thee,)Tj
T*
( That thou no more wilt weigh mine eyelids down)Tj
T*
( And steep my senses in forgetfulness?)Tj
T*
( Why rather, sleep, liest thou in smoky cribs,)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Upon uneasy pallets stretching thee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hushed with buzzing night-flies to thy slumber,)Tj
T*
( Than in the perfumed chambers of the great,)Tj
T*
( Under the canopies of costly state,)Tj
T*
( And lulled with sound of sweetest melody?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Then, happy low, lie down!)Tj
T*
( Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( O God! that one might read the book of fate,)Tj
T*
( And see the revolution of the times)Tj
T*
( Make mountains level, and the continent,\227)Tj
T*
( Weary of solid firmness,\227melt itself)Tj
T*
( Into the sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( O! if this were seen,)Tj
T*
( The happiest youth, viewing his progress through,)Tj
T*
( What perils past, what crosses to ensue,)Tj
T*
( Would shut the book, and sit him down and die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( There is a history in all men\222s lives,)Tj
T*
( Figuring the nature of the times deceased,)Tj
T*
( The which observed, a man may prophesy,)Tj
T*
( With a near aim, of the main chance of things)Tj
T*
( As yet not come to life, which in their seeds)Tj
T*
( And weak beginnings lie intreasur\351d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( A soldier is better accommodated than with a wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [73])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Most forcible Feeble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [181])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( We have heard the chimes at midnight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [231])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( I care not; a man can die but once; we owe God a death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [253].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( He that dies this year is quit for the next.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( Lord, Lord! how subject we old men are to this vice of lying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [329])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( When a\222 was naked, he was, for all the world, like a forked radis\
h, with a head fantastically )Tj
ET
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(carved upon it with a knife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [335])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Talks as familiarly of John a Gaunt as if he had been sworn brother \
to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [348])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Against ill chances men are ever merry,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But heaviness foreruns the good event.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( That I may justly say with the hook-nosed fellow of Rome, \221I came\
, saw, and overcame.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [44].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( A man cannot make him laugh; but that\222s no marvel; he drinks no w\
ine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( A good sherris-sack hath a two-fold operation in it. It ascends me i\
nto the brain; dries me there )Tj
T*
(all the foolish and dull and crudy vapours which environ it; makes it ap\
prehensive, quick, )Tj
T*
(forgetive, full of nimble fiery and delectable shapes; which, delivered \
o\222er to the voice, the )Tj
T*
(tongue, which is the birth, becomes excellent wit. The second property o\
f your excellent sherris )Tj
T*
(is, the warming of the blood; which, before cold and settled, left the l\
iver white and pale, which is )Tj
T*
(the badge of pusillanimity and cowardice: but the sherris warms it and m\
akes it course from the )Tj
T*
(inwards to the parts extreme. It illumineth the face, which, as a beacon\
, gives warning to all the )Tj
T*
(rest of this little kingdom, man, to arm; and then the vital commoners a\
nd inland petty spirits )Tj
T*
(muster me all to their captain, the heart, who, great and puffed up with\
this retinue, doth any deed )Tj
T*
(of courage; and this valour comes of sherris. So that skill in the weapo\
n is nothing without sack, )Tj
T*
(for that sets it a-work; and learning, a mere hoard of gold kept by a de\
vil till sack commences it )Tj
T*
(and sets it in act and use.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [103])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( If I had a thousand sons, the first human principle I would teach th\
em should be, to forswear )Tj
T*
(thin potations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [133])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( O polished perturbation! golden care!)Tj
T*
( That keep\222st the ports of slumber open wide)Tj
T*
( To many a watchful night! Sleep with it now!)Tj
T*
( Yet not so sound, and half so deeply sweet)Tj
T*
( As he whose brow with homely biggin bound)Tj
T*
( Snores out the watch of night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( This sleep is sound indeed; this is a sleep)Tj
T*
( That from this golden rigol hath divorced)Tj
T*
( So many English kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Thy wish was father, Harry, to that thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 91)Tj
ET
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( Commit)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The oldest sins the newest kind of ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 124)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( It hath been prophesied to me many years)Tj
T*
( I should not die but in Jerusalem,)Tj
T*
( Which vainly I supposed the Holy Land.)Tj
T*
( But bear me to that chamber; there I\222ll lie:)Tj
T*
( In that Jerusalem shall Harry die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 235)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Any pretty little tiny kickshaws, tell William Cook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( This is the English, not the Turkish court;)Tj
T*
( Not Amurath an Amurath succeeds,)Tj
T*
( But Harry, Harry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Sorrow so royally in you appears,)Tj
T*
( That I will deeply put the fashion on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( My father is gone wild into his grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( \222Tis merry in hall when beards wag all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( A foutra for the world, and worldlings base!)Tj
T*
( I speak of Africa and golden joys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [100])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Under which king, Bezonian? speak, or die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [116])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Let us take any man\222s horses; the laws of England are at my comma\
ndment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [139])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( I know thee not, old man: fall to thy prayers;)Tj
T*
( How ill white hairs become a fool and jester!)Tj
T*
( I have long dreamed of such a kind of man,)Tj
T*
( So surfeit-swelled, so old, and so profane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 5, l. [52])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Make less thy body hence, and more thy grace;)Tj
T*
( Leave gormandising; know the grave doth gape)Tj
T*
( For thee thrice wider than for other men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.92047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 5, l. [57])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.00456 Tm
( Presume not that I am the thing I was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 5, l. [61])Tj
ET
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Q
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0 0 612 792 re
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BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Where, for anything I know, Falstaff shall die of a sweat, unless al\
ready a\222 be killed with your )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hard opinions; for Oldcastle died a martyr, and this is not the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Henry IV, Part 2\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 5, epilogue, l. [32])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 688.04173 Tm
( 7.66.10 Henry V)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.75456 Tm
( O! for a Muse of fire, that would ascend)Tj
T*
( The brightest heaven of invention;)Tj
T*
( A kingdom for a stage, princes to act)Tj
T*
( And monarchs to behold the swelling scene.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 596.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) chorus, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.00456 Tm
( Can this cockpit hold)Tj
T*
( The vasty fields of France? or may we cram)Tj
T*
( Within this wooden O the very casques)Tj
T*
( That did affright the air at Agincourt?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) chorus, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 485.25456 Tm
( Consideration like an angel came,)Tj
T*
( And whipped the offending Adam out of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.50456 Tm
( When he speaks,)Tj
T*
( The air, a chartered libertine, is still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( O noble English! that could entertain)Tj
T*
( With half their forces the full pride of France,)Tj
T*
( And let another half stand laughing by,)Tj
T*
( All out of work, and cold for action.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( And make your chronicle as rich with praise)Tj
T*
( As is the owse and bottom of the sea)Tj
T*
( With sunken wrack and sumless treasuries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 163)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( For so work the honey-bees,)Tj
T*
( Creatures that by a rule in nature teach)Tj
T*
( The act of order to a peopled kingdom.)Tj
T*
( They have a king and officers of sorts;)Tj
T*
( Where some, like magistrates, correct at home,)Tj
T*
( Others, like merchants, venture trade abroad,)Tj
T*
( Others, like soldiers, arm\351d in their stings,)Tj
T*
( Make boot upon the summer\222s velvet buds;)Tj
T*
( Which pillage they with merry march bring home)Tj
T*
( To the tent-royal of their emperor:)Tj
ET
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Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Who, busied in his majesty, surveys)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The singing masons building roofs of gold,)Tj
T*
( The civil citizens kneading up the honey,)Tj
T*
( The poor mechanic porters crowding in)Tj
T*
( Their heavy burdens at his narrow gate,)Tj
T*
( The sad-eyed justice, with his surly hum,)Tj
T*
( Delivering o\222er to executors pale)Tj
T*
( The lazy yawning drone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( King Henry: What treasure, uncle?)Tj
T*
( Exeter: Tennis-balls, my liege.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 258)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( His present and your pains we thank you for:)Tj
T*
( When we have matched our rackets to these balls,)Tj
T*
( We will in France, by God\222s grace, play a set)Tj
T*
( Shall strike his father\222s crown into the hazard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Now all the youth of England are on fire,)Tj
T*
( And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies;)Tj
T*
( Now thrive the armourers, and honour\222s thought)Tj
T*
( Reigns solely in the breast of every man:)Tj
T*
( They sell the pasture now to buy the horse,)Tj
T*
( Following the mirror of all Christian kings,)Tj
T*
( With wing\351d heels, as English Mercuries.)Tj
T*
( For now sits Expectation in the air)Tj
T*
( And hides a sword from hilts unto the point)Tj
T*
( With crowns imperial, crowns and coronets,)Tj
T*
( Promised to Harry and his followers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, chorus, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( O England! model to thy inward greatness,)Tj
T*
( Like little body with a mighty heart,)Tj
T*
( What might\222st thou do, that honour would thee do,)Tj
T*
( Were all thy children kind and natural!)Tj
T*
( But see thy fault!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, chorus, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( I dare not fight; but I will wink and hold out mine iron.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [7])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( For, lambkins, we will live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [134])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Would I were with him, wheresome\222er he is, either in heaven or in\
hell.)Tj
ET
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Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [7])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( He\222s in Arthur\222s bosom, if ever man went to Arthur\222s bosom.\
A\222 made a finer end, and went )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(away an it had been any christom child; a\222 parted even just between t\
welve and one, even at the )Tj
T*
(turning o\222 the tide: for after I saw him fumble with the sheets and p\
lay with flowers and smile )Tj
T*
(upon his fingers\222 ends, I knew there was but one way; for his nose wa\
s as sharp as a pen, and a\222 )Tj
T*
(babbled of green fields.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [9])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( So a\222 cried out \221God, God, God!\222 three or four times: now I\
, to comfort him, bid him a\222 should )Tj
T*
(not think of God, I hoped there was no need to trouble himself with any \
such thoughts yet. So a\222 )Tj
T*
(bade me lay more clothes on his feet: I put my hand into the bed and fel\
t them, and they were as )Tj
T*
(cold as any stone; then I felt to his knees, and so upward, and upward, \
and all was as cold as any )Tj
T*
(stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Boy: Yes, that a\222 did; and said they were devils incarnate. )Tj
T*
( Hostess: A\222 never could abide carnation; \222twas a colour he ne\
ver liked. boy: A\222 said once, the )Tj
T*
(devil would have him about women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [33])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Trust none;)Tj
T*
( For oaths are straws, men\222s faiths are wafer-cakes,)Tj
T*
( And hold-fast is the only dog, my duck.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [53])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more;)Tj
T*
( Or close the wall up with our English dead!)Tj
T*
( In peace there\222s nothing so becomes a man)Tj
T*
( As modest stillness and humility:)Tj
T*
( But when the blast of war blows in our ears,)Tj
T*
( Then imitate the action of the tiger;)Tj
T*
( Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood,)Tj
T*
( Disguise fair nature with hard-favoured rage;)Tj
T*
( Then lend the eye a terrible aspect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( On, on you noblest English!)Tj
T*
( Whose blood is fet from fathers of war-proof;)Tj
T*
( Fathers that, like so many Alexanders,)Tj
T*
( Have in these parts from morn till even fought,)Tj
T*
( And sheathed their swords for lack of argument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( And you, good yeomen,)Tj
T*
( Whose limbs were made in England, show us here)Tj
T*
( The mettle of your pasture.)Tj
ET
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Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I see you stand like greyhounds in the slips,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Straining upon the start. The game\222s afoot:)Tj
T*
( Follow your spirit; and, upon this charge)Tj
T*
( Cry \221God for Harry! England and Saint George!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Would I were in an alehouse in London! I would give all my fame for \
a pot of ale, and safety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [13])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Men of few words are the best men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( A\222 never broke any man\222s head but his own, and that was agains\
t a post when he was drunk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [43])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( One Bardolph, if your majesty know the man: his face is all bubukles\
, and whelks, and knobs, )Tj
T*
(and flames o\222 fire. I)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 6, l. [110])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Give them great meals of beef and iron and steel, they will eat like\
wolves and fight like devils.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 7, l. [166])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Now entertain conjecture of a time)Tj
T*
( When creeping murmur and the poring dark)Tj
T*
( Fills the wide vessel of the universe.)Tj
T*
( From camp to camp, through the foul womb of night,)Tj
T*
( The hum of either army stilly sounds,)Tj
T*
( That the fixed sentinels almost receive)Tj
T*
( The secret whispers of each other\222s watch.)Tj
T*
( Fire answers fire, and through their paly flames)Tj
T*
( Each battle sees the other\222s umbered face:)Tj
T*
( Steed threatens steed, in high and boastful neighs)Tj
T*
( Piercing the night\222s dull ear; and from the tents)Tj
T*
( The armourers, accomplishing the knights,)Tj
T*
( With busy hammers closing rivets up,)Tj
T*
( Give dreadful note of preparation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, chorus, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( The royal captain of this ruin\222d band.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, chorus, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( A largess universal, like the sun)Tj
T*
( His liberal eye doth give to every one,)Tj
T*
( Thawing cold fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, chorus, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( A little touch of Harry in the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, chorus, l. 47)Tj
ET
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( Yet sit and see;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Minding true things by what their mockeries be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, chorus, l. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Gloucester, \222tis true that we are in great danger;)Tj
T*
( The greater therefore should our courage be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Thus may we gather honey from the weed,)Tj
T*
( And make a moral of the devil himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Discuss unto me; art thou officer?)Tj
T*
( Or art thou base, common and popular?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The king\222s a bawcock, and a heart of gold,)Tj
T*
( A lad of life, an imp of fame,)Tj
T*
( Of parents good, of fist most valiant:)Tj
T*
( I kiss his dirty shoe, and from my heart-string)Tj
T*
( I love the lovely bully.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( If you would take the pains but to examine the wars of Pompey the Gr\
eat, you shall find, I )Tj
T*
(warrant you, that there is no tiddle-taddle nor pibble-pabble in Pompey\222\
s camp.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [69])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Though it appear a little out of fashion,)Tj
T*
( There is much care and valour in this Welshman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [86])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( I think the king is but a man, as I am: the violet smells to him as \
it doth to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [106])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( I am afeard there are few die well that die in a battle; for how can\
they charitably dispose of )Tj
T*
(any thing when blood is their argument?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [149])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Every subject\222s duty is the king\222s; but every subject\222s sou\
l is his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [189])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Upon the king! let us our lives, our souls,)Tj
T*
( Our debts, our careful wives,)Tj
T*
( Our children, and our sins lay on the king!)Tj
T*
( We must bear all. O hard condition!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [250])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( What infinite heart\222s ease)Tj
T*
( Must kings neglect, that private men enjoy!)Tj
T*
( And what have kings that privates have not too,)Tj
T*
( Save ceremony, save general ceremony?)Tj
ET
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Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [256])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \222Tis not the balm, the sceptre and the ball,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,)Tj
T*
( The intertissued robe of gold and pearl,)Tj
T*
( The farc\351d title running \222fore the king,)Tj
T*
( The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp)Tj
T*
( That beats upon the high shore of this world,)Tj
T*
( No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,)Tj
T*
( Not all these, laid in bed majestical,)Tj
T*
( Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave,)Tj
T*
( Who with a body filled and vacant mind)Tj
T*
( Gets him to rest, crammed with distressful bread;)Tj
T*
( Never sees horrid night, the child of hell,)Tj
T*
( But, like a lackey, from the rise to set)Tj
T*
( Sweats in the eye of Phoebus, and all night)Tj
T*
( Sleeps in Elysium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [280])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( O God of battles! steel my soldiers\222 hearts;)Tj
T*
( Possess them not with fear; take from them now)Tj
T*
( The sense of reckoning, if the oppos\351d numbers)Tj
T*
( Pluck their hearts from them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [309])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( O! that we now had here)Tj
T*
( But one ten thousand of those men in England)Tj
T*
( That do no work to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( If we are marked to die, we are enow)Tj
T*
( To do our country loss; and if to live,)Tj
T*
( The fewer men, the greater share of honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( If it be a sin to covet honour)Tj
T*
( I am the most offending soul alive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( He which hath no stomach to this fight,)Tj
T*
( Let him depart; his passport shall be made,)Tj
T*
( And crowns for convoy put into his purse:)Tj
T*
( We would not die in that man\222s company)Tj
T*
( That fears his fellowship to die with us.)Tj
T*
( This day is called the feast of Crispian:)Tj
T*
( He that outlives this day and comes safe home,)Tj
ET
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( Will stand a tip-toe when this day is named,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And rouse him at the name of Crispian.)Tj
T*
( He that shall live this day, and see old age,)Tj
T*
( Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,)Tj
T*
( And say, \221To-morrow is Saint Crispian:\222)Tj
T*
( Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars,)Tj
T*
( And say, \221These wounds I had on Crispin\222s day.\222)Tj
T*
( Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,)Tj
T*
( But he\222ll remember with advantages)Tj
T*
( What feats he did that day. Then shall our names,)Tj
T*
( Familiar in his mouth as household words,)Tj
T*
( Harry the King, Bedford and Exeter,)Tj
T*
( Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester,)Tj
T*
( Be in their flowing cups freshly remembered.)Tj
T*
( This story shall the good man teach his son;)Tj
T*
( And Crispin Crispian shall ne\222er go by,)Tj
T*
( From this day to the ending of the world,)Tj
T*
( But we in it shall be remember\351d;)Tj
T*
( We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;)Tj
T*
( For he to-day that sheds his blood with me)Tj
T*
( Shall be my brother; be he ne\222er so vile)Tj
T*
( This day shall gentle his condition:)Tj
T*
( And gentlemen in England, now a-bed)Tj
T*
( Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,)Tj
T*
( And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks)Tj
T*
( That fought with us upon Saint Crispin\222s day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( Thou damned and luxurious mountain goat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 4, l. [20])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( There is a river in Macedon, and there is also moreover a river at M\
onmouth: it is called Wye )Tj
T*
(at Monmouth; but it is out of my prains what is the name of the other ri\
ver; but \222tis all one, \222tis )Tj
T*
(alike as my fingers is to my fingers, and there is salmons in both.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 177.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 7, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( But now behold,)Tj
T*
( In the quick forge and working-house of thought,)Tj
T*
( How London doth pour out her citizens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, chorus, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( There is occasions and causes why and wherefore in all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [3])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( Not for Cadwallader and all his goats.)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( By this leek, I will most horribly revenge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [49])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Let it not disgrace me)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If I demand before this royal view,)Tj
T*
( What rub or what impediment there is,)Tj
T*
( Why that the naked, poor, and mangl\351d Peace,)Tj
T*
( Dear nurse of arts, plenties, and joyful births,)Tj
T*
( Should not in this best garden of the world,)Tj
T*
( Our fertile France, put up her lovely visage?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Her fallow leas)Tj
T*
( The darnel, hemlock and rank fumitory)Tj
T*
( Doth root upon, while that the coulter rusts)Tj
T*
( That should deracinate such savagery;)Tj
T*
( The even mead, that erst brought sweetly forth)Tj
T*
( The freckled cowslip, burnet, and green clover,)Tj
T*
( Wanting the scythe, all uncorrected, rank,)Tj
T*
( Conceives by idleness, and nothing teems)Tj
T*
( But hateful docks, rough thistles, kecksies, burs,)Tj
T*
( Losing both beauty and utility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( For these fellows of infinite tongue, that can rhyme themselves into\
ladies\222 favours, they do )Tj
T*
(always reason themselves out again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [162])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Shall not thou and I, between Saint Denis and Saint George, compound\
a boy, half-French, )Tj
T*
(half-English, that shall go to Constantinople and take the Turk by the b\
eard?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [218])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( It is not a fashion for the maids in France to kiss before they are \
married.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [287])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( God, the best maker of all marriages,)Tj
T*
( Combine your hearts in one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [387])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Thus far, with rough and all-unable pen,)Tj
T*
( Our bending author hath pursued the story,)Tj
T*
( In little room confining mighty men,)Tj
T*
( Mangling by starts the full course of their glory.)Tj
T*
( Small time, but in that small most greatly lived)Tj
T*
( This star of England. Fortune made his sword,)Tj
T*
( By which the world\222s best garden he achieved,)Tj
ET
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( And of it made his son imperial lord.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Henry the Sixth, in infant bands crowned King)Tj
T*
( Of France and England, did this king succeed,)Tj
T*
( Whose state so many had the managing)Tj
T*
( That they lost France and made this England bleed;)Tj
T*
( Which oft our stage hath shown; and for their sake)Tj
T*
( In your fair minds let this acceptance take.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Henry V\222 \(1599\) epilogue)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 598.04173 Tm
( 7.66.11 Henry VI, Part 1)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( Hung be the heavens with black, yield day to night!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( Expect Saint Martin\222s summer, halcyon days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 131)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( Unbidden guests)Tj
T*
( Are often welcomest when they are gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.50456 Tm
( But in these nice sharp quillets of the law,)Tj
T*
( Good faith, I am no wiser than a daw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( Plantagenet: Let him that is a true-born gentleman,)Tj
T*
( And stands upon the honour of his birth,)Tj
T*
( If he suppose that I have pleaded truth,)Tj
T*
( From off this brier pluck a white rose with me.)Tj
T*
( Somerset: Let him that is no coward nor no flatterer,)Tj
T*
( But dare maintain the party of the truth,)Tj
T*
( Pluck a red rose from off this thorn with me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( Delays have dangerous ends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( I owe him little duty and less love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( So doth the swan her downy cygnets save,)Tj
T*
( Keeping them prisoners underneath her wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( She\222s beautiful and therefore to be wooed;)Tj
T*
( She is a woman, therefore to be won.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 1\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 78.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 55.79173 Tm
( 7.66.12 Henry VI, Part 2)Tj
ET
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( Put forth thy hand, reach at the glorious gold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Is this the fashion of the court of England?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is this the government of Britain\222s isle,)Tj
T*
( And this the royalty of Albion\222s king?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [46])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( She bears a duke\222s revenues on her back,)Tj
T*
( And in her heart she scorns our poverty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Could I come near your beauty with my nails)Tj
T*
( I\222d set my ten commandments in your face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [144])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted!)Tj
T*
( Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just,)Tj
T*
( And he but naked, though locked up in steel,)Tj
T*
( Whose conscience with injustice is corrupted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 232)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Forbear to judge, for we are sinners all.)Tj
T*
( Close up his eyes, and draw the curtain close;)Tj
T*
( And let us all to meditation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( The gaudy, blabbing, and remorseful day)Tj
T*
( Is crept into the bosom of the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( True nobility is exempt from fear:)Tj
T*
( More can I bear than you dare execute.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( I say it was never merry world in England since gentlemen came up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [10])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Cade: There shall be in England seven halfpenny loaves sold for a p\
enny; the three-hooped pot )Tj
T*
(shall have ten hoops; and I will make it felony to drink small beer. All\
the realm shall be in )Tj
T*
(common, and in Cheapside shall my palfrey go to grass. And when I am kin\
g,\227as king I will be,)Tj
T*
(\227...there shall be no money; all shall eat and drink on my score; and\
I will apparel them all in )Tj
T*
(one livery, that they may agree like brothers, and worship me their lord\
.)Tj
T*
( Dick: The first thing we do, let\222s kill all the lawyers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [73])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb\
should be made parchment? )Tj
T*
( that parchment, being scribbled o\222er, should undo a man?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [88])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( And Adam was a gardener.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [146])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Thou hast most traitorously corrupted the youth of the realm in erec\
ting a grammar school: )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( and whereas, before, our forefathers had no other books but the score a\
nd the tally, thou hast )Tj
T*
(caused printing to be used; and, contrary to the king, his crown and dig\
nity, thou hast built a )Tj
T*
(paper-mill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 7, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Away with him! away with him! he speaks Latin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 2\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 7, l. [62])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 596.54173 Tm
( 7.66.13 Henry VI, Part 3)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 575.25456 Tm
( O tiger\222s heart wrapped in a woman\222s hide!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 538.50456 Tm
( This battle fares like to the morning\222s war,)Tj
T*
( When dying clouds contend with growing light,)Tj
T*
( What time the shepherd, blowing of his nails,)Tj
T*
( Can neither call it perfect day nor night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.75456 Tm
( O God! methinks it were a happy life,)Tj
T*
( To be no better than a homely swain;)Tj
T*
( To sit upon a hill, as I do now,)Tj
T*
( To carve out dials, quaintly, point by point,)Tj
T*
( Thereby to see the minutes how they run,)Tj
T*
( How many make the hour full complete;)Tj
T*
( How many hours bring about the day;)Tj
T*
( How many days will finish up the year;)Tj
T*
( How many years a mortal man may live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( Gives not the hawthorn bush a sweeter shade)Tj
T*
( To shepherds, looking on their silly sheep,)Tj
T*
( Than doth a rich embroidered canopy)Tj
T*
( To kings that fear their subjects\222 treachery?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 5, l. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( Peace! impudent and shameless Warwick, peace;)Tj
T*
( Proud setter up and puller down of kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( A little fire is quickly trodden out,)Tj
T*
( Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 8, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.75456 Tm
( Lo! now my glory smeared in dust and blood;)Tj
T*
( My parks, my walks, my manors that I had,)Tj
ET
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( Even now forsake me; and, of all my lands)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is nothing left me but my body\222s length.)Tj
T*
( Why, what is pomp, rule, reign, but earth and dust?)Tj
T*
( And, live we how we can, yet die we must.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Suspicion always haunts the guilty mind;)Tj
T*
( The thief doth fear each bush an officer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Down, down to hell; and say I sent thee thither.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VI, Part 3\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 67)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 560.54173 Tm
( 7.66.14 Henry VIII)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 539.25456 Tm
( Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot)Tj
T*
( That it do singe yourself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 140)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( If I chance to talk a little wild, forgive me;)Tj
T*
( I had it from my father.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( Go with me, like good angels, to my end;)Tj
T*
( And, as the long divorce of steel falls on me,)Tj
T*
( Make of your prayers one sweet sacrifice,)Tj
T*
( And lift my soul to heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( Chamberlain: It seems the marriage with his brother\222s wife)Tj
T*
( Has crept too near his conscience.)Tj
T*
( Suffolk: No; his conscience)Tj
T*
( Has crept too near another lady.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [17])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 248.25456 Tm
( Heaven will one day open)Tj
T*
( The king\222s eyes, that so long have slept upon)Tj
T*
( This bold bad man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [42].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 175.50456 Tm
( I would not be a queen)Tj
T*
( For all the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( Orpheus with his lute made trees,)Tj
T*
( And the mountain-tops that freeze,)Tj
T*
( Bow themselves when he did sing:)Tj
T*
( To his music plants and flowers)Tj
T*
( Ever sprung; as sun and showers)Tj
ET
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( There had made a lasting spring.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Everything that heard him play,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Even the billows of the sea,)Tj
T*
( Hung their heads, and then lay by.)Tj
T*
( In sweet music is such art,)Tj
T*
( Killing care and grief of heart)Tj
T*
( Fall asleep, or hearing die.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.50456 Tm
( Heaven is above all yet; there sits a judge,)Tj
T*
( That no king can corrupt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.75456 Tm
( A spleeny Lutheran.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.00456 Tm
( Then to breakfast with)Tj
T*
( What appetite you have.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 203)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.25456 Tm
( I shall fall)Tj
T*
( Like a bright exhalation in the evening,)Tj
T*
( And no man see me more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( In all you writ to Rome, or else)Tj
T*
( To foreign princes, Ego et Rex meus)Tj
T*
( Was still inscribed; in which you brought the king)Tj
T*
( To be your servant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 313)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( Farewell! a long farewell, to all my greatness!)Tj
T*
( This is the state of man: to-day he puts forth)Tj
T*
( The tender leaves of hope; to-morrow blossoms,)Tj
T*
( And bears his blushing honours thick upon him;)Tj
T*
( The third day comes a frost, a killing frost;)Tj
T*
( And, when he thinks, good easy man, full surely)Tj
T*
( His greatness is a-ripening, nips his root,)Tj
T*
( And then he falls, as I do. I have ventured,)Tj
T*
( Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders,)Tj
T*
( This many summers in a sea of glory,)Tj
T*
( But far beyond my depth: my high-blown pride)Tj
T*
( At length broke under me, and now has left me)Tj
T*
( Weary and old with service, to the mercy)Tj
T*
( Of a rude stream that must for ever hide me.)Tj
T*
( Vain pomp and glory of this world, I hate ye:)Tj
ET
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( I feel my heart new opened. O how wretched)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is that poor man that hangs on princes\222 favours!)Tj
T*
( There is, betwixt that smile we would aspire to,)Tj
T*
( That sweet aspect of princes, and their ruin,)Tj
T*
( More pangs and fears than wars or women have;)Tj
T*
( And when he falls, he falls like Lucifer,)Tj
T*
( Never to hope again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 352)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( A peace above all earthly dignities,)Tj
T*
( A still and quiet conscience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 380)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( A load would sink a navy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 384)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition:)Tj
T*
( By that sin fell the angels; how can man then,)Tj
T*
( The image of his Maker, hope to win by\222t?)Tj
T*
( Love thyself last: cherish those hearts that hate thee;)Tj
T*
( Corruption wins not more than honesty.)Tj
T*
( Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace,)Tj
T*
( To silence envious tongues: be just, and fear not.)Tj
T*
( Let all the ends thou aim\222st at be thy country\222s,)Tj
T*
( Thy God\222s, and truth\222s: then if thou fall\222st, O Cromwell!)Tj
T*
( Thou fall\222st a blessed martyr.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 441)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Had I but served my God with half the zeal)Tj
T*
( I served my king, he would not in mine age)Tj
T*
( Have left me naked to mine enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 456)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( She had all the royal makings of a queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( An old man, broken with the storms of state)Tj
T*
( Is come to lay his weary bones among ye;)Tj
T*
( Give him a little earth for charity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( He gave his honours to the world again,)Tj
T*
( His blessed part to Heaven, and slept in peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( So may he rest; his faults lie gently on him!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( He was a man)Tj
ET
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( Of an unbounded stomach.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( His promises were, as he then was, mighty;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But his performance, as he is now, nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Men\222s evil manners live in brass; their virtues)Tj
T*
( We write in water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( He was a scholar, and a ripe and good one;)Tj
T*
( Exceeding wise, fair-spoken, and persuading:)Tj
T*
( Lofty and sour to them that loved him not;)Tj
T*
( But, to those men that sought him, sweet as summer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Those twins of learning that he raised in you,)Tj
T*
( Ipswich and Oxford!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( After my death I wish no other herald,)Tj
T*
( No other speaker of my living actions,)Tj
T*
( To keep mine honour from corruption,)Tj
T*
( Than such an honest chronicler as Griffith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( I had thought)Tj
T*
( They had parted so much honesty among \222em,\227)Tj
T*
( At least, good manners,\227as not thus to suffer)Tj
T*
( A man of his place, and so near our favour,)Tj
T*
( To dance attendance on their lordships\222 pleasures,)Tj
T*
( And at the door too, like a post with packets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( \222Tis a cruelty)Tj
T*
( To load a falling man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 2, l. /76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( In her days every man shall eat in safety)Tj
T*
( Under his own vine what he plants; and sing)Tj
T*
( The merry songs of peace to all his neighbours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( Those about her)Tj
T*
( From her shall read the perfect ways of honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Nor shall this peace sleep with her; but as when)Tj
T*
( The bird of wonder dies, the maiden phoenix,)Tj
ET
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( Her ashes new-create another heir)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As great in admiration as herself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Some come to take their ease)Tj
T*
( And sleep an act or two.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Henry VIII\222 \(1613\) act 5, epilogue, l. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 633.29173 Tm
( 7.66.15 Julius Caesar)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.00456 Tm
( Hence! home, you idle creatures, get you home:)Tj
T*
( Is this a holiday?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 557.25456 Tm
( You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things!)Tj
T*
( O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome,)Tj
T*
( Knew you not Pompey?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [39])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( Caesar: Who is it in the press that calls on me?)Tj
T*
( I hear a tongue, shriller than all the music,)Tj
T*
( Cry \221Caesar\222. Speak; Caesar is turned to hear.)Tj
T*
( Soothsayer: Beware the ides of March.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 393.75456 Tm
( He is a dreamer; let us leave him: pass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.00456 Tm
( I am not gamesome: I do lack some part)Tj
T*
( Of that quick spirit that is in Antony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( Brutus, I do observe you now of late:)Tj
T*
( I have not from your eyes that gentleness)Tj
T*
( And show of love as I was wont to have:)Tj
T*
( You bear too stubborn and too strange a hand)Tj
T*
( Over your friend that loves you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( Poor Brutus, with himself at war,)Tj
T*
( Forgets the shows of love to other men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Set honour in one eye and death i\222 the other,)Tj
T*
( And I will look on both indifferently.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Well, honour is the subject of my story.)Tj
T*
( I cannot tell what you and other men)Tj
T*
( Think of this life: but, for my single self,)Tj
ET
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( I had as lief not be as live to be)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In awe of such a thing as I myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I was born free as Caesar; so were you:)Tj
T*
( We both have fed as well, and we can both)Tj
T*
( Endure the winter\222s cold as well as he:)Tj
T*
( For once, upon a raw and gusty day,)Tj
T*
( The troubled Tiber chafing with her shores,)Tj
T*
( Caesar said to me, \221Dar\222st thou, Cassius, now,)Tj
T*
( Leap in with me into this angry flood,)Tj
T*
( And swim to yonder point?\222 Upon the word,)Tj
T*
( Accoutr\351d as I was, I plung\351d in,)Tj
T*
( And bade him follow...)Tj
T*
( But ere we could arrive the point proposed,)Tj
T*
( Caesar cried, \221Help me, Cassius, or I sink!\222)Tj
T*
( I, as Aeneas, our great ancestor,)Tj
T*
( Did from the flames of Troy upon his shoulder)Tj
T*
( The old Anchises bear, so from the waves of Tiber)Tj
T*
( Did I the tired Caesar. And this man)Tj
T*
( Is now become a god.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( He had a fever when he was in Spain,)Tj
T*
( And when the fit was on him, I did mark)Tj
T*
( How he did shake; \222tis true, this god did shake;)Tj
T*
( His coward lips did from their colour fly,)Tj
T*
( And that same eye whose bend doth awe the world)Tj
T*
( Did lose his lustre.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( Ye gods, it doth amaze me,)Tj
T*
( A man of such a feeble temper should)Tj
T*
( So get the start of the majestic world,)Tj
T*
( And bear the palm alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world)Tj
T*
( Like a Colossus; and we petty men)Tj
T*
( Walk under his huge legs, and peep about)Tj
T*
( To find ourselves dishonourable graves.)Tj
T*
( Men at some time are masters of their fates:)Tj
T*
( The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,)Tj
T*
( But in ourselves, that we are underlings.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \221Brutus\222 will start a spirit as soon as \221Caesar\222.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Now in the names of all the gods at once,)Tj
T*
( Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed,)Tj
T*
( That he is grown so great?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( When could they say, till now, that talked of Rome,)Tj
T*
( That her wide walls encompassed but one man?)Tj
T*
( Now is it Rome indeed and room enough,)Tj
T*
( When there is in it but one only man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Let me have men about me that are fat;)Tj
T*
( Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o\222 nights;)Tj
T*
( Yond\222 Cassius has a lean and hungry look;)Tj
T*
( He thinks too much: such men are dangerous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 191)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Would he were fatter! but I fear him not:)Tj
T*
( Yet if my name were liable to fear,)Tj
T*
( I do not know the man I should avoid)Tj
T*
( So soon as that spare Cassius. He reads much;)Tj
T*
( He is a great observer, and he looks)Tj
T*
( Quite through the deeds of men; he loves no plays,)Tj
T*
( As thou dost, Antony; he hears no music;)Tj
T*
( Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort)Tj
T*
( As if he mocked himself, and scorned his spirit,)Tj
T*
( That could be moved to smile at anything.)Tj
T*
( Such men as he be never at heart\222s ease,)Tj
T*
( Whiles they behold a greater than themselves,)Tj
T*
( And therefore are they very dangerous.)Tj
T*
( I rather tell thee what is to be feared)Tj
T*
( Than what I fear, for always I am Caesar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 197)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( \222Tis very like: he hath the falling sickness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [255])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Cassius: Did Cicero say any thing?)Tj
T*
( Casca: Ay, he spoke Greek.)Tj
T*
( Cassius: To what effect?)Tj
T*
( Casca: Nay, an I tell you that, I\222ll ne\222er look you i\222 the\
face again; but those that understood )Tj
T*
(him smiled at one another and shook their heads; but, for mine own part,\
it was Greek to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [282])Tj
ET
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( Yesterday the bird of night did sit,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Even at noon-day, upon the market-place,)Tj
T*
( Hooting and shrieking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Cassius from bondage will deliver Cassius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Nor stony tower, nor walls of beaten brass,)Tj
T*
( Nor airless dungeon, nor strong links of iron,)Tj
T*
( Can be retentive to the strength of spirit;)Tj
T*
( But life, being weary of these worldly bars,)Tj
T*
( Never lacks power to dismiss itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( It is the bright day that brings forth the adder;)Tj
T*
( And that craves wary walking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( \222Tis a common proof,)Tj
T*
( That lowliness is young ambition\222s ladder,)Tj
T*
( Whereto the climber-upward turns his face;)Tj
T*
( But when he once attains the upmost round,)Tj
T*
( He then unto the ladder turns his back,)Tj
T*
( Looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees)Tj
T*
( By which he did ascend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Between the acting of a dreadful thing)Tj
T*
( And the first motion, all the interim is)Tj
T*
( Like a phantasma, or a hideous dream:)Tj
T*
( The genius and the mortal instruments)Tj
T*
( Are then in council; and the state of man,)Tj
T*
( Like to a little kingdom, suffers then)Tj
T*
( The nature of an insurrection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( O conspiracy!)Tj
T*
( Sham\222st thou to show thy dangerous brow by night,)Tj
T*
( When evils are most free?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Let us be sacrificers, but not butchers, Caius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( Let\222s carve him as a dish fit for the gods,)Tj
T*
( Not hew him as a carcass fit for hounds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 173)Tj
ET
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( For he is superstitious grown of late,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quite from the main opinion he held once)Tj
T*
( Of fantasy, of dreams, and ceremonies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 195)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( But when I tell him he hates flatterers,)Tj
T*
( He says he does, being then most flattered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 207)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 230)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( What! is Brutus sick,)Tj
T*
( And will he steal out of his wholesome bed)Tj
T*
( To dare the vile contagion of the night?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 263)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( That great vow)Tj
T*
( Which did incorporate and make us one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 272)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Portia: Dwell I but in the suburbs)Tj
T*
( Of your good pleasure? If it be no more,)Tj
T*
( Portia is Brutus\222 harlot, not his wife.)Tj
T*
( Brutus: You are my true and honourable wife,)Tj
T*
( As dear to me as are the ruddy drops)Tj
T*
( That visit my sad heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 285)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( I grant I am a woman, but, withal,)Tj
T*
( A woman that Lord Brutus took to wife;)Tj
T*
( I grant I am a woman, but, withal,)Tj
T*
( A woman well-reputed, Cato\222s daughter.)Tj
T*
( Think you I am no stronger than my sex,)Tj
T*
( Being so fathered and so husbanded?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 292)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Nor heaven nor earth have been at peace to-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Calphurnia: When beggars die, there are no comets seen;)Tj
T*
( The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes. )Tj
T*
( Caesar: Cowards die many times before their deaths;)Tj
T*
( The valiant never taste of death but once.)Tj
T*
( Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,)Tj
T*
( It seems to me most strange that men should fear;)Tj
T*
( Seeing that death, a necessary end,)Tj
T*
( Will come when it will come.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Danger knows full well)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That Caesar is more dangerous than he:)Tj
T*
( We are two lions littered in one day,)Tj
T*
( And I the elder and more terrible:)Tj
T*
( And Caesar shall go forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( The cause is in my will: I will not come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( See! Antony, that revels long o\222 nights,)Tj
T*
( Is notwithstanding up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 116)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( O constancy! be strong upon my side;)Tj
T*
( Set a huge mountain \222tween my heart and tongue;)Tj
T*
( I have a man\222s mind, but a woman\222s might.)Tj
T*
( How hard it is for women to keep counsel!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Caesar: The ides of March are come.)Tj
T*
( Soothsayer: Ay, Caesar; but not gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Be not fond,)Tj
T*
( To think that Caesar bears such rebel blood)Tj
T*
( That will be thawed from the true quality)Tj
T*
( With that which melted fools; I mean sweet words,)Tj
T*
( Low-crooked curtsies, and base spaniel fawning.)Tj
T*
( Thy brother by decree is banish\351d:)Tj
T*
( If thou dost bend and pray and fawn for him,)Tj
T*
( I spurn thee like a cur out of my way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( If I could pray to move, prayers would move me;)Tj
T*
( But I am constant as the northern star,)Tj
T*
( Of whose true-fixed and resting quality)Tj
T*
( There is no fellow in the firmament.)Tj
T*
( The skies are painted with unnumbered sparks,)Tj
T*
( They are all fire and every one doth shine,)Tj
T*
( But there\222s but one in all doth hold his place:)Tj
T*
( So, in the world; \222tis furnished well with men,)Tj
T*
( And men are flesh and blood, and apprehensive;)Tj
T*
( Yet in the number I do know but one)Tj
T*
( That unassailable holds on his rank,)Tj
ET
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( Unshaked of motion: and that I am he,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let me a little show it, even in this,)Tj
T*
( That I was constant Cimber should be banished,)Tj
T*
( And constant do remain to keep him so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 77.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Ambition\222s debt is paid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( That we shall die, we know; \222tis but the time)Tj
T*
( And drawing days out, that men stand upon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( He that cuts off twenty years of life)Tj
T*
( Cuts off so many years of fearing death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Cassius: How many ages hence)Tj
T*
( Shall this our lofty scene be acted o\222er,)Tj
T*
( In states unborn, and accents yet unknown!)Tj
T*
( Brutus: How many times shall Caesar bleed in sport.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( O mighty Caesar! dost thou lie so low?)Tj
T*
( Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils,)Tj
T*
( Shrunk to this little measure?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Your swords, made rich)Tj
T*
( With the most noble blood of all this world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Live a thousand years,)Tj
T*
( I shall not find myself so apt to die:)Tj
T*
( No place will please me so, no mean of death,)Tj
T*
( As here by Caesar, and by you cut off,)Tj
T*
( The choice and master spirits of this age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( Had I as many eyes as thou hast wounds,)Tj
T*
( Weeping as fast as they stream forth thy blood,)Tj
T*
( It would become me better than to close)Tj
T*
( In terms of friendship with thine enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 200)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( The enemies of Caesar shall say this;)Tj
T*
( Then, in a friend, it is cold modesty.)Tj
ET
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(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 212)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O! pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That I am meek and gentle with these butchers;)Tj
T*
( Thou art the ruins of the noblest man)Tj
T*
( That ever liv\351d in the tide of times.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 254)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Caesar\222s spirit, ranging for revenge,)Tj
T*
( With Ate by his side, come hot from hell,)Tj
T*
( Shall in these confines, with a monarch\222s voice)Tj
T*
( Cry, \221Havoc!\222 and let slip the dogs of war;)Tj
T*
( That this foul deed shall smell above the earth)Tj
T*
( With carrion men, groaning for burial.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 270)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Passion, I see, is catching.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 283)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [22])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( As he was valiant, I honour him: but, as he was ambitious, I slew hi\
m.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [27])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Who is here so base that would be a bondman? If any, speak; for him \
have I offended. Who is )Tj
T*
(here so rude that would not be a Roman? If any, speak; for him have I of\
fended. Who is here so )Tj
T*
(vile that will not love his country? If any, speak; for him have I offen\
ded. I pause for a reply.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears;)Tj
T*
( I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.)Tj
T*
( The evil that men do lives after them,)Tj
T*
( The good is oft interr\351d with their bones;)Tj
T*
( So let it be with Caesar. The noble Brutus)Tj
T*
( Hath told you Caesar was ambitious;)Tj
T*
( If it were so, it was a grievous fault;)Tj
T*
( And grievously hath Caesar answered it.)Tj
T*
( Here, under leave of Brutus and the rest,\227)Tj
T*
( For Brutus is an honourable man;)Tj
T*
( So are they all, all honourable men,\227)Tj
T*
( Come I to speak in Caesar\222s funeral.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [79])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( He was my friend, faithful and just to me:)Tj
T*
( But Brutus says he was ambitious;)Tj
T*
( And Brutus is an honourable man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [91])Tj
ET
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( When that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ambition should be made of sterner stuff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [97])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( On the Lupercal)Tj
T*
( I thrice presented him a kingly crown)Tj
T*
( Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [101])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( You all did love him once, not without cause.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( O judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts,)Tj
T*
( And men have lost their reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [110])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( But yesterday the word of Caesar might)Tj
T*
( Have stood against the world; now lies he there,)Tj
T*
( And none so poor to do him reverence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [124])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( The will, the will! we will hear Caesar\222s will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [145])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( You are not wood, you are not stones, but men;)Tj
T*
( And, being men, hearing the will of Caesar,)Tj
T*
( It will inflame you, it will make you mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( If you have tears, prepare to shed them now.)Tj
T*
( You all do know this mantle: I remember)Tj
T*
( The first time ever Caesar put it on;)Tj
T*
( \222Twas on a summer\222s evening, in his tent,)Tj
T*
( That day he overcame the Nervii.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [174])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( See what a rent the envious Casca made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [180])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( This was the most unkindest cut of all;)Tj
T*
( For when the noble Caesar saw him stab,)Tj
T*
( Ingratitude, more strong than traitors\222 arms,)Tj
T*
( Quite vanquished him: then burst his mighty heart;)Tj
T*
( And, in his mantle muffling up his face,)Tj
T*
( Even at the base of Pompey\222s statua,)Tj
T*
( Which all the while ran blood, great Caesar fell.)Tj
T*
( O! what a fall was there, my countrymen;)Tj
T*
( Then I, and you, and all of us fell down,)Tj
T*
( Whilst bloody treason flourished over us.)Tj
ET
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( O! now you weep, and I perceive you feel)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The dint of pity; these are gracious drops.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [188])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I come not, friends, to steal away your hearts:)Tj
T*
( I am no orator, as Brutus is;)Tj
T*
( But, as you know me all, a plain, blunt man,)Tj
T*
( That love my friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [220])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( For I have neither wit, nor words, nor worth,)Tj
T*
( Action, nor utterance, nor power of speech,)Tj
T*
( To stir men\222s blood; I only speak right on;)Tj
T*
( I tell you that which you yourselves do know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [225])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( But were I Brutus,)Tj
T*
( And Brutus Antony, there were an Antony)Tj
T*
( Would ruffle up your spirits, and put a tongue)Tj
T*
( In every wound of Caesar, that should move)Tj
T*
( The stones of Rome to rise and mutiny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [230])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( He hath left you all his walks,)Tj
T*
( His private arbours, and new-planted orchards,)Tj
T*
( On this side Tiber; he hath left them you,)Tj
T*
( And to your heirs for ever; common pleasures,)Tj
T*
( To walk abroad, and recreate yourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [252])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Here was a Caesar! when comes such another?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Now let it work; mischief, thou art afoot,)Tj
T*
( Take thou what course thou wilt!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [265])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Fortune is merry,)Tj
T*
( And in this mood will give us anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [271])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Tear him for his bad verses, tear him for his bad verses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [34])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( He shall not live; look, with a spot I damn him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( This is a slight unmeritable man,)Tj
T*
( Meet to be sent on errands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 12)Tj
ET
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( When love begins to sicken and decay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It useth an enforc\351d ceremony.)Tj
T*
( There are no tricks in plain and simple faith.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Let me tell you, Cassius, you yourself)Tj
T*
( Are much condemned to have an itching palm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Shall we now)Tj
T*
( Contaminate our fingers with base bribes?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( I had rather be a dog, and bay the moon,)Tj
T*
( Than such a Roman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Away, slight man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( You wrong me every way; you wrong me, Brutus;)Tj
T*
( I said an elder soldier, not a better:)Tj
T*
( Did I say \221better\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Do not presume too much upon my love;)Tj
T*
( I may do that I shall be sorry for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats;)Tj
T*
( For I am armed so strong in honesty)Tj
T*
( That they pass by me as the idle wind,)Tj
T*
( Which I respect not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( By heaven, I had rather coin my heart,)Tj
T*
( And drop my blood for drachmas, than to wring)Tj
T*
( From the hard hands of peasants their vile trash)Tj
T*
( By any indirection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( A friend should bear his friend\222s infirmities,)Tj
T*
( But Brutus makes mine greater than they are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Cassius is aweary of the world;)Tj
T*
( Hated by one he loves; braved by his brother;)Tj
T*
( Checked like a bondman; all his faults observed,)Tj
T*
( Set in a note-book, learned, and conned by rote,)Tj
T*
( To cast into my teeth.)Tj
ET
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(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( O Cassius! you are yok\351d with a lamb)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That carries anger as the flint bears fire;)Tj
T*
( Who, much enforc\351d, shows a hasty spark,)Tj
T*
( And straight is cold again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O Cassius! I am sick of many griefs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Good reasons must, of force, give place to better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The enemy increaseth every day;)Tj
T*
( We, at the height, are ready to decline.)Tj
T*
( There is a tide in the affairs of men,)Tj
T*
( Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;)Tj
T*
( Omitted, all the voyage of their life)Tj
T*
( Is bound in shallows and in miseries.)Tj
T*
( On such a full sea are we now afloat,)Tj
T*
( And we must take the current when it serves,)Tj
T*
( Or lose our ventures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 215)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( The deep of night is crept upon our talk,)Tj
T*
( And nature must obey necessity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 225)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Brutus: Then I shall see thee again?)Tj
T*
( Ghost: Ay, at Philippi.)Tj
T*
( Brutus: Why, I will see thee at Philippi, then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 283)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( But for your words, they rob the Hybla bees,)Tj
T*
( And leave them honeyless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( If we do meet again, why, we shall smile!)Tj
T*
( If not, why then, this parting was well made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( O! that a man might know)Tj
T*
( The end of this day\222s business, ere it come;)Tj
T*
( But it sufficeth that the day will end,)Tj
T*
( And then the end is known.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( This day I breath\351d first: time is come round,)Tj
T*
( And where I did begin, there shall I end;)Tj
ET
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( My life is run his compass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O hateful error, melancholy\222s child!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Why dost thou show, to the apt thoughts of men,)Tj
T*
( The things that are not?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O Julius Caesar! thou art mighty yet!)Tj
T*
( Thy spirit walks abroad, and turns our swords)Tj
T*
( In our own proper entrails.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( I had rather have)Tj
T*
( Such men my friends than enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Thou seest the world, Volumnius, how it goes;)Tj
T*
( Our enemies have beat us to the pit:)Tj
T*
( It is more worthy to leap in ourselves,)Tj
T*
( Than tarry till they push us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Thou art a fellow of a good respect;)Tj
T*
( Thy life hath had some smatch of honour in it.)Tj
T*
( Hold then my sword, and turn away thy face,)Tj
T*
( While I do run upon it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( This was the noblest Roman of them all;)Tj
T*
( All the conspirators save only he)Tj
T*
( Did that they did in envy of great Caesar;)Tj
T*
( He, only, in a general honest thought)Tj
T*
( And common good to all, made one of them.)Tj
T*
( His life was gentle, and the elements)Tj
T*
( So mixed in him that Nature might stand up)Tj
T*
( And say to all the world, \223This was a man!\224)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Julius Caesar\222 \(1599\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 68)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 161.54173 Tm
( 7.66.16 King John)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 140.25456 Tm
( Hadst thou rather be a Faulconbridge)Tj
T*
( And like thy brother, to enjoy thy land,)Tj
T*
( Or the reputed son of Coeur-de-Lion,)Tj
T*
( Lord of thy presence and no land beside.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.50456 Tm
( And if his name be George, I\222ll call him Peter;)Tj
ET
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( For new-made honour doth forget men\222s names.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Sweet, sweet, sweet poison for the age\222s tooth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Courage mounteth with occasion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Saint George, that swing\351d the dragon and e\222er since)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sits on his horse back at mine hostess\222 door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 288)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Mad world! mad kings! mad composition!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 561)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( That smooth-faced gentleman, tickling Commodity,)Tj
T*
( Commodity, the bias of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 573)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( Well, whiles I am a beggar, I will rail,)Tj
T*
( And say there is no sin, but to be rich;)Tj
T*
( And, being rich, my virtue then shall be,)Tj
T*
( To say there is no vice, but beggary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 593)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Thou wear a lion\222s hide! doff it for shame,)Tj
T*
( And hang a calf\222s-skin on those recreant limbs!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( Old Time the clock-setter, that bald sexton, Time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 324)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Bell, book, and candle shall not drive me back,)Tj
T*
( When gold and silver becks me to come on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Grief fills the room up of my absent child,)Tj
T*
( Lies in his bed, walks up and down with me,)Tj
T*
( Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words,)Tj
T*
( Remembers me of all his gracious parts,)Tj
T*
( Stuffs out his vacant garments with his form:)Tj
T*
( Then have I reason to be fond of grief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale,)Tj
T*
( Vexing the dull ear of a drowsy man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( Heat me these irons hot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( Methinks nobody should be sad but I:)Tj
ET
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( Yet I remember, when I was in France,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Young gentlemen would be as sad as night,)Tj
T*
( Only for wantonness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Will you put out mine eyes?)Tj
T*
( These eyes that never did nor never shall)Tj
T*
( So much as frown on you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( To be possessed with double pomp,)Tj
T*
( To guard a title that was rich before,)Tj
T*
( To gild refin\351d gold, to paint the lily,)Tj
T*
( To throw a perfume on the violet,)Tj
T*
( To smooth the ice, or add another hue)Tj
T*
( Unto the rainbow, or with taper light)Tj
T*
( To seek the beauteous eye of heaven to garnish,)Tj
T*
( Is wasteful and ridiculous excess.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( The spirit of the time shall teach me speed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 176)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Another lean unwashed artificer)Tj
T*
( Cuts off his tale and talks of Arthur\222s death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds)Tj
T*
( Makes ill deeds done!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 219)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Heaven take my soul, and England keep my bones!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( Whate\222er you think, good words, I think, were best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( None of you will bid the winter come)Tj
T*
( To thrust his icy fingers in my maw;)Tj
T*
( Nor let my kingdom\222s rivers take their course)Tj
T*
( Through my burned bosom; nor entreat the north)Tj
T*
( To make his bleak winds kiss my parch\351d lips)Tj
T*
( And comfort me with cold. I do not ask you much:)Tj
T*
( I beg cold comfort; and you are so strait)Tj
T*
( And so ingrateful you deny me that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 5, sc. 7, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( This England never did, nor never shall,)Tj
T*
( Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror,)Tj
ET
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( But when it first did help to wound itself.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Now these her princes are come home again,)Tj
T*
( Come the three corners of the world in arms,)Tj
T*
( And we shall shock them: nought shall make us rue,)Tj
T*
( If England to itself do rest but true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221King John\222 \(1591-8\) act 5, sc. 7, l. 112)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 634.04173 Tm
( 7.66.17 King Lear)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.75456 Tm
( Nothing will come of nothing: speak again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 596.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [92])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.00456 Tm
( Lear: So young, and so untender?)Tj
T*
( Cordelia: So young, my lord, and true.)Tj
T*
( Lear: Let it be so; thy truth then be thy dower:)Tj
T*
( For, by the sacred radiance of the sun,)Tj
T*
( The mysteries of Hecate and the night,)Tj
T*
( By all the operation of the orbs)Tj
T*
( From whom we do exist and cease to be,)Tj
T*
( Here I disclaim all my paternal care,)Tj
T*
( Propinquity and property of blood,)Tj
T*
( And as a stranger to my heart and me)Tj
T*
( Hold thee from this for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( Come not between the dragon and his wrath.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [124])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( I want that glib and oily art)Tj
T*
( To speak and purpose not; since what I well intend,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll do\222t before I speak.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [227])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.75456 Tm
( It is no vicious blot nor other foulness,)Tj
T*
( No unchaste action, or dishonoured step,)Tj
T*
( That hath deprived me of your grace and favour,)Tj
T*
( But even for want of that for which I am richer,)Tj
T*
( A still-soliciting eye, and such a tongue)Tj
T*
( That I am glad I have not, though not to have it)Tj
T*
( Hath lost me in your liking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [230])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.00456 Tm
( Love is not love)Tj
T*
( When it is mingl\351d with regards that stand)Tj
T*
( Aloof from the entire point.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [241])Tj
ET
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( Fairest Cordelia, that art most rich, being poor;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Most choice, forsaken; and most loved, despised!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [253])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Why bastard? wherefore base?)Tj
T*
( When my dimensions are as well compact,)Tj
T*
( My mind as generous, and my shape as true,)Tj
T*
( As honest madam\222s issue? Why brand they us)Tj
T*
( With base? with baseness? bastardy? base, base?)Tj
T*
( Who in the lusty stealth of nature take)Tj
T*
( More composition and fierce quality)Tj
T*
( Than doth, within a dull, stale, tired bed,)Tj
T*
( Go to creating a whole tribe of fops,)Tj
T*
( Got \222tween asleep and wake?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( I grow, I prosper;)Tj
T*
( Now, gods, stand up for bastards!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( This is the excellent foppery of the world, that, when we are sick i\
n fortune,\227often the surfeit )Tj
T*
(of our own behaviour,\227we make guilty of our own disasters the sun, th\
e moon, and the stars; as )Tj
T*
(if we were villains by necessity, fools by heavenly compulsion, knaves, \
thieves, and treachers by )Tj
T*
(spherical predominance, drunkards, liars, and adulterers by an enforced \
obedience of planetary )Tj
T*
(influence; and all that we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on: an adm\
irable evasion of )Tj
T*
(whoremaster man, to lay his goatish disposition to the charge of a star!\
My father compounded )Tj
T*
(with my mother under the dragon\222s tail, and my nativity was under urs\
a major; so that it follows I )Tj
T*
(am rough and lecherous. \222Sfoot! I should have been that I am had the \
maidenliest star in the )Tj
T*
(firmament twinkled on my bastardizing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [132])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( Pat he comes, like the catastrophe of the old comedy; my cue is vill\
anous melancholy, with a )Tj
T*
(sigh like Tom o\222 Bedlam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [150])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( Lear: Dost thou know me, fellow?)Tj
T*
( Kent: No, sir; but you have that in your countenance which I would \
fain call master.)Tj
T*
( Lear: What\222s that?)Tj
T*
( Kent: Authority.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( Not so young, sir, to love a woman for singing, nor so old to dote o\
n her for any thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Have more than thou showest,)Tj
T*
( Speak less than thou knowest,)Tj
T*
( Lend less than thou owest.)Tj
ET
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(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [132])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Lear: Dost thou call me fool, boy?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fool: All thy other titles thou hast given away; that thou wast bor\
n with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [163])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend,)Tj
T*
( More hideous, when thou show\222st thee in a child,)Tj
T*
( Than the sea-monster.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [283])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( How sharper than a serpent\222s tooth it is)Tj
T*
( To have a thankless child!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [312])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( O! let me not be mad, not mad, sweet heaven;)Tj
T*
( Keep me in temper; I would not be mad!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Thou whoreson zed! thou unnecessary letter!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [68])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Goose, if I had you upon Sarum plain,)Tj
T*
( I\222d drive ye cackling home to Camelot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [88])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Down, thou climbing sorrow!)Tj
T*
( Thy element\222s below.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [57])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( O, sir! you are old;)Tj
T*
( Nature in you stands on the very verge)Tj
T*
( Of her confine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( You see me here, you gods, a poor old man,)Tj
T*
( As full of grief as age; wretched in both!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [275])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Touch me with noble anger,)Tj
T*
( And let not women\222s weapons, water-drops,)Tj
T*
( Stain my man\222s cheeks! No, you unnatural hags,)Tj
T*
( I will have such revenges on you both)Tj
T*
( That all the world shall\227I will do such things,\227)Tj
T*
( What they are yet I know not,\227but they shall be)Tj
T*
( The terrors of the earth. You think I\222ll weep;)Tj
T*
( No, I\222ll not weep:)Tj
T*
( I have full cause of weeping, but this heart)Tj
T*
( Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws)Tj
T*
( Or ere I\222ll weep. O fool! I shall go mad.)Tj
ET
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(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [279])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Contending with the fretful elements;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Bids the wind blow the earth into the sea,)Tj
T*
( Or swell the curl\351d waters \222bove the main,)Tj
T*
( That things might change or cease.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! rage! blow!)Tj
T*
( You cataracts and hurricanoes, spout)Tj
T*
( Till you have drenched our steeples, drowned the cocks!)Tj
T*
( You sulphurous and thought-executing fires,)Tj
T*
( Vaunt-couriers to oak-cleaving thunderbolts,)Tj
T*
( Singe my white head! And thou, all-shaking thunder,)Tj
T*
( Strike flat the thick rotundity o\222 the world!)Tj
T*
( Crack nature\222s moulds, all germens spill at once)Tj
T*
( That make ingrateful man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Rumble thy bellyful! Spit, fire! Spout, rain!)Tj
T*
( Nor rain, wind, thunder, fire, are my daughters:)Tj
T*
( I tax not you, you elements, with unkindness;)Tj
T*
( I never gave you kingdom, called you children,)Tj
T*
( You owe me no subscription: then, let fall)Tj
T*
( Your horrible pleasure; here I stand, your slave,)Tj
T*
( A poor, infirm, weak, and despised old man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( There was never yet fair woman but she made mouths in a glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( No, I will be the pattern of all patience; I will say nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [37])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Marry, here\222s grace and a cod-piece; that\222s a wise man and a f\
ool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Things that love night)Tj
T*
( Love not such nights as these.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [42])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Close pent-up guilts,)Tj
T*
( Rive your concealing continents, and cry)Tj
T*
( These dreadful summoners grace. I am a man)Tj
T*
( More sinned against than sinning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [57])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( The art of our necessities is strange,)Tj
T*
( That can make vile things precious.)Tj
ET
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(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [70])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( He that has a little tiny wit,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,)Tj
T*
( Must make content with his fortunes fit,)Tj
T*
( Though the rain it raineth every day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [74])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( When the mind\222s free,)Tj
T*
( The body\222s delicate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( O! that way madness lies; let me shun that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Poor naked wretches, wheresoe\222er you are,)Tj
T*
( That bide the pelting of this pitiless storm,)Tj
T*
( How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides,)Tj
T*
( Your loop\351d and windowed raggedness, defend you)Tj
T*
( From seasons such as these?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Take physic, pomp;)Tj
T*
( Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Pillicock sat on Pillicock-hill:)Tj
T*
( Halloo, halloo, loo, loo!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [75])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( A serving-man, proud in heart and mind: that curled my hair, wore gl\
oves in my cap, served )Tj
T*
(the lust of my mistress\222s heart, and did the act of darkness with her\
; swore as many oaths as I )Tj
T*
(spake words, and broke them in the sweet face of heaven; one that slept \
in the contriving of lust, )Tj
T*
(and waked to do it. Wine loved I deeply, dice dearly, and in woman out-p\
aramoured the Turk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [84])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Keep thy foot out of brothels, thy hand out of plackets, thy pen fro\
m lenders\222 books, and defy )Tj
T*
(the foul fiend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [96])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Thou art the thing itself; unaccommodated man is no more but such a \
poor, bare, forked animal )Tj
T*
(as thou art. Off, off, you lendings! Come; unbutton here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [109])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( \222Tis a naughty night to swim in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [113])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( This is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet: he begins at curfew, and wal\
ks till the first cock; he gives )Tj
T*
(the web and the pin, squints the eye, and makes the harelip; mildews the\
white wheat, and hurts )Tj
T*
(the poor creatures of earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [118])Tj
ET
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( The green mantle of the standing pool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [136])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The prince of darkness is a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Poor Tom\222s a-cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [151])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Child Roland to the dark tower came,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His word was still, Fie, foh, and fum,)Tj
T*
( I smell the blood of a British man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [185].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( He\222s mad that trusts in the tameness of a wolf, a horse\222s heal\
th, a boy\222s love, or a whore\222s oath.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 6, l. [20])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( The little dogs and all,)Tj
T*
( Tray, Blanch, and Sweet-heart, see, they bark at me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 6, l. [65])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( By the kind gods, \222tis most ignobly done)Tj
T*
( To pluck me by the beard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 7, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( I am tied to the stake, and I must stand the course.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 7, l. [54])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Cornwall: Out, vile jelly!)Tj
T*
( Where is thy lustre now?)Tj
T*
( Gloucester: All dark and comfortless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 3, sc. 7, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( Yet better thus, and known to be contemnd,)Tj
T*
( Than still contemned and flattered. To be worst,)Tj
T*
( The lowest and most dejected thing of fortune,)Tj
T*
( Stands still in esperance, lives not in fear:)Tj
T*
( The lamentable change is from the best;)Tj
T*
( The worst returns to laughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( I have no way, and therefore want no eyes;)Tj
T*
( I stumbled when I saw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Might I but live to see thee in my touch,)Tj
T*
( I\222d say I had eyes again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( The worst is not,)Tj
T*
( So long as we can say, \221This is the worst.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 27)Tj
ET
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( As flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( They kill us for their sport.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( You are not worth the dust which the rude wind)Tj
T*
( Blows in your face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Wisdom and goodness to the vile seem vile;)Tj
T*
( Filths savour but themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( It is the stars,)Tj
T*
( The stars above us, govern our conditions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [34])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( He was met even now)Tj
T*
( As mad as the vexed sea; singing aloud;)Tj
T*
( Crowned with rank fumitor and furrow weeds,)Tj
T*
( With burdocks, hemlock, nettles, cuckoo-flowers,)Tj
T*
( Darnel, and all the idle weeds that grow)Tj
T*
( In our sustaining corn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( How fearful)Tj
T*
( And dizzy \222tis to cast one\222s eyes so low!)Tj
T*
( The crows and choughs that wing the midway air)Tj
T*
( Show scarce so gross as beetles; half-way down)Tj
T*
( Hangs one that gathers samphire, dreadful trade!)Tj
T*
( Methinks he seems no bigger than his head.)Tj
T*
( The fishermen that walk upon the beach)Tj
T*
( Appear like mice, and yond tall anchoring bark)Tj
T*
( Diminished to her cock, her cock a buoy)Tj
T*
( Almost too small for sight. The murmuring surge,)Tj
T*
( That on the unnumbered idle pebbles chafes,)Tj
T*
( Cannot be heard so high.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( They told me I was every thing; \222tis a lie, I am not ague-proof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [107])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Gloucester: Is\222t not the king?)Tj
T*
( Lear: Ay, every inch a king:)Tj
T*
( When I do stare, see how the subject quakes.)Tj
T*
( I pardon that man\222s life. What was thy cause?)Tj
T*
( Adultery?)Tj
T*
( Thou shalt not die: die for adultery! No:)Tj
ET
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( The wren goes to\222t, and the small gilded fly)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Does lecher in my sight.)Tj
T*
( Let copulation thrive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [110])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Lear: The fitchew nor the soiled horse goes to\222t)Tj
T*
( With a more riotous appetite.)Tj
T*
( Down from the waist they are Centaurs,)Tj
T*
( Though women all above:)Tj
T*
( But to the girdle do the Gods inherit,)Tj
T*
( Beneath is all the fiends\222:)Tj
T*
( There\222s hell, there\222s darkness, there is the sulphurous pit,)Tj
T*
( Burning, scalding, stench, consumption; fie, fie, fie! pah, pah!)Tj
T*
( Give me an ounce of civet, good apothecary, to sweeten my imaginatio\
n; there\222s money for )Tj
T*
(thee.)Tj
T*
( Gloucester: O! let me kiss that hand!)Tj
T*
( Lear: Let me wipe it first; it smells of mortality.)Tj
T*
( Gloucester: O ruined piece of nature! This great world)Tj
T*
( Should so wear out to nought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [125])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( A man may see how this world goes with no eyes. Look with thine ears\
: see how yond justice )Tj
T*
(rails upon yond simple thief. Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, ha\
ndy-dandy, which is the )Tj
T*
(justice, which is the thief?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [154])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Thou rascal beadle, hold thy bloody hand!)Tj
T*
( Why dost thou lash that whore? Strip thine own back;)Tj
T*
( Thou hotly lust\222st to use her in that kind)Tj
T*
( For which thou whipp\222st her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [165])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( Plate sin with gold,)Tj
T*
( And the strong lance of justice hurtless breaks;)Tj
T*
( Arm it in rags, a pigmy\222s straw doth pierce it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [170])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Get thee glass eyes;)Tj
T*
( And, like a scurvy politician, seem)Tj
T*
( To see the things thou dost not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [175])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( I know thee well enough; thy name is Gloucester:)Tj
T*
( Thou must be patient; we came crying hither:)Tj
T*
( Thou know\222st the first time that we smell the air)Tj
T*
( We waul and cry.)Tj
ET
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(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [182])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( When we are born we cry that we are come)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To this great stage of fools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 6, l. [187])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Mine enemy\222s dog,)Tj
T*
( Though he had bit me, should have stood that night)Tj
T*
( Against my fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Thou art a soul in bliss; but I am bound)Tj
T*
( Upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears)Tj
T*
( Do scald like molten lead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I am a very foolish, fond old man,)Tj
T*
( Fourscore and upward, not an hour more or less;)Tj
T*
( And, to deal plainly,)Tj
T*
( I fear I am not in my perfect mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 4, sc. 7, l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Men must endure)Tj
T*
( Their going hence, even as their coming hither:)Tj
T*
( Ripeness is all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Come, let\222s away to prison;)Tj
T*
( We two alone will sing like birds i\222 the cage:)Tj
T*
( When thou dost ask me blessing, I\222ll kneel down,)Tj
T*
( And ask of thee forgiveness: and we\222ll live,)Tj
T*
( And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh)Tj
T*
( At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues)Tj
T*
( Talk of court news; and we\222ll talk with them too,)Tj
T*
( Who loses, and who wins; who\222s in, who\222s out;)Tj
T*
( And take upon \222s the mystery of things,)Tj
T*
( As if we were God\222s spies; and we\222ll wear out,)Tj
T*
( In a walled prison, packs and sets of great ones)Tj
T*
( That ebb and flow by the moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Upon such sacrifices, my Cordelia,)Tj
T*
( The gods themselves throw incense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( The gods are just, and of our pleasant vices)Tj
T*
( Make instruments to plague us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [172])Tj
ET
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( The wheel is come full circle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [176])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( His flawed heart,\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Alack! too weak the conflict to support;)Tj
T*
( \222Twixt two extremes of passion, joy and grief,)Tj
T*
( Burst smilingly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [198])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Howl, howl, howl, howl! O! you are men of stones:)Tj
T*
( Had I your tongue and eyes, I\222d use them so)Tj
T*
( That heaven\222s vaults should crack. She\222s gone for ever!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [259])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Kent: Is this the promised end?)Tj
T*
( Edgar: Or image of that horror?)Tj
T*
( Albion: Fall and cease?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [265])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Her voice was ever soft,)Tj
T*
( Gentle and low, an excellent thing in woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [274])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( And my poor fool is hanged! No, no, no life!)Tj
T*
( Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,)Tj
T*
( And thou no breath at all? Thou\222lt come no more,)Tj
T*
( Never, never, never, never, never!)Tj
T*
( Pray you, undo this button.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [307])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Vex not his ghost: O! let him pass; he hates him)Tj
T*
( That would upon the rack of this tough world)Tj
T*
( Stretch him out longer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [314])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( The weight of this sad time we must obey,)Tj
T*
( Speak what we feel; not what we ought to say.)Tj
T*
( The oldest hath borne most: we that are young,)Tj
T*
( Shall never see so much, nor live so long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221King Lear\222 \(1605-6\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [325])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 142.79173 Tm
( 7.66.18 Love\222s Labour\222s Lost)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 121.50456 Tm
( Let fame, that all hunt after in their lives,)Tj
T*
( Live registered upon our brazen tombs,)Tj
T*
( And then grace us in the disgrace of death;)Tj
T*
( When, spite of cormorant devouring Time,)Tj
T*
( The endeavour of this present breath may buy)Tj
ET
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( That honour which shall bate his scythe\222s keen edge,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And make us heirs of all eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Study is like the heaven\222s glorious sun,)Tj
T*
( That will not be deep-searched with saucy looks;)Tj
T*
( Small have continual plodders ever won,)Tj
T*
( Save base authority from others\222 books.)Tj
T*
( These earthly godfathers of Heaven\222s lights)Tj
T*
( That give a name to every fix\351d star,)Tj
T*
( Have no more profit of their shining nights)Tj
T*
( Than those that walk and wot not what they are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( At Christmas I no more desire a rose)Tj
T*
( Than wish a snow in May\222s new-fangled mirth;)Tj
T*
( But like of each thing that in season grows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Assist me some extemporal god of rime, for I am sure I shall turn so\
nneter. Devise, wit; write, )Tj
T*
(pen; for I am for whole volumes in folio.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [192])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( Beauty is bought by judgment of the eye,)Tj
T*
( Not utter\222d by base sale of chapmen\222s tongues.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( A merrier man,)Tj
T*
( Within the limit of becoming mirth,)Tj
T*
( I never spent an hour\222s talk withal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Did not I dance with you in Brabant once?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [114])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Your wit\222s too hot, it speeds too fast, \222twill tire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [119])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Warble, child; make passionate my sense of hearing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( This wimpled, whining, purblind, wayward boy,)Tj
T*
( This senior-junior, giant-dwarf, Dan Cupid;)Tj
T*
( Regent of love rhymes, lord of folded arms,)Tj
T*
( The anointed sovereign of sighs and groans,)Tj
T*
( Liege of all loiterers and malecontents,)Tj
T*
( Dread prince of plackets, king of codpieces,)Tj
T*
( Sole imperator and great general)Tj
T*
( Of trotting \222paritors: O my little heart!)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [189])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A wightly wanton with a velvet brow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With two pitch balls stuck in her face for eyes;)Tj
T*
( Ay, and, by heaven, one that will do the deed)Tj
T*
( Though Argus were her eunuch and her guard:)Tj
T*
( And I to sigh for her! to watch for her!)Tj
T*
( To pray for her!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [206])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( He hath not fed of the dainties that are bred in a book; he hath not\
eat paper, as it were; he hath )Tj
T*
(not drunk ink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [25])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Old Mantuan! old Mantuan! Who understandeth thee not, loves thee not\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [102])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Here are only numbers ratified; but, for the elegancy, facility, and\
golden cadence of poesy, )Tj
T*
(caret. Ovidius Naso was the man: and why, indeed, Naso, but for smelling\
out the odoriferous )Tj
T*
(flowers of fancy, the jerks of invention?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [126])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye,)Tj
T*
( \222Gainst whom the world cannot hold argument,)Tj
T*
( Persuade my heart to this false perjury?)Tj
T*
( Vows for thee broke deserve not punishment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( From women\222s eyes this doctrine I derive:)Tj
T*
( They are the ground, the books, the academes,)Tj
T*
( From whence doth spring the true Promethean fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [302])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( But love, first learn\351d in a lady\222s eyes,)Tj
T*
( Lives not alone immur\351d in the brain,)Tj
T*
( But, with the motion of all elements,)Tj
T*
( Courses as swift as thought in every power,)Tj
T*
( And gives to every power a double power,)Tj
T*
( Above their functions and their offices.)Tj
T*
( It adds a precious seeing to the eye;)Tj
T*
( A lover\222s eyes will gaze an eagle blind;)Tj
T*
( A lover\222s ears will hear the lowest sound,)Tj
T*
( When the suspicious head of theft is stopped:)Tj
T*
( Love\222s feeling is more soft and sensible)Tj
T*
( Than are the tender horns of cockled snails:)Tj
T*
( Love\222s tongue proves dainty Baccus gross in taste.)Tj
T*
( For valour, is not love a Hercules,)Tj
ET
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( Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Subtle as Sphinx; as sweet and musical)Tj
T*
( As bright Apollo\222s lute, strung with his hair;)Tj
T*
( And when Love speaks, the voice of all the gods)Tj
T*
( Makes heaven drowsy with the harmony.)Tj
T*
( Never durst poet touch a pen to write)Tj
T*
( Until his ink were tempered with Love\222s sighs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [327])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( From women\222s eyes this doctrine I derive:)Tj
T*
( They sparkle still the right Promethean fire;)Tj
T*
( They are the books, the arts, the academes,)Tj
T*
( That show, contain, and nourish all the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [350])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( He draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of \
his argument.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [18])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Bone? bone, for bene: Priscian a little scratched; \222twill serve.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Moth: They have been at a great feast of languages, and stolen the \
scraps.)Tj
T*
( Costard: O! they have lived long on the alms-basket of words. I mar\
vel thy master hath not )Tj
T*
(eaten thee for a word; for thou art not so long by the head as honorific\
abilitudinitatibus: thou art )Tj
T*
(easier swallowed than a flap-dragon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [39])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( The posteriors of this day; which the rude multitude call the aftern\
oon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [96])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Had she been light, like you,)Tj
T*
( Of such a merry, nimble, stirring spirit,)Tj
T*
( She might ha\222 been a grandam ere she died;)Tj
T*
( And so may you; for a light heart lives long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Taffeta phrases, silken terms precise,)Tj
T*
( Three-piled hyperboles, spruce affectation,)Tj
T*
( Figures pedantical; these summer flies)Tj
T*
( Have blown me full of maggot ostentation:)Tj
T*
( I do forswear them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 407)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Henceforth my wooing mind shall be expressed)Tj
T*
( In russet yeas and honest kersey noes:)Tj
T*
( And, to begin, wench,\227so God help me, la!\227)Tj
T*
( My love to thee is sound, sans crack or flaw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 413)Tj
ET
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( A jest\222s prosperity lies in the ear)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of him that hears it, never in the tongue)Tj
T*
( Of him that makes it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [869])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( When daisies pied and violets blue)Tj
T*
( And lady-smocks all silver-white)Tj
T*
( And cuckoo-buds of yellow hue)Tj
T*
( Do paint the meadows with delight,)Tj
T*
( The cuckoo then, on every tree,)Tj
T*
( Mocks married men; for thus sings he,)Tj
T*
( Cuckoo;)Tj
T*
( Cuckoo, cuckoo; O, word of fear,)Tj
T*
( Unpleasing to a married ear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [902])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( When icicles hang by the wall,)Tj
T*
( And Dick the shepherd, blows his nail,)Tj
T*
( And Tom bears logs into the hall,)Tj
T*
( And milk comes frozen home in pail,)Tj
T*
( When blood is nipped and ways be foul,)Tj
T*
( Then nightly sings the staring owl,)Tj
T*
( Tu-who;)Tj
T*
( Tu-whit, tu-who\227a merry note,)Tj
T*
( While greasy Joan doth keel the pot.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( When all aloud the wind doth blow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And coughing drowns the parson\222s saw;)Tj
T*
( And birds sit brooding in the snow,)Tj
T*
( And Marion\222s nose looks red and raw,)Tj
T*
( When roasted crabs hiss in the bowl.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [920])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( The words of Mercury are harsh after the songs of Apollo. You, that \
way: we, this way.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Labour\222s Lost\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [938])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 178.04173 Tm
( 7.66.19 Macbeth)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( First Witch: When shall we three meet again)Tj
T*
( In thunder, lightning, or in rain?)Tj
T*
( Second Witch: When the hurly-burly\222s done,)Tj
T*
( When the battle\222s lost and won.)Tj
T*
( Third Witch: That will be ere the set of sun.)Tj
T*
( First Witch: Where the place?)Tj
T*
( Second Witch: Upon the heath.)Tj
ET
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( Third Witch: There to meet with Macbeth.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( First Witch: I come, Graymalkin!)Tj
T*
( Second Witch: Paddock calls.)Tj
T*
( third witch: Anon!)Tj
T*
( All: Fair is foul, and foul is fair:)Tj
T*
( Hover through the fog and filthy air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( What bloody man is that?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Brave Macbeth,\227well he deserves that name,\227)Tj
T*
( Disdaining fortune, with his brandished steel,)Tj
T*
( Which smoked with bloody execution,)Tj
T*
( Like valour\222s minion carved out his passage)Tj
T*
( Till he faced the slave;)Tj
T*
( Which ne\222er shook hands, nor bade farewell to him,)Tj
T*
( Till he unseamed him from the nave to the chaps,)Tj
T*
( And fixed his head upon our battlements.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( They)Tj
T*
( Doubly redoubled strokes upon the foe:)Tj
T*
( Except they meant to bathe in reeking wounds,)Tj
T*
( Or memorize another Golgotha,)Tj
T*
( I cannot tell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Bellona\222s bridegroom, lapped in proof,)Tj
T*
( Confronted him with self-comparisons,)Tj
T*
( Point against point, rebellious arm \222gainst arm,)Tj
T*
( Curbing his lavish spirit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( A sailor\222s wife had chestnuts in her lap,)Tj
T*
( And munched, and munched, and munched: )Tj
T*
( \221Give me,\222 quoth I:)Tj
T*
( \221Aroint thee, witch!\222 the rump-fed ronyon cries.)Tj
T*
( Her husband\222s to Aleppo gone, master o\222 the Tiger:)Tj
T*
( But in a sieve I\222ll thither sail,)Tj
T*
( And, like a rat without a tail,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll do, I\222ll do, and I\222ll do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Sleep shall neither night nor day)Tj
T*
( Hang upon his pent-house lid.)Tj
ET
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( He shall live a man forbid.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Weary se\222nnights nine times nine)Tj
T*
( Shall he dwindle, peak, and pine:)Tj
T*
( Though his bark cannot be lost,)Tj
T*
( Yet it shall be tempest-tost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( third witch: A drum! a drum!)Tj
T*
( Macbeth doth come.)Tj
T*
( all: The weird sisters, hand in hand,)Tj
T*
( Posters of the sea and land,)Tj
T*
( Thus do go about, about.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( So foul and fair a day I have not seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( What are these,)Tj
T*
( So withered, and so wild in their attire,)Tj
T*
( That look not like th\222 inhabitants o\222 the earth,)Tj
T*
( And yet are on \222t? Live you? or are you aught)Tj
T*
( That man may question? You seem to understand me,)Tj
T*
( By each at once her choppy finger laying)Tj
T*
( Upon her skinny lips: you should be women,)Tj
T*
( And yet your beards forbid me to interpret)Tj
T*
( That you are so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( If you can look into the seeds of time,)Tj
T*
( And say which grain will grow and which will not,)Tj
T*
( Speak then to me, who neither beg nor fear)Tj
T*
( Your favours nor your hate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Say, from whence)Tj
T*
( You owe this strange intelligence? or why)Tj
T*
( Upon this blasted heath you stop our way)Tj
T*
( With such prophetic greeting?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( The earth hath bubbles, as the water has,)Tj
T*
( And these are of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Were such things here as we do speak about?)Tj
T*
( Or have we eaten on the insane root)Tj
T*
( That takes the reason prisoner?)Tj
ET
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Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( What! can the devil speak true?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The Thane of Cawdor lives: why do you dress me)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In borrowed robes?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Oftentimes, to win us to our harm,)Tj
T*
( The instruments of darkness tell us truths;)Tj
T*
( Win us with honest trifles, to betray\222s)Tj
T*
( In deepest consequence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Two truths are told,)Tj
T*
( As happy prologues to the swelling act)Tj
T*
( Of the imperial theme.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( This supernatural soliciting)Tj
T*
( Cannot be ill, cannot be good; if ill,)Tj
T*
( Why hath it given me earnest of success,)Tj
T*
( Commencing in a truth? I am Thane of Cawdor:)Tj
T*
( If good, why do I yield to that suggestion)Tj
T*
( Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair)Tj
T*
( And make my seated heart knock at my ribs,)Tj
T*
( Against the use of nature? Present fears)Tj
T*
( Are less than horrible imaginings;)Tj
T*
( My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical,)Tj
T*
( Shakes so my single state of man that function)Tj
T*
( Is smothered in surmise, and nothing is)Tj
T*
( But what is not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Come what come may,)Tj
T*
( Time and the hour runs through the roughest day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Malcolm: Nothing in his life)Tj
T*
( Became him like the leaving it: he died)Tj
T*
( As one that had been studied in his death)Tj
T*
( To throw away the dearest thing he owed)Tj
T*
( As \222twere a careless trifle.)Tj
T*
( Duncan: There\222s no art)Tj
T*
( To find the mind\222s construction in the face;)Tj
T*
( He was a gentleman on whom I built)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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( An absolute trust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( What thou art promised. Yet I do fear thy nature;)Tj
T*
( It is too full o\222 the milk of human kindness)Tj
T*
( To catch the nearest way; thou wouldst be great,)Tj
T*
( Art not without ambition; but without)Tj
T*
( The illness should attend it; what thou wouldst highly,)Tj
T*
( That thou wouldst holily; wouldst not play false,)Tj
T*
( And yet wouldst wrongly win; thou\222dst have, great Glamis,)Tj
T*
( That which cries, \221Thus thou must do, if thou have it\222;)Tj
T*
( And that which rather thou dost fear to do)Tj
T*
( Than wishest should be undone. Hie thee hither)Tj
T*
( That I may pour my spirits in thine ear,)Tj
T*
( And chastise with the valour of my tongue)Tj
T*
( All that impedes thee from the golden round,)Tj
T*
( Which fate and metaphysical aid doth seem)Tj
T*
( To have thee crowned withal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [16])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( The raven himself is hoarse)Tj
T*
( That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan)Tj
T*
( Under my battlements. Come, you spirits)Tj
T*
( That tend on mortal thoughts! unsex me here,)Tj
T*
( And fill me from the crown to the toe top full)Tj
T*
( Of direst cruelty; make thick my blood,)Tj
T*
( Stop up the access and passage to remorse,)Tj
T*
( That no compunctious visitings of nature)Tj
T*
( Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between)Tj
T*
( The effect and it! Come to my woman\222s breasts,)Tj
T*
( And take my milk for gall, you murdering ministers,)Tj
T*
( Wherever in your sightless substances)Tj
T*
( You wait on nature\222s mischief! Come, thick night,)Tj
T*
( And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,)Tj
T*
( That my keen knife see not the wound it makes,)Tj
T*
( Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark,)Tj
T*
( To cry \221Hold, hold!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [38])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.75456 Tm
( Your face, my thane, is as a book where men)Tj
T*
( May read strange matters. To beguile the time,)Tj
T*
( Look like the time; bear welcome in your eye,)Tj
ET
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( Your hand, your tongue: look like the innocent flower,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But be the serpent under\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [63])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Duncan: This castle hath a pleasant seat; the air)Tj
T*
( Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself)Tj
T*
( Unto our gentle senses.)Tj
T*
( Banquo: This guest of summer,)Tj
T*
( The temple-haunting martlet, does approve)Tj
T*
( By his loved mansionry that the heaven\222s breath)Tj
T*
( Smells wooingly here: no jutty, frieze,)Tj
T*
( Buttress, nor coign of vantage, but this bird)Tj
T*
( Hath made his pendent bed and procreant cradle:)Tj
T*
( Where they most breed and haunt, I have observed,)Tj
T*
( The air is delicate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 6, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( If it were done when \222tis done, then \222twere well)Tj
T*
( It were done quickly: if the assassination)Tj
T*
( Could trammel up the consequence, and catch)Tj
T*
( With his surcease success; that but this blow)Tj
T*
( Might be the be-all and the end-all here,)Tj
T*
( But here, upon this bank and shoal of time,)Tj
T*
( We\222d jump the life to come. But in these cases)Tj
T*
( We still have judgment here; that we but teach)Tj
T*
( Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return,)Tj
T*
( To plague the inventor; this even-handed justice)Tj
T*
( Commends the ingredients of our poisoned chalice)Tj
T*
( To our own lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( Besides, this Duncan)Tj
T*
( Hath borne his faculties so meek, hath been)Tj
T*
( So clear in his great office, that his virtues)Tj
T*
( Will plead like angels trumpet-tongued, against)Tj
T*
( The deep damnation of his taking-off;)Tj
T*
( And pity, like a naked new-born babe,)Tj
T*
( Striding the blast, or heaven\222s cherubim, horsed)Tj
T*
( Upon the sightless couriers of the air,)Tj
T*
( Shall blow the horrid deed in every eye,)Tj
T*
( That tears shall drown the wind. I have no spur)Tj
T*
( To prick the sides of my intent, but only)Tj
T*
( Vaulting ambition, which o\222erleaps itself,)Tj
ET
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( And falls on the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( We will proceed no further in this business:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He hath honoured me of late; and I have bought)Tj
T*
( Golden opinions from all sorts of people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Was the hope drunk,)Tj
T*
( Wherein you dressed yourself? hath it slept since,)Tj
T*
( And wakes it now, to look so green and pale)Tj
T*
( At what it did so freely? From this time)Tj
T*
( Such I account thy love. Art thou afeard)Tj
T*
( To be the same in thine own act and valour)Tj
T*
( As thou art in desire? Wouldst thou have that)Tj
T*
( Which thou esteem\222st the ornament of life,)Tj
T*
( And live a coward in thine own esteem,)Tj
T*
( Letting \221I dare not\222 wait upon \221I would,\222)Tj
T*
( Like the poor cat i\222 the adage?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( I dare do all that may become a man;)Tj
T*
( Who dares do more is none.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Lady Macbeth: I have given suck, and know)Tj
T*
( How tender \222tis to love the babe that milks me:)Tj
T*
( I would, while it was smiling in my face,)Tj
T*
( Have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums,)Tj
T*
( And dash\222d the brains out, had I so sworn as you)Tj
T*
( Have done to this.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: If we should fail,\227)Tj
T*
( Lady Macbeth: We fail!)Tj
T*
( But screw your courage to the sticking-place,)Tj
T*
( And we\222ll not fail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Bring forth men-children only;)Tj
T*
( For thy undaunted mettle should compose)Tj
T*
( Nothing but males.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( False face must hide what the false heart doth know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 1, sc. 7, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( There\222s husbandry in heaven;)Tj
T*
( Their candles are all out.)Tj
ET
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(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A heavy summons lies like lead upon me,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And yet I would not sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Is this a dagger which I see before me,)Tj
T*
( The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee:)Tj
T*
( I have thee not, and yet I see thee still.)Tj
T*
( Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible)Tj
T*
( To feeling as to sight? or art thou but)Tj
T*
( A dagger of the mind, a false creation,)Tj
T*
( Proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Now o\222er the one half-world)Tj
T*
( Nature seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse)Tj
T*
( The curtained sleep; witchcraft celebrates)Tj
T*
( Pale Hecate\222s offerings; and withered murder,)Tj
T*
( Alarumed by his sentinel, the wolf,)Tj
T*
( Whose howl\222s his watch, thus with his stealthy pace,)Tj
T*
( With Tarquin\222s ravishing strides, toward his design)Tj
T*
( Moves like a ghost. Thou sure and firm-set earth,)Tj
T*
( Hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear)Tj
T*
( The very stones prate of my whereabout,)Tj
T*
( And take the present horror from the time,)Tj
T*
( Which now suits with it. Whiles I threat he lives:)Tj
T*
( Words to the heat of deeds too cold breath gives.)Tj
T*
( I go, and it is done; the bell invites me.)Tj
T*
( Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell)Tj
T*
( That summons thee to heaven or to hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( That which hath made them drunk hath made me bold,)Tj
T*
( What hath quenched them hath given me fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( It was the owl that shrieked, the fatal bellman,)Tj
T*
( Which gives the stern\222st good-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( The attempt and not the deed,)Tj
T*
( Confounds us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Had he not resembled)Tj
T*
( My father as he slept I had done\222t.)Tj
ET
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(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I have done the deed. Didst thou not hear a noise?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Wherefore could not I pronounce \221Amen\222?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I had most need of blessing, and \221Amen\222)Tj
T*
( Stuck in my throat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Methought I heard a voice cry, \221Sleep no more!)Tj
T*
( Macbeth does murder sleep,\222 the innocent sleep,)Tj
T*
( Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care,)Tj
T*
( The death of each day\222s life, sore labour\222s bath,)Tj
T*
( Balm of hurt minds, great nature\222s second course,)Tj
T*
( Chief nourisher in life\222s feast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Glamis hath murdered sleep, and therefore Cawdor)Tj
T*
( Shall sleep no more, Macbeth shall sleep no more!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Macbeth: I am afraid to think what I have done;)Tj
T*
( Look on\222t again I dare not.)Tj
T*
( Lady Macbeth: Infirm of purpose!)Tj
T*
( Give me the daggers. The sleeping and the dead)Tj
T*
( Are but as pictures; \222tis the eye of childhood)Tj
T*
( That fears a painted devil. If he do bleed)Tj
T*
( I\222ll gild the faces of the grooms withal;)Tj
T*
( For it must seem their guilt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Whence is that knocking?)Tj
T*
( How is\222t with me, when every noise appals me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Will all great Neptune\222s ocean wash this blood)Tj
T*
( Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather)Tj
T*
( The multitudinous seas incarnadine,)Tj
T*
( Making the green one red.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( A little water clears us of this deed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Here\222s a knocking, indeed! If a man were porter of hell-gate he s\
hould have old turning the )Tj
T*
(key. Knock, knock, knock! Who\222s there i\222 the name of Beelzebub? He\
re\222s a farmer that hanged )Tj
T*
(himself on the expectation of plenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 1)Tj
ET
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( Who\222s there i\222 the other devil\222s name! Faith, here\222s an \
equivocator, that could swear in both )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the scales against either scale; who committed treason enough for God\222\
s sake, yet could not )Tj
T*
(equivocate to heaven: O! come in, equivocator.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [9])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( This place is too cold for hell. I\222ll devil-porter it no further:\
I had thought to have let in some of )Tj
T*
(all professions, that go the primrose way to the everlasting bonfire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [19].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Porter: Drink, sir, is a great provoker of three things. )Tj
T*
( Macduff: What three things does drink especially provoke?)Tj
T*
( Porter: Marry, sir, nose-painting, sleep, and urine. Lechery, sir, \
it provokes, and unprovokes; it )Tj
T*
(provokes the desire, but it takes away the performance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The labour we delight in physics pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [56])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The night has been unruly: where we lay)Tj
T*
( Our chimneys were blown down; and, as they say,)Tj
T*
( Lamentings heard i\222 the air; strange screams of death,)Tj
T*
( And prophesying with accents terrible)Tj
T*
( Of dire combustion and confused events)Tj
T*
( New-hatched to the woeful time. The obscure bird)Tj
T*
( Clamoured the live-long night: some say the earth)Tj
T*
( Was feverous and did shake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Confusion now hath made his masterpiece!)Tj
T*
( Most sacrilegious murder hath broke ope)Tj
T*
( The Lord\222s anointed temple, and stole thence)Tj
T*
( The life o\222 the building!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [72])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( Shake off this downy sleep, death\222s counterfeit,)Tj
T*
( And look on death itself! up, up, and see)Tj
T*
( The great doom\222s image!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Macduff: Our royal master\222s murdered!)Tj
T*
( Lady Macbeth: Woe, alas!)Tj
T*
( What! in our house?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Had I but died an hour before this chance,)Tj
T*
( I had lived a blessed time; for, from this instant,)Tj
T*
( There\222s nothing serious in mortality:)Tj
T*
( All is but toys; renown and grace is dead,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( The wine of life is drawn, and the mere lees)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is left this vault to brag of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [98])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Who can be wise, amaz\351d, temperate, and furious,)Tj
T*
( Loyal and neutral, in a moment? No man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [115])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Lady Macbeth: Help me hence, ho!)Tj
T*
( Macduff: Look to the lady.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [125])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Where we are,)Tj
T*
( There\222s daggers in men\222s smiles: the near in blood,)Tj
T*
( The nearer bloody.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [146])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( A falcon, towering in her pride of place,)Tj
T*
( Was by a mousing owl hawked at and killed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Thou hast it now: King, Cawdor, Glamis, all,)Tj
T*
( As the weird women promised; and, I fear,)Tj
T*
( Thou play\222dst most foully for\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Banquo: Go not my horse the better,)Tj
T*
( I must become a borrower of the night)Tj
T*
( For a dark hour or twain.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: Fail not our feast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( To be thus is nothing;)Tj
T*
( But to be safely thus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( First Murderer: We are men, my liege.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: Ay, in the catalogue ye go for men,)Tj
T*
( As hounds and greyhounds, mongrels, spaniels, curs,)Tj
T*
( Shoughs, water-rugs, and demi-wolves are clipt)Tj
T*
( All by the name of dogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Second Murderer: I am one, my liege,)Tj
T*
( Whom the vile blows and buffets of the world)Tj
T*
( Have so incensed, that I am reckless what)Tj
T*
( I do to spite the world.)Tj
T*
( First Murderer: I another,)Tj
T*
( So weary with disasters, tugged with fortune,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( That I would set my life on any chance,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To mend it or be rid on\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Leave no rubs nor botches in the work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Lady Macbeth: Things without all remedy)Tj
T*
( Should be without regard: what\222s done is done.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: We have scotched the snake, not killed it:)Tj
T*
( She\222ll close and be herself, whilst our poor malice)Tj
T*
( Remains in danger of her former tooth.)Tj
T*
( But let the frame of things disjoint, both the worlds suffer,)Tj
T*
( Ere we will eat our meal in fear, and sleep)Tj
T*
( In the affliction of these terrible dreams)Tj
T*
( That shake us nightly. Better be with the dead,)Tj
T*
( Whom we, to gain our peace, have sent to peace,)Tj
T*
( Than on the torture of the mind to lie)Tj
T*
( In restless ecstasy. Duncan is in his grave;)Tj
T*
( After life\222s fitful fever he sleeps well;)Tj
T*
( Treason has done his worst: nor steel, nor poison,)Tj
T*
( Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing,)Tj
T*
( Can touch him further.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( Ere the bat hath flown)Tj
T*
( His cloistered flight, ere, to black Hecate\222s summons)Tj
T*
( The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums)Tj
T*
( Hath rung night\222s yawning peal, there shall be done)Tj
T*
( A deed of dreadful note.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,)Tj
T*
( Till thou applaud the deed. Come, seeling night,)Tj
T*
( Scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day,)Tj
T*
( And with thy bloody and invisible hand,)Tj
T*
( Cancel and tear to pieces that great bond)Tj
T*
( Which keeps me pale! Light thickens, and the crow)Tj
T*
( Makes wing to the rooky wood;)Tj
T*
( Good things of day begin to droop and drowse,)Tj
T*
( Whiles night\222s black agents to their preys do rouse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day:)Tj
T*
( Now spurs the lated traveller apace)Tj
ET
EMC
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( To gain the timely inn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Ourself will mingle with society)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And play the humble host.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Now I am cabined, cribbed, confined, bound in)Tj
T*
( To saucy doubts and fears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Now good digestion wait on appetite,)Tj
T*
( And health on both!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Thou canst not say I did it: never shake)Tj
T*
( Thy gory locks at me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( What man dare, I dare;)Tj
T*
( Approach thou like the rugged Russian bear,)Tj
T*
( The armed rhinoceros or the Hyrcan tiger,)Tj
T*
( Take any shape but that, and my firm nerves)Tj
T*
( Shall never tremble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Stand not upon the order of your going,)Tj
T*
( But go at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Macbeth: It will have blood, they say; blood will have blood:)Tj
T*
( Stones have been known to move and trees to speak;)Tj
T*
( Augurs and understood relations have)Tj
T*
( By maggot-pies and choughs and rooks brought forth)Tj
T*
( The secret\222st man of blood. What is the night?)Tj
T*
( Lady Macbeth: Almost at odds with morning, which is which.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( I am in blood)Tj
T*
( Stepped in so far that, should I wade no more,)Tj
T*
( Returning were as tedious as go o\222er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 136)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( You lack the season of all natures, sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Security)Tj
T*
( Is mortals\222 chiefest enemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Round about the cauldron go;)Tj
ET
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( In the poisoned entrails throw.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Toad, that under cold stone)Tj
T*
( Days and nights hast thirty-one)Tj
T*
( Sweltered venom sleeping got,)Tj
T*
( Boil thou first i\222 the charm\351d pot.)Tj
T*
( Double, double toil and trouble;)Tj
T*
( Fire burn and cauldron bubble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Eye of newt, and toe of frog,)Tj
T*
( Wool of bat, and tongue of dog,)Tj
T*
( Adder\222s fork, and blind-worm\222s sting,)Tj
T*
( Lizard\222s leg, and howlet\222s wing,)Tj
T*
( For a charm of powerful trouble,)Tj
T*
( Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( Liver of blaspheming Jew,)Tj
T*
( Gall of goat, and slips of yew)Tj
T*
( Slivered in the moon\222s eclipse,)Tj
T*
( Nose of Turk, and Tartar\222s lips,)Tj
T*
( Finger of birth-strangled babe)Tj
T*
( Ditch-delivered by a drab,)Tj
T*
( Make the gruel thick and slab.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Second Witch: By the pricking of my thumbs,)Tj
T*
( Something wicked this way comes.)Tj
T*
( Open, locks,)Tj
T*
( Whoever knocks.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: How now, you secret, black, and midnight hags!)Tj
T*
( What is\222t you do?)Tj
T*
( Witches: A deed without a name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( Be bloody, bold, and resolute; laugh to scorn)Tj
T*
( The power of man, for none of woman born)Tj
T*
( Shall harm Macbeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( But yet, I\222ll make assurance double sure,)Tj
T*
( And take a bond of fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Macbeth shall never vanquished be until)Tj
T*
( Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill)Tj
ET
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( Shall come against him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( His flight was madness: when our actions do not,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Our fears do make us traitors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( He loves us not;)Tj
T*
( He wants the natural touch; for the poor wren,)Tj
T*
( The most diminutive of birds, will fight\227)Tj
T*
( Her young ones in her nest\227against the owl.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Son: And must they all be hanged that swear and lie?)Tj
T*
( Lady Macduff: Every one.)Tj
T*
( Son: Who must hang them?)Tj
T*
( Lady Macduff: Why, the honest men.)Tj
T*
( Son: Then the liars and swearers are fools, for there are liars and\
swearers enow to beat the )Tj
T*
(honest men and hang up them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Angels are bright still, though the brightest fell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Stands Scotland where it did?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 164)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( What! man; ne\222er pull your hat upon your brows;)Tj
T*
( Give sorrow words: the grief that does not speak)Tj
T*
( Whispers the o\222er-fraught heart, and bids it break.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Malcolm: Let\222s make us medicine of our great revenge,)Tj
T*
( To cure this deadly grief.)Tj
T*
( Macduff: He has no children. All my pretty ones?)Tj
T*
( Did you say all? O hell-kite! All?)Tj
T*
( What! all my pretty chickens and their dam,)Tj
T*
( At one fell swoop?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 216)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Malcolm: Dispute it like a man.)Tj
T*
( Macduff: I shall do so;)Tj
T*
( But I must also feel it as a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 219)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Doctor: You see her eyes are open.)Tj
T*
( Gentlewoman: Ay, but their sense is shut.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [27])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Out, damned spot! out, I say! One; two: why then, \222tis time to do\
\222t. Hell is murky! Fie, my )Tj
ET
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(lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard? What need we fear who knows it, when n\
one can call our power )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to account? Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much b\
lood in him?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [38])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The Thane of Fife had a wife: where is she now? What! will these han\
ds ne\222er be clean? No )Tj
T*
(more o\222 that, my lord, no more o\222 that: you mar all with this star\
ting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [46])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Here\222s the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes of Arabia w\
ill not sweeten this little hand. )Tj
T*
(Oh! oh! oh!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [55])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( I would not have such a heart in my bosom for the dignity of the who\
le body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [60])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Wash your hands, put on your night-gown; look not so pale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [67])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( What\222s done cannot be undone. To bed, to bed, to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [74])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( More needs she the divine than the physician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 act 5, sc. 1, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Foul whisperings are abroad. Unnatural deeds)Tj
T*
( Do breed unnatural troubles; infected minds)Tj
T*
( To their deaf pillows will discharge their secrets;)Tj
T*
( More needs she the divine than the physician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( Those he commands move only in command,)Tj
T*
( Nothing in love; now does he feel his title)Tj
T*
( Hang loose about him, like a giant\222s robe)Tj
T*
( Upon a dwarfish thief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Bring me no more reports; let them fly all:)Tj
T*
( Till Birnam wood remove to Dunsinane)Tj
T*
( I cannot taint with fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( The devil damn thee black, thou cream-faced loon!)Tj
T*
( Where gott\222st thou that goose look?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( I have liv\351d long enough: my way of life)Tj
T*
( Is fall\222n into the sear, the yellow leaf;)Tj
T*
( And that which should accompany old age,)Tj
T*
( As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,)Tj
T*
( I must not look to have; but, in their stead,)Tj
T*
( Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath,)Tj
ET
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( Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Macbeth: Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow,)Tj
T*
( Raze out the written troubles of the brain,)Tj
T*
( And with some sweet oblivious antidote)Tj
T*
( Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff)Tj
T*
( Which weighs upon the heart?)Tj
T*
( Doctor: Therein the patient)Tj
T*
( Must minister to himself.)Tj
T*
( Macbeth: Throw physic to the dogs; I\222ll none of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Hang out our banners on the outward walls;)Tj
T*
( The cry is still, \221They come\222; our castle\222s strength)Tj
T*
( Will laugh a siege to scorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( I have almost forgot the taste of fears.)Tj
T*
( The time has been my senses would have cooled)Tj
T*
( To hear a night-shriek, and my fell of hair)Tj
T*
( Would at a dismal treatise rouse and stir)Tj
T*
( As life were in\222t. I have supped full with horrors;)Tj
T*
( Direness, familiar to my slaughterous thoughts,)Tj
T*
( Cannot once start me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( She should have died hereafter;)Tj
T*
( There would have been a time for such a word,)Tj
T*
( To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,)Tj
T*
( Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,)Tj
T*
( To the last syllable of recorded time;)Tj
T*
( And all our yesterdays have lighted fools)Tj
T*
( The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!)Tj
T*
( Life\222s but a walking shadow, a poor player,)Tj
T*
( That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,)Tj
T*
( And then is heard no more; it is a tale)Tj
T*
( Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,)Tj
T*
( Signifying nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( If that which he avouches does appear,)Tj
T*
( There is nor flying hence, nor tarrying here.)Tj
T*
( I \222gin to be aweary of the sun,)Tj
ET
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( And wish the estate o\222 the world were now undone.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ring the alarum-bell! Blow, wind! come, wrack!)Tj
T*
( At least we\222ll die with harness on our back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Macbeth: I bear a charm\351d life, which must not yield)Tj
T*
( To one of woman born.)Tj
T*
( Macduff: Despair thy charm;)Tj
T*
( And let the angel who thou still hast served)Tj
T*
( Tell thee, Macduff was from his mother\222s womb)Tj
T*
( Untimely ripped.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 7, l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Lay on, Macduff;)Tj
T*
( And damned be him that first cries, \221Hold, enough!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 7, l. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Siward: Had he his hurts before?)Tj
T*
( Ross: Ay, on the front.)Tj
T*
( Siward: Why, then, God\222s soldier be he!)Tj
T*
( Had I as many sons as I have hairs,)Tj
T*
( I would not wish them to a fairer death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Macbeth\222 \(1606\) act 5, sc. 7, l. 75)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 379.79173 Tm
( 7.66.20 Measure for Measure)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Now, as fond fathers,)Tj
T*
( Having bound up the threat\222ning twigs of birch,)Tj
T*
( Only to stick it in their children\222s sight)Tj
T*
( For terror, not to use, in time the rod)Tj
T*
( Becomes more mocked than feared; so our decrees,)Tj
T*
( Dead to infliction, to themselves are dead,)Tj
T*
( And liberty plucks justice by the nose;)Tj
T*
( The baby beats the nurse, and quite athwart)Tj
T*
( Goes all decorum.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.75456 Tm
( I hold you as a thing enskyed and sainted;)Tj
T*
( By your renouncement an immortal spirit,)Tj
T*
( And to be talked with in sincerity,)Tj
T*
( As with a saint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.00456 Tm
( Your brother and his lover have embraced:)Tj
T*
( As those that feed grow full, as blossoming time)Tj
T*
( That from the seedness the bare fallow brings)Tj
ET
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( To teeming foison, even so her plenteous womb)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Expresseth his full tilth and husbandry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A man whose blood)Tj
T*
( Is very snow-broth; one who never feels)Tj
T*
( The wanton stings and motions of the sense,)Tj
T*
( But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge)Tj
T*
( With profits of the mind, study and fast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( We must not make a scarecrow of the law,)Tj
T*
( Setting it up to fear the birds of prey,)Tj
T*
( And let it keep one shape, till custom make it)Tj
T*
( Their perch and not their terror.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( \222Tis one thing to be tempted, Escalus,)Tj
T*
( Another thing to fall. I not deny,)Tj
T*
( The jury, passing on the prisoner\222s life,)Tj
T*
( May in the sworn twelve have a thief or two)Tj
T*
( Guiltier than him they try.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( This will last out a night in Russia,)Tj
T*
( When nights are longest there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [144])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( There is a vice that most I do abhor,)Tj
T*
( And most desire should meet the blow of justice,)Tj
T*
( For which I would not plead, but that I must;)Tj
T*
( For which I must not plead, but that I am)Tj
T*
( At war \222twixt will and will not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Condemn the fault and not the actor of it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( No ceremony that to great ones \222longs,)Tj
T*
( Not the king\222s crown, nor the deputed sword,)Tj
T*
( The marshal\222s truncheon, nor the judge\222s robe,)Tj
T*
( Become them with one half so good a grace)Tj
T*
( As mercy does.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( O! it is excellent)Tj
T*
( To have a giant\222s strength, but it is tyrannous)Tj
T*
( To use it like a giant.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Man, proud man,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drest in a little brief authority,)Tj
T*
( Most ignorant of what he\222s most assured,)Tj
T*
( His glassy essence, like an angry ape,)Tj
T*
( Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven,)Tj
T*
( As make the angels weep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Great men may jest with saints; \222tis wit in them,)Tj
T*
( But, in the less foul profanation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( That in the captain\222s but a choleric word,)Tj
T*
( Which in the soldier is flat blasphemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Is this her fault or mine?)Tj
T*
( The tempter or the tempted, who sins most?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 162)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( O cunning enemy, that, to catch a saint,)Tj
T*
( With saints dost bait thy hook! Most dangerous)Tj
T*
( Is that temptation that doth goad us on)Tj
T*
( To sin in loving virtue; never could the strumpet,)Tj
T*
( With all her double vigour, art and nature,)Tj
T*
( Once stir my temper; but this virtuous maid)Tj
T*
( Subdues me quite. Ever till now)Tj
T*
( When men were fond, I smiled and wondered how.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 180)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Might there not be a charity in sin)Tj
T*
( To save this brother\222s life?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Claudio: The miserable have no other medicine)Tj
T*
( But only hope:)Tj
T*
( I have hope to live, and am prepared to die.)Tj
T*
( Duke: Be absolute for death; either death or life)Tj
T*
( Shall thereby be the sweeter. Reason thus with life:)Tj
T*
( If I do lose thee, I do lose a thing)Tj
T*
( That none but fools would keep: a breath thou art)Tj
T*
( Servile to all the skyey influences,)Tj
T*
( That dost this habitation, where thou keep\222st,)Tj
T*
( Hourly afflict. Merely, thou art death\222s fool;)Tj
T*
( For him thou labour\222st by thy flight to shun,)Tj
ET
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( And yet run\222st toward him still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( If thou art rich, thou\222rt poor;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For, like an ass whose back with ingots bows,)Tj
T*
( Thou bear\222st thy heavy riches but a journey,)Tj
T*
( And death unloads thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Thou hast nor youth nor age;)Tj
T*
( But, as it were, an after-dinner\222s sleep,)Tj
T*
( Dreaming on both; for all thy blessed youth)Tj
T*
( Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms)Tj
T*
( Of palsied eld.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Dar\222st thou die?)Tj
T*
( The sense of death is most in apprehension,)Tj
T*
( And the poor beetle, that we tread upon,)Tj
T*
( In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great)Tj
T*
( As when a giant dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( If I must die,)Tj
T*
( I will encounter darkness as a bride,)Tj
T*
( And hug it in mine arms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Sure, it is no sin;)Tj
T*
( Or of the deadly seven it is the least.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( Claudio: Death is a fearful thing.)Tj
T*
( Isabella: And shamed life a hateful.)Tj
T*
( Claudio: Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;)Tj
T*
( To lie in cold obstruction and to rot;)Tj
T*
( This sensible warm motion to become)Tj
T*
( A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit)Tj
T*
( To bathe in fiery floods or to reside)Tj
T*
( In thrilling region of thick-ribb\351d ice;)Tj
T*
( To be imprisoned in the viewless winds,)Tj
T*
( And blown with restless violence round about)Tj
T*
( The pendant world; or to be worse than worst)Tj
T*
( Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts)Tj
T*
( Imagine howling: \222tis too horrible!)Tj
T*
( The weariest and most loath\351d worldly life)Tj
ET
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( That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Can lay on nature, is a paradise)Tj
T*
( To what we fear of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The hand that hath made you fair hath made you good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [182])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Virtue is bold, and goodness never fearful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [214])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( There, at the moated grange, resides this dejected Mariana.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [279])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Some report a sea-maid spawned him; some that he was begot between t\
wo stock-fishes. But it )Tj
T*
(is certain that when he makes water his urine is congealed ice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [117])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( A very superficial, ignorant, unweighing fellow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [151])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Take, O take those lips away,)Tj
T*
( That so sweetly were forsworn;)Tj
T*
( And those eyes, the break of day,)Tj
T*
( Lights that do mislead the morn:)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But my kisses bring again, bring again;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Seals of love, but sealed in vain, sealed in vain.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.00456 Tm
( Though music oft hath such a charm)Tj
T*
( To make bad good, and good provoke to harm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.25456 Tm
( He will discredit our mystery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.50456 Tm
( Every true man\222s apparel fits your thief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [46])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.75456 Tm
( A man that apprehends death no more dreadfully but as a drunken slee\
p; careless, reckless, and )Tj
T*
(fearless of what\222s past, present, or to come; insensible of mortality\
, and desperately mortal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.92047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.00456 Tm
( O! death\222s a great disguiser.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [185])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.25456 Tm
( I am a kind of burr; I shall stick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [193])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.50456 Tm
( Let the devil)Tj
T*
( Be sometime honoured for his burning throne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.67047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [289])Tj
ET
EMC
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( Haste still pays haste, and leisure answers leisure;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like doth quit like, and Measure still for Measure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [411])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( They say best men are moulded out of faults,)Tj
T*
( And, for the most, become much more the better)Tj
T*
( For being a little bad: so may my husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Measure for Measure\222 \(1604\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [440])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 615.29173 Tm
( 7.66.21 The Merchant of Venice)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.00456 Tm
( Antonio: In sooth I know not why I am so sad:)Tj
T*
( It wearies me; you say it wearies you;)Tj
T*
( But how I caught it, found it, or came by it,)Tj
T*
( What stuff \222tis made of, whereof it is born,)Tj
T*
( I am to learn;)Tj
T*
( And such a want-wit sadness makes of me,)Tj
T*
( That I have much ado to know myself.)Tj
T*
( Salarino: Your mind is tossing on the ocean;)Tj
T*
( There, where your argosies with portly sail,\227)Tj
T*
( Like signiors and rich burghers on the flood,)Tj
T*
( Or, as it were, the pageants of the sea,\227)Tj
T*
( Do overpeer the petty traffickers,)Tj
T*
( That curtsy to them, do them reverence,)Tj
T*
( As they fly by them with their woven wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( Now, by two-headed Janus,)Tj
T*
( Nature hath framed strange fellows in her time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( You have too much respect upon the world:)Tj
T*
( They lose it that do buy it with much care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.75456 Tm
( I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano;)Tj
T*
( A stage where every man must play a part,)Tj
T*
( And mine a sad one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.00456 Tm
( Why should a man, whose blood is warm within,)Tj
T*
( Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( There are a sort of men whose visages)Tj
T*
( Do cream and mantle like a standing pond,)Tj
T*
( And do a wilful stillness entertain,)Tj
ET
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( With purpose to be dressed in an opinion)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of wisdom, gravity, profound conceit;)Tj
T*
( As who should say, \221I am Sir Oracle,)Tj
T*
( And when I ope my lips let no dog bark!\222)Tj
T*
( O, my Antonio, I do know of these,)Tj
T*
( That therefore only are reputed wise,)Tj
T*
( For saying nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( Fish not, with this melancholy bait,)Tj
T*
( For this fool gudgeon, this opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Silence is only commendable)Tj
T*
( In a neat\222s tongue dried and a maid not vendible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Gratiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing, more than any man in al\
l Venice. His reasons are )Tj
T*
(as two grains of wheat, hid in two bushels of chaff: you shall seek all \
day ere you find them; and, )Tj
T*
(when you have them, they are not worth the search.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( My purse, my person, my extremest means)Tj
T*
( Lie all unlocked to your occasions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [139])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( In Belmont is a lady richly left,)Tj
T*
( And she is fair, and fairer than the word,)Tj
T*
( Of wondrous virtues; sometimes from her eyes)Tj
T*
( I did receive fair speechless messages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [162])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( By my troth, Nerissa, my little body is aweary of this great world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( They are as sick that surfeit with too much, as they that starve wit\
h nothing. It is no mean )Tj
T*
(happiness, therefore, to be seated in the mean: superfluity comes sooner\
by white hairs, but )Tj
T*
(competency lives longer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [5])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( If to do were as easy as to know what were good to do, chapels had b\
een churches, and poor )Tj
T*
(men\222s cottages princes\222 palaces. It is a good divine that follows \
his own instructions; I can easier )Tj
T*
(teach twenty what were good to be done, than be one of the twenty to fol\
low mine own teaching.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [13])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( He doth nothing but talk of his horse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [43])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( God made him, and therefore let him pass for a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [59])Tj
ET
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( If I should marry him, I should marry twenty husbands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [66])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I think he bought his doublet in Italy, his round hose in France, hi\
s bonnet in Germany, and his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(behaviour everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I will do anything, Nerissa, ere I will be married to a sponge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [105])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( There is not one among them but I dote on his very absence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [117])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Ships are but boards, sailors but men; there be land-rats and water-\
rats, land-thieves and water-)Tj
T*
(thieves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [22])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( I will buy with you, sell with you, talk with you, walk with you, an\
d so following; but I will )Tj
T*
(not eat with you, drink with you, nor pray with you.)Tj
T*
( What news on the Rialto?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( How like a fawning publican he looks!)Tj
T*
( I hate him for he is a Christian;)Tj
T*
( But more for that in low simplicity)Tj
T*
( He lends out money gratis, and brings down)Tj
T*
( The rate of usance here with us in Venice.)Tj
T*
( If I can catch him once upon the hip,)Tj
T*
( I will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him.)Tj
T*
( He hates our sacred nation, and he rails,)Tj
T*
( Even there where merchants most do congregate,)Tj
T*
( On me, my bargains, and my well-won thrift,)Tj
T*
( Which he calls interest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [42])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.)Tj
T*
( An evil soul, producing holy witness,)Tj
T*
( Is like a villain with a smiling cheek,)Tj
T*
( A goodly apple rotten at the heart.)Tj
T*
( O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [99])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Signior Antonio, many a time and oft)Tj
T*
( In the Rialto you have rated me)Tj
T*
( About my moneys and my usances:)Tj
T*
( Still have I borne it with a patient shrug,)Tj
T*
( For sufferance is the badge of all our tribe.)Tj
T*
( You call me misbeliever, cut-throat dog,)Tj
ET
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( And spet upon my Jewish gabardine,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all for use of that which is mine own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [107])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( You that did void your rheum upon my beard,)Tj
T*
( And foot me as you spurn a stranger cur)Tj
T*
( Over your threshold: moneys is your suit.)Tj
T*
( What should I say to you? Should I not say,)Tj
T*
( \221Hath a dog money? Is it possible)Tj
T*
( A cur can lend three thousand ducats?\222 or)Tj
T*
( Shall I bend low, and in a bondman\222s key,)Tj
T*
( With bated breath, and whispering humbleness,)Tj
T*
( Say this:\227)Tj
T*
( \221Fair sir, you spat on me Wednesday last;)Tj
T*
( You spurned me such a day; another time)Tj
T*
( You called me dog; and for these courtesies)Tj
T*
( I\222ll lend you thus much moneys?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [118])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( O father Abram! what these Christians are,)Tj
T*
( Whose own hard dealing teaches them suspect)Tj
T*
( The thoughts of others!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [161])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( aNtonio: This Hebrew will turn Christian, he grows kind. )Tj
T*
( Bassanio: I like not fair terms and a villain\222s mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [179])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Mislike me not for my complexion,)Tj
T*
( The shadowed livery of the burnished sun,)Tj
T*
( To whom I am a neighbour and near bred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( My conscience, hanging about the neck of my heart, says very wisely \
to me, \221my honest friend )Tj
T*
(Launcelot, being an honest man\222s son,\222\227or rather an honest woma\
n\222s son;\227for, indeed, my )Tj
T*
(father did something smack, something grow to, he had a kind of taste;\227\
well, my conscience )Tj
T*
(says, \221Launcelot, budge not.\222 \221Budge.\222 says the fiend. \221B\
udge not,\222 says my conscience. )Tj
T*
(\221Conscience,\222 say I, \221you counsel well;\222 \221fiend,\222 say \
I, \221you counsel well.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [13])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( The boy was the very staff of my age, my very prop.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [71])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( It is a wise father that knows his own child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [83])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Truth will come to light; murder cannot be hid long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [86])Tj
ET
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( There is some ill a-brewing towards my rest.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For I did dream of money-bags to-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Then it was not for nothing that my nose fell a-bleeding on Black-Mo\
nday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [24])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Lock up my doors; and when you hear the drum,)Tj
T*
( And the vile squealing of the wry-necked fife,)Tj
T*
( Clamber not you up to the casements then,)Tj
T*
( Nor thrust your head into the public street)Tj
T*
( To gaze on Christian fools with varnished faces,)Tj
T*
( But stop my house\222s ears, I mean my casements;)Tj
T*
( Let not the sound of shallow foppery enter)Tj
T*
( My sober house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( Love is blind, and lovers cannot see)Tj
T*
( The pretty follies that themselves commit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 6, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( What! must I hold a candle to my shames?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 6, l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Men that hazard all)Tj
T*
( Do it in hope of fair advantages:)Tj
T*
( A golden mind stoops not to shows of dross.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Had you been as wise as bold,)Tj
T*
( Young in limbs, in judgment old,)Tj
T*
( Your answer had not been inscrolled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 7, l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( My daughter! O my ducats! O my daughter!)Tj
T*
( Fled with a Christian! O my Christian ducats!)Tj
T*
( Justice! the law! my ducats, and my daughter!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 8, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( What many men desire! that \221many\222 may be meant)Tj
T*
( By the fool multitude, that choose by show,)Tj
T*
( Not learning more than the fond eye doth teach;)Tj
T*
( Which pries not to the interior; but, like the martlet,)Tj
T*
( Builds in the weather on the outward wall,)Tj
T*
( Even in the force and road of casualty.)Tj
T*
( I will not choose what many men desire,)Tj
T*
( Because I will not jump with common spirits)Tj
T*
( And rank me with the barbarous multitude.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 9, l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The portrait of a blinking idiot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 9, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( The fire seven times tried this:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Seven times tried that judgment is)Tj
T*
( That did never choose amiss.)Tj
T*
( Some there be that shadows kiss;)Tj
T*
( Such have but a shadow\222s bliss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 9, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Thus hath the candle singed the moth.)Tj
T*
( O, these deliberate fools!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 2, sc. 9, l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The Goodwins, I think they call the place; a very dangerous flat, an\
d fatal, where the carcasses )Tj
T*
(of many a tall ship lie buried, as they say, if my gossip Report be an h\
onest woman of her word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [4])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Let him look to his bond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Hath not a Jew eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, sense\
s, affections, passions? )Tj
T*
(fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same \
diseases, healed by the )Tj
T*
(same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as a Christ\
ian is? If you prick )Tj
T*
(us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if you poison us\
, do we not die? and if you )Tj
T*
(wrong us, shall we not revenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will \
resemble you in that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( The villany you teach me I will execute, and it shall go hard but I \
will better the instruction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [76])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Thou stick\222st a dagger in me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [118])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Tubal: One of them showed me a ring that he had of your daughter fo\
r a monkey.)Tj
T*
( Shylock: Out upon her! Thou torturest me, Tubal: it was my turquois\
e; I had it of Leah when I )Tj
T*
(was a bachelor: I would not have given it for a wilderness of monkeys.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [126])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( He makes a swan-like end)Tj
T*
( Fading in music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Tell me where is fancy bred.)Tj
T*
( Or in the heart or in the head?)Tj
T*
( How begot, how nourish\351d?)Tj
T*
( Reply, reply.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is engendered in the eyes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With gazing fed; and fancy dies)Tj
ET
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( In the cradle where it lies.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let us all ring fancy\222s knell:)Tj
T*
( I\222ll begin it,\227Ding, dong, bell.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 63)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.25456 Tm
( So may the outward shows be least themselves:)Tj
T*
( The world is still deceived with ornament.)Tj
T*
( In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt)Tj
T*
( But, being seasoned with a gracious voice,)Tj
T*
( Obscures the show of evil? In religion,)Tj
T*
( What damn\351d error, but some sober brow)Tj
T*
( Will bless it and approve it with a text,)Tj
T*
( Hiding the grossness with fair ornament?)Tj
T*
( There is no vice so simple but assumes)Tj
T*
( Some mark of virtue on his outward parts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( Ornament is but the guil\351d shore)Tj
T*
( To a most dangerous sea; the beauteous scarf)Tj
T*
( Veiling an Indian beauty; in a word,)Tj
T*
( The seeming truth which cunning times put on)Tj
T*
( To entrap the wisest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.75456 Tm
( You see me, Lord Bassanio, where I stand,)Tj
T*
( Such as I am: though for myself alone)Tj
T*
( I would not be ambitious in my wish,)Tj
T*
( To wish myself much better; yet, for you)Tj
T*
( I would be trebled twenty times myself;)Tj
T*
( A thousand times more fair, ten thousand times)Tj
T*
( More rich;)Tj
T*
( That only to stand high in your account,)Tj
T*
( I might in virtues, beauties, livings, friends,)Tj
T*
( Exceed account: but the full sum of me)Tj
T*
( Is sum of nothing; which, to term in gross,)Tj
T*
( Is an unlessoned girl, unschooled, unpractised;)Tj
T*
( Happy in this, she is not yet so old)Tj
T*
( But she may learn; happier than this,)Tj
T*
( She is not bred so dull but she can learn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.00456 Tm
( I wish you all the joy that you can wish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 191)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.25456 Tm
( Here are a few of the unpleasant\222st words)Tj
ET
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( That ever blotted paper!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 252)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I will have my bond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( How every fool can play upon the word!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [48])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Wilt thou show the whole wealth of thy wit in an instant? I pray the\
e, understand a plain man )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in his plain meaning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [62])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( You\222ll ask me, why I rather choose to have)Tj
T*
( A weight of carrion flesh than to receive)Tj
T*
( Three thousand ducats: I\222ll not answer that:)Tj
T*
( But say it is my humour: is it answered?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Some men there are love not a gaping pig;)Tj
T*
( Some, that are mad if they behold a cat;)Tj
T*
( And others, when the bagpipe sings i\222 the nose,)Tj
T*
( Cannot contain their urine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( There is no firm reason to be rendered,)Tj
T*
( Why he cannot abide a gaping pig;)Tj
T*
( Why he, a harmless necessary cat;)Tj
T*
( Why he, a wauling bagpipe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( I am not bound to please thee with my answer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( I am a tainted wether of the flock,)Tj
T*
( Meetest for death: the weakest kind of fruit)Tj
T*
( Drops earliest to the ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( I never knew so young a body with so old a head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [163])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Portia: Then must the Jew be merciful.)Tj
T*
( Shylock: On what compulsion must I? tell me that.)Tj
T*
( Portia: The quality of mercy is not strained,)Tj
T*
( It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven)Tj
T*
( Upon the place beneath: it is twice blessed;)Tj
T*
( It blesseth him that gives and him that takes:)Tj
ET
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( \222Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The thron\351d monarch better than his crown;)Tj
T*
( His sceptre shows the force of temporal power,)Tj
T*
( The attribute to awe and majesty,)Tj
T*
( Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings;)Tj
T*
( But mercy is above this sceptred sway,)Tj
T*
( It is enthron\351d in the hearts of kings,)Tj
T*
( It is an attribute to God himself,)Tj
T*
( And earthly power doth then show likest God\222s)Tj
T*
( When mercy seasons justice. Therefore, Jew,)Tj
T*
( Though justice be thy plea, consider this,)Tj
T*
( That in the course of justice none of us)Tj
T*
( Should see salvation: we do pray for mercy,)Tj
T*
( And that same prayer doth teach us all to render)Tj
T*
( The deeds of mercy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [182])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( My deeds upon my head! I crave the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [206])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Wrest once the law to your authority:)Tj
T*
( To do a great right, do a little wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [215])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( Portia: There is no power in Venice)Tj
T*
( Can alter a decree established:)Tj
T*
( \222Twill be recorded for a precedent,)Tj
T*
( And many an error by the same example)Tj
T*
( Will rush into the state.)Tj
T*
( Shylock: A Daniel come to judgment! yea, a Daniel!)Tj
T*
( O wise young judge, how I do honour thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [218])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven:)Tj
T*
( Shall I lay perjury upon my soul?)Tj
T*
( No, not for Venice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [228])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( I charge you by the law,)Tj
T*
( Whereof you are a well-deserving pillar,)Tj
T*
( Proceed to judgment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [238])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( The court awards it, and the law doth give it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [301])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Thyself shalt see the act;)Tj
ET
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( For, as thou urgest justice, be assured)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou shalt have justice, more than thou desir\222st.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [315])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( A second Daniel, a Daniel, Jew!)Tj
T*
( Now, infidel, I have thee on the hip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [334])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I thank thee, Jew, for teaching me that word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [342])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Nay, take my life and all; pardon not that:)Tj
T*
( You take my house when you do take the prop)Tj
T*
( That doth sustain my house; you take my life)Tj
T*
( When you do take the means whereby I live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [375])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( He is well paid that is well satisfied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [416])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( I see, sir, you are liberal in offers:)Tj
T*
( You taught me first to beg, and now methinks)Tj
T*
( You teach me how a beggar should be answered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [439])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( The moon shines bright: in such a night as this,)Tj
T*
( When the sweet wind did gently kiss the trees)Tj
T*
( And they did make no noise, in such a night)Tj
T*
( Troilus methinks mounted the Troyan walls,)Tj
T*
( And sighed his soul toward the Grecian tents,)Tj
T*
( Where Cressid lay that night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( In such a night)Tj
T*
( Stood Dido with a willow in her hand)Tj
T*
( Upon the wild sea-banks, and waft her love)Tj
T*
( To come again to Carthage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank!)Tj
T*
( Here will we sit, and let the sounds of music)Tj
T*
( Creep in our ears; soft stillness and the night)Tj
T*
( Become the touches of sweet harmony.)Tj
T*
( Sit, Jessica: look, how the floor of heaven)Tj
T*
( Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold:)Tj
T*
( There\222s not the smallest orb which thou behold\222st)Tj
T*
( But in this motion like an angel sings)Tj
T*
( Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubins;)Tj
ET
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( Such harmony is in immortal souls;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But, whilst this muddy vesture of decay)Tj
T*
( Doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I am never merry when I hear sweet music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The man that hath no music in himself,)Tj
T*
( Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,)Tj
T*
( Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils;)Tj
T*
( The motions of his spirit are dull as night,)Tj
T*
( And his affections dark as Erebus:)Tj
T*
( Let no such man be trusted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Portia: How far that little candle throws his beams!)Tj
T*
( So shines a good deed in a naughty world.)Tj
T*
( Nerissa: When the moon shone, we did not see the candle. )Tj
T*
( Portia: So doth the greater glory dim the less:)Tj
T*
( A substitute shines brightly as a king)Tj
T*
( Until a king be by, and then his state)Tj
T*
( Empties itself, as doth an inland brook)Tj
T*
( Into the main of waters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( The crow doth sing as sweetly as the lark)Tj
T*
( When neither is attended, and I think)Tj
T*
( The nightingale, if she should sing by day,)Tj
T*
( When every goose is cackling, would be thought)Tj
T*
( No better a musician than the wren.)Tj
T*
( How many things by season seasoned are)Tj
T*
( To their right praise and true perfection!)Tj
T*
( Peace, ho! the moon sleeps with Endymion,)Tj
T*
( And would not be awaked!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( This night methinks is but the daylight sick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 124)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Let me give light, but let me not be light:)Tj
T*
( For a light wife doth make a heavy husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( These blessed candles of the night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Venice\222 \(1596-8\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 220)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 13.75 0 0 13.75 10 754.04173 Tm
( 7.66.22 The Merry Wives of Windsor)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 732.75456 Tm
( I will make a Star-Chamber matter of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.92047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.00456 Tm
( She has brown hair, and speaks small like a woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.17047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [48])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.25456 Tm
( I had rather than forty shillings I had my Book of Songs and Sonnets\
here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.42047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [205])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.50456 Tm
( \221Convey,\222 the wise it call. \221Steal!\222 foh! a fico for the\
phrase!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [30])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( Here will be an old abusing of God\222s patience, and the king\222s \
English.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.92047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 1, sc. 4, l. [5])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.00456 Tm
( We burn daylight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.17047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [54])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 512.25456 Tm
( Why, then the world\222s mine oyster,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which I with sword will open.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.42047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.50456 Tm
( Falstaff: Of what quality was your love, then?)Tj
T*
( Ford: Like a fair house built upon another man\222s ground; so that\
I have lost my edifice by )Tj
T*
(mistaking the place where I erected it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.67047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [228])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.75456 Tm
( He capers, he dances, he has eyes of youth, he writes verses, he spe\
aks holiday, he smells April )Tj
T*
(and May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.92047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [71])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.00456 Tm
( O, what a world of vile ill-favoured faults)Tj
T*
( Looks handsome in three hundred pounds a year!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.17047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [32])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.25456 Tm
( If I be served such another trick, I\222ll have my brains ta\222en o\
ut, and buttered, and give them to a )Tj
T*
(dog for a new year\222s gift.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.42047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [7])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( You may know by my size that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( He so takes on yonder with my husband; so rails against all married \
mankind; so curses all )Tj
T*
(Eve\222s daughters, of what complexion soever; and so buffets himself on\
the forehead, crying, )Tj
T*
(\221Peer out, peer out!\222 that any madness I ever yet beheld seemed bu\
t tameness, civility and )Tj
T*
(patience, to this his distemper he is in now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [22])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( This is the third time; I hope good luck lies in odd numbers...There\
is divinity in odd numbers, )Tj
T*
(either in nativity, chance or death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221The Merry Wives of Windsor\222 \(1597\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 2)Tj
ET
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( 7.66.23 A Midsummer Night\222s Dream)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 732.75456 Tm
( Question your desires;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Know of your youth, examine well your blood,)Tj
T*
( Whether, if you yield not to your father\222s choice,)Tj
T*
( You can endure the livery of a nun,)Tj
T*
( For aye to be in shady cloister mewed,)Tj
T*
( To live a barren sister all your life,)Tj
T*
( Chanting faint hymns to the cold fruitless moon.)Tj
T*
( Thrice bless\351d they that master so their blood,)Tj
T*
( To undergo such maiden pilgrimage;)Tj
T*
( But earthlier happy is the rose distilled,)Tj
T*
( Than that which withering on the virgin thorn)Tj
T*
( Grows, lives, and dies, in single blessedness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Ay me! for aught that ever I could read,)Tj
T*
( Could ever hear by tale or history,)Tj
T*
( The course of true love never did run smooth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( O hell! to choose love by another\222s eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 140)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( If there were a sympathy in choice,)Tj
T*
( War, death, or sickness did lay siege to it,)Tj
T*
( Making it momentany as a sound,)Tj
T*
( Swift as a shadow, short as any dream,)Tj
T*
( Brief as the lightning in the collied night,)Tj
T*
( That, in a spleen, unfolds both heaven and earth,)Tj
T*
( And ere a man hath power to say, \221Behold!\222)Tj
T*
( The jaws of darkness do devour it up:)Tj
T*
( So quick bright things come to confusion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Your eyes are lodestars! and your tongue\222s sweet air)Tj
T*
( More tuneable than lark to shepherd\222s ear,)Tj
T*
( When wheat is green, when hawthorn buds appear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 183)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( How happy some o\222er other some can be!)Tj
T*
( Through Athens I am thought as fair as she;)Tj
T*
( But what of that? Demetrius thinks not so;)Tj
T*
( He will not know what all but he do know;)Tj
T*
( And as he errs, doting on Helen\222s eyes,)Tj
T*
( So I, admiring of his qualities.)Tj
ET
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( Things base and vile, holding no quantity,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Love can transpose to form and dignity.)Tj
T*
( Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind,)Tj
T*
( And therefore is wing\222d Cupid painted blind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 226)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( The most lamentable comedy, and most cruel death of Pyramus and This\
by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [11])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Masters, spread yourselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [16])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( If I do it, let the audience look to their eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I could play Ercles rarely, or a part to tear a cat in, to make all \
split.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( This is Ercles\222 vein, a tyrant\222s vein.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [43])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Nay, faith, let me not play a woman; I have a beard coming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [50])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( I will roar, that I will do any man\222s heart good to hear me; I wi\
ll roar, that I will make the duke )Tj
T*
(say, \221Let him roar again, let him roar again.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [73])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( I will roar you as gently as any sucking dove; I will roar you as \222\
twere any nightingale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [85])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Pyramus is a sweet-faced man; a proper man, as one shall see in a su\
mmer\222s day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [89])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Hold, or cut bow-strings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [115])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( Puck: How now, spirit! whither wander you?)Tj
T*
( Fairy: Over hill, over dale,)Tj
T*
( Thorough bush, thorough brier,)Tj
T*
( Over park, over pale,)Tj
T*
( Thorough flood, thorough fire,)Tj
T*
( I do wander everywhere,)Tj
T*
( Swifter than the moone\222s sphere;)Tj
T*
( And I serve the fairy queen,)Tj
T*
( To dew her orbs upon the green:)Tj
T*
( The cowslips tall her pensioners be;)Tj
T*
( In their gold coats spots you see;)Tj
T*
( Those be rubies, fairy favours,)Tj
T*
( In those freckles live their savours:)Tj
T*
( I must go seek some dew-drops here,)Tj
ET
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( And hang a pearl in every cowslip\222s ear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The wisest aunt, telling the saddest tale,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sometime for three-foot stool mistaketh me;)Tj
T*
( Then slip I from her bum, down topples she,)Tj
T*
( And \221tailor\222 cries, and falls into a cough;)Tj
T*
( And then the whole quire hold their hips and loff.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( The fold stands empty in the drown\351d field,)Tj
T*
( And crows are fatted with the murrion flock;)Tj
T*
( The nine men\222s morris is filled up with mud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Therefore the moon, the governess of floods,)Tj
T*
( Pale in her anger, washes all the air,)Tj
T*
( That rheumatic diseases do abound:)Tj
T*
( And thorough this distemperature we see)Tj
T*
( The seasons alter: hoary-headed frosts)Tj
T*
( Fall in the fresh lap of the crimson rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Since once I sat upon a promontory,)Tj
T*
( And heard a mermaid on a dolphin\222s back)Tj
T*
( Uttering such dulcet and harmonious breath,)Tj
T*
( That the rude sea grew civil at her song,)Tj
T*
( And certain stars shot madly from their spheres,)Tj
T*
( To hear the sea-maid\222s music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( But I might see young Cupid\222s fiery shaft)Tj
T*
( Quenched in the chaste beams of the wat\222ry moon,)Tj
T*
( And the imperial votaress passed on,)Tj
T*
( In maiden meditation, fancy-free.)Tj
T*
( Yet marked I where the bolt of Cupid fell:)Tj
T*
( It fell upon a little western flower,)Tj
T*
( Before milk-white, now purple with love\222s wound,)Tj
T*
( And maidens call it, Love-in-idleness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 161)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( I\222ll put a girdle round about the earth)Tj
T*
( In forty minutes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 175)Tj
ET
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( I know a bank whereon the wild thyme blows,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows)Tj
T*
( Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,)Tj
T*
( With sweet musk-roses, and with eglantine:)Tj
T*
( There sleeps Titania some time of the night,)Tj
T*
( Lulled in these flowers with dances and delight;)Tj
T*
( And there the snake throws her enamelled skin,)Tj
T*
( Weed wide enough to wrap a fairy in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( You spotted snakes with double tongue,)Tj
T*
( Thorny hedge-hogs, be not seen;)Tj
T*
( Newts, and blind-worms, do no wrong;)Tj
T*
( Come not near our fairy queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( Weaving spiders come not here;)Tj
T*
( Hence you long-legged spinners, hence!)Tj
T*
( Beetles black, approach not near;)Tj
T*
( Worm nor snail, do no offence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( God shield us!\227a lion among ladies, is a most dreadful thing; for\
there is not a more fearful )Tj
T*
(wild-fowl than your lion living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [32])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Look in the almanack; find out moonshine, find out moonshine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [55])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( What hempen home-spuns have we swaggering here,)Tj
T*
( So near the cradle of the fairy queen?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [82])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( Bless thee, Bottom! bless thee! thou art translated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [124])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( bottom: The ousel-cock, so black of hue,)Tj
T*
( With orange-tawny bill,)Tj
T*
( The throstle with his note so true,)Tj
T*
( The wren with little quill.)Tj
T*
( titania: What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [131])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Out of this wood do not desire to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [159])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( As wild geese that the creeping fowler eye,)Tj
T*
( Or russet-pated choughs, many in sort,)Tj
T*
( Rising and cawing at the gun\222s report,)Tj
ET
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( Sever themselves, and madly sweep the sky;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So, at his sight, away his fellows fly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Lord, what fools these mortals be!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( So we grew together,)Tj
T*
( Like to a double cherry, seeming parted,)Tj
T*
( But yet an union in partition;)Tj
T*
( Two lovely berries moulded on one stem;)Tj
T*
( So, with two seeming bodies, but one heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Ay, do, persever, counterfeit sad looks,)Tj
T*
( Make mouths upon me when I turn my back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( O! when she\222s angry she is keen and shrewd.)Tj
T*
( She was a vixen when she went to school:)Tj
T*
( And though she be but little, she is fierce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 323)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Night\222s swift dragons cut the clouds full fast,)Tj
T*
( And yonder shines Aurora\222s harbinger;)Tj
T*
( At whose approach, ghosts, wandering here and there,)Tj
T*
( Troop home to churchyards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 379)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Cupid is a knavish lad,)Tj
T*
( Thus to make poor females mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 440)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Jack shall have Jill;)Tj
T*
( Nought shall go ill;)Tj
T*
( The man shall have his mare again,)Tj
T*
( And all shall be well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 461)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( I must to the barber\222s, mounsieur, for methinks I am marvellous h\
airy about the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [25])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( I have a reasonable good ear in music: let us have the tongs and the\
bones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [32])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Methinks I have a great desire to a bottle of hay: good hay, sweet h\
ay, hath no fellow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [37])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( I pray you, let none of your people stir me: I have an exposition of\
sleep come upon me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [43])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( My Oberon! what visions have I seen!)Tj
ET
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( Methought I was enamoured of an ass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [82])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I was with Hercules and Cadmus once,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When in a wood of Crete they bayed the bear)Tj
T*
( With hounds of Sparta: never did I hear...)Tj
T*
( So musical a discord, such sweet thunder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [118])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Saint Valentine is past:)Tj
T*
( Begin these wood-birds but to couple now?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [145])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( I have had a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [211])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen, man\222\
s hand is not able to taste, )Tj
T*
(his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report, what my dream was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [218])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( The lunatic, the lover, and the poet,)Tj
T*
( Are of imagination all compact:)Tj
T*
( One sees more devils than vast hell can hold,)Tj
T*
( That is, the madman; the lover, all as frantic,)Tj
T*
( Sees Helen\222s beauty in a brow of Egypt:)Tj
T*
( The poet\222s eye, in a fine frenzy rolling,)Tj
T*
( Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;)Tj
T*
( And, as imagination bodies forth)Tj
T*
( The forms of things unknown, the poet\222s pen)Tj
T*
( Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing)Tj
T*
( A local habitation and a name.)Tj
T*
( Such tricks hath strong imagination,)Tj
T*
( That, if it would but apprehend some joy,)Tj
T*
( It comprehends some bringer of that joy;)Tj
T*
( Or in the night, imagining some fear,)Tj
T*
( How easy is a bush supposed a bear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( What revels are in hand? Is there no play,)Tj
T*
( To ease the anguish of a torturing hour?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( A tedious brief scene of young Pyramus)Tj
T*
( And his love Thisbe: very tragical mirth.)Tj
T*
( Merry and tragical! tedious and brief!)Tj
T*
( That is, hot ice and wondrous strange snow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 56)Tj
ET
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( For never anything can be amiss,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When simpleness and duty tender it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Out of this silence yet I pick\222d a welcome;)Tj
T*
( And in the modesty of fearful duty)Tj
T*
( I read as much as from the rattling tongue)Tj
T*
( Of saucy and audacious eloquence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( If we offend, it is with our good will.)Tj
T*
( That you should think, we come not to offend,)Tj
T*
( But with good will. To show our simple skill,)Tj
T*
( That is the true beginning of our end.)Tj
T*
( Consider then we come but in despite.)Tj
T*
( We do not come as minding to content you,)Tj
T*
( Our true intent is. All for your delight,)Tj
T*
( We are not here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Whereat, with blade, with bloody blameful blade,)Tj
T*
( He bravely broached his boiling bloody breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [148])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( I see a voice: now will I to the chink,)Tj
T*
( To spy an I can hear my Thisby\222s face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [195])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( The best in this kind are but shadows, and the worst are no worse, i\
f imagination amend them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [215])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve;)Tj
T*
( Lovers, to bed; \222tis almost fairy time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [372])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Now the hungry lion roars,)Tj
T*
( And the wolf behowls the moon;)Tj
T*
( Whilst the heavy ploughman snores,)Tj
T*
( All with weary task fordone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Not a mouse)Tj
T*
( Shall disturb this hallow\222d house:)Tj
T*
( I am sent with broom before,)Tj
T*
( To sweep the dust behind the door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( If we shadows have offended,)Tj
T*
( Think but this, and all is mended,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( That you have but slumbered here)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( While these visions did appear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221A Midsummer Night\222s Dream\222 \(1595-6\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 54)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 688.04173 Tm
( 7.66.24 Much Ado About Nothing)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.75456 Tm
( A victory is twice itself when the achiever brings home full numbers\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 650.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [8])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 630.00456 Tm
( He hath indeed better bettered expectation than you must expect of m\
e to tell you how.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 614.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [15])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 593.25456 Tm
( He is a very valiant trencher-man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 577.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [52])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 556.50456 Tm
( How much better is it to weep at joy than to joy at weeping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [27])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( I see, lady, the gentleman is not in your books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [79])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( Beatrice: I wonder that you will still be talking, Signior Benedick\
: nobody marks you.)Tj
T*
( Benedick: What! my dear Lady Disdain, are you yet living?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [121])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( Shall I never see a bachelor of three-score again?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [209])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( In time the savage bull doth bear the yoke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [271])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( Lord! I could not endure a husband with a beard on his face: I had r\
ather lie in the woollen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Would it not grieve a woman to be over-mastered with a piece of vali\
ant dust? to make an )Tj
T*
(account of her life to a clod of wayward marl?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [64])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( I have a good eye, uncle: I can see a church by daylight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [86])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Speak low, if you speak love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [104])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Friendship is constant in all other things)Tj
T*
( Save in the office and affairs of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [184])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( She speaks poniards, and every word stabs: if her breath were as ter\
rible as her terminations, )Tj
T*
(there were no living near her; she would infect to the north star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( I will go on the slightest errand now to the Antipodes that you can \
devise to send me on; I will )Tj
T*
(fetch you a toothpicker now from the furthest inch of Asia; bring you th\
e length of Prester John\222s )Tj
T*
(foot; fetch you a hair off the Great Cham\222s beard; do you any embassa\
ge to the Pigmies, rather )Tj
ET
EMC
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(than hold three words\222 conference with this harpy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [274])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Speak, cousin, or, if you cannot, stop his mouth with a kiss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [322])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Don Pedro: Out of question, you were born in a merry hour. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beatrice: No, sure, my lord, my mother cried; but then there was a \
star danced, and under that )Tj
T*
(was I born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [348])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( She is never sad but when she sleeps; and not ever sad then, for I h\
ave heard my daughter say, )Tj
T*
(she hath often dreamed of unhappiness and waked herself with laughing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [360])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I have known, when he would have walked ten miles afoot to see a goo\
d armour; and now will )Tj
T*
(he lie ten nights awake, carving the fashion of a new doublet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [16])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Is it not strange, that sheeps\222 guts should hale souls out of men\
\222s bodies?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [62])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more,)Tj
T*
( Men were deceivers ever;)Tj
T*
( One foot in sea, and one on shore,)Tj
T*
( To one thing constant never.)Tj
T*
( Then sigh not so,)Tj
T*
( But let them go,)Tj
T*
( And be you blithe and bonny,)Tj
T*
( Converting all your sounds of woe)Tj
T*
( Into Hey nonny, nonny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [65])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Sits the wind in that corner?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Doth not the appetite alter? A man loves the meat in his youth that \
he cannot endure in his age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [258])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( The world must be peopled. When I said I would die a bachelor, I did\
not think I should live )Tj
T*
(till I were married.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [262])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( Now begin;)Tj
T*
( For look where Beatrice, like a lapwing, runs)Tj
T*
( Close by the ground, to hear our counsel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Disdain and scorn ride sparkling in her eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( Contempt, farewell! and maiden pride, adieu!)Tj
ET
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( No glory lives behind the back of such.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And, Benedick, love on; I will requite thee,)Tj
T*
( Taming my wild heart to thy loving hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( He hath a heart as sound as a bell, and his tongue is the clapper; f\
or what his heart thinks his )Tj
T*
(tongue speaks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Well, every one can master a grief but he that has it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [28])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( A\222 brushes his hat a mornings; what should that bode?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [41])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( The barber\222s man hath been seen with him; and the old ornament of\
his cheek hath already )Tj
T*
(stuffed tennis-balls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [45])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( To be a well-favoured man is the gift of fortune; but to write and r\
ead comes by nature)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [14])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Well, for your favour, sir, why, give God thanks, and make no boast \
of it; and for your writing )Tj
T*
(and reading, let that appear when there is no need of such vanity. You a\
re thought here to be the )Tj
T*
(most senseless and fit man for the constable of the watch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( You shall comprehend all vagrom men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [25])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( For the watch to babble and to talk is most tolerable and not to be \
endured.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( The most peaceable way for you, if you do take a thief, is, to let h\
im show himself what he is )Tj
T*
(and steal out of your company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [61])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( I thank God, I am as honest as any man living, that is an old man an\
d no honester than I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [15])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Comparisons are odorous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [18])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( A good old man, sir; he will be talking: as they say, \221when the a\
ge is in, the wit is out.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [36])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( Well, God\222s a good man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 3, sc. 5, l. [39])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.50456 Tm
( O! what men dare do! what men may do! what men daily do, not knowing\
what they do!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [19])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( I do love nothing in the world so well as you: is not that strange?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [271])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( Beatrice: You have stayed me in a happy hour. I was about to protes\
t I loved you.)Tj
ET
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( Benedick: And do it with all thy heart.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Beatrice: I love you with so much of my heart that none is left to \
protest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [283])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( O God, that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the market-place.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [311])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( Flat burglary as ever was committed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [54])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.75456 Tm
( O that he were here to write me down an ass! but, masters, remember \
that I am an ass; though )Tj
T*
(it be not written down, yet forget not that I am an ass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [80])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( Patch grief with proverbs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.25456 Tm
( There was never yet philosopher)Tj
T*
( That could endure the toothache patiently.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( In a false quarrel there is no true valour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [121])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( What though care killed a cat, thou hast mettle enough in thee to ki\
ll care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [135])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.00456 Tm
( No, I was not born under a riming planet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.17047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 2, l. [40])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 366.25456 Tm
( Good morrow, masters: put your torches out,)Tj
T*
( The wolves have preyed; and look, the gentle day,)Tj
T*
( Before the wheels of Phoebus, round about)Tj
T*
( Dapples the drowsy east with spots of grey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(\221Much Ado About Nothing\222 \(1598-9\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 265.29173 Tm
( 7.66.25 Othello)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 244.00456 Tm
( \222Tis the curse of the service,)Tj
T*
( Preferment goes by letter and affection,)Tj
T*
( Not by the old gradation, where each second)Tj
T*
( Stood heir to the first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.25456 Tm
( You shall mark)Tj
T*
( Many a duteous and knee-crooking knave,)Tj
T*
( That, doting on his own obsequious bondage,)Tj
T*
( Wears out his time, much like his master\222s ass,)Tj
T*
( For nought but provender.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.50456 Tm
( In following him, I follow but myself.)Tj
ET
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(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 58)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( But I will wear my heart upon my sleeve)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For daws to peck at: I am not what I am.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Even now, now, very now, an old black ram)Tj
T*
( Is tupping your white ewe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( \222Zounds! sir, you are one of those that will not serve God if the \
devil bid you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [117])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Though I do hate him as I do hell-pains,)Tj
T*
( Yet, for necessity of present life,)Tj
T*
( I must show out a flag and sign of love,)Tj
T*
( Which is indeed but sign.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [155])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Though in the trade of war I have slain men,)Tj
T*
( Yet do I hold it very stuff o\222 the conscience)Tj
T*
( To do no contrived murder: I lack iniquity)Tj
T*
( Sometimes to do me service.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Keep up your bright swords, for the dew will rust them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( I\222ll refer me to all things of sense,)Tj
T*
( Whether a maid so tender, fair, and happy,)Tj
T*
( So opposite to marriage that she shunned)Tj
T*
( The wealthy curl\351d darlings of our nation,)Tj
T*
( Would ever have, to incur a general mock,)Tj
T*
( Run from her guardage to the sooty bosom)Tj
T*
( Of such a thing as thou.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( My particular grief)Tj
T*
( Is of so flood-gate and o\222bearing nature)Tj
T*
( That it engluts and swallows other sorrows)Tj
T*
( And it is still itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Othello: Most potent, grave, and reverend signiors,)Tj
T*
( My very noble and approved good masters,)Tj
T*
( That I have ta\222en away this old man\222s daughter,)Tj
T*
( It is most true; true, I have married her:)Tj
ET
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( The very head and front of my offending)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hath this extent, no more. Rude am I in my speech,)Tj
T*
( And little blessed with the soft phrase of peace;)Tj
T*
( For since these arms of mine had seven years\222 pith,)Tj
T*
( Till now some nine moons wasted, they have used)Tj
T*
( Their dearest action in the tented field;)Tj
T*
( And little of this great world can I speak,)Tj
T*
( More than pertains to feats of broil and battle;)Tj
T*
( And therefore little shall I grace my cause)Tj
T*
( In speaking for myself. Yet, by your gracious patience,)Tj
T*
( I will a round unvarnished tale deliver)Tj
T*
( Of my whole course of love; what drugs, what charms,)Tj
T*
( What conjuration, and what mighty magic,)Tj
T*
( For such proceeding I am charged withal,)Tj
T*
( I won his daughter.)Tj
T*
( Brabantio: A maiden never bold;)Tj
T*
( Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion)Tj
T*
( Blush\222d at herself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( Her father loved me; oft invited me;)Tj
T*
( Still questioned me the story of my life)Tj
T*
( From year to year, the battles, sieges, fortunes)Tj
T*
( That I have passed.)Tj
T*
( I ran it through, even from my boyish days)Tj
T*
( To the very moment that he bade me tell it;)Tj
T*
( Wherein I spake of most disastrous chances,)Tj
T*
( Of moving accidents by flood and field,)Tj
T*
( Of hair-breadth \222scapes i\222 the imminent deadly breach,)Tj
T*
( Of being taken by the insolent foe)Tj
T*
( And sold to slavery, of my redemption thence)Tj
T*
( And portance in my travel\222s history;)Tj
T*
( Wherein of antres vast and desarts idle,)Tj
T*
( Rough quarries, rocks and hills whose heads touch heaven,)Tj
T*
( It was my hint to speak, such was the process;)Tj
T*
( And of the Cannibals that each other eat,)Tj
T*
( The Anthropophagi, and men whose heads)Tj
T*
( Do grow beneath their shoulders. This to hear)Tj
T*
( Would Desdemona seriously incline.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.50456 Tm
( And often did beguile her of her tears,)Tj
ET
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( When I did speak of some distressful stroke)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That my youth suffered. My story being done,)Tj
T*
( She gave me for my pains a world of sighs:)Tj
T*
( She swore, in faith, \222twas strange, \222twas passing strange;)Tj
T*
( \222Twas pitiful, \222twas wondrous pitiful:)Tj
T*
( She wished she had not heard it, yet she wished)Tj
T*
( That heaven had made her such a man; she thanked me,)Tj
T*
( And bade me, if I had a friend that lov\222d her,)Tj
T*
( I should but teach him how to tell my story,)Tj
T*
( And that would woo her. Upon this hint I spake:)Tj
T*
( She loved me for the dangers I had passed,)Tj
T*
( And I loved her that she did pity them.)Tj
T*
( This only is the witchcraft I have used.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( I do perceive here a divided duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 181)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.50456 Tm
( The robbed that smiles steals something from the thief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 208)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( But words are words; I never yet did hear)Tj
T*
( That the bruised heart was pierc\351d through the ear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 218)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( The tyrant custom, most grave senators,)Tj
T*
( Hath made the flinty and steel couch of war)Tj
T*
( My thrice-driven bed of down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [230])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( If I be left behind,)Tj
T*
( A moth of peace, and he go to the war,)Tj
T*
( The rites for which I love him are bereft me,)Tj
T*
( And I a heavy interim shall support)Tj
T*
( By his dear absence. Let me go with him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Roderigo: I will incontinently drown myself.)Tj
T*
( Iago: Well, if thou dost, I shall never love thee after. Why, thou \
silly gentleman!)Tj
T*
( Roderigo: It is silliness to live when to live is torment; and then\
have we a prescription to die )Tj
T*
(when death is our physician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [307])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Virtue! a fig! \222tis in ourselves that we are thus, or thus. Our b\
odies are our gardens, to the )Tj
T*
(which our wills are gardeners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [323])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Put money in thy purse.)Tj
ET
EMC
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(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [345])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( These Moors are changeable in their wills;\227fill thy purse with mo\
ney:\227the food that to him )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(now is as luscious as locusts, shall be to him shortly as bitter as colo\
quintida.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [352])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( There are many events in the womb of time which will be delivered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [377])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( He hath a person and a smooth dispose)Tj
T*
( Framed to make women false.)Tj
T*
( The Moor is of a free and open nature,)Tj
T*
( That thinks men honest that but seem to be so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [403])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( I have\222t; it is engendered; hell and night)Tj
T*
( Must bring this monstrous birth to the world\222s light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [409])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Our great captain\222s captain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( You are pictures out of doors,)Tj
T*
( Bells in your parlours, wild cats in your kitchens,)Tj
T*
( Saints in your injuries, devils being offended,)Tj
T*
( Players in your housewifery, and housewives in your beds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Do not put me to\222t,)Tj
T*
( For I am nothing if not critical.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( I am not merry, but I do beguile)Tj
T*
( The thing I am by seeming otherwise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 122)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Iago: She that was ever fair and never proud,)Tj
T*
( Had tongue at will and yet was never loud,)Tj
T*
( Never lacked gold and yet went never gay,)Tj
T*
( Fled from her wish and yet said \221Now I may,\222)Tj
T*
( She that being angered, her revenge being nigh,)Tj
T*
( Bade her wrong stay and her displeasure fly,)Tj
T*
( She that in wisdom never was so frail)Tj
T*
( To change the cod\222s head for the salmon\222s tail,)Tj
T*
( She that could think and ne\222er disclose her mind,)Tj
T*
( See suitors following and not look behind,)Tj
T*
( She was a wight, if ever such wight were,\227)Tj
T*
( Desdemona: To do what?)Tj
T*
( Iago: To suckle fools and chronicle small beer.)Tj
ET
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( Desdemona: O most lame and impotent conclusion!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( With as little a web as this will I ensnare as great a fly as Cassio\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [169])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Othello: If it were now to die,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \222Twere now to be most happy, for I fear)Tj
T*
( My soul hath her content so absolute)Tj
T*
( That not another comfort like to this)Tj
T*
( Succeeds in unknown fate.)Tj
T*
( Desdemona: The heavens forbid)Tj
T*
( But that our loves and comforts should increase)Tj
T*
( Even as our days do grow!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [192])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( A slipper and subtle knave, a finder-out of occasions, that has an e\
ye can stamp and counterfeit )Tj
T*
(advantages, though true advantage never present itself; a devilish knave\
! Besides, the knave is )Tj
T*
(handsome, young, and hath all those requisites in him that folly and gre\
en minds look after; a )Tj
T*
(pestilent complete knave! and the woman hath found him already.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [247])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Make the Moor thank me, love me, and reward me)Tj
T*
( For making him egregiously an ass)Tj
T*
( And practising upon his peace and quiet)Tj
T*
( Even to madness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [320])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( I have very poor and unhappy brains for drinking: I could well wish \
courtesy would invent )Tj
T*
(some other custom of entertainment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [34])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( My boat sails freely, both with wind and stream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [66])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Cassio: \222Fore God, an excellent song.)Tj
T*
( Iago: I learned it in England, where indeed they are most potent in\
potting; your Dane, your )Tj
T*
(German, and your swag-bellied Hollander,\227drink, ho!\227are nothing to\
your English.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( \222Tis pride that pulls the country down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [99])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Silence that dreadful bell! it frights the isle)Tj
T*
( From her propriety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [177])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( But men are men; the best sometimes forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [243])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Thy honesty and love doth mince this matter.)Tj
ET
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(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [249])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Reputation, reputation, reputation! O! I have lost my reputation. I \
have lost the immortal part )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of myself, and what remains is bestial. My reputation, Iago, my reputati\
on!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [264])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( O thou invisible spirit of wine! if thou hast no name to be known by\
, let us call thee devil!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [285])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( O God! that men should put an enemy in their mouths to steal away th\
eir brains; that we )Tj
T*
(should, with joy, pleasance, revel, and applause, transform ourselves in\
to beasts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [293])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Come, come; good wine is a good familiar creature if it be well used\
; exclaim no more against )Tj
T*
(it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [315])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( How poor are they that have not patience!)Tj
T*
( What wound did ever heal but by degrees?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [379])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( O! thereby hangs a tail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [8])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Excellent wretch! Perdition catch my soul)Tj
T*
( But I do love thee! and when I love thee not,)Tj
T*
( Chaos is come again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( By heaven, he echoes me,)Tj
T*
( As if there were some monster in his thought)Tj
T*
( Too hideous to be shown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Good name in man and woman, dear my lord,)Tj
T*
( Is the immediate jewel of their souls;)Tj
T*
( Who steals my purse steals trash; \222tis something, nothing;)Tj
T*
( \222Twas mine, \222tis his, and has been slave to thousands;)Tj
T*
( But he that filches from me my good name)Tj
T*
( Robs me of that which not enriches him,)Tj
T*
( And makes me poor indeed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( O! beware, my lord, of jealousy;)Tj
T*
( It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock)Tj
T*
( The meat it feeds on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 165)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( In Venice they do let heaven see the pranks)Tj
T*
( They dare not show their husbands; their best conscience)Tj
T*
( Is not to leave\222t undone, but keep\222t unknown.)Tj
ET
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(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Not to affect many propos\351d matches)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of her own clime, complexion, and degree,)Tj
T*
( Whereto, we see, in all things nature tends;)Tj
T*
( Foh! one may smell in such, a will most rank,)Tj
T*
( Foul disposition, thoughts unnatural.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 229)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( If I do prove her haggard,)Tj
T*
( Though that her jesses were my dear heart-strings,)Tj
T*
( I\222d whistle her off and let her down the wind,)Tj
T*
( To prey at fortune. Haply, for I am black,)Tj
T*
( And have not those soft parts of conversation)Tj
T*
( That chamberers have, or, for I am declined)Tj
T*
( Into the vale of years\227yet that\222s not much\227)Tj
T*
( She\222s gone, I am abused; and my relief)Tj
T*
( Must be to loathe her. O curse of marriage!)Tj
T*
( That we can call these delicate creatures ours,)Tj
T*
( And not their appetites. I had rather be a toad,)Tj
T*
( And live upon the vapour of a dungeon,)Tj
T*
( Than keep a corner in the thing I love)Tj
T*
( For others\222 uses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 260)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( If she be false, O! then heaven mocks itself.)Tj
T*
( I\222ll not believe it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 278)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( Trifles light as air)Tj
T*
( Are to the jealous confirmations strong)Tj
T*
( As proofs of holy writ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 323)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Not poppy, nor mandragora,)Tj
T*
( Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,)Tj
T*
( Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep)Tj
T*
( Which thou owedst yesterday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 331)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( I had been happy, if the general camp,)Tj
T*
( Pioners and all, had tasted her sweet body,)Tj
T*
( So I had nothing known. O! now, for ever)Tj
T*
( Farewell the tranquil mind; farewell content!)Tj
T*
( Farewell the plum\351d troop and the big wars)Tj
T*
( That make ambition virtue! O, farewell!)Tj
ET
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( Farewell the neighing steed and the shrill trump,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The spirit-stirring drum, the ear-piercing fife,)Tj
T*
( The royal banner, and all quality,)Tj
T*
( Pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious war!)Tj
T*
( And, O you mortal engines, whose rude throats)Tj
T*
( The immortal Jove\222s dread clamours counterfeit,)Tj
T*
( Farewell! Othello\222s occupation\222s gone!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 346)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( O wretched fool!)Tj
T*
( That liv\222st to make thine honesty a vice.)Tj
T*
( O monstrous world! Take note, take note, O world!)Tj
T*
( To be direct and honest is not safe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 376)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( This denoted a foregone conclusion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 429)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Like to the Pontick sea,)Tj
T*
( Whose icy current and compulsive course)Tj
T*
( Ne\222er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due on)Tj
T*
( To the Propontic and the Hellespont,)Tj
T*
( Even so my bloody thoughts, with violent pace,)Tj
T*
( Shall ne\222er look back, ne\222er ebb to humble love,)Tj
T*
( Till that a capable and wide revenge)Tj
T*
( Swallow them up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 454)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( For here\222s a young and sweating devil here,)Tj
T*
( That commonly rebels. \222Tis a good hand,)Tj
T*
( A frank one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( That handkerchief)Tj
T*
( Did an Egyptian to my mother give.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( \222Tis true; there\222s magic in the web of it;)Tj
T*
( A sibyl, that had numbered in the world)Tj
T*
( The sun to course two hundred compasses,)Tj
T*
( In her prophetic fury sewed the work;)Tj
T*
( The worms were hallowed that did breed the silk,)Tj
T*
( And it was dyed in mummy which the skilful)Tj
T*
( Conserved of maidens\222 hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Jealous souls will not be answered so;)Tj
ET
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( They are not ever jealous for the cause,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But jealous for they are jealous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( What! keep a week away? seven days and nights?)Tj
T*
( Eight score eight hours? and lovers\222 absent hours,)Tj
T*
( More tedious than the dial eight score times?)Tj
T*
( O, weary reckoning!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( O! it comes o\222er my memory,)Tj
T*
( As doth the raven o\222er the infected house,)Tj
T*
( Boding to all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Work on,)Tj
T*
( My medicine, work! Thus credulous fools are caught.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( \222Tis the strumpet\222s plague)Tj
T*
( To beguile many and be beguiled by one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( I would have him nine years a-killing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [186])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( My heart is turned to stone; I strike it, and it hurts my hand. O! t\
he world hath not a sweeter )Tj
T*
(creature; she might lie by an emperor\222s side and command him tasks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [190])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( An admirable musician! O, she will sing the savageness out of a bear\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [197])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( But yet the pity of it, Iago! O! Iago, the pity of it, Iago!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [205])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( O well-painted passion!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [268])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Goats and monkeys!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [274])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( Is this the noble nature)Tj
T*
( Whom passion could not shake? whose solid virtue)Tj
T*
( The shot of accident nor dart of chance)Tj
T*
( Could neither graze nor pierce?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [277])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Your mystery, your mystery; nay, dispatch.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( Had it pleased heaven)Tj
T*
( To try me with affliction, had he rained)Tj
ET
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( All kinds of sores, and shames, on my bare head,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Steeped me in poverty to the very lips,)Tj
T*
( Given to captivity me and my utmost hopes,)Tj
T*
( I should have found in some part of my soul)Tj
T*
( A drop of patience; but, alas! to make me)Tj
T*
( The fix\351d figure for the time of scorn)Tj
T*
( To point his slow and moving finger at;)Tj
T*
( Yet could I bear that too; well, very well.)Tj
T*
( But there, where I have garnered up my heart,)Tj
T*
( Where either I must live or bear no life,)Tj
T*
( The fountain from the which my current runs)Tj
T*
( Or else dries up; to be discarded thence!)Tj
T*
( Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads)Tj
T*
( To knot and gender in! Turn thy complexion there,)Tj
T*
( Patience, thou young and rose-lipped cherubin;)Tj
T*
( Ay, there, look grim as hell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( O thou weed!)Tj
T*
( Who art so lovely fair and smell\222st so sweet)Tj
T*
( That the sense aches at thee, would thou hadst ne\222er been born!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( Heaven stops the nose at it and the moon winks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( I cry you mercy, then;)Tj
T*
( I took you for that cunning whore of Venice)Tj
T*
( That married with Othello. You, mistress,)Tj
T*
( That have the office opposite to Saint Peter,)Tj
T*
( And keep the gate of hell!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Those that do teach young babes)Tj
T*
( Do it with gentle means and easy tasks;)Tj
T*
( He might have chid me so; for, in good faith,)Tj
T*
( I am a child to chiding.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 137.25456 Tm
( I will be hanged, if some eternal villain,)Tj
T*
( Some busy and insinuating rogue,)Tj
T*
( Some cogging cozening slave, to get some office,)Tj
T*
( Have not devised this slander.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Unkindness may do much;)Tj
ET
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( And his unkindness may defeat my life,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But never taint my love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( emilia: I would you had never seen him.)Tj
T*
( desdemona: So would not I; my love doth so approve him,)Tj
T*
( That even his stubbornness, his checks and frowns...)Tj
T*
( Have grace and favour in them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( My mother had a maid called Barbara;)Tj
T*
( She was in love, and he she loved proved mad)Tj
T*
( And did forsake her; she had a song of \221willow;\222)Tj
T*
( An old thing \222twas, but it expressed her fortune,)Tj
T*
( And she died singing it; that song to-night)Tj
T*
( Will not go from my mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( The poor soul sat sighing by a sycamore tree,)Tj
T*
( Sing all a green willow;)Tj
T*
( Her hand on her bosom, her head on her knee,)Tj
T*
( Sing willow, willow, willow:)Tj
T*
( The fresh streams ran by her, and murmured her moans;)Tj
T*
( Sing willow, willow, willow:)Tj
T*
( Her salt tears fell from her, and softened the stones;\227)Tj
T*
( Sing willow, willow, willow:)Tj
T*
( Sing all a green willow must be my garland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [41].)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( desdemona: Mine eyes do itch;)Tj
T*
( Doth that bode weeping?)Tj
T*
( emilia: \222Tis neither here nor there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [59])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Who would not make her husband a cuckold to make him a monarch?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [76])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( He hath a daily beauty in his life.)Tj
T*
( That makes me ugly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( This is the night)Tj
T*
( That either makes me or fordoes me quite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( It is the cause, it is the cause, my soul;)Tj
T*
( Let me not name it to you, you chaste stars!)Tj
T*
( It is the cause. Yet I\222ll not shed her blood,)Tj
ET
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( Nor scar that whiter skin of hers than snow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And smooth as monumental alabaster.)Tj
T*
( Yet she must die, else she\222ll betray more men.)Tj
T*
( Put out the light, and then put out the light:)Tj
T*
( If I quench thee, thou flaming minister,)Tj
T*
( I can again thy former light restore,)Tj
T*
( Should I repent me; but once put out thy light,)Tj
T*
( Thou cunning\222st pattern of excelling nature,)Tj
T*
( I know not where is that Promethean heat)Tj
T*
( That can thy light relume. When I have plucked the rose,)Tj
T*
( I cannot give it vital growth again,)Tj
T*
( It needs must wither: I\222ll smell it on the tree.)Tj
T*
( O balmy breath, that dost almost persuade)Tj
T*
( Justice to break her sword! One more, one more.)Tj
T*
( Be thus when thou art dead, and I will kill thee,)Tj
T*
( And love thee after. One more, and this the last:)Tj
T*
( So sweet was ne\222er so fatal. I must weep,)Tj
T*
( But they are cruel tears; this sorrow\222s heavenly,)Tj
T*
( It strikes where it doth love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( Alas! why gnaw you so your nether lip?)Tj
T*
( Some bloody passion shakes your very frame;)Tj
T*
( These are portents, but yet, I hope, I hope)Tj
T*
( They do not point on me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 322.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 301.50456 Tm
( Kill me to-morrow; let me live to-night!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.75456 Tm
( It is the very error of the moon;)Tj
T*
( She comes more near the earth than she was wont,)Tj
T*
( And makes men mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( Murder\222s out of tune,)Tj
T*
( And sweet revenge grows harsh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 113)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 137.25456 Tm
( emilia: O! who hath done this deed?)Tj
T*
( desdemona: Nobody; I myself; farewell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 121)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( othello: She\222s like a liar gone to burning hell;)Tj
T*
( \222Twas I that killed her.)Tj
T*
( emilia: O! the more angel she,)Tj
ET
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( And you the blacker devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Nay, had she been true,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If heaven would make me such another world)Tj
T*
( Of one entire and perfect chrysolite,)Tj
T*
( I\222d not have sold her for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( May his pernicious soul)Tj
T*
( Rot half a grain a day! he lies to the heart:)Tj
T*
( She was too fond of her most filthy bargain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Thou hast not half the power to do me harm)Tj
T*
( As I have to be hurt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Are there no stones in heaven)Tj
T*
( But what serve for the thunder?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 232)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Every puny whipster gets my sword.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 242)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( I will play the swan,)Tj
T*
( And die in music.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 245)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Who can control his fate?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 264)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Be not afraid, though you do see me weaponed;)Tj
T*
( Here is my journey\222s end, here is my butt,)Tj
T*
( And very sea-mark of my utmost sail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 265)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( O ill-starred wench!)Tj
T*
( Pale as thy smock! when we shall meet at compt,)Tj
T*
( This look of thine will hurl my soul from heaven,)Tj
T*
( And fiends will snatch at it. Cold, cold, my girl!)Tj
T*
( Even like thy chastity.)Tj
T*
( O! curs\351d, curs\351d slave. Whip me, ye devils,)Tj
T*
( From the possession of this heavenly sight!)Tj
T*
( Blow me about in winds! roast me in sulphur!)Tj
T*
( Wash me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire!)Tj
T*
( O Desdemona! Desdemona! dead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 271)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( An honourable murderer, if you will;)Tj
ET
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( For nought did I in hate, but all in honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 293)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I have done the state some service, and they know \222t;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No more of that. I pray you, in your letters,)Tj
T*
( When you shall these unlucky deeds relate,)Tj
T*
( Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,)Tj
T*
( Nor set down aught in malice: then, must you speak)Tj
T*
( Of one that loved not wisely but too well;)Tj
T*
( Of one not easily jealous, but, being wrought,)Tj
T*
( Perplexed in the extreme; of one whose hand,)Tj
T*
( Like the base Indian, threw a pearl away)Tj
T*
( Richer than all his tribe; of one whose subdued eyes)Tj
T*
( Albeit unus\351d to the melting mood,)Tj
T*
( Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees)Tj
T*
( Their med\222cinable gum. Set you down this;)Tj
T*
( And say besides, that in Aleppo once,)Tj
T*
( Where a malignant and a turbaned Turk)Tj
T*
( Beat a Venetian and traduced the state,)Tj
T*
( I took by the throat the circumcised dog,)Tj
T*
( And smote him thus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 338)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( gratiano: All that\222s spoke is marred.)Tj
T*
( othello: I kiss\222d thee ere I kill\222d thee, no way but this,)Tj
T*
( Killing myself to die upon a kiss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Othello\222 \(1602-4\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 356)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 290.54173 Tm
( 7.66.26 Pericles, Prince Of Tyre)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 269.25456 Tm
( See where she comes apparelled like the spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Pericles, Prince Of Tyre\222 \(1606-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.50456 Tm
( Few love to hear the sins they love to act.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221Pericles, Prince Of Tyre\222 \(1606-8\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.75456 Tm
( Third Fisherman: Master, I marvel how the fishes live in the sea. )Tj
T*
( First Fisherman: Why, as men do a-land: the great ones eat up the l\
ittle ones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221Pericles, Prince Of Tyre\222 \(1606-8\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.00456 Tm
( O you gods!)Tj
T*
( Why do you make us love your goodly gifts,)Tj
T*
( And snatch them straight away?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Pericles, Prince Of Tyre\222 \(1606-8\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 22)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 58.04173 Tm
( 7.66.27 Richard II)Tj
ET
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( Old John of Gaunt, time-honour\222d Lancaster.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Let\222s purge this choler without letting blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The purest treasure mortal times afford)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is spotless reputation; that away,)Tj
T*
( Men are but gilded loam or painted clay.)Tj
T*
( A jewel in a ten-times-barred-up chest)Tj
T*
( Is a bold spirit in a loyal breast.)Tj
T*
( Mine honour is my life; both grow in one;)Tj
T*
( Take honour from me, and my life is done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 177)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( We were not born to sue, but to command.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 196)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The language I have learned these forty years,)Tj
T*
( My native English, now I must forego;)Tj
T*
( And now my tongue\222s use is to me no more)Tj
T*
( Than an unstring\351d viol or a harp.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( How long a time lies in one little word!)Tj
T*
( Four lagging winters and four wanton springs)Tj
T*
( End in a word; such is the breath of kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Things sweet to taste prove in digestion sour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 236)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( Must I not serve a long apprenticehood)Tj
T*
( To foreign passages, and in the end,)Tj
T*
( Having my freedom, boast of nothing else)Tj
T*
( But that I was a journeyman to grief?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 271)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( All places that the eye of heaven visits)Tj
T*
( Are to a wise man ports and happy havens.)Tj
T*
( Teach thy necessity to reason thus;)Tj
T*
( There is no virtue like necessity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 275)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( O! who can hold a fire in his hand)Tj
T*
( By thinking on the frosty Caucasus?)Tj
T*
( Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite,)Tj
T*
( By bare imagination of a feast?)Tj
T*
( Or wallow naked in December snow)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( By thinking on fantastic summer\222s heat?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O, no! the apprehension of the good)Tj
T*
( Gives but the greater feeling to the worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 294)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( More are men\222s ends marked than their lives before:)Tj
T*
( The setting sun, and music at the close,)Tj
T*
( As the last taste of sweets, is sweetest last,)Tj
T*
( Writ in remembrance more than things long past.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Methinks I am a prophet new inspired,)Tj
T*
( And thus expiring do foretell of him:)Tj
T*
( His rash fierce blaze of riot cannot last,)Tj
T*
( For violent fires soon burn out themselves;)Tj
T*
( Small showers last long, but sudden storms are short;)Tj
T*
( He tires betimes that spurs too fast betimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( This royal throne of kings, this sceptered isle,)Tj
T*
( This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,)Tj
T*
( This other Eden, demi-paradise,)Tj
T*
( This fortress built by Nature for herself)Tj
T*
( Against infection and the hand of war,)Tj
T*
( This happy breed of men, this little world,)Tj
T*
( This precious stone set in the silver sea,)Tj
T*
( Which serves it in the office of a wall,)Tj
T*
( Or as a moat defensive to a house,)Tj
T*
( Against the envy of less happier lands,)Tj
T*
( This bless\351d plot, this earth, this realm, this England,)Tj
T*
( This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,)Tj
T*
( Feared by their breed and famous by their birth,)Tj
T*
( Renown\351d for their deeds as far from home,\227)Tj
T*
( For Christian service and true chivalry,\227)Tj
T*
( As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry)Tj
T*
( Of the world\222s ransom, bless\351d Mary\222s Son:)Tj
T*
( This land of such dear souls, this dear, dear land,)Tj
T*
( Dear for her reputation through the world,)Tj
T*
( Is now leased out,\227I die pronouncing it,\227)Tj
T*
( Like to a tenement or pelting farm:)Tj
T*
( England, bound in with the triumphant sea,)Tj
T*
( Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege)Tj
T*
( Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,)Tj
ET
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( With inky blots, and rotten parchment bonds:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That England, that was wont to conquer others,)Tj
T*
( Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( I am a stranger here in Gloucestershire:)Tj
T*
( These high wild hills and rough uneven ways)Tj
T*
( Draw out our miles and make them wearisome.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( I count myself in nothing else so happy)Tj
T*
( As in a soul remembering my good friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Grace me no grace, nor uncle me no uncle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( The caterpillars of the commonwealth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Things past redress are now with me past care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Eating the bitter bread of banishment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Not all the water in the rough rude sea)Tj
T*
( Can wash the balm from an anointed king;)Tj
T*
( The breath of worldly men cannot depose)Tj
T*
( The deputy elected by the Lord.)Tj
T*
( For every man that Bolingbroke hath pressedd)Tj
T*
( To lift shrewd steel against our golden crown,)Tj
T*
( God for his Richard hath in heavenly pay)Tj
T*
( A glorious angel; then, if angels fight,)Tj
T*
( Weak men must fall, for heaven still guards the right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( O! call back yesterday, bid time return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 69)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Is not the king\222s name twenty thousand names?)Tj
T*
( Arm, arm, my name! A puny subject strikes)Tj
T*
( At thy great glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( The worst is death, and death will have his day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( Of comfort no man speak:)Tj
T*
( Let\222s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs;)Tj
T*
( Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes)Tj
ET
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( Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let\222s choose executors, and talk of wills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 144)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( For God\222s sake, let us sit upon the ground)Tj
T*
( And tell sad stories of the death of kings:)Tj
T*
( How some have been deposed, some slain in war,)Tj
T*
( Some haunted by the ghosts they have deposed,)Tj
T*
( Some poisoned by their wives, some sleeping killed;)Tj
T*
( All murdered: for within the hollow crown)Tj
T*
( That rounds the mortal temples of a king)Tj
T*
( Keeps Death his court, and there the antick sits,)Tj
T*
( Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp;)Tj
T*
( Allowing him a breath, a little scene,)Tj
T*
( To monarchize, be feared, and kill with looks,)Tj
T*
( Infusing him with self and vain conceit)Tj
T*
( As if this flesh which walls about our life)Tj
T*
( Were brass impregnable; and humoured thus)Tj
T*
( Comes at the last, and with a little pin)Tj
T*
( Bores through his castle wall, and farewell king!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 155)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( See, see, King Richard doth himself appear,)Tj
T*
( As doth the blushing discontented sun)Tj
T*
( From out the fiery portal of the east.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.75456 Tm
( The purple testament of bleeding war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( O! that I were as great)Tj
T*
( As is my grief, or lesser than my name,)Tj
T*
( Or that I could forget what I have been,)Tj
T*
( Or not remember what I must be now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 136)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( What must the king do now? Must he submit?)Tj
T*
( The king shall do it: must he be deposed?)Tj
T*
( The king shall be contented: must he lose)Tj
T*
( The name of king? o\222 God\222s name, let it go.)Tj
T*
( I\222ll give my jewels for a set of beads,)Tj
T*
( My gorgeous palace for a hermitage,)Tj
T*
( My gay apparel for an almsman\222s gown,)Tj
T*
( My figured goblets for a dish of wood,)Tj
T*
( My sceptre for a palmer\222s walking staff,)Tj
ET
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( My subjects for a pair of carved saints,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And my large kingdom for a little grave,)Tj
T*
( A little little grave, an obscure grave;)Tj
T*
( Or I\222ll be buried in the king\222s highway,)Tj
T*
( Some way of common trade, where subjects\222 feet)Tj
T*
( May hourly trample on their sovereign\222s head;)Tj
T*
( For on my heart they tread now whilst I live;)Tj
T*
( And buried once, why not upon my head?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( Shall we play the wantons with our woes,)Tj
T*
( And make some pretty match with shedding tears?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 164)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Go, bind thou up yon dangling apricocks,)Tj
T*
( Which, like unruly children, make their sire)Tj
T*
( Stoop with oppression of their prodigal weight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Old Adam\222s likeness, set to dress this garden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Here did she fall a tear; here, in this place,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll set a bank of rue, sour herb of grace;)Tj
T*
( Rue, even for ruth, here shortly shall be seen,)Tj
T*
( In the remembrance of a weeping queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 104)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Peace shall go sleep with Turks and infidels,)Tj
T*
( And in this seat of peace tumultuous wars)Tj
T*
( Shall kin with kin and kind with kind confound;)Tj
T*
( Disorder, horror, fear and mutiny)Tj
T*
( Shall here inhabit, and this land be called)Tj
T*
( The field of Golgotha and dead men\222s skulls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 139)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( God save the king! Will no man say, amen?)Tj
T*
( Am I both priest and clerk? Well then, amen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( Give me the crown. Here, cousin, seize the crown;)Tj
T*
( Here cousin,)Tj
T*
( On this side my hand and on that side thine.)Tj
T*
( Now is this golden crown like a deep well)Tj
T*
( That owes two buckets filling one another;)Tj
T*
( The emptier ever dancing in the air,)Tj
T*
( The other down, unseen, and full of water:)Tj
ET
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( That bucket down and full of tears am I,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drinking my griefs, whilst you mount up on high.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 181)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( You may my glories and my state depose,)Tj
T*
( But not my griefs; still am I king of those.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Now mark me how I will undo myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 203)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( With mine own tears I wash away my balm,)Tj
T*
( With mine own hands I give away my crown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 207)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( God pardon all oaths that are broke to me!)Tj
T*
( God keep all vows unbroke are made to thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 214)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Mine eyes are full of tears, I cannot see:)Tj
T*
( And yet salt water blinds them not so much)Tj
T*
( But they can see a sort of traitors here.)Tj
T*
( Nay, if I turn my eyes upon myself,)Tj
T*
( I find myself a traitor with the rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 244)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( A brittle glory shineth in this face:)Tj
T*
( As brittle as the glory is the face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 287)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( This is the way)Tj
T*
( To Julius Caesar\222s ill-erected tower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( I am sworn brother, sweet,)Tj
T*
( To grim Necessity, and he and I)Tj
T*
( Will keep a league till death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( In winter\222s tedious nights sit by the fire)Tj
T*
( With good old folks, and let them tell thee tales)Tj
T*
( Of woeful ages, long ago betid;)Tj
T*
( And ere thou bid good night, to quit their grief,)Tj
T*
( Tell thou the lamentable tale of me,)Tj
T*
( And send the hearers weeping to their beds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( That were some love but little policy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( As in a theatre, the eyes of men,)Tj
ET
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( After a well-graced actor leaves the stage,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Are idly bent on him that enters next,)Tj
T*
( Thinking his prattle to be tedious;)Tj
T*
( Even so, or with much more contempt, men\222s eyes)Tj
T*
( Did scowl on Richard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( Who are the violets now)Tj
T*
( That strew the green lap of the new come spring?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( He prays but faintly and would be denied.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( I have been studying how I may compare)Tj
T*
( This prison where I live unto the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( How sour sweet music is,)Tj
T*
( When time is broke, and no proportion kept!)Tj
T*
( So is it in the music of men\222s lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( I wasted time, and now doth time waste me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Mount, mount, my soul! thy seat is up on high,)Tj
T*
( Whilst my gross flesh sinks downwards here to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Richard II\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 5, l. 112)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 323.54173 Tm
( 7.66.28 Richard III)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( Now is the winter of our discontent)Tj
T*
( Made glorious summer by this sun of York.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 247.50456 Tm
( Grim-visaged war hath smoothed his wrinkled front;)Tj
T*
( And now, instead of mounting barb\351d steeds,)Tj
T*
( To fright the souls of fearful adversaries,\227)Tj
T*
( He capers nimbly in a lady\222s chamber)Tj
T*
( To the lascivious pleasing of a lute.)Tj
T*
( But I, that am not shaped for sportive tricks,)Tj
T*
( Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;)Tj
T*
( I, that am rudely stamped, and want love\222s majesty)Tj
T*
( To strut before a wanton ambling nymph;)Tj
T*
( I, that am curtailed of this fair proportion,)Tj
T*
( Cheated of feature by dissembling nature,)Tj
T*
( Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time)Tj
ET
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( Into this breathing world, scarce half made up,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And that so lamely and unfashionable)Tj
T*
( That dogs bark at me, as I halt by them;)Tj
T*
( Why, I, in this weak piping time of peace,)Tj
T*
( Have no delight to pass away the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( And therefore, since I cannot prove a lover,)Tj
T*
( To entertain these fair well-spoken days,)Tj
T*
( I am determin\351d to prove a villain,)Tj
T*
( And hate the idle pleasures of these days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Teach not thy lip such scorn, for it was made)Tj
T*
( For kissing, lady, not for such contempt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 172)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Was ever woman in this humour wooed?)Tj
T*
( Was ever woman in this humour won?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 229)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Cannot a plain man live and think no harm,)Tj
T*
( But that his simple truth must be abused)Tj
T*
( By silken, sly, insinuating Jacks?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Since every Jack became a gentleman)Tj
T*
( There\222s many a gentle person made a Jack.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( And thus I clothe my naked villany)Tj
T*
( With odd old ends stol\222n forth of holy writ,)Tj
T*
( And seem a saint when most I play the devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 336)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Lord, Lord! methought what pain it was to drown:)Tj
T*
( What dreadful noise of water in mine ears!)Tj
T*
( What sights of ugly death within mine eyes!)Tj
T*
( Methought I saw a thousand fearful wracks;)Tj
T*
( A thousand men that fishes gnawed upon;)Tj
T*
( Wedges of gold, great anchors, heaps of pearl,)Tj
T*
( Inestimable stones, unvalued jewels,)Tj
T*
( All scattered in the bottom of the sea.)Tj
T*
( Some lay in dead men\222s skulls; and in those holes)Tj
T*
( Where eyes did once inhabit, there were crept)Tj
ET
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( As \222twere in scorn of eyes, reflecting gems,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That wooed the slimy bottom of the deep,)Tj
T*
( And mocked the dead bones that lay scattered by.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Clarence is come,\227false, fleeting, perjured Clarence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Woe to the land that\222s governed by a child!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 11.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( So wise so young, they say, do never live long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( My Lord of Ely, when I was last in Holborn,)Tj
T*
( I saw good strawberries in your garden there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Talk\222st thou to me of \221ifs\222? Thou art a traitor:)Tj
T*
( Off with his head!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( I am not in the giving vein to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( The sons of Edward sleep in Abraham\222s bosom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Thou cam\222st on earth to make the earth my hell.)Tj
T*
( A grievous burden was thy birth to me;)Tj
T*
( Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy;)Tj
T*
( Thy school-days frightful, desperate, wild and furious;)Tj
T*
( Thy prime of manhood daring, bold, and venturous;)Tj
T*
( Thy age confirmed, proud, subtle, sly, and bloody,)Tj
T*
( More mild, but yet more harmful, kind in hatred;)Tj
T*
( What comfortable hour canst thou name)Tj
T*
( That ever graced me in thy company?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 167)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( An honest tale speeds best being plainly told.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 359)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Harp not on that string.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 4, sc. 4, l. 365)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( True hope is swift, and flies with swallow\222s wings;)Tj
T*
( Kings it makes gods, and meaner creatures kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( The king\222s name is a tower of strength.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( Give me another horse! bind up my wounds!)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Have mercy, Jesu! Soft! I did but dream.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( My conscience hath a thousand several tongues,)Tj
T*
( And every tongue brings in a several tale,)Tj
T*
( And every tale condemns me for a villain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 194)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I shall despair. There is no creature loves me;)Tj
T*
( And if I die, no soul will pity me:)Tj
T*
( Nay, wherefore should they, since that I myself)Tj
T*
( Find in myself no pity to myself?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( By the apostle Paul, shadows to-night)Tj
T*
( Have struck more terror to the soul of Richard)Tj
T*
( Than can the substance of ten thousand soldiers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 217)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Conscience is but a word that cowards use,)Tj
T*
( Devised at first to keep the strong in awe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 310)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Slave! I have set my life upon a cast,)Tj
T*
( And I will stand the hazard of the die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Richard III\222 \(1591\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 9)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 305.54173 Tm
( 7.66.29 Romeo And Juliet)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.25456 Tm
( From forth the fatal loins of these two foes)Tj
T*
( A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( The fearful passage of their death-marked love,)Tj
T*
( And the continuance of their parents\222 rage,)Tj
T*
( Which, but their children\222s end, nought could remove,)Tj
T*
( Is now the two hours\222 traffick of our stage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [50])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( I do not bite my thumb at you, sir; but I bite my thumb, sir.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [56])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.25456 Tm
( \222Tis not hard, I think,)Tj
T*
( For men so old as we to keep the peace.)Tj
ET
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(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Paris: Younger than she are happy mothers made.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Capulet: And too soon marred are those so early made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( And then my husband\227God be with his soul!)Tj
T*
( A\222 was a merry man\227took up the child:)Tj
T*
( \221Yea,\222 quoth he, \221dost thou fall upon thy face?)Tj
T*
( Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit;)Tj
T*
( Wilt thou not, Jule?\222 and, by my halidom,)Tj
T*
( The pretty wretch left crying, and said \221Ay\222...)Tj
T*
( Pretty fool, it stinted and said \221Ay.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( O! then, I see, Queen Mab hath been with you...)Tj
T*
( She is the fairies\222 midwife, and she comes)Tj
T*
( In shape no bigger than an agate-stone)Tj
T*
( On the forefinger of an alderman,)Tj
T*
( Drawn with a team of little atomies)Tj
T*
( Athwart men\222s noses as they lie asleep:)Tj
T*
( Her waggon-spokes made of long spinners\222 legs;)Tj
T*
( The cover, of the wings of grasshoppers;)Tj
T*
( The traces, of the smallest spider\222s web;)Tj
T*
( The collars, of the moonshine\222s watery beams;)Tj
T*
( Her whip, of cricket\222s bone; the lash, of film;)Tj
T*
( Her waggoner, a small grey-coated gnat,)Tj
T*
( Not half so big as a round little worm)Tj
T*
( Pricked from the lazy finger of a maid;)Tj
T*
( Her chariot is an empty hazel-nut,)Tj
T*
( Made by the joiner squirrel or old grub,)Tj
T*
( Time out o\222 mind the fairies\222 coach-makers.)Tj
T*
( And in this state she gallops night by night)Tj
T*
( Through lovers\222 brains, and then they dream of love;)Tj
T*
( O\222er courtiers\222 knees, that dream on curtsies straight;)Tj
T*
( O\222er lawyers\222 fingers, who straight dream on fees;)Tj
T*
( O\222er ladies\222 lips, who straight on kisses dream;)Tj
T*
( Which oft the angry Mab with blisters plagues,)Tj
T*
( Because their breaths with sweetmeats tainted are.)Tj
T*
( Sometimes she gallops o\222er a courtier\222s nose,)Tj
T*
( And then dreams he of smelling out a suit;)Tj
T*
( And sometimes comes she with a tithe-pig\222s tail,)Tj
T*
( Tickling a parson\222s nose as a\222 lies asleep,)Tj
ET
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( Then dreams he of another benefice;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sometimes she driveth o\222er a soldier\222s neck,)Tj
T*
( And then dreams he of cutting foreign throats,)Tj
T*
( Of breaches, ambuscadoes, Spanish blades,)Tj
T*
( Of healths five fathom deep; and then anon)Tj
T*
( Drums in his ear, at which he starts and wakes;)Tj
T*
( And, being thus frighted, swears a prayer or two,)Tj
T*
( And sleeps again. This is that very Mab)Tj
T*
( That plats the manes of horses in the night;)Tj
T*
( And bakes the elf-locks in foul sluttish hairs,)Tj
T*
( Which once untangled much misfortune bodes;)Tj
T*
( This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs,)Tj
T*
( That presses them and learns them first to bear,)Tj
T*
( Making them women of good carriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( You and I are past our dancing days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( O! she doth teach the torches to burn bright.)Tj
T*
( It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night)Tj
T*
( Like a rich jewel in an Ethiop\222s ear;)Tj
T*
( Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [48])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.75456 Tm
( Gentlemen, prepare not to be gone;)Tj
T*
( We have a trifling foolish banquet towards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [125])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( My only love sprung from my only hate!)Tj
T*
( Too early seen unknown, and known too late!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [142])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 245.25456 Tm
( He jests at scars, that never felt a wound.)Tj
T*
( But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?)Tj
T*
( It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( It is my lady; O! it is my love:)Tj
T*
( O! that she knew she were.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( See! how she leans her cheek upon her hand:)Tj
T*
( O! that I were a glove upon that hand,)Tj
T*
( That I might touch that cheek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?)Tj
ET
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( Deny thy father, and refuse thy name;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,)Tj
T*
( And I\222ll no longer be a Capulet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( What\222s in a name? that which we call a rose)Tj
T*
( By any other name would smell as sweet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( With love\222s light wings did I o\222er-perch these walls;)Tj
T*
( For stony limits cannot hold love out,)Tj
T*
( And what love can do that dares love attempt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Thou know\222st the mask of night is on my face,)Tj
T*
( Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek)Tj
T*
( For that which thou hast heard me speak tonight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Fain would I dwell on form, fain, fain deny)Tj
T*
( What I have spoke: but farewell compliment!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( At lovers\222 perjuries,)Tj
T*
( They say, Jove laughs. O gentle Romeo!)Tj
T*
( If thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully:)Tj
T*
( Or if thou think\222st I am too quickly won,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll frown and be perverse and say thee nay,)Tj
T*
( So thou wilt woo; but else, not for the world.)Tj
T*
( In truth, fair Montague, I am too fond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( I\222ll prove more true)Tj
T*
( Than those that have more cunning to be strange.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Romeo: Lady, by yonder blessed moon I swear)Tj
T*
( That tips with silver all these fruit-tree tops,\227)Tj
T*
( Juliet: O! swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,)Tj
T*
( That monthly changes in her circled orb,)Tj
T*
( Lest that thy love prove likewise variable.)Tj
T*
( Romeo: What shall I swear by?)Tj
T*
( Juliet: Do not swear at all;)Tj
T*
( Or, if thou wilt, swear by thy gracious self,)Tj
T*
( Which is the god of my idolatry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden;)Tj
ET
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( Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ere one can say it lightens. Sweet, good-night!)Tj
T*
( This bud of love, by summer\222s ripening breath,)Tj
T*
( May prove a beauteous flower when next we meet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( My bounty is as boundless as the sea,)Tj
T*
( My love as deep; the more I give to thee,)Tj
T*
( The more I have, for both are infinite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 133)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Love goes toward love, as schoolboys from their books;)Tj
T*
( But love from love, toward school with heavy looks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Juliet: O! for a falconer\222s voice,)Tj
T*
( To lure this tassel-gentle back again.)Tj
T*
( Bondage is hoarse, and may not speak aloud,)Tj
T*
( Else would I tear the cave where Echo lies,)Tj
T*
( And make her airy tongue more hoarse than mine,)Tj
T*
( With repetition of my Romeo\222s name.)Tj
T*
( Romeo: It is my soul that calls upon my name:)Tj
T*
( How silver-sweet sound lovers\222 tongues by night,)Tj
T*
( Like softest music to attending ears!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 158)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( Juliet: \222Tis almost morning; I would have thee gone;)Tj
T*
( And yet no further than a wanton\222s bird,)Tj
T*
( Who lets it hop a little from her hand,)Tj
T*
( Like a poor prisoner in his twisted gyves,)Tj
T*
( And with a silk thread plucks it back again,)Tj
T*
( So loving-jealous of his liberty.)Tj
T*
( Romeo: I would I were thy bird.)Tj
T*
( Juliet: Sweet, so would I:)Tj
T*
( Yet I should kill thee with much cherishing.)Tj
T*
( Good-night, good-night! parting is such sweet sorrow)Tj
T*
( That I shall say good-night till it be morrow.)Tj
T*
( Romeo: Sleep dwell upon thine eyes, peace in thy breast!)Tj
T*
( Would I were sleep and peace, so sweet to rest!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 176)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( One, two, and the third in your bosom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [24])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( O flesh, flesh, how art thou fishified!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [41])Tj
ET
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( I am the very pink of courtesy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [63])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear himself talk, and will speak \
more in a minute than he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(will stand to in a month.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [156])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( O! so light a foot)Tj
T*
( Will ne\222er wear out the everlasting flint.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 2, sc. 6, l. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( Thy head is as full of quarrels as an egg is full of meat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [23])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( No, \222tis not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church door; but\
\222tis enough, \222twill serve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [100])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( A plague o\222 both your houses!)Tj
T*
( They have made worms\222 meat of me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [112])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( O! I am Fortune\222s fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [142])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds,)Tj
T*
( Towards Phoebus\222 lodging; such a waggoner)Tj
T*
( As Phaethon would whip you to the west,)Tj
T*
( And bring in cloudy night immediately.)Tj
T*
( Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night!)Tj
T*
( That runaway\222s eyes may wink, and Romeo)Tj
T*
( Leap to these arms, untalked of and unseen!)Tj
T*
( Lovers can see to do their amorous rites)Tj
T*
( By their own beauties; or, if love be blind,)Tj
T*
( It best agrees with night. Come, civil night,)Tj
T*
( Thou sober-suited matron, all in black.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( Come, night! come, Romeo! come, thou day in night!)Tj
T*
( For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night,)Tj
T*
( Whiter than new snow on a raven\222s back.)Tj
T*
( Come, gentle night; come, loving, black-browed night,)Tj
T*
( Give me my Romeo: and, when he shall die,)Tj
T*
( Take him and cut him out in little stars,)Tj
T*
( And he will make the face of heaven so fine)Tj
T*
( That all the world will be in love with night,)Tj
T*
( And pay no worship to the garish sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( He was not born to shame:)Tj
ET
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( Upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 91)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Romeo, come forth; come forth, thou fearful man:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Affliction is enamoured of thy parts,)Tj
T*
( And thou art wedded to calamity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Thou cutt\222st my head off with a golden axe,)Tj
T*
( And smil\222st upon the stroke that murders me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Adversity\222s sweet milk, philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Hang up philosophy!)Tj
T*
( Unless philosophy can make a Juliet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( O Lord, I could have stayed here all the night)Tj
T*
( To hear good counsel. O, what learning is!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 159)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Wilt thou be gone? it is not yet near day:)Tj
T*
( It was the nightingale, and not the lark,)Tj
T*
( That pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear;)Tj
T*
( Nightly she sings on yon pomegranate tree:)Tj
T*
( Believe me, love, it was the nightingale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Night\222s candles are burnt out, and jocund day)Tj
T*
( Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( I have more care to stay than will to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Villain and he be many miles asunder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Thank me no thankings, nor proud me no prouds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( Is there no pity sitting in the clouds,)Tj
T*
( That sees into the bottom of my grief?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 198)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( Romeo\222s a dishclout to him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 221)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Sirrah, go hire me twenty cunning cooks.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Farewell! God knows when we shall meet again.)Tj
ET
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( I have a faint cold fear thrills through my veins,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That almost freezes up the heat of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( Out, alas! she\222s cold;)Tj
T*
( Her blood is settled, and her joints are stiff;)Tj
T*
( Life and these lips have long been separated:)Tj
T*
( Death lies on her like an untimely frost)Tj
T*
( Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.00456 Tm
( My bosom\222s lord sits lightly on his throne;)Tj
T*
( And all this day an unaccustomed spirit)Tj
T*
( Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.25456 Tm
( Is it even so? then I defy you, stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( Being holiday, the beggar\222s shop is shut.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.67047 Tm
(56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.75456 Tm
( Romeo: The world is not thy friend nor the world\222s law:)Tj
T*
( The world affords no law to make thee rich;)Tj
T*
( Then be not poor, but break it, and take this.)Tj
T*
( Apothecary: My poverty, but not my will, consents.)Tj
T*
( Romeo: I pay thy poverty, and not thy will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.00456 Tm
( Tempt not a desperate man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.25456 Tm
( One writ with me in sour misfortune\222s book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 82)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.50456 Tm
( How oft when men are at the point of death)Tj
T*
( Have they been merry! which their keepers call)Tj
T*
( A lightning before death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.67047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.75456 Tm
( Beauty\222s ensign yet)Tj
T*
( Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks,)Tj
T*
( And death\222s pale flag is not advanc\351d there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.92047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.00456 Tm
( Shall I believe)Tj
T*
( That unsubstantial Death is amorous,)Tj
T*
( And that the lean abhorr\351d monster keeps)Tj
T*
( Thee here in dark to be his paramour?)Tj
T*
( For fear of that I still will stay with thee,)Tj
ET
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( And never from this palace of dim night)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Depart again: here, here will I remain)Tj
T*
( With worms that are thy chambermaids; O! here)Tj
T*
( Will I set up my everlasting rest,)Tj
T*
( And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars)Tj
T*
( From this world-wearied flesh. Eyes, look your last!)Tj
T*
( Arms, take your last embrace! and, lips, O you)Tj
T*
( The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss)Tj
T*
( A dateless bargain to engrossing death!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.17047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( Seal up the mouth of outrage for a while,)Tj
T*
( Till we can clear these ambiguities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Romeo And Juliet\222 \(1595\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 216)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 507.29173 Tm
( 7.66.30 The Taming Of The Shrew)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 486.00456 Tm
( Look in the chronicles; we came in with Richard Conqueror.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) induction, sc. 1, l. [4])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 449.25456 Tm
( As Stephen Sly, and old John Naps of Greece,)Tj
T*
( And Peter Turf, and Henry Pimpernell,)Tj
T*
( And twenty more such names and men as these,)Tj
T*
( Which never were nor no man ever saw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) induction, sc. 2, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( No profit grows where is no pleasure ta\222en;)Tj
T*
( In brief, sir, study what you most affect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( Nothing comes amiss, so money comes withal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [82])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( O! this learning, what a thing it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [163])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( She is your treasure, she must have a husband;)Tj
T*
( I must dance bare-foot on her wedding day,)Tj
T*
( And, for your love to her, lead apes in hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( Say that she rail; why then I\222ll tell her plain)Tj
T*
( She sings as sweetly as a nightingale:)Tj
T*
( Say that she frown; I\222ll say she looks as clear)Tj
T*
( As morning roses newly washed with dew:)Tj
T*
( Say she be mute and will not speak a word;)Tj
T*
( Then I\222ll commend her volubility,)Tj
T*
( And say she uttereth piercing eloquence.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( You are called plain Kate,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And bonny Kate, and sometimes Kate the curst;)Tj
T*
( But, Kate, the prettiest Kate in Christendom;)Tj
T*
( Kate of Kate-Hall, my super-dainty Kate,)Tj
T*
( For dainties are all cates: and therefore, Kate,)Tj
T*
( Take this of me, Kate of my consolation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Kiss me Kate, we will be married o\222 Sunday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 318)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( She shall watch all night:)Tj
T*
( And if she chance to nod I\222ll rail and brawl,)Tj
T*
( And with the clamour keep her still awake.)Tj
T*
( This is the way to kill a wife with kindness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [208])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( What say you to a piece of beef and mustard?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [23])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Petruchio: It shall be what o\222clock I say it is.)Tj
T*
( Hortensio: Why, so this gallant will command the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [197])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( O vile,)Tj
T*
( Intolerable, not to be endur\222d!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 93)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Fie, fie! unknit that threatening unkind brow,)Tj
T*
( And dart not scornful glances from those eyes,)Tj
T*
( To wound thy lord, thy king, thy governor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( A woman moved is like a fountain troubled,)Tj
T*
( Muddy, ill-seeming, thick, bereft of beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 143)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( Thy husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper,)Tj
T*
( Thy head, thy sovereign; one that cares for thee,)Tj
T*
( And for thy maintenance commits his body)Tj
T*
( To painful labour both by sea and land.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 147)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Such duty as the subject owes the prince,)Tj
T*
( Even such a woman oweth to her husband.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 156)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( I am ashamed that women are so simple)Tj
T*
( To offer war where they should kneel for peace.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Taming Of The Shrew\222 \(1592\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 162)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 724.04173 Tm
( 7.66.31 The Tempest)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.75456 Tm
( What cares these roarers for the name of king?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 686.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [18])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 666.00456 Tm
( He hath no drowning mark upon him; his complexion is perfect gallows\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 650.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [33])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 629.25456 Tm
( Now would I give a thousand furlongs of sea for an acre of barren gr\
ound; long heath, brown )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(furze, any thing. The wills above be done! but I would fain die a dry d\
eath.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [70])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 574.50456 Tm
( O! I have suffer\222d)Tj
T*
( With those that I saw suffer: a brave vessel,)Tj
T*
( Who had, no doubt, some noble creatures in her,)Tj
T*
( Dashed all to pieces. O! the cry did knock)Tj
T*
( Against my very heart. Poor souls, they perished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.75456 Tm
( What seest thou else)Tj
T*
( In the dark backward and abysm of time?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.00456 Tm
( Your tale, sir, would cure deafness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( My library)Tj
T*
( Was dukedom large enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( The still-vexed Bermoothes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 229)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( For this, be sure, tonight thou shalt have cramps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 325)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( You taught me language; and my profit on\222t)Tj
T*
( Is, I know how to curse: the red plague rid you,)Tj
T*
( For learning me your language!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 363)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Come unto these yellow sands,)Tj
T*
( And then take hands:)Tj
T*
( Curtsied when you have, and kissed,\227)Tj
T*
( The wild waves whist,\227)Tj
T*
( Foot it featly here and there;)Tj
T*
( And, sweet sprites, the burden bear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 375)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( This music crept by me upon the waters,)Tj
ET
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( Allaying both their fury, and my passion,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With its sweet air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 389)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Full fathom five thy father lies;)Tj
T*
( Of his bones are coral made:)Tj
T*
( Those are pearls that were his eyes:)Tj
T*
( Nothing of him that doth fade,)Tj
T*
( But doth suffer a sea-change)Tj
T*
( Into something rich and strange.)Tj
T*
( Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell:)Tj
T*
( Ding-dong.)Tj
T*
( Hark! now I hear them,\227ding-dong, bell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 394)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( The fring\351d curtains of thine eye advance,)Tj
T*
( And say what thou seest yond.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 405)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( At the first sight)Tj
T*
( They have changed eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 437)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( He receives comfort like cold porridge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Look, he\222s winding up the watch of his wit, by and by it will str\
ike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [12])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( What\222s past is prologue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [261])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( They\222ll take suggestion as a cat laps milk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [296])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( A very ancient and fish-like smell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [27])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( When they will not give a doit to relieve a lame beggar, they will l\
ay out ten to see a dead )Tj
T*
(Indian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [33])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [42])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( Well, here\222s my comfort. [Drinks.])Tj
T*
( The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I,)Tj
T*
( The gunner and his mate,)Tj
T*
( Loved Mall, Meg, and Marian and Margery,)Tj
T*
( But none of us cared for Kate;)Tj
T*
( For she had a tongue with a tang,)Tj
ET
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( Would cry to a sailor, \221Go hang!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [48])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( \222Ban, \222Ban, Ca-Caliban,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Has a new master\227Get a new man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 2, sc. 2, l. [197])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Ferdinand: Wherefore weep you?)Tj
T*
( Miranda: At mine unworthiness, that dare not offer)Tj
T*
( What I desire to give; and much less take)Tj
T*
( What I shall die to want.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Miranda: I am your wife, if you will marry me;)Tj
T*
( If not, I\222ll die your maid: to be your fellow)Tj
T*
( You may deny me; but I\222ll be your servant)Tj
T*
( Whether you will or no.)Tj
T*
( Ferdinand: My mistress, dearest;)Tj
T*
( And thus I humble ever.)Tj
T*
( Miranda: My husband then?)Tj
T*
( Ferdinand: Ay, with a heart as willing)Tj
T*
( As bondage e\222er of freedom: here\222s my hand.)Tj
T*
( Miranda: And mine, with my heart in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Thou deboshed fish thou.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [30])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( Flout \222em, and scout \222em; and scout \222em, and flout \222em;)Tj
T*
( Thought is free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [133])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( He that dies pays all debts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [143])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Be not afeard: the isle is full of noises,)Tj
T*
( Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight, and hurt not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [147])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( In dreaming,)Tj
T*
( The clouds methought would open and show riches)Tj
T*
( Ready to drop upon me; that, when I waked)Tj
T*
( I cried to dream again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [152])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( Thy banks with pion\351d and twill\351d brims,)Tj
T*
( Which spongy April at thy hest betrims,)Tj
T*
( To make cold nymphs chaste crowns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 64)Tj
ET
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( Our revels now are ended. These our actors,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As I foretold you, were all spirits and)Tj
T*
( Are melted into air, into thin air:)Tj
T*
( And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,)Tj
T*
( The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,)Tj
T*
( The solemn temples, the great globe itself,)Tj
T*
( Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve)Tj
T*
( And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,)Tj
T*
( Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff)Tj
T*
( As dreams are made on, and our little life)Tj
T*
( Is rounded with a sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 536.25456 Tm
( I do begin to have bloody thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [221])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( We shall lose our time,)Tj
T*
( And all be turned to barnacles, or to apes)Tj
T*
( With foreheads villanous low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 4, sc. 1, l. [250])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Ye elves of hills, brooks, standing lakes, and groves;)Tj
T*
( And ye, that on the sands with printless foot)Tj
T*
( Do chase the ebbing Neptune and do fly him)Tj
T*
( When he comes back; you demi-puppets, that)Tj
T*
( By moonshine do the green sour ringlets make)Tj
T*
( Whereof the ewe not bites.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( This rough magic)Tj
T*
( I here abjure...)Tj
T*
( I\222ll break my staff,)Tj
T*
( Bury it certain fathoms in the earth,)Tj
T*
( And, deeper than did ever plummet sound,)Tj
T*
( I\222ll drown my book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( Where the bee sucks, there suck I)Tj
T*
( In a cowslip\222s bell I lie;)Tj
T*
( There I couch when owls do cry.)Tj
T*
( On the bat\222s back I do fly)Tj
T*
( After summer merrily:)Tj
T*
( Merrily, merrily shall I live now)Tj
T*
( Under the blossom that hangs on the bough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 88)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( How many goodly creatures are there here!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world,)Tj
T*
( That has such people in\222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Tempest\222 \(1611\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 182)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 670.04173 Tm
( 7.66.32 Timon Of Athens)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 648.75456 Tm
( \222Tis not enough to help the feeble up,)Tj
T*
( But to support him after.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 614.92047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 1, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 594.00456 Tm
( He that loves to be flattered is worthy o\222 the flatterer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.17047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 1, l. [233])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 557.25456 Tm
( The strain of man\222s bred out)Tj
T*
( Into baboon and monkey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.42047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 1, l. [260])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 502.50456 Tm
( I wonder men dare trust themselves with men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 2, l. [45])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.75456 Tm
( Immortal gods, I crave no pelf;)Tj
T*
( I pray for no man but myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 2, l. [64])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.00456 Tm
( Like madness is the glory of this life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 2, l. [141])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( Men shut their doors against a setting sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 1, sc. 2, l. [152])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.50456 Tm
( Nothing emboldens sin so much as mercy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 3, sc. 5, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( You fools of fortune, trencher-friends, time\222s flies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 3, sc. 6, l. [107])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( We have seen better days.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 4, sc. 2, l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( O! the fierce wretchedness that glory brings us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 4, sc. 2, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( The middle of humanity thou never knewest, but the extremity of both\
ends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 4, sc. 2, l. [300])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.75456 Tm
( He has almost charmed me from my profession, by persuading me to it.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 4, sc. 3, l. [457])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( My long sickness)Tj
T*
( Of health and living now begins to mend,)Tj
T*
( And nothing brings me all things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 5, sc. 1, l. [191])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Tell them, that, to ease them of their griefs,)Tj
ET
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( Their fears of hostile strokes, their aches, losses,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Their pangs of love, with other incident throes)Tj
T*
( That nature\222s fragile vessel doth sustain)Tj
T*
( In life\222s uncertain voyage, I will some kindness do them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 5, sc. 1, l. [203])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Timon hath made his everlasting mansion)Tj
T*
( Upon the beach\351d verge of the salt flood;)Tj
T*
( Who once a day with his emboss\351d froth)Tj
T*
( The turbulent surge shall cover.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Timon Of Athens\222 act 5, sc. 1, l. [220])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 561.29173 Tm
( 7.66.33 Titus Andronicus)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( She is a woman, therefore may be wooed;)Tj
T*
( She is a woman, therefore may be won;)Tj
T*
( She is Lavinia, therefore must be loved.)Tj
T*
( What, man! more water glideth by the mill)Tj
T*
( Than wots the miller of; and easy it is)Tj
T*
( Of a cut loaf to steal a shive, we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Titus Andronicus\222 \(1590\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 82.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( Come, and take choice of all my library,)Tj
T*
( And so beguile thy sorrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Titus Andronicus\222 \(1590\) act 4, sc. 1, l. 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Tamora: Why hast thou slain thine only daughter thus?)Tj
T*
( Titus: Not I, \222twas Chiron and Demetrius:)Tj
T*
( They ravished her and cut away her tongue,)Tj
T*
( And they, \222twas they, that did her all this wrong.)Tj
T*
( Saturninus: Go fetch them hither to us presently.)Tj
T*
( Titus: Why, there they are, both bak\351d in this pie)Tj
T*
( Whereof their mother daintily hath fed,)Tj
T*
( Eating the flesh that she herself hath bred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(\221Titus Andronicus\222 \(1590\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 54])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 195.75456 Tm
( If one good deed in all my life I did,)Tj
T*
( I do repent it from my very soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221Titus Andronicus\222 \(1590\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [189])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 130.79173 Tm
( 7.66.34 Troilus And Cressida)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 109.50456 Tm
( I have had my labour for my travail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 1, l. [73])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.75456 Tm
( Women are angels, wooing:)Tj
T*
( Things won are done; joy\222s soul lies in the doing;)Tj
ET
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( That she beloved knows nought that knows not this:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Men prize the thing ungained more than it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 2, l. [310])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The heavens themselves, the planets, and this centre)Tj
T*
( Observe degree, priority, and place,)Tj
T*
( Insisture, course, proportion, season, form,)Tj
T*
( Office, and custom, in all line of order.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( O! when degree is shaked,)Tj
T*
( Which is the ladder to all high designs,)Tj
T*
( The enterprise is sick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 101)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Take but degree away, untune that string,)Tj
T*
( And, hark! what discord follows; each thing meets)Tj
T*
( In mere oppugnancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( The general\222s disdained)Tj
T*
( By him one step below, he by the next,)Tj
T*
( That next by him beneath; so every step,)Tj
T*
( Exampled by the first pace that is sick)Tj
T*
( Of his superior, grows to an envious fever)Tj
T*
( Of pale and bloodless emulation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( We are soldiers;)Tj
T*
( And may that soldier a mere recreant prove,)Tj
T*
( That means not, hath not, or is not in love!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 286)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( And in such indexes, although small pricks)Tj
T*
( To their subsequent volumes, there is seen)Tj
T*
( The baby figure of the giant mass)Tj
T*
( Of things to come at large.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 343)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( The plague of Greece upon thee, thou mongrel beef-witted lord!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [13])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Achilles...who wears his wit in his belly, and his guts in his head,\
I\222ll tell you what I say of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [78])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( You have both said well;)Tj
T*
( And on the cause and question now in hand)Tj
T*
( Have glozed but superficially; not much)Tj
T*
( Unlike young men, whom Aristotle thought)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Unfit to hear moral philosophy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 163)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Thus to persist)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In doing wrong extenuates not wrong,)Tj
T*
( But makes it much more heavy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 186)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( I am giddy, expectation whirls me round.)Tj
T*
( The imaginary relish is so sweet)Tj
T*
( That it enchants my sense.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [17])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( This is the monstruosity in love, lady, that the will is infinite, a\
nd the execution confined; that )Tj
T*
(the desire is boundless, and the act a slave to limit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [85])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( To be wise, and love,)Tj
T*
( Exceeds man\222s might.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [163])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( I am as true as truth\222s simplicity,)Tj
T*
( And simpler than the infancy of truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [176])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back,)Tj
T*
( Wherein he puts alms for oblivion,)Tj
T*
( A great-sized monster of ingratitudes:)Tj
T*
( Those scraps are good deeds past; which are devoured)Tj
T*
( As fast as they are made, forgot as soon)Tj
T*
( As done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Perseverance, dear my lord,)Tj
T*
( Keeps honour bright: to have done, is to hang)Tj
T*
( Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail)Tj
T*
( In monumental mockery.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 150)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( Time is like a fashionable host)Tj
T*
( That slightly shakes his parting guest by the hand,)Tj
T*
( And with his arms outstretched, as he would fly,)Tj
T*
( Grasps in the comer: welcome ever smiles,)Tj
T*
( And farewell goes out sighing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 165)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Beauty, wit,)Tj
T*
( High birth, vigour of bone, desert in service,)Tj
T*
( Love, friendship, charity, are subjects all)Tj
ET
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Q
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( To envious and calumniating time.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( One touch of nature makes the whole world kin,)Tj
T*
( That all with one consent praise new-born gawds,)Tj
T*
( Though they are made and moulded of things past,)Tj
T*
( And give to dust that is a little gilt)Tj
T*
( More laud than gilt o\222er-dusted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( A plague of opinion! a man may wear it on both sides, like a leather\
jerkin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 3, sc. 3, l. [267])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( How my achievements mock me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [72])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( What a pair of spectacles is here!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 4, l. [13] \(Pandarus, \
of the lovers\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( We two, that with so many thousand sighs)Tj
T*
( Did buy each other, must poorly sell ourselves)Tj
T*
( With the rude brevity and discharge of one.)Tj
T*
( Injurious time now with a robber\222s haste)Tj
T*
( Crams his rich thievery up, he knows not how:)Tj
T*
( As many farewells as be stars in heaven,)Tj
T*
( With distinct breath and consigned kisses to them,)Tj
T*
( He fumbles up into a loose adieu,)Tj
T*
( And scants us with a single famished kiss,)Tj
T*
( Distasted with the salt of broken tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 4, l. [39])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Fie, fie upon her!)Tj
T*
( There\222s language in her eye, her cheek, her lip,)Tj
T*
( Nay, her foot speaks; her wanton spirits look out)Tj
T*
( At every joint and motive of her body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( What\222s past, and what\222s to come is strewed with husks)Tj
T*
( And formless ruin of oblivion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 165)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( The end crowns all,)Tj
T*
( And that old common arbitrator, Time,)Tj
T*
( Will one day end it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 4, sc. 5, l. 223)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( Lechery, lechery; still, wars and lechery: nothing else holds fashio\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Words, words, mere words, no matter from the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 5, sc. 3, l. [109])Tj
ET
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( Hector is dead; there is no more to say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 5, sc. 10, l. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O world! world! world! thus is the poor agent despised. O traitors a\
nd bawds, how earnestly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(are you set a-work, and how ill requited! why should our endeavour be so\
loved, and the )Tj
T*
(performance so loathed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Troilus And Cressida\222 \(1602\) act 5, sc. 10, l. [36])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 633.29173 Tm
( 7.66.35 Twelfth Night)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.00456 Tm
( If music be the food of love, play on;)Tj
T*
( Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,)Tj
T*
( The appetite may sicken, and so die.)Tj
T*
( That strain again! it had a dying fall:)Tj
T*
( O! it came o\222er my ear like the sweet sound)Tj
T*
( That breathes upon a bank of violets,)Tj
T*
( Stealing and giving odour! Enough! no more:)Tj
T*
( \222Tis not so sweet now as it was before.)Tj
T*
( O spirit of love! how quick and fresh art thou,)Tj
T*
( That notwithstanding thy capacity)Tj
T*
( Receiveth as the sea, nought enters there,)Tj
T*
( Of what validity and pitch soe\222er,)Tj
T*
( But falls into abatement and low price,)Tj
T*
( Even in a minute: so full of shapes is fancy,)Tj
T*
( That it alone is high fantastical.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( O! when mine eyes did see Olivia first,)Tj
T*
( Methought she purged the air of pestilence.)Tj
T*
( That instant was I turned into a hart,)Tj
T*
( And my desires, like fell and cruel hounds,)Tj
T*
( E\222er since pursue me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.50456 Tm
( And what should I do in Illyria?)Tj
T*
( My brother he is in Elysium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( He\222s as tall a man as any\222s in Illyria.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [21])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.00456 Tm
( He plays o\222 the viol-de-gamboys, and speaks three or four languag\
es word for word without )Tj
T*
(book, and hath all the good gifts of nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [27])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 68.25456 Tm
( Methinks sometimes I have no more wit than a Christian or an ordinar\
y man has; but I am a )Tj
T*
(great eater of beef, and I believe that does harm to my wit.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [90])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Sir Andrew: I would I had bestowed that time in the tongues that I \
have in fencing, dancing, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and bear-baiting. O! had I but followed the arts! )Tj
T*
( Sir Toby: Then hadst thou had an excellent head of hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [99])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Wherefore are these things hid? wherefore have these gifts a curtain\
before \222em? are they like )Tj
T*
(to take dust, like Mistress Mall\222s picture? why dost thou not go to c\
hurch in a galliard, and come )Tj
T*
(home in a coranto? My very walk should be a jig.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [135])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Is it a world to hide virtues in?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 3, l. [142])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( They shall yet belie thy happy years)Tj
T*
( That say thou art a man: Diana\222s lip)Tj
T*
( Is not more smooth and rubious; thy small pipe)Tj
T*
( Is as the maiden\222s organ, shrill and sound;)Tj
T*
( And all is semblative a woman\222s part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 4, l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Many a good hanging prevents a bad marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [20])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( What says Quinapalus? \221Better a witty fool than a foolish wit.\222\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [37])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( Virtue that transgresses is but patched with sin; and sin that amend\
s is but patched with virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [52])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Good my mouse of virtue, answer me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [68])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( A plague o\222 these pickle herring!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [127])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Not yet old enough for a man, nor young enough for a boy; as a squas\
h is before \222tis a peascod, )Tj
T*
(or a codling when \222tis almost an apple: \222tis with him in standing\
water, between boy and man. He )Tj
T*
(is very well-favoured, and he speaks very shrewishly: one would think hi\
s mother\222s milk were )Tj
T*
(scarce out of him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [166])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( I would be loath to cast away my speech, for besides that it is exce\
llently well penned, I have )Tj
T*
(taken great pains to con it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [184])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( I can say little more than I have studied, and that question\222s ou\
t of my part.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [191])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Olivia: \222Tis in grain, sir; \222twill endure wind and weather. )Tj
T*
( Viola: \222Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and white)Tj
T*
( Nature\222s own sweet and cunning hand laid on:)Tj
ET
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( Lady, you are the cruell\222st she alive)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If you will lead these graces to the grave)Tj
T*
( And leave the world no copy.)Tj
T*
( Olivia: O! sir I will not be so hard-hearted; I will give out diver\
s schedules of my beauty: it )Tj
T*
(shall be inventoried, and every particle and utensil labelled to my will\
: as Item, Two lips, )Tj
T*
(indifferent red; Item, Two grey eyes with lids to them; Item, One neck, \
one chin, and so forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [257])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Make me a willow cabin at your gate,)Tj
T*
( And call upon my soul within the house;)Tj
T*
( Write loyal cantons of contemn\351d love,)Tj
T*
( And sing them loud even in the dead of night;)Tj
T*
( Halloo your name to the reverberate hills,)Tj
T*
( And make the babbling gossip of the air)Tj
T*
( Cry out, \221Olivia!\222 O! you should not rest)Tj
T*
( Between the elements of air and earth,)Tj
T*
( But you should pity me!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [289])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( \221What is your parentage?\222)Tj
T*
( \221Above my fortune, yet my state is well:)Tj
T*
( I am a gentleman.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 1, sc. 5, l. [310])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( She is drowned already, sir, with salt water, though I seem to drown\
her remembrance again )Tj
T*
(with more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 1, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.00456 Tm
( Not to be a-bed after midnight is to be up betimes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( O mistress mine! where are you roaming?)Tj
T*
( O! stay and hear; your true love\222s coming,)Tj
T*
( That can sing both high and low.)Tj
T*
( Trip no further, pretty sweeting;)Tj
T*
( Journeys end in lovers meeting,)Tj
T*
( Every wise man\222s son doth know...)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What is love? \222tis not hereafter;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Present mirth hath present laughter;)Tj
T*
( What\222s to come is still unsure:)Tj
T*
( In delay there lies no plenty;)Tj
T*
( Then come kiss me, sweet and twenty,)Tj
T*
( Youth\222s a stuff will not endure.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [42])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Am not I consanguineous? am I not of her blood? Tillyvally, lady.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [85])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( He does it with a better grace, but I do it more natural.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [91])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Is there no respect of place, persons, nor time, in you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [100])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more c\
akes and ale?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [124])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( Maria: Marry, sir, sometimes he is a kind of puritan.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sir Andrew: O, if I thought that, I\222d beat him like a dog!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [153])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( I will drop in his way some obscure epistles of love; wherein by the\
colour of his beard, the )Tj
T*
(shape of his leg, the manner of his gait, the expressure of his eye, for\
ehead, and complexion, he )Tj
T*
(shall find himself most feelingly personated.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [171])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( I was adored once too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [200])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( My purpose is, indeed, a horse of that colour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 3, l. [184])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( Now, good Cesario, but that piece of song,)Tj
T*
( That old and antique song we heard last night;)Tj
T*
( Methought it did relieve my passion much,)Tj
T*
( More than light airs and recollected terms)Tj
T*
( Of these most brisk and giddy-paced times:)Tj
T*
( Come, but one verse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Duke: If ever thou shalt love,)Tj
T*
( In the sweet pangs of it remember me;)Tj
T*
( For such as I am all true lovers are:)Tj
T*
( Unstaid and skittish in all motions else,)Tj
T*
( Save in the constant image of the creature)Tj
T*
( That is beloved. How dost thou like this tune?)Tj
T*
( Viola: It gives a very echo to the seat)Tj
T*
( Where love is enthroned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Let still the woman take)Tj
T*
( An elder than herself, so wears she to him,)Tj
T*
( So sways she level in her husband\222s heart:)Tj
T*
( For, boy, however we do praise ourselves,)Tj
T*
( Our fancies are more giddy and unfirm,)Tj
T*
( More longing, wavering, sooner lost and worn,)Tj
ET
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( Than women\222s are.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Then let thy love be younger than thyself,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or thy affection cannot hold the bent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Mark it, Cesario; it is old and plain.)Tj
T*
( The spinsters and the knitters in the sun)Tj
T*
( And the free maids that weave their thread with bones)Tj
T*
( Do use to chant it: it is silly sooth,)Tj
T*
( And dallies with the innocence of love,)Tj
T*
( Like the old age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Come away, come away, death,)Tj
T*
( And in sad cypress let me be laid;)Tj
T*
( Fly away, fly away, breath:)Tj
T*
( I am slain by a fair cruel maid.)Tj
T*
( My shroud of white, stuck all with yew,)Tj
T*
( O! prepare it.)Tj
T*
( My part of death no one so true)Tj
T*
( Did share it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( Now, the melancholy god protect thee, and the tailor make thy double\
t of changeable taffeta, )Tj
T*
(for thy mind is a very opal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [74])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( There is no woman\222s sides)Tj
T*
( Can bide the beating of so strong a passion)Tj
T*
( As love doth give my heart; no woman\222s heart)Tj
T*
( So big, to hold so much; they lack retention.)Tj
T*
( Alas! their love may be called appetite,)Tj
T*
( No motion of the liver, but the palate,)Tj
T*
( That suffer surfeit, cloyment, and revolt;)Tj
T*
( But mine is all as hungry as the sea,)Tj
T*
( And can digest so much.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [95])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Viola: My father had a daughter loved a man,)Tj
T*
( As it might be, perhaps, were I a woman,)Tj
T*
( I should your lordship.)Tj
T*
( Duke: And what\222s her history?)Tj
T*
( Viola: A blank, my lord. She never told her love,)Tj
T*
( But let concealment, like a worm i\222 the bud,)Tj
ET
EMC
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Feed on her damask cheek: she pined in thought;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And with a green and yellow melancholy,)Tj
T*
( She sat like patience on a monument,)Tj
T*
( Smiling at grief. Was not this love indeed?)Tj
T*
( We men may say more, swear more; but, indeed,)Tj
T*
( Our shows are more than will; for still we prove)Tj
T*
( Much in our vows, but little in our love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [108])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( I am all the daughters of my father\222s house,)Tj
T*
( And all the brothers too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 4, l. [122])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( How now, my metal of India!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [17])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( \222Tis but Fortune, all is Fortune. Maria once told me she did affe\
ct me, and I have heard herself )Tj
T*
(come thus near, that, should she fancy, it should be one of my complexio\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [23])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Here comes the trout that must be caught with tickling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [25])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Contemplation makes a rare turkey-cock of him: how he jets under his\
advanced plumes!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Now is the woodcock near the gin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [93])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( I may command where I adore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [117])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( But be not afraid of greatness: some men are born great, some achiev\
e greatness, and some )Tj
T*
(have greatness thrust upon them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [158])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Let thy tongue tang arguments of state; put thyself into the trick o\
f singularity. She thus )Tj
T*
(advises thee that sighs for thee. Remember who commended thy yellow stoc\
kings, and wished to )Tj
T*
(see thee ever cross-gartered.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [165])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Jove and my stars be praised! Here is yet a postscript.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [190])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( He will come to her in yellow stockings, and \222tis a colour she ab\
hors; and cross-gartered, a )Tj
T*
(fashion she detests.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 2, sc. 5, l. [220])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.00456 Tm
( Now Jove, in his next commodity of hair, send thee a beard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.25456 Tm
( This fellow\222s wise enough to play the fool,)Tj
T*
( And to do that well craves a kind of wit.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [68])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Taste your legs, sir; put them to motion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [88])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( \222Twas never merry world)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Since lowly feigning was called compliment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [110])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( O world! how apt the poor are to be proud.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [141])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( O! what a deal of scorn looks beautiful)Tj
T*
( In the contempt and anger of his lip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [159])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Love sought is good, but giv\222n unsought is better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 1, l. [170])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( You should then have accosted her, and with some excellent jests, fi\
re-new from the mint, you )Tj
T*
(should have banged the youth into dumbness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [23])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( You are now sailed into the north of my lady\222s opinion; where you\
will hang like an icicle on a )Tj
T*
(Dutchman\222s beard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( I had as lief be a Brownist as a politician.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [35])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( As many lies as will lie in thy sheet of paper, although the sheet w\
ere big enough for the bed of )Tj
T*
(Ware in England, set \222em down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [51])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( If he were opened, and you find so much blood in his liver as will c\
log the foot of a flea, I\222ll )Tj
T*
(eat the rest of the anatomy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [68])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Look, where the youngest wren of nine comes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [73])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( He does smile his face into more lines than are in the new map with \
the augmentation of the )Tj
T*
(Indies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [85])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( In the south suburbs, at the Elephant,)Tj
T*
( Is best to lodge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 3, l. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.50456 Tm
( I think we do know the sweet Roman hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [31])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( Why, this is very midsummer madness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [62])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( What, man! defy the devil: consider, he\222s an enemy to mankind.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [109])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.25456 Tm
( Go, hang yourselves all! you are idle shallow things: I am not of yo\
ur element.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 716.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [138])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 695.50456 Tm
( If this were played upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an impro\
bable fiction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [142])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.75456 Tm
( More matter for a May morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [158])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.00456 Tm
( Still you keep o\222 the windy side of the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [183])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.25456 Tm
( Fare thee well; and God have mercy upon one of our souls! He may hav\
e mercy upon mine, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(but my hope is better; and so look to thyself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [185])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 530.50456 Tm
( Nay, let me alone for swearing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [204])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.75456 Tm
( He is knight dubbed with unhatched rapier, and on carpet considerati\
on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [260])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 457.00456 Tm
( I am one that had rather go with sir priest than sir knight; I care \
not who knows so much of my )Tj
T*
(mettle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [300])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 402.25456 Tm
( I hate ingratitude more in a man)Tj
T*
( Than lying, vainness, babbling drunkenness,)Tj
T*
( Or any taint of vice whose strong corruption)Tj
T*
( Inhabits our frail blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [390])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 311.50456 Tm
( In nature there\222s no blemish but the mind;)Tj
T*
( None can be called deformed but the unkind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 3, sc. 4, l. [403])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.75456 Tm
( Out, hyperbolical fiend!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [29])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.00456 Tm
( For I am one of those gentle ones that will use the devil himself wi\
th courtesy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [37])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.25456 Tm
( Clown: What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? )Tj
T*
( Malvolio: That the soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird. \
)Tj
T*
( Clown: What thinkest thou of his opinion?)Tj
T*
( Malvolio: I think nobly of the soul, and no way approve his opinion\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [55])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.50456 Tm
( Leave thy vain bibble-babble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [106])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.75456 Tm
( We took him for a coward, but he\222s the very devil incardinate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [185])Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 749.00456 Tm
( Why have you suffered me to be imprisoned,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Kept in a dark house, visited by the priest,)Tj
T*
( And made the most notorious geck and gull)Tj
T*
( That e\222er invention played on? Tell me why.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.17047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [353])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.25456 Tm
( Thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.42047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [388])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.50456 Tm
( I\222ll be revenged on the whole pack of you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.67047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [390])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 584.75456 Tm
( When that I was and a little tiny boy,)Tj
T*
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain;)Tj
T*
( A foolish thing was but a toy,)Tj
T*
( For the rain it raineth every day.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But when I came to man\222s estate,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain;)Tj
T*
( \222Gainst knaves and thieves men shut their gates,)Tj
T*
( For the rain it raineth every day.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( But when I came, alas! to wive,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain;)Tj
T*
( By swaggering could I never thrive,)Tj
T*
( For the rain it raineth every day.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( But when I came unto my beds,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain;)Tj
T*
( With toss-pots still had drunken heads,)Tj
T*
( For the rain it raineth every day.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( A great while ago the world begun,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With hey, ho, the wind and the rain;)Tj
T*
( But that\222s all one, our play is done,)Tj
T*
( And we\222ll strive to please you every day.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.92047 Tm
(\221Twelfth Night\222 \(1601\) act 5, sc. 1, l. [401])Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 180.79173 Tm
( 7.66.36 The Two Gentlemen Of Verona)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.50456 Tm
( Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.67047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.75456 Tm
( He was more than over shoes in love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.92047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.00456 Tm
( I have no other but a woman\222s reason:)Tj
T*
( I think him so, because I think him so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 23)Tj
ET
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( Fie, fie! how wayward is this foolish love)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That, like a testy babe, will scratch the nurse)Tj
T*
( And presently all humbled kiss the rod!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( O! how this spring of love resembleth)Tj
T*
( The uncertain glory of an April day,)Tj
T*
( Which now shows all the beauty of the sun,)Tj
T*
( And by and by a cloud takes all away!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 1, sc. 3, l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Or as one nail by strength drives out another,)Tj
T*
( So the remembrance of my former love)Tj
T*
( Is by a newer object quite forgotten.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 2, sc. 4, l. 194)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Except I be by Silvia in the night,)Tj
T*
( There is no music in the nightingale;)Tj
T*
( Unless I look on Silvia in the day,)Tj
T*
( There is no day for me to look upon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Much is the force of heaven-bred poesy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Who is Sylvia? what is she,)Tj
T*
( That all our swains commend her?)Tj
T*
( Holy, fair, and wise is she;)Tj
T*
( The heaven such grace did lend her,)Tj
T*
( That she might admir\351d be.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Is she kind as she is fair?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For beauty lives with kindness:)Tj
T*
( Love doth to her eyes repair,)Tj
T*
( To help him of his blindness;)Tj
T*
( And, being helped, inhabits there.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.45747 TD
( Then to Silvia let us sing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That Silvia is excelling;)Tj
T*
( She excels each mortal thing)Tj
T*
( Upon the dull earth dwelling;)Tj
T*
( To her let us garlands bring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( How use doth breed a habit in man!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.17047 Tm
(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.25456 Tm
( O heaven! were man)Tj
T*
( But constant, he were perfect.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Two Gentlemen Of Verona\222 \(1592-3\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 110)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 721.29173 Tm
( 7.66.37 The Winter\222s Tale)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 700.00456 Tm
( We were, fair queen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Two lads that thought there was no more behind)Tj
T*
( But such a day to-morrow as to-day,)Tj
T*
( And to be boy eternal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( We were as twinned lambs that did frisk i\222 the sun,)Tj
T*
( And bleat the one at the other: what we changed)Tj
T*
( Was innocence for innocence; we knew not)Tj
T*
( The doctrine of ill-doing, no, nor dreamed)Tj
T*
( That any did.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.50456 Tm
( But to be paddling palms and pinching fingers,)Tj
T*
( As now they are, and making practised smiles,)Tj
T*
( As in a looking-glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 116)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.75456 Tm
( How like, methought, I then was to this kernel,)Tj
T*
( This squash, this gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.00456 Tm
( Make that thy question, and go rot!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 324)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.25456 Tm
( A sad tale\222s best for winter.)Tj
T*
( I have one of sprites and goblins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.50456 Tm
( It is a heretic that makes the fire,)Tj
T*
( Not she which burns in \222t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 114)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.75456 Tm
( I am a feather for each wind that blows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 2, sc. 3, l. 153)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.00456 Tm
( What\222s gone and what\222s past help)Tj
T*
( Should be past grief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 3, sc. 2, l. [223])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.25456 Tm
( Exit, pursued by a bear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 3, sc. 3, stage direction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.50456 Tm
( When daffodils begin to peer,)Tj
T*
( With heigh! the doxy, over the dale,)Tj
T*
( Why, then comes in the sweet o\222 the year;)Tj
T*
( For the red blood reigns in the winter\222s pale.)Tj
ET
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( The white sheet bleaching on the hedge,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With heigh! the sweet birds, O, how they sing!)Tj
T*
( Doth set my pugging tooth on edge;)Tj
T*
( For a quart of ale is a dish for a king.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The lark, that tirra-lirra chants,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With, heigh! with, heigh! the thrush and the jay,)Tj
T*
( Are summer songs for me and my aunts,)Tj
T*
( While we lie tumbling in the hay.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.25456 Tm
( My father named me Autolycus; who being, as I am, littered under Mer\
cury, was likewise a )Tj
T*
(snapper-up of unconsidered trifles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [24])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.50456 Tm
( For the life to come, I sleep out the thought of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 515.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [30])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 494.75456 Tm
( Prig, for my life, prig; he haunts wakes, fairs, and bear-baitings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [109])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.00456 Tm
( Jog on, jog on the foot-path way,)Tj
T*
( And merrily hent the stile-a:)Tj
T*
( A merry heart goes all the day,)Tj
T*
( Your sad tires in a mile-a.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 2, l. [133])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.25456 Tm
( For you there\222s rosemary and rue; these keep)Tj
T*
( Seeming and savour all the winter long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.50456 Tm
( The fairest flowers o\222 the season)Tj
T*
( Are our carnations and streaked gillyvors,)Tj
T*
( Which some call nature\222s bastards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.75456 Tm
( I\222ll not put)Tj
T*
( The dibble in earth to set one slip of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.00456 Tm
( Here\222s flowers for you;)Tj
T*
( Hot lavender, mints, savory, marjoram;)Tj
T*
( The marigold, that goes to bed wi\222 the sun,)Tj
T*
( And with him rises weeping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.25456 Tm
( O Proserpina!)Tj
T*
( For the flowers now that frighted thou let\222st fall)Tj
T*
( From Dis\222s waggon! daffodils,)Tj
T*
( That come before the swallow dares, and take)Tj
ET
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( The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But sweeter than the lids of Juno\222s eyes)Tj
T*
( Or Cytherea\222s breath; pale prime-roses,)Tj
T*
( That die unmarried, ere they can behold)Tj
T*
( Bright Phoebus in his strength,\227a malady)Tj
T*
( Most incident to maids; bold oxlips and)Tj
T*
( The crown imperial; lilies of all kinds,)Tj
T*
( The flower-de-luce being one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 116)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Perdita: Sure this robe of mine)Tj
T*
( Doth change my disposition.)Tj
T*
( Florizel: What you do)Tj
T*
( Still betters what is done. When you speak, sweet,)Tj
T*
( I\222d have you do it ever: when you sing,)Tj
T*
( I\222d have you buy and sell so; so give alms;)Tj
T*
( Pray so; and, for the ordering your affairs,)Tj
T*
( To sing them too: when you do dance, I wish you)Tj
T*
( A wave o\222 the sea, that you might ever do)Tj
T*
( Nothing but that; move still, still so,)Tj
T*
( And own no other function: each your doing,)Tj
T*
( So singular in each particular,)Tj
T*
( Crowns what you are doing in the present deed,)Tj
T*
( That all your acts are queens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.75456 Tm
( Good sooth, she is)Tj
T*
( The queen of curds and cream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. 160)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( Lawn as white as driven snow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [220])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( I love a ballad in print, a-life, for then we are sure they are true\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [262])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( The self-same sun that shines upon his court)Tj
T*
( Hides not his visage from our cottage, but)Tj
T*
( Looks on alike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [457])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( Being now awake, I\222ll queen it no inch further,)Tj
T*
( But milk my ewes and weep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [462])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Prosperity\222s the very bond of love,)Tj
T*
( Whose fresh complexion and whose heart together)Tj
ET
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( Affliction alters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [586])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Ha, ha! what a fool Honesty is! and Trust his sworn brother, a very \
simple gentleman!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [608])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Though I am not naturally honest, I am so sometimes by chance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [734])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( I will but look upon the hedge and follow you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 4, sc. 3, l. [862])Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Stars, stars!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all eyes else dead coals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 5, sc. 1, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Still, methinks,)Tj
T*
( There is an air comes from her: what fine chisel)Tj
T*
( Could ever yet cut breath?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( O! she\222s warm.)Tj
T*
( If this be magic, let it be an art)Tj
T*
( Lawful as eating.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Winter\222s Tale\222 \(1610-1\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 109)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 395.54173 Tm
( 7.66.38 The Passionate Pilgrim)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( Crabbed age and youth cannot live together:)Tj
T*
( Youth is full of pleasance, age is full of care.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221The Passionate Pilgrim\222 \(1599\), 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( Age, I do abhor thee, youth, I do adore thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221The Passionate Pilgrim\222 \(1599\), 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 272.54173 Tm
( 7.66.39 The Rape Of Lucrece)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 251.25456 Tm
( What I have done is yours; what I have to do is yours; being part in\
all I have, devoted yours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 235.42047 Tm
(\221The Rape Of Lucrece\222 \(1594\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.50456 Tm
( Beauty itself doth of itself persuade)Tj
T*
( The eyes of men without an orator.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.67047 Tm
(\221The Rape Of Lucrece\222 \(1594\) l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 159.75456 Tm
( Who buys a minute\222s mirth to wail a week?)Tj
T*
( Or sells eternity to get a toy?)Tj
T*
( For one sweet grape who will the vine destroy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.92047 Tm
(\221The Rape Of Lucrece\222 \(1594\) l. 213)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.00456 Tm
( Time\222s glory is to calm contending kings,)Tj
T*
( To unmask falsehood, and bring truth to light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape Of Lucrece\222 \(1594\) l. 939)Tj
ET
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( And now this pale swan in her watery nest)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Begins the sad dirge of her certain ending.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Rape Of Lucrece\222 \(1594\) l. 1611)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 688.04173 Tm
( 7.66.40 Sonnets)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.75456 Tm
( To the onlie begetter of these insuing sonnets, Mr. W.H.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 650.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnets\222 \(1609\) dedication \(also attributed to Thomas Thorpe\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 630.00456 Tm
( From fairest creatures we desire increase,)Tj
T*
( That thereby beauty\222s rose might never die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 596.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 575.25456 Tm
( When forty winters shall besiege thy brow,)Tj
T*
( And dig deep trenches in thy beauty\222s field.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.50456 Tm
( Thou art thy mother\222s glass, and she in thee)Tj
T*
( Calls back the lovely April of her prime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.75456 Tm
( Music to hear, why hear\222st thou music sadly?)Tj
T*
( Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy:)Tj
T*
( Why lov\222st thou that which thou receiv\222st not gladly,)Tj
T*
( Or else receiv\222st with pleasure thine annoy?)Tj
T*
( If the true concord of well-tuned sounds,)Tj
T*
( By unions married, do offend thine ear,)Tj
T*
( They do but sweetly chide thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.00456 Tm
( When lofty trees I see barren of leaves,)Tj
T*
( Which erst from heat did canopy the herd,)Tj
T*
( And summer\222s green all girded up in sheaves,)Tj
T*
( Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( If I could write the beauty of your eyes)Tj
T*
( And in fresh numbers number all your graces,)Tj
T*
( The age to come would say, \221This poet lies;)Tj
T*
( Such heavenly touches ne\222er touched earthly faces.\222)Tj
T*
( So should my papers, yellowed with their age,)Tj
T*
( Be scorned, like old men of less truth than tongue,)Tj
T*
( And your true rights be termed a poet\222s rage)Tj
T*
( And stretch\351d metre of an antique song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 88.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.50456 Tm
( Shall I compare thee to a summer\222s day?)Tj
T*
( Thou art more lovely and more temperate:)Tj
ET
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( Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And summer\222s lease hath all too short a date:)Tj
T*
( Sometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines,)Tj
T*
( And often is his gold complexion dimmed;)Tj
T*
( And every fair from fair sometime declines,)Tj
T*
( By chance, or nature\222s changing course untrimmed;)Tj
T*
( But thy eternal summer shall not fade,)Tj
T*
( Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow\222st,)Tj
T*
( Nor shall death brag thou wander\222st in his shade,)Tj
T*
( When in eternal lines to time thou grow\222st;)Tj
T*
( So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,)Tj
T*
( So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( My glass shall not persuade me I am old,)Tj
T*
( So long as youth and thou are of one date;)Tj
T*
( But when in thee time\222s furrows I behold,)Tj
T*
( Then look I death my days should expiate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( As an unperfect actor on the stage,)Tj
T*
( Who with his fear is put beside his part,)Tj
T*
( Or some fierce thing replete with too much rage,)Tj
T*
( Whose strength\222s abundance weakens his own heart;)Tj
T*
( So I, for fear of trust, forget to say)Tj
T*
( The perfect ceremony of love\222s rite.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( O! let my books be then the eloquence)Tj
T*
( And dumb presagers of my speaking breast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( The painful warrior famous\351d for fight,)Tj
T*
( After a thousand victories once foiled,)Tj
T*
( Is from the book of honour raz\351d quite,)Tj
T*
( And all the rest forgot for which he toil\222d.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( Weary with toil, I haste me to my bed,)Tj
T*
( The dear repose for limbs with travel tired;)Tj
T*
( But then begins a journey in my head)Tj
T*
( To work my mind, when body\222s work\222s expired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( When in disgrace with fortune and men\222s eyes)Tj
T*
( I all alone beweep my outcast state,)Tj
ET
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( And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And look upon myself and curse my fate,)Tj
T*
( Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,)Tj
T*
( Featured like him, like him with friends possessed,)Tj
T*
( Desiring this man\222s art, and that man\222s scope,)Tj
T*
( With what I most enjoy contented least;)Tj
T*
( Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,)Tj
T*
( Haply I think on thee,\227and then my state,)Tj
T*
( Like to the lark at break of day arising)Tj
T*
( From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven\222s gate;)Tj
T*
( For thy sweet love remembered such wealth brings)Tj
T*
( That then I scorn to change my state with kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( When to the sessions of sweet silent thought)Tj
T*
( I summon up remembrance of things past,)Tj
T*
( I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought,)Tj
T*
( And with old woes new wail my dear times\222 waste:)Tj
T*
( Then can I drown an eye, unused to flow,)Tj
T*
( For precious friends hid in death\222s dateless night,)Tj
T*
( And weep afresh love\222s long since cancelled woe,)Tj
T*
( And moan the expense of many a vanished sight:)Tj
T*
( Then can I grieve at grievances foregone,)Tj
T*
( And heavily from woe to woe tell o\222er)Tj
T*
( The sad account of fore-bemoan\351d moan,)Tj
T*
( Which I new pay as if not paid before.)Tj
T*
( But if the while I think on thee, dear friend,)Tj
T*
( All losses are restored and sorrows end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 247.50456 Tm
( Full many a glorious morning have I seen)Tj
T*
( Flatter the mountain-tops with sovereign eye,)Tj
T*
( Kissing with golden face the meadows green,)Tj
T*
( Gilding pale streams with heavenly alchemy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 177.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.75456 Tm
( But, out! alack! he was but one hour mine,)Tj
T*
( The region cloud hath masked him from me now.)Tj
T*
( Yet him for this my love no whit disdaineth;)Tj
T*
( Suns of the world may stain when heaven\222s sun staineth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 86.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 66.00456 Tm
( Why didst thou promise such a beauteous day,)Tj
T*
( And make me travel forth without my cloak)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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( To let base clouds o\222ertake me in my way,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hiding thy bravery in their rotten smoke?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 34)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Roses have thorns, and silver fountains mud;)Tj
T*
( Clouds and eclipses stain both moon and sun,)Tj
T*
( And loathsome canker lives in sweetest bud.)Tj
T*
( All men make faults.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( As a decrepit father takes delight)Tj
T*
( To see his active child do deeds of youth,)Tj
T*
( So I, made lame by fortune\222s dearest spite,)Tj
T*
( Take all my comfort of thy worth and truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Against that time when thou shalt strangely pass,)Tj
T*
( And scarely greet me with that sun, thine eye,)Tj
T*
( When love, converted from the thing it was,)Tj
T*
( Shall reasons find of settled gravity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( What is your substance, whereof are you made,)Tj
T*
( That millions of strange shadows on you tend?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( O! how much more doth beauty beauteous seem)Tj
T*
( By that sweet ornament which truth doth give!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Not marble, nor the gilded monuments)Tj
T*
( Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rime;)Tj
T*
( But you shall shine more bright in these contents)Tj
T*
( Than unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Being your slave, what should I do but tend)Tj
T*
( Upon the hours and times of your desire?)Tj
T*
( I have no precious time at all to spend,)Tj
T*
( Nor services to do, till you require.)Tj
T*
( Nor dare I chide the world-without-end hour)Tj
T*
( Whilst I, my sovereign, watch the clock for you,)Tj
T*
( Nor think the bitterness of absence sour)Tj
T*
( When you have bid your servant once adieu;)Tj
T*
( Nor dare I question with my jealous thought)Tj
T*
( Where you may be, or your affairs suppose,)Tj
T*
( But like a sad slave, stay and think of nought)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Save, where you are, how happy you make those.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So true a fool is love that in your will,)Tj
T*
( Though you do anything, he thinks no ill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore,)Tj
T*
( So do our minutes hasten to their end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Time doth transfix the flourish set on youth)Tj
T*
( And delves the parallels in beauty\222s brow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Sin of self-love possesseth all mine eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 62)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( When I have seen by Time\222s fell hand defaced)Tj
T*
( The rich-proud cost of outworn buried age.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( When I have seen the hungry ocean gain)Tj
T*
( Advantage on the kingdom of the shore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea,)Tj
T*
( But sad mortality o\222ersways their power,)Tj
T*
( How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,)Tj
T*
( Whose action is no stronger than a flower?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Tired with all these, for restful death I cry,)Tj
T*
( As to behold desert a beggar born,)Tj
T*
( And needy nothing trimmed in jollity,)Tj
T*
( And purest faith unhappily forsworn,)Tj
T*
( And gilded honour shamefully misplaced,)Tj
T*
( And maiden virtue rudely strumpeted,)Tj
T*
( And right perfection wrongfully disgraced,)Tj
T*
( And strength by limping sway disabled,)Tj
T*
( And art made tongue-tied by authority,)Tj
T*
( And folly\227doctor-like\227controlling skill,)Tj
T*
( And simple truth miscalled simplicity,)Tj
T*
( And captive good attending captain ill:)Tj
T*
( Tired with all these, from these I would be gone,)Tj
T*
( Save that, to die, I leave my love alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( No longer mourn for me when I am dead)Tj
T*
( Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Give warning to the world that I am fled)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( That time of year thou mayst in me behold)Tj
T*
( When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang)Tj
T*
( Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,)Tj
T*
( Bare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.)Tj
T*
( In me thou see\222st the twilight of such day)Tj
T*
( As after sunset fadeth in the west;)Tj
T*
( Which by and by black night doth take away,)Tj
T*
( Death\222s second self, that seals up all in rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( This thou perceiv\222st, which makes thy love more strong,)Tj
T*
( To love that well which thou must leave ere long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( O! know, sweet love, I always write of you,)Tj
T*
( And you and love are still my argument;)Tj
T*
( So all my best is dressing old words new,)Tj
T*
( Spending again what is already spent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Time\222s thievish progress to eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Was it the proud full sail of his great verse,)Tj
T*
( Bound for the prize of all too precious you,)Tj
T*
( That did my ripe thoughts in my brain inhearse,)Tj
T*
( Making their tomb the womb wherein they grew?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( That affable familiar ghost)Tj
T*
( Which nightly gulls him with intelligence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing,)Tj
T*
( And like enough thou know\222st thy estimate:)Tj
T*
( The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing;)Tj
T*
( My bonds in thee are all determinate.)Tj
T*
( For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?)Tj
T*
( And for that riches where is my deserving?)Tj
T*
( The cause of this fair gift in me is wanting,)Tj
T*
( And so my patent back again is swerving.)Tj
T*
( Thyself thou gav\222st, thy own worth then not knowing,)Tj
T*
( Or me, to whom thou gav\222st it, else mistaking;)Tj
ET
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( So thy great gift, upon misprision growing,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Comes home again, on better judgment making.)Tj
T*
( Thus have I had thee, as a dream doth flatter,)Tj
T*
( In sleep a king, but, waking, no such matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Ah, do not, when my heart hath \222scaped this sorrow,)Tj
T*
( Come in the rearward of a conquered woe;)Tj
T*
( Give not a windy night a rainy morrow,)Tj
T*
( To linger out a purposed overthrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( They that have power to hurt and will do none,)Tj
T*
( That do not do the thing they most do show,)Tj
T*
( Who, moving others, are themselves as stone,)Tj
T*
( Unmov\351d, cold, and to temptation slow;)Tj
T*
( They rightly do inherit heaven\222s graces,)Tj
T*
( And husband nature\222s riches from expense;)Tj
T*
( They are the lords and owners of their faces,)Tj
T*
( Others but stewards of their excellence.)Tj
T*
( The summer\222s flower is to the summer sweet,)Tj
T*
( Though to itself it only live and die,)Tj
T*
( But if that flower with base infection meet,)Tj
T*
( The basest weed outbraves his dignity:)Tj
T*
( For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds;)Tj
T*
( Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( How like a winter hath my absence been)Tj
T*
( From thee, the pleasure of the fleeting year!)Tj
T*
( What freezings have I felt, what dark days seen!)Tj
T*
( What old December\222s bareness every where!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( From you have I been absent in the spring,)Tj
T*
( When proud-pied April, dressed in all his trim,)Tj
T*
( Hath put a spirit of youth in everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 98)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 137.25456 Tm
( When in the chronicle of wasted time)Tj
T*
( I see descriptions of the fairest wights,)Tj
T*
( And beauty making beautiful old rime,)Tj
T*
( In praise of ladies dead and lovely knights.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( For we, which now behold these present days,)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Have eyes to wonder, but lack tongues to praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of the wide world dreaming on things to come,)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( And thou in this shalt find thy monument,)Tj
T*
( When tyrants\222 crests and tombs of brass are spent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 107)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( O! never say that I was false of heart,)Tj
T*
( Though absence seemed my flame to qualify.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( Alas! \222tis true I have gone here and there,)Tj
T*
( And made myself a motley to the view,)Tj
T*
( Gored mine own thoughts, sold cheap what is most dear,)Tj
T*
( Made old offences of affections new;)Tj
T*
( Most true it is that I have looked on truth)Tj
T*
( Askance and strangely; but, by all above,)Tj
T*
( These blenches gave my heart another youth,)Tj
T*
( And worse essays proved thee my best of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 110)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( My nature is subdued)Tj
T*
( To what it works in, like the dyer\222s hand;)Tj
T*
( Pity me, then, and wish I were renewed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Let me not to the marriage of true minds)Tj
T*
( Admit impediments. Love is not love)Tj
T*
( Which alters when it alteration finds,)Tj
T*
( Or bends with the remover to remove:)Tj
T*
( O, no! it is an ever-fix\351d mark,)Tj
T*
( That looks on tempests and is never shaken;)Tj
T*
( It is the star to every wandering bark,)Tj
T*
( Whose worth\222s unknown, although his height be taken.)Tj
T*
( Love\222s not Time\222s fool, though rosy lips and cheeks)Tj
T*
( Within his bending sickle\222s compass come;)Tj
T*
( Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,)Tj
T*
( But bears it out even to the edge of doom.)Tj
T*
( If this be error, and upon me proved,)Tj
T*
( I never writ, nor no man ever loved.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 116)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( What potions have I drunk of Siren tears,)Tj
ET
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Q
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( Distilled from limbecks foul as hell within,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Applying fears to hopes, and hopes to fears,)Tj
T*
( Still losing when I saw myself to win!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( The expense of spirit in a waste of shame)Tj
T*
( Is lust in action; and till action, lust)Tj
T*
( Is perjured, murderous, bloody, full of blame,)Tj
T*
( Savage, extreme, rude, cruel, not to trust;)Tj
T*
( Enjoyed no sooner but despis\351d straight;)Tj
T*
( Past reason hunted; and no sooner had,)Tj
T*
( Past reason hated, as a swallowed bait,)Tj
T*
( On purpose laid to make the taker mad:)Tj
T*
( Mad in pursuit, and in possession so;)Tj
T*
( Had, having, and in quest to have, extreme;)Tj
T*
( A bliss in proof,\227and proved, a very woe;)Tj
T*
( Before, a joy proposed; behind, a dream.)Tj
T*
( All this the world well knows; yet none knows well:)Tj
T*
( To shun the heaven that leads men to this hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 129)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( My mistress\222 eyes are nothing like the sun;)Tj
T*
( Coral is far more red than her lips\222 red:)Tj
T*
( If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun;)Tj
T*
( If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 318.75456 Tm
( And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare)Tj
T*
( As any she belied with false compare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(Sonnet 130)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( Whoever hath her wish, thou hast thy Will,)Tj
T*
( And Will to boot, and Will in over-plus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 135)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( When my love swears that she is made of truth,)Tj
T*
( I do believe her, though I know she lies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 138)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( Two loves I have of comfort and despair,)Tj
T*
( Which like two spirits do suggest me still:)Tj
T*
( The better angel is a man right fair,)Tj
T*
( The worser spirit a woman coloured ill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 144)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth,)Tj
T*
( [Fooled by] these rebel powers that thee array,)Tj
ET
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( Why dost thou pine within and suffer dearth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Painting thy outward walls so costly gay?)Tj
T*
( Why so large cost, having so short a lease,)Tj
T*
( Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(Sonnet 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( So shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men,)Tj
T*
( And Death once dead, there\222s no more dying then.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(Sonnet 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Past cure I am, now Reason is past care,)Tj
T*
( And frantic-mad with evermore unrest;)Tj
T*
( My thoughts and my discourse as madmen\222s are,)Tj
T*
( At random from the truth vainly expressed;)Tj
T*
( For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee bright,)Tj
T*
( Who art as black as hell, as dark as night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(Sonnet 147)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 470.54173 Tm
( 7.66.41 Sonnets To Sundry Notes Of Music)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 449.25456 Tm
( Live with me and be my love,)Tj
T*
( And we will all the pleasures prove.)Tj
T*
( That hills and valleys, dales and fields,)Tj
T*
( And all the craggy mountains yields.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnets To Sundry Notes Of Music\222 5.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 348.29173 Tm
( 7.66.42 Venus And Adonis)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 327.00456 Tm
( If the first heir of my invention prove deformed, I shall be sorry i\
t had so noble a godfather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.17047 Tm
(\221Venus And Adonis\222 \(1593\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 290.25456 Tm
( Hunting he loved, but love he laughed to scorn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.42047 Tm
(\221Venus And Adonis\222 \(1593\) l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 253.50456 Tm
( Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear,)Tj
T*
( Or like a fairy trip upon the green,)Tj
T*
( Or, like a nymph, with long dishevelled hair,)Tj
T*
( Dance on the sands, and yet no footing seen:)Tj
T*
( Love is a spirit all compact of fire,)Tj
T*
( Not gross to sink, but light, and will aspire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Venus And Adonis\222 \(1593\) l. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( Round-hoofed, short-jointed, fetlocks shag and long,)Tj
T*
( Broad breast, full eye, small head and nostril wide,)Tj
T*
( High crest, short ears, straight legs and passing strong,)Tj
T*
( Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide:)Tj
T*
( Look, what a horse should have he did not lack,)Tj
ET
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( Save a proud rider on so proud a back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Venus And Adonis\222 \(1593\) l. 295)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( By this, poor Wat, far off upon a hill,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Stands on his hinder legs with listening ear,)Tj
T*
( To hearken if his foes pursue him still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Venus And Adonis\222 \(1593\) l. 697)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
13.75 0 0 13.75 10 633.29173 Tm
(7.66.43 Miscellaneous)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 612.00456 Tm
( Good friend, for Jesu\222s sake forbear)Tj
T*
( To dig the dust enclosed here.)Tj
T*
( Blest be the man that spares these stones,)Tj
T*
( And curst be he that moves my bones.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.17047 Tm
(Epitaph on his tomb at Stratford-on-Avon, supposed to have been chosen b\
y himself.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( Item, I give unto my wife my second best bed, with the furniture.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(Will, 1616)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.2124 Tm
( 7.67 Bill Shankly 1914-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Some people think football is a matter of life and death. I don\222t\
like that attitude. I can assure )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(them it is much more serious than that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Times\222 4 October 1981)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 385.4624 Tm
( 7.68 Tom Sharpe 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The South African police would leave no stone unturned to see that n\
othing disturbed the even )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(terror of their lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Indecent Exposure\222 \(1973\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 297.7124 Tm
( 7.69 George Bernard Shaw 1856-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All great truths begin as blasphemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Annajanska\222 \(1919\) p. 262)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( One man that has a mind and knows it can always beat ten men who hav\
nt and dont.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.42047 Tm
(\221The Apple Cart\222 \(1930\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.50456 Tm
( What Englishman will give his mind to politics as long as he can aff\
ord to keep a motor car?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221The Apple Cart\222 \(1930\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.75456 Tm
( You can always tell an old soldier by the inside of his holsters and\
cartridge boxes. The young )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ones carry pistols and cartridges; the old ones, grub.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Arms and the Man\222 \(1898\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.00456 Tm
( Oh, you are a very poor soldier\227a chocolate cream soldier!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221Arms and the Man\222 \(1898\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 74.25456 Tm
( Youre not a man, you\222re a machine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 58.42047 Tm
(\221Arms and the Man\222 \(1898\) act 3)Tj
ET
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( I enjoy convalescence. It is the part that makes illness worth while\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Back to Methuselah\222 \(1921\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( He [the Briton] is a barbarian, and thinks that the customs of his t\
ribe and island are the laws of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Caesar and Cleopatra\222 \(1901\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of, he always dec\
lares that it is his duty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Caesar and Cleopatra\222 \(1901\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( A man of great common sense and good taste, meaning thereby a man wi\
thout originality or )Tj
T*
(moral courage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Notes to Caesar and Cleopatra\222 \(1901\) \221Julius Caesar\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than\
to consume wealth )Tj
T*
(without producing it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Candida\222 \(1898\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Do you think that the things people make fools of themselves about a\
re any less real and true )Tj
T*
(than the things they behave sensibly about? They are more true: they ar\
e the only things that are )Tj
T*
(true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Candida\222 \(1898\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( It is easy\227terribly easy\227to shake a man\222s faith in himself.\
To take advantage of that to break )Tj
T*
(a man\222s spirit is devil\222s work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Candida\222 \(1898\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( I\222m only a beer teetotaller, not a champagne teetotaller.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Candida\222 \(1898\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but \
to be indifferent to them: )Tj
T*
(thats the essence of inhumanity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Disciple\222 \(1901\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Martyrdom...the only way in which a man can become famous without ab\
ility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Disciple\222 \(1901\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( I never expect a soldier to think.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Disciple\222 \(1901\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( swindon: \221What will history say?\222)Tj
T*
( burgoyne: \221History, sir, will tell lies as usual.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Disciple\222 \(1901\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Your friend the British soldier can stand up to anything except the \
British War Office.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Disciple\222 \(1901\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( There is at bottom only one genuinely scientific treatment for all d\
iseases, and that is to )Tj
T*
(stimulate the phagocytes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221The Doctor\222s Dilemma\222 \(1911\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( All professions are conspiracies against the laity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221The Doctor\222s Dilemma\222 \(1911\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the s\
upport of Paul.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.92047 Tm
(\221Everybody\222s Political What\222s What?\222 \(1944\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( It\222s all that the young can do for the old, to shock them and kee\
p them up to date.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(\221Fanny\222s First Play\222 \(1914\) \221Induction\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( Home life as we understand it is no more natural to us than a cage i\
s natural to a cockatoo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221Getting Married\222 \(1911\) preface \221Hearth and Home\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( The one point on which all women are in furious secret rebellion aga\
inst the existing law is the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(saddling of the right to a child with the obligation to become the serva\
nt of a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.67047 Tm
(\221Getting Married\222 \(1911\) preface \221The Right to Motherhood\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.75456 Tm
( Physically there is nothing to distinguish human society from the fa\
rm-yard except that )Tj
T*
(children are more troublesome and costly than chickens and calves, and t\
hat men and women are )Tj
T*
(not so completely enslaved as farm stock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221Getting Married\222 \(1911\) preface \221The Personal Sentimental Ba\
sis of Monogamy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( What God hath joined together no man ever shall put asunder: God wil\
l take care of that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.17047 Tm
(\221Getting Married\222 \(1911\) p. 216.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.25456 Tm
( I am a woman of the world, Hector; and I can assure you that if you \
will only take the trouble )Tj
T*
(always to do the perfectly correct thing, and to say the perfectly corre\
ct thing, you can do just )Tj
T*
(what you like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.42047 Tm
(\221Heartbreak House\222 \(1919\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.50456 Tm
( Go anywhere in England where there are natural, wholesome, contented\
, and really nice )Tj
T*
(English people; and what do you always find? That the stables are the re\
al centre of the )Tj
T*
(household.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.67047 Tm
(\221Heartbreak House\222 \(1919\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.75456 Tm
( The captain is in his bunk, drinking bottled ditch-water; and the cr\
ew is gambling in the )Tj
T*
(forecastle. She will strike and sink and split. Do you think the laws of\
God will be suspended in )Tj
T*
(favour of England because you were born in it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(\221Heartbreak House\222 \(1919\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.00456 Tm
( Money is indeed the most important thing in the world; and all sound\
and successful personal )Tj
T*
(and national morality should have this fact for its basis.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.17047 Tm
(\221The Irrational Knot\222 \(1905\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.25456 Tm
( Reminiscences make one feel so deliciously aged and sad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.42047 Tm
(\221The Irrational Knot\222 \(1905\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.50456 Tm
( A man who has no office to go to\227I don\222t care who he is\227is \
a trial of which you can have no )Tj
T*
(conception.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221The Irrational Knot\222 \(1905\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( An Irishman\222s heart is nothing but his imagination.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(\221John Bull\222s Other Island\222 \(1907\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( What really flatters a man is that you think him worth flattering.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.17047 Tm
(\221John Bull\222s Other Island\222 \(1907\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.25456 Tm
( There are only two qualities in the world: efficiency and inefficien\
cy, and only two sorts of )Tj
T*
(people: the efficient and the inefficient.)Tj
ET
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(\221John Bull\222s Other Island\222 \(1907\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.50456 Tm
( The greatest of evils and the worst of crimes is poverty...our first\
duty\227a duty to which every )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(other consideration should be sacrificed\227is not to be poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.67047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.75456 Tm
( Nobody can say a word against Greek: it stamps a man at once as an e\
ducated gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.92047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.00456 Tm
( I am a Millionaire. That is my religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.17047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.25456 Tm
( I can\222t talk religion to a man with bodily hunger in his eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.42047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.50456 Tm
( Wot prawce Selvytion nah?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.67047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 530.75456 Tm
( Alcohol is a very necessary article...It makes life bearable to mill\
ions of people who could not )Tj
T*
(endure their existence if they were quite sober. It enables Parliament t\
o do things at eleven at )Tj
T*
(night that no sane person would do at eleven in the morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 478.92047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.00456 Tm
( He knows nothing; and he thinks he knows everything. That points cle\
arly to a political career.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 442.17047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 421.25456 Tm
( Nothing is ever done in this world until men are prepared to kill on\
e another if it is not done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.42047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 384.50456 Tm
( Like all young men, you greatly exaggerate the difference between on\
e young woman and )Tj
T*
(another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 350.67047 Tm
(\221Major Barbara\222 \(1907\) act 3.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 329.75456 Tm
( But a lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be\
hell on earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 313.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.00456 Tm
( The more things a man is ashamed of, the more respectable he is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.25456 Tm
( Vitality in a woman is a blind fury of creation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.50456 Tm
( Of all human struggles there is none so treacherous and remorseless \
as the struggle between )Tj
T*
(the artist man and the mother woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.75456 Tm
( You think that you are Ann\222s suitor; that you are the pursuer and\
she the pursued...Fool: it is )Tj
T*
(you who are the pursued, the marked down quarry, the destined prey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.00456 Tm
( Mendoza: I am a brigand: I live by robbing the rich.)Tj
T*
( Tanner: I am a gentleman: I live by robbing the poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.25456 Tm
( Hell is full of musical amateurs: music is the brandy of the damned.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
ET
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( Englishmen never will be slaves: they are free to do whatever the Go\
vernment and public )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(opinion allow them to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 714.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 693.75456 Tm
( An Englishman thinks he is moral when he is only uncomfortable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 677.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.00456 Tm
( In the arts of life man invents nothing; but in the arts of death he\
outdoes Nature herself, and )Tj
T*
(produces by chemistry and machinery all the slaughter of plague, pestile\
nce and famine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 602.25456 Tm
( In the arts of peace Man is a bungler.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 586.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 565.50456 Tm
( As an old soldier I admit the cowardice: it\222s as universal as sea\
sickness, and matters just as )Tj
T*
(little.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 531.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 510.75456 Tm
( When the military man approaches, the world locks up its spoons and \
packs off its womankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.00456 Tm
( What is virtue but the Trade Unionism of the married?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 437.25456 Tm
( Those who talk most about the blessings of marriage and the constanc\
y of its vows are the very )Tj
T*
(people who declare that if the chain were broken and the prisoners were \
left free to choose, the )Tj
T*
(whole social fabric would fly asunder. You can\222t have the argument bo\
th ways. If the prisoner is )Tj
T*
(happy, why lock him in? If he is not, why pretend that he is?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.50456 Tm
( Beauty is all very well at first sight; but who ever looks at it whe\
n it has been in the house )Tj
T*
(three days?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 312.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.75456 Tm
( Revolutions have never lightened the burden of tyranny: they have on\
ly shifted it to another )Tj
T*
(shoulder.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221The Revolutionist\222s Handbook\222\
, foreword)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 237.00456 Tm
( The art of government is the organization of idolatry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Idolatry\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 200.25456 Tm
( Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointme\
nt by the corrupt few.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 184.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Democracy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 163.50456 Tm
( Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Liberty and Equality\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Education\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.00456 Tm
( Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation wi\
th the maximum of )Tj
T*
(opportunity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Marriage\222)Tj
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( Titles distinguish the mediocre, embarrass the superior, and are dis\
graced by the inferior.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Titles\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( When domestic servants are treated as human beings it is not worth w\
hile to keep them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Servants\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( If you strike a child take care that you strike it in anger, even at\
the risk of maiming it for life. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(A blow in cold blood neither can nor should be forgiven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: How to Beat Children\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Beware of the man whose god is in the skies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Religion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Self-denial is not a virtue: it is only the effect of prudence on ra\
scality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Virtues and Vice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( A moderately honest man with a moderately faithful wife, moderate dr\
inkers both, in a )Tj
T*
(moderately healthy house: that is the true middle class unit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Moderation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable one\
persists in trying to )Tj
T*
(adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreas\
onable man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Reason\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( The man who listens to Reason is lost: Reason enslaves all whose min\
ds are not strong enough )Tj
T*
(to master her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Reason\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Decency is Indecency\222s conspiracy of silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Decency\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Life levels all men: death reveals the eminent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Fame\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Home is the girl\222s prison and the woman\222s workhouse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Women in the Home\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( Every man over forty is a scoundrel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Stray Sayings\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( Youth, which is forgiven everything, forgives itself nothing: age, w\
hich forgives itself )Tj
T*
(everything, is forgiven nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Stray Sayings\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( Take care to get what you like or you will be forced to like what yo\
u get.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Stray Sayings\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( Beware of the man who does not return your blow: he neither forgives\
you nor allows you to )Tj
T*
(forgive yourself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Stray Sayings\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( Self-sacrifice enables us to sacrifice other people without blushing\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.92047 Tm
(\221Man and Superman\222 \(1903\) \221Maxims: Self-Sacrifice\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.00456 Tm
( There is nothing so bad or so good that you will not find Englishmen\
doing it; but you will )Tj
T*
(never find an Englishman in the wrong. He does everything on principle. \
He fights you on )Tj
ET
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(patriotic principles; he robs you on business principles; he enslaves yo\
u on imperial principles; he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(bullies you on manly principles; he supports his king on loyal principle\
s and cuts off his king\222s )Tj
T*
(head on republican principles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221The Man of Destiny\222 \(1898\) p. 201)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 678.25456 Tm
( Anarchism is a game at which the police can beat you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(\221Misalliance\222 \(1914\) p. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( The only way for a woman to provide for herself decently is for her \
to be good to some man )Tj
T*
(that can afford to be good to her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221Mrs Warren\222s Profession\222 \(1898\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( A great devotee of the Gospel of Getting On.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.92047 Tm
(\221Mrs Warren\222s Profession\222 \(1898\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.00456 Tm
( You\222ll never have a quiet world till you knock the patriotism out\
of the human race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221O\222Flaherty V.C.\222 \(1919\) p. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( The secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother about whe\
ther you are happy or not. )Tj
T*
(The cure for it is occupation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.42047 Tm
(\221Parents and Children\222 \(1914\) \221Children\222s Happiness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.50456 Tm
( A perpetual holiday is a good working definition of hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 442.67047 Tm
(\221Parents and Children\222 \(1914\) \221Children\222s Happiness\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 421.75456 Tm
( There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of i\
t.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.92047 Tm
(\221Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant\222 \(1898\) vol. 2, preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.00456 Tm
( The English have no respect for their language, and will not teach t\
heir children to speak it. )Tj
T*
(They spell it so abominably that no man can teach himself what it sounds\
like. It is impossible for )Tj
T*
(an Englishman to open his mouth without making some other Englishman hat\
e or despise him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( I don\222t want to talk grammar, I want to talk like a lady.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( Pickering: Have you no morals, man?)Tj
T*
( Doolittle: Can\222t afford them, Governor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 241.67047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.75456 Tm
( I\222m one of the undeserving poor...up agen middle class morality a\
ll the time...What is middle )Tj
T*
(class morality? Just an excuse for never giving me anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.92047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.00456 Tm
( Gin was mother\222s milk to her.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 150.17047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.25456 Tm
( Walk! Not bloody likely. I am going in a taxi.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.42047 Tm
(\221Pygmalion\222 \(1916\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 92.50456 Tm
( If ever I utter an oath again may my soul be blasted to eternal damn\
ation!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(\221Saint Joan\222 \(1924\) sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.75456 Tm
( We were not fairly beaten, my lord. No Englishman is ever fairly bea\
ten.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.92047 Tm
(\221Saint Joan\222 \(1924\) sc. 4)Tj
ET
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( How can what an Englishman believes be heresy? It is a contradiction\
in terms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 733.17047 Tm
(\221Saint Joan\222 \(1924\) sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 712.25456 Tm
( Must then a Christ perish in torment in every age to save those that\
have no imagination?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.42047 Tm
(\221Saint Joan\222 \(1924\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 675.50456 Tm
( Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 659.67047 Tm
(\221The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet\222 \(1911\) \221Limits to Toleratio\
n\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 638.75456 Tm
( \221Do you know what a pessimist is?\222 \221A man who thinks everyb\
ody is as nasty as himself, and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hates them for it.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 604.92047 Tm
(\221An Unsocial Socialist\222 \(1887\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 584.00456 Tm
( The great advantage of a hotel is that it\222s a refuge from home li\
fe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 568.17047 Tm
(\221You Never Can Tell\222 \(1898\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 547.25456 Tm
( The younger generation is knocking at the door, and as I open it the\
re steps spritely in the )Tj
T*
(incomparable Max.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 513.42047 Tm
(\221Saturday Review\222 21 May 1898 \221Valedictory\222, on handing over\
the theatre review column to Max Beerbohm)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 492.50456 Tm
( Americans are conceited enough to believe they are the only fools in\
the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.67047 Tm
(In Michael Holroyd \221Bernard Shaw: The Lure of Fantasy\222 \(1991\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 455.75456 Tm
( The trouble, Mr Goldwyn, is that you are only interested in art and \
I am only interested in )Tj
T*
(money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.92047 Tm
(Telegraphed version of the outcome of a conversation between Shaw and Sa\
m Goldwyn, in Alva Johnson )Tj
T*
(\221The Great Goldwyn\222 \(1937\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.00456 Tm
( [Dancing is] a perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.17047 Tm
(In \221New Statesman\222 23 March 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.25456 Tm
( England and America are two countries separated by a common language\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.42047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 301.2124 Tm
( 7.70 Sir Hartley Shawcross \(Baron Shawcross\) 1902\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221But,\222 said Alice, \221the question is whether you can make a \
word mean different things.\222 \221Not )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(so,\222 said Humpty-Dumpty, \221the question is which is to be the maste\
r. That\222s all.\222 We are the )Tj
T*
(masters at the moment, and not only at the moment, but for a very long t\
ime to come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.67047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 2 April 1946, col. 1213; often quoted: \221We are the ma\
sters now\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 195.4624 Tm
( 7.71 Charles Shaw-Lefevre, Viscount Eversley 1794-1888)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What is that fat gentleman in such a passion about?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.92047 Tm
(As a child, on hearing Charles James Fox speak in Parliament: G. W. E. \
Russell \221Collections and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 110.7124 Tm
( 7.72 Patrick Shaw-Stewart 1888-1917)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I saw a man this morning)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who did not wish to die;)Tj
T*
( I ask and cannot answer)Tj
ET
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( If otherwise wish I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Poem \(1916\) in M. Baring \221Have You Anything to Declare?\222 \(1936\)\
p. 39)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 7.73 John Sheffield, Duke of Buckingham)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Buckingham \(2.234\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.74 Mary Shelley \(n\350e Wollstonecraft\) 1797-1851)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You seek for knowledge and wisdom as I once did; and I ardently hope\
that the gratification of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(your wishes may not be a serpent to sting you, as mine has been.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Frankenstein\222 \(1818\) Letter 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( It was the secrets of heaven and earth that I desired to learn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221Frankenstein\222 \(1818\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.00456 Tm
( I beheld the wretch\227the miserable monster whom I had created.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.17047 Tm
(\221Frankenstein\222 \(1818\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 500.25456 Tm
( All men hate the wretched; how, then, must I be hated, who am misera\
ble beyond all living )Tj
T*
(things! Yet you, my creator, detest and spurn me, thy creature, to whom \
thou art bound by ties )Tj
T*
(only dissoluble by the annihilation of one of us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Frankenstein\222 \(1818\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( Everywhere I see bliss, from which I alone am irrevocably excluded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Frankenstein\222 \(1818\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Teach him to think for himself? Oh, my God, teach him rather to thin\
k like other people!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(On her son\222s education, in Matthew Arnold \221Essays in Criticism\222\
Second Series \(1888\) \221Shelley\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 342.7124 Tm
( 7.75 Percy Bysshe Shelley 1792-1822)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The cemetery is an open space among the ruins, covered in winter wit\
h violets and daisies. It )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(might make one in love with death, to think that one should be buried in\
so sweet a place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( I weep for Adonais\227he is dead!)Tj
T*
( O, weep for Adonais! though our tears)Tj
T*
( Thaw not the frost which binds so dear a head!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( He died,)Tj
T*
( Who was the Sire of an immortal strain,)Tj
T*
( Blind, old and lonely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 141.67047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 120.75456 Tm
( To that high Capital, where kingly Death)Tj
T*
( Keeps his pale court in beauty and decay,)Tj
T*
( He came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.00456 Tm
( The quick Dreams,)Tj
ET
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( The passion-wing\351d Ministers of thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Lost Angel of a ruined Paradise!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She knew not \222twas her own; as with no stain)Tj
T*
( She faded, like a cloud which had outwept its rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Ah, woe is me! Winter is come and gone,)Tj
T*
( But grief returns with the revolving year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( From the great morning of the world when first)Tj
T*
( God dawned on Chaos.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Alas! that all we loved of him should be,)Tj
T*
( But for our grief, as if it had not been,)Tj
T*
( And grief itself be mortal!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( Whence are we, and why are we? Of what scene)Tj
T*
( The actors or spectators?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( A pardlike Spirit, beautiful and swift\227)Tj
T*
( A Love in desolation masked;\227a Power)Tj
T*
( Girt round with weakness;\227it can scarce uplift)Tj
T*
( The weight of the superincumbent hour;)Tj
T*
( It is a dying lamp, a falling shower,)Tj
T*
( A breaking billow;\227even whilst we speak)Tj
T*
( Is it not broken?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( He wakes or sleeps with the enduring dead;)Tj
T*
( Thou canst not soar where he is sitting now\227)Tj
T*
( Dust to the dust! but the pure spirit shall flow)Tj
T*
( Back to the burning fountain whence it came,)Tj
T*
( A portion of the Eternal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( He hath awakened from the dream of life\227)Tj
T*
( \222Tis we, who lost in stormy visions, keep)Tj
T*
( With phantoms an unprofitable strife,)Tj
T*
( And in mad trance, strike with our spirit\222s knife)Tj
T*
( Invulnerable nothings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( He has out-soared the shadow of our night;)Tj
ET
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( Envy and calumny and hate and pain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And that unrest which men miscall delight,)Tj
T*
( Can touch him not and torture not again;)Tj
T*
( From the contagion of the world\222s slow stain)Tj
T*
( He is secure, and now can never mourn)Tj
T*
( A heart grown cold, a head grown grey in vain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( He lives, he wakes,\227\222tis Death is dead, not he.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( He is a portion of the loveliness)Tj
T*
( Which once he made more lovely.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 43)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The One remains, the many change and pass;)Tj
T*
( Heaven\222s light forever shines, Earth\222s shadows fly;)Tj
T*
( Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,)Tj
T*
( Stains the white radiance of Eternity,)Tj
T*
( Until Death tramples it to fragments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Adonais\222 \(1821\) st. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( A widow bird sat mourning for her love)Tj
T*
( Upon a wintry bough;)Tj
T*
( The frozen wind crept on above,)Tj
T*
( The freezing stream below.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Charles the First\222 \(1822\) sc. 5, l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( That orb\351d maiden, with white fire laden,)Tj
T*
( Whom mortals call the Moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Cloud\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( I am the daughter of Earth and Water,)Tj
T*
( And the nursling of the Sky;)Tj
T*
( I pass through the pores of the ocean and shores;)Tj
T*
( I change, but I cannot die,)Tj
T*
( For after the rain when with never a stain)Tj
T*
( The pavilion of Heaven is bare,)Tj
T*
( And the winds and sunbeams with their convex gleams)Tj
T*
( Build up the blue dome of air,)Tj
T*
( I silently laugh at my own cenotaph,)Tj
T*
( And out of the caverns of rain,)Tj
T*
( Like a child from the womb, like a ghost from the tomb,)Tj
T*
( I arise and unbuild it again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221The Cloud\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( How wonderful is Death,)Tj
ET
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( Death and his brother Sleep!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( One pale as yonder wan and horn\351d moon,)Tj
T*
( With lips of lurid blue,)Tj
T*
( The other glowing like the vital morn,)Tj
T*
( When throned on ocean\222s wave)Tj
T*
( It breathes over the world:)Tj
T*
( Yet both so passing strange and wonderful!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221The Daemon of the World\222 part 1, l. 1 \(a revision of the opening\
lines of \221Queen Mab\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( I never was attached to that great sect,)Tj
T*
( Whose doctrine is that each one should select)Tj
T*
( Out of the crowd a mistress or a friend,)Tj
T*
( And all the rest, though fair and wise, commend)Tj
T*
( To cold oblivion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Epipsychidion\222 \(1821\) l. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.50456 Tm
( The beaten road)Tj
T*
( Which those poor slaves with weary footsteps tread,)Tj
T*
( Who travel to their home among the dead)Tj
T*
( By the broad highway of the world, and so)Tj
T*
( With one chained friend, perhaps a jealous foe,)Tj
T*
( The dreariest and the longest journey go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221Epipsychidion\222 \(1821\) l. 154)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.75456 Tm
( I pant, I sink, I tremble, I expire!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221Epipsychidion\222 \(1821\) l. 591)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( Chameleons feed on light and air:)Tj
T*
( Poets\222 food is love and fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221An Exhortation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( Good-night? ah! no; the hour is ill)Tj
T*
( Which severs those it should unite;)Tj
T*
( Let us remain together still,)Tj
T*
( Then it will be good night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Good Night\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Let there be light! said Liberty,)Tj
T*
( And like sunrise from the sea,)Tj
T*
( Athens arose!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Hellas\222 \(1822\) l. 682)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( The world\222s great age begins anew,)Tj
T*
( The golden years return,)Tj
T*
( The earth doth like a snake renew)Tj
T*
( Her winter weeds outworn;)Tj
T*
( Heaven smiles, and faiths and empires gleam,)Tj
ET
EMC
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( Like wrecks of a dissolving dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Hellas\222 \(1822\) l. 1060)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( O cease! must hate and death return?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cease! must men kill and die?)Tj
T*
( Cease! drain not to its dregs the urn)Tj
T*
( Of bitter prophecy.)Tj
T*
( The world is weary of the past,)Tj
T*
( Oh, might it die or rest at last!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Hellas\222 \(1822\) l. 1096)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( I pursued a maiden and clasped a reed.)Tj
T*
( Gods and men, we are all deluded thus!)Tj
T*
( It breaks in our bosom and then we bleed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Hymn of Pan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( The awful shadow of some unseen Power)Tj
T*
( Floats though unseen among us,\227visiting)Tj
T*
( This various world with as inconstant wing)Tj
T*
( As summer winds that creep from flower to flower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Intellectual Beauty\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( The day becomes more solemn and serene)Tj
T*
( When noon is past\227there is a harmony)Tj
T*
( In autumn, and a lustre in its sky,)Tj
T*
( Which through the summer is not heard or seen,)Tj
T*
( As if it could not be, as if it had not been!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Intellectual Beauty\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( I love all waste)Tj
T*
( And solitary places; where we taste)Tj
T*
( The pleasure of believing what we see)Tj
T*
( Is boundless, as we wish our souls to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221Julian and Maddalo\222 \(1818\) l. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Thou Paradise of exiles, Italy!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Julian and Maddalo\222 \(1818\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Me\227who am as a nerve o\222er which do creep)Tj
T*
( The else unfelt oppressions of this earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Julian and Maddalo\222 \(1818\) l. 449)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Most wretched men)Tj
T*
( Are cradled into poetry by wrong:)Tj
T*
( They learn in suffering what they teach in song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Julian and Maddalo\222 \(1818\) l. 544)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( London, that great sea, whose ebb and flow)Tj
T*
( At once is deaf and loud, and on the shore)Tj
ET
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( Vomits its wrecks, and still howls on for more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Letter to Maria Gisborne\222 \(1820\) l. 193)Tj
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( You will see Coleridge\227he who sits obscure)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In the exceeding lustre and the pure)Tj
T*
( Intense irradiation of a mind,)Tj
T*
( Which, with its own internal lightning blind,)Tj
T*
( Flags wearily through darkness and despair\227)Tj
T*
( A cloud-encircled meteor of the air,)Tj
T*
( A hooded eagle among blinking owls\227)Tj
T*
( You will see Hunt\227one of those happy souls)Tj
T*
( Which are the salt of the earth, and without whom)Tj
T*
( This world would smell like what it is\227a tomb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Letter to Maria Gisborne\222 \(1820\) l. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( Have you not heard)Tj
T*
( When a man marries, dies, or turns Hindoo,)Tj
T*
( His best friends hear no more of him?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221Letter to Maria Gisborne\222 \(1820\) l. 235)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( His fine wit)Tj
T*
( Makes such a wound, the knife is lost in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221Letter to Maria Gisborne\222 \(1820\) l. 240 \(on Thomas Love Peacoc\
k\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( When the lamp is shattered)Tj
T*
( The light in the dust lies dead\227)Tj
T*
( When the cloud is scattered)Tj
T*
( The rainbow\222s glory is shed.)Tj
T*
( When the lute is broken,)Tj
T*
( Sweet tones are remembered not;)Tj
T*
( When the lips have spoken,)Tj
T*
( Loved accents are soon forgot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Lines: When the lamp\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Beneath is spread like a green sea)Tj
T*
( The waveless plain of Lombardy,)Tj
T*
( Bounded by the vaporous air,)Tj
T*
( Islanded by cities fair;)Tj
T*
( Underneath Day\222s azure eyes)Tj
T*
( Ocean\222s nursling, Venice lies,)Tj
T*
( A peopled labyrinth of walls,)Tj
T*
( Amphitrite\222s destined halls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Lines written amongst the Euganean Hills\222 \(1818\) l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Sun-girt city, thou hast been)Tj
T*
( Ocean\222s child, and then his queen;)Tj
ET
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( Now is come a darker day,)Tj
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( And thou soon must be his prey.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Lines written amongst the Euganean Hills\222 \(1818\) l. 115 \(on Ve\
nice\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The fountains mingle with the river,)Tj
T*
( And the rivers with the ocean;)Tj
T*
( The winds of heaven mix for ever)Tj
T*
( With a sweet emotion;)Tj
T*
( Nothing in the world is single;)Tj
T*
( All things, by a law divine,)Tj
T*
( In one spirit meet and mingle.)Tj
T*
( Why not I with thine?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Love\222s Philosophy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( I met Murder on the way\227)Tj
T*
( He had a mask like Castlereagh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Mask of Anarchy\222 \(1819\) st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( His big tears, for he wept full well,)Tj
T*
( Turned to mill-stones as they fell.)Tj
T*
( And the little children, who)Tj
T*
( Round his feet played to and fro,)Tj
T*
( Thinking every tear a gem,)Tj
T*
( Had their brains knocked out by them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Mask of Anarchy\222 \(1819\) st. 4 \(on \221Fraud\222 [Lord Eldo\
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( Nought may endure but Mutability.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Mutability\222 \(1816\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( I stood within the City disinterred;)Tj
T*
( And heard the autumnal leaves like light footfalls)Tj
T*
( Of spirits passing through the streets; and heard)Tj
T*
( The Mountain\222s slumberous voice at intervals)Tj
T*
( Thrill through those roofless halls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to Naples\222 \(1820\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn\222s being,)Tj
T*
( Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead)Tj
T*
( Are driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,)Tj
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( Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pestilence-stricken multitudes: O thou,)Tj
T*
( Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The wing\351d seeds, where they lie cold and low,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Each like a corpse within its grave, until)Tj
T*
( Thine azure sister of the spring shall blow)Tj
ET
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( Her clarion o\222er the dreaming earth, and fill)Tj
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( \(Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air\))Tj
T*
( With living hues and odours plain and hill:)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Wild Spirit, which art moving everywhere;)Tj
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( Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh, hear!)Tj
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(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 1)Tj
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( There are spread)Tj
T*
( On the blue suface of thine a\353ry surge,)Tj
T*
( Like the bright hair uplifted from the head)Tj
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( Of some fierce Maenad, even from the dim verge)Tj
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( Of the horizon to the zenith\222s height,)Tj
T*
( The locks of the approaching storm.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.92047 Tm
(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 510.00456 Tm
( Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams)Tj
T*
( The blue Mediterranean, where he lay,)Tj
T*
( Lulled by the coil of his cryst\341lline streams)Tj
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( Beside a pumice isle in Baiae\222s bay,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Quivering within the wave\222s intenser day,)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( All overgrown with azure moss and flowers)Tj
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( So sweet, the sense faints picturing them!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 29)Tj
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( The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear)Tj
T*
( The sapless foliage of the ocean, know)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( Thy voice, and suddenly grow grey with fear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And tremble and despoil themselves.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 39)Tj
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( Oh, lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!)Tj
T*
( I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:)Tj
T*
( What if my leaves are falling like its own!)Tj
T*
( The tumult of thy mighty harmonies)Tj
T*
( Will take from both a deep, autumnal tone,)Tj
T*
( Sweet though in sadness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( And, by the incantation of this verse,)Tj
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( Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth)Tj
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( Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!)Tj
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( Be through my lips to unawakened earth)Tj
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( The trumpet of a prophecy! O, Wind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?)Tj
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(\221Ode to the West Wind\222 \(1819\) l. 65)Tj
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( Its horror and its beauty are divine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221On the Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci\222)Tj
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( I met a traveller from an antique land)Tj
T*
( Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone)Tj
T*
( Stand in the desert.)Tj
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(\221Ozymandias\222)Tj
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( \221My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:)Tj
T*
( Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!\222)Tj
T*
( Nothing beside remains. Round the decay)Tj
T*
( Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare)Tj
T*
( The lone and level sands stretch far away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.17047 Tm
(\221Ozymandias\222)Tj
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( Hell is a city much like London\227)Tj
T*
( A populous and smoky city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.42047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell the Third\222 \(1819\) pt. 3, st. 1)Tj
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( But from the first \222twas Peter\222s drift)Tj
T*
( To be a kind of moral eunuch,)Tj
T*
( He touched the hem of Nature\222s shift,)Tj
T*
( Felt faint\227and never dared uplift)Tj
T*
( The closest, all-concealing tunic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell the Third\222 \(1819\) pt. 4, st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( Ere Babylon was dust,)Tj
T*
( The Magus Zoroaster, my dead child,)Tj
T*
( Met his own image walking in the garden,)Tj
T*
( That apparition, sole of men, he saw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1819\) act 1, l. 191)Tj
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( Cruel he looks, but calm and strong,)Tj
T*
( Like one who does, not suffers wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1819\) act 1, l. 238)Tj
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( It doth repent me: words are quick and vain;)Tj
T*
( Grief for awhile is blind, and so was mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 303)Tj
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( Kingly conclaves stern and cold)Tj
T*
( Where blood with guilt is bought and sold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 530)Tj
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( The good want power, but to weep barren tears.)Tj
ET
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( The powerful goodness want: worse need for them.)Tj
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( The wise want love; and those who love want wisdom.)Tj
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(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 625)Tj
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T*
( I am a God and cannot find it there.)Tj
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(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 638)Tj
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( The dust of creeds outworn.)Tj
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(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 697)Tj
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( On a poet\222s lips I slept)Tj
T*
( Dreaming like a love-adept)Tj
T*
( In the sound his breathing kept.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.67047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 1, l. 737)Tj
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( To be)Tj
T*
( Omnipotent but friendless is to reign.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.92047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 2, scene 4, l. 47)Tj
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( He gave man speech, and speech created thought,)Tj
T*
( Which is the measure of the universe.)Tj
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(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 2, scene 4, l. 73)Tj
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( My soul is an enchanted boat,)Tj
T*
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T*
( Upon the silver waves of thy sweet singing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 2, scene 5, l. 72.)Tj
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( The loathsome mask has fallen, the man remains)Tj
T*
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T*
( Equal, unclassed, tribeless, and nationless,)Tj
T*
( Exempt from awe, worship, degree, the king)Tj
T*
( Over himself; just, gentle, wise: but man)Tj
T*
( Passionless?\227no, yet free from guilt or pain,)Tj
T*
( Which were, for his will made or suffered them,)Tj
T*
( Nor yet exempt, though ruling them like slaves,)Tj
T*
( From chance, and death, and mutability,)Tj
T*
( The clogs of that which else might oversoar)Tj
T*
( The loftiest star of unascended heaven,)Tj
T*
( Pinnacled dim in the intense inane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.67047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 3, sc. 4, l. 193)Tj
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( A traveller from the cradle to the grave)Tj
T*
( Through the dim night of this immortal day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.92047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 4, l. 551)Tj
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( To suffer woes which Hope thinks infinite;)Tj
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( To forgive wrongs darker than death or night;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To defy Power, which seems omnipotent;)Tj
T*
( To love, and bear; to hope till Hope creates)Tj
T*
( From its own wreck the thing it contemplates;)Tj
T*
( Neither to change, nor falter, nor repent;)Tj
T*
( This, like thy glory, Titan, is to be)Tj
T*
( Good, great and joyous, beautiful and free;)Tj
T*
( This is alone Life, Joy, Empire and Victory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Prometheus Unbound\222 \(1820\) act 4, l. 570)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( That sweet bondage which is freedom\222s self.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Queen Mab\222 \(1813\) canto 9, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( I dreamed that, as I wandered by the way,)Tj
T*
( Bare Winter suddenly was changed to Spring,)Tj
T*
( And gentle odours led my steps astray,)Tj
T*
( Mixed with a sound of water\222s murmuring)Tj
T*
( Along a shelving bank of turf, which lay)Tj
T*
( Under a copse, and hardly dared to fling)Tj
T*
( Its green arms round the bosom of the stream,)Tj
T*
( But kissed it and then fled, as thou mightst in dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221The Question\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( Daisies, those pearled Arcturi of the earth,)Tj
T*
( The constellated flower that never sets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Question\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( And in the warm hedge grew lush eglantine,)Tj
T*
( Green cowbind and the moonlight-coloured may.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.17047 Tm
(\221The Question\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 281.25456 Tm
( With hue like that when some great painter dips)Tj
T*
( His pencil in the gloom of earthquake and eclipse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Revolt of Islam\222 \(1818\) canto 5, st. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( A Sensitive Plant in a garden grew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221The Sensitive Plant\222 \(1820\) pt. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( And the rose like a nymph to the bath addressed,)Tj
T*
( Which unveiled the depth of her glowing breast,)Tj
T*
( Till, fold after fold, to the fainting air)Tj
T*
( The soul of her beauty and love lay bare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221The Sensitive Plant\222 \(1820\) pt. 1, l. 29)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( And the jessamine faint, and the sweet tuberose,)Tj
T*
( The sweetest flower for scent that blows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Sensitive Plant\222 \(1820\) pt. 1, l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Rarely, rarely, comest thou,)Tj
ET
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( Spirit of Delight!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Song\222; adopted by Elgar as epigraph to his Second Symphony)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Men of England, wherefore plough)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For the lords who lay ye low?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Song to the Men of England\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The seed ye sow, another reaps;)Tj
T*
( The wealth ye find, another keeps;)Tj
T*
( The robes ye weave, another wears;)Tj
T*
( The arms ye forge, another bears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Song to the Men of England\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Lift not the painted veil which those who live)Tj
T*
( Call Life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Through the unheeding many he did move,)Tj
T*
( A splendour among shadows, a bright blot)Tj
T*
( Upon this gloomy scene, a Spirit that strove)Tj
T*
( For truth, and like the Preacher found it not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Sonnet: England in 1819\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Away! the moor is dark beneath the moon,)Tj
T*
( Rapid clouds have drank the last pale beam of even:)Tj
T*
( Away! the gathering winds will call the darkness soon,)Tj
T*
( And profoundest midnight shroud the serene lights of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Stanzas\227April 1814\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( I see the waves upon the shore,)Tj
T*
( Like light dissolved in star-showers, thrown.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Stanzas Written in Dejection, near Naples\222 \(1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Alas! I have nor hope nor health,)Tj
T*
( Nor peace within nor calm around,)Tj
T*
( Nor that content surpassing wealth)Tj
T*
( The sage in meditation found.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Stanzas Written in Dejection, near Naples\222 \(1818\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( Music, when soft voices die,)Tj
T*
( Vibrates in the memory\227)Tj
T*
( Odours, when sweet violets sicken,)Tj
T*
( Live within the sense they quicken.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221To\227: Music, when soft voices die\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( The desire of the moth for the star,)Tj
T*
( Of the night for the morrow,)Tj
ET
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( The devotion to something afar)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the sphere of our sorrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221To\227: One word is too often profaned\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Hail to thee, blithe Spirit!)Tj
T*
( Bird thou never wert,)Tj
T*
( That from Heaven, or near it,)Tj
T*
( Pourest thy full heart)Tj
T*
( In profuse strains of unpremeditated art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( And singing still dost soar, and soaring ever singest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Like an unbodied joy whose race is just begun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Thou art unseen, but yet I hear thy shrill delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Like a Poet hidden)Tj
T*
( In the light of thought,)Tj
T*
( Singing hymns unbidden,)Tj
T*
( Till the world is wrought)Tj
T*
( To sympathy with hopes and fears it heeded not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( With thy clear keen joyance)Tj
T*
( Languor cannot be:)Tj
T*
( Shadow of annoyance)Tj
T*
( Never came near thee:)Tj
T*
( Thou lovest\227but ne\222er knew love\222s sad satiety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( We look before and after,)Tj
T*
( And pine for what is not:)Tj
T*
( Our sincerest laughter)Tj
T*
( With some pain is fraught;)Tj
T*
( Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( Teach me half the gladness)Tj
T*
( That thy brain must know,)Tj
T*
( Such harmonious madness)Tj
T*
( From my lips would flow)Tj
T*
( The world should listen then\227as I am listening now.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(1819\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Less oft is peace in Shelley\222s mind,)Tj
ET
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( Than calm in waters, seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221To Jane: The Recollection\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Swiftly walk o\222er the western wave,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Spirit of Night!)Tj
T*
( Out of the misty eastern cave,)Tj
T*
( Where, all the long and lone daylight,)Tj
T*
( Thou wovest dreams of joy and fear,)Tj
T*
( Which make thee terrible and dear,\227)Tj
T*
( Swift be thy flight!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221To Night\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Death will come when thou art dead,)Tj
T*
( Soon, too soon\227)Tj
T*
( Sleep will come when thou art fled;)Tj
T*
( Of neither would I ask the boon)Tj
T*
( I ask of thee, belov\351d Night\227)Tj
T*
( Swift be thine approaching flight,)Tj
T*
( Come soon, soon!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221To Night\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Art thou pale for weariness)Tj
T*
( Of climbing heaven, and gazing on the earth,)Tj
T*
( Wandering companionless)Tj
T*
( Among the stars that have a different birth,\227)Tj
T*
( And ever changing, like a joyless eye)Tj
T*
( That finds no object worth its constancy?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221To the Moon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( In honoured poverty thy voice did weave)Tj
T*
( Songs consecrate to truth and liberty,\227)Tj
T*
( Deserting these, thou leavest me to grieve,)Tj
T*
( Thus having been, that thou shouldst cease to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221To Wordsworth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( And like a dying lady, lean and pale,)Tj
T*
( Who totters forth, wrapped in a gauzy veil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221The Waning Moon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( A lovely lady, garmented in light)Tj
T*
( From her own beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221The Witch of Atlas\222 \(written 1820; published 1824\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( For she was beautiful\227her beauty made)Tj
T*
( The bright world dim, and everything beside)Tj
T*
( Seemed like the fleeting image of a shade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221The Witch of Atlas\222 \(written 1820; published 1824\) st. 12)Tj
ET
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( A single word even may be a spark of inextinguishable thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221A Defence of Poetry\222 \(written 1821; published 1840\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The rich have become richer, and the poor have become poorer; and th\
e vessel of the state is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(driven between the Scylla and Charybdis of anarchy and despotism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221A Defence of Poetry\222 \(written 1821, published 1840\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Poetry is the record of the best and happiest moments of the happies\
t and best minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221A Defence of Poetry\222 \(written 1821, published 1840\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration; the mirro\
rs of the gigantic shadows )Tj
T*
(which futurity casts upon the present; the words which express what they\
understand not; the )Tj
T*
(trumpets which sing to battle, and feel not what they inspire; the influ\
ence which is moved not, )Tj
T*
(but moves. Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221A Defence of Poetry\222 \(written 1821, published 1840\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 522.7124 Tm
( 7.76 William Shenstone 1714-63)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The charm dissolves; th\222aerial music\222s past;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The banquet ceases, and the vision flies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Elegy 11. He complains how soon the pleasing novelty of life is over\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( Whoe\222er has travelled life\222s dull round,)Tj
T*
( Where\222er his stages may have been,)Tj
T*
( May sigh to think he still has found)Tj
T*
( The warmest welcome, at an inn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221Written at an Inn at Henley\222 \(1758\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( Laws are generally found to be nets of such a texture, as the little\
creep through, the great )Tj
T*
(break through, and the middle-sized are alone entangled in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Essays on Men, Manners, and Things\222 \221On Politics\222 in \221Wo\
rks\222 \(1764\) vol. 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( A fool and his words are soon parted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Essays on Men, Manners, and Things\222 \221On Reserve\222 in \221Wor\
ks in Verse and Prose\222 \(1764\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( The world may be divided into people that read, people that write, p\
eople that think, and fox-)Tj
T*
(hunters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Essays on Men, Manners, and Things\222 \221On Writing and Books\222 \
in \221Works in Verse and Prose\222 \(1764\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( Every good poet includes a critic; the reverse will not hold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 193.42047 Tm
(\221Essays on Men, Manners, and Things\222 \221On Writing and Books\222 \
in \221Works in Verse and Prose\222 \(1764\) vol. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 172.50456 Tm
( To endeavour, all one\222s days, to fortify our minds with learning \
and philosophy, is to spend so )Tj
T*
(much in armour that one has nothing left to defend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Essays on Men, Manners, and Things\222 \221On Writing and Books\222 \
in \221Works in Verse and Prose\222 \(1764\) vol. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 106.4624 Tm
( 7.77 E. A. Sheppard)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Charles Collins \(3.145\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.78 Philip Henry Sheridan 1831-88)Tj
ET
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( The only good Indian is a dead Indian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Attributed; at Fort Cobb, January 1869)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.79 Richard Brinsley Sheridan 1751-1816)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You write with ease, to show your breeding,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But easy writing\222s vile hard reading.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Clio\222s Protest\222. T. Moore \221Life of Sheridan\222 \(1825\) 1,\
55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( The newspapers! Sir, they are the most)Tj
T*
( villainous\227licentious\227abominable\227infernal\227Not that I eve\
r read them\227No\227I make it a )Tj
T*
(rule never to look into a newspaper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( If it is abuse,\227why one is always sure to hear of it from one dam\
ned goodnatured friend or )Tj
T*
(another!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Egad I think the interpreter is the hardest to be understood of the \
two!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( I wish sir, you would practise this without me. I can\222t stay dyin\
g here all night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( O Lord, Sir\227when a heroine goes mad she always goes into white sa\
tin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.75456 Tm
( An oyster may be crossed in love!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221The Critic\222 \(1779\) act 3, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( I was struck all of a heap.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Duenna\222 \(1775\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Conscience has no more to do with gallantry than it has with politic\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Duenna\222 \(1775\) act 2, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( The throne we honour is the people\222s choice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Pizarro\222 \(1799\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Illiterate him, I say, quite from your memory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( \222Tis safest in matrimony to begin with a little aversion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( He is the very pineapple of politeness!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( An aspersion upon my parts of speech!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.67047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 96.75456 Tm
( If I reprehend any thing in this world, it is the use of my oracular\
tongue, and a nice )Tj
T*
(derangement of epitaphs!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.92047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.00456 Tm
( She\222s as headstrong as an allegory on the banks of the Nile.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Too civil by half.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 3, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Our ancestors are very good kind of folks; but they are the last peo\
ple I should choose to have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a visiting acquaintance with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( No caparisons, Miss, if you please!\227Caparisons don\222t become a \
young woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 4, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( The quarrel is a very pretty quarrel as it stands\227we should only \
spoil it by trying to explain it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.42047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 4, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.50456 Tm
( My valour is certainly going!\227it is sneaking off!\227I feel it oo\
zing out as it were at the palms )Tj
T*
(of my hands!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221The Rivals\222 \(1775\) act 5, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page where a neat rivulet o\
f text shall meander )Tj
T*
(through a meadow of margin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( You had no taste when you married me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( Mrs Candour: I\222ll swear her colour is natural\227I have seen it \
come and go\227)Tj
T*
( Lady Teazle: I dare swear you have, ma\222am; it goes of a night an\
d comes again in the morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Here is the whole set! a character dead at every word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 2, sc. 2.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( Here\222s to the maiden of bashful fifteen)Tj
T*
( Here\222s to the widow of fifty)Tj
T*
( Here\222s to the flaunting, extravagant queen;)Tj
T*
( And here\222s to the housewife that\222s thrifty.)Tj
T*
( Let the toast pass\227)Tj
T*
( Drink to the lass\227)Tj
T*
( I\222ll warrant she\222ll prove an excuse for the glass!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 3, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( An unforgiving eye, and a damned disinheriting countenance!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 4, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Rowley: I believe there is no sentiment he has more faith in as tha\
t \221Charity begins at home\222.)Tj
T*
( Sir Oliver Surface: And his I presume is of that domestic sort whic\
h never stirs abroad at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 5, sc. 1)Tj
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( There is no trusting appearances.)Tj
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(\221The School for Scandal\222 \(1777\) act 5, sc. 2)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
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0 -1.2 TD
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( The Right Honourable gentleman is indebted to his memory for his jes\
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T*
(imagination for his facts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.42047 Tm
(Speech in reply to Mr Dundas, in T. Moore \221Life of Sheridan\222 \(182\
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15 0 0 15 10 608.50456 Tm
( Won\222t you come into the garden? I would like my roses to see you.\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.67047 Tm
(To a young lady; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.80 General Sherman 1820-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There is many a boy here to-day who looks on war as all glory, but, \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 522.92047 Tm
(Speech at Columbus, Ohio, 11 August 1880, in Lloyd Lewis \221Sherman, Fi\
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15 0 0 15 10 502.00456 Tm
( I will not accept if nominated, and will not serve if elected.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.17047 Tm
(Telegram to General Henderson on being urged to stand as Republican cand\
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0 -1.2 TD
(election of 1884, in \221Memoirs\222 \(4th ed.\); to which his children \
added chapter 27, in which this text appears as )Tj
T*
(the recollection of Sherman\222s son who was present at its drafting)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 423.9624 Tm
( 7.81 Emanuel Shinwell \(Baron Shinwell\) 1884-1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We know that the organised workers of the country are our friends. A\
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0 -1.2 TD
(matter a tinker\222s cuss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.42047 Tm
(Speech to the Electrical Trades Union conference at Margate, 7 May 1947,\
in \221Manchester Guardian\222 8 May )Tj
T*
(1947)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 321.2124 Tm
( 7.82 James Shirley 1596-1666)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The glories of our blood and state)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Are shadows, not substantial things;)Tj
T*
( There is no armour against fate;)Tj
T*
( Death lays his icy hand on kings:)Tj
T*
( Sceptre and crown)Tj
T*
( Must tumble down,)Tj
T*
( And in the dust be equal made)Tj
T*
( With the poor crooked scythe and spade.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.67047 Tm
(\221The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses\222 \(1659\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.75456 Tm
( The garlands wither on your brow;)Tj
T*
( Then boast no more your mighty deeds!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.92047 Tm
(\221The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses\222 \(1659\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.00456 Tm
( Only the actions of the just)Tj
T*
( Smell sweet, and blossom in their dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.17047 Tm
(\221The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses\222 \(1659\) act 1, sc. 3)Tj
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( I presume you\222re mortal, and may err.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Pleasure\222 \(1635\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
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( How little room)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( No bounds?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Wedding\222 \(1626\) act 4, sc. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.83 The Shorter Catechism)Tj
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( \221Who made you?\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221God made me\222)Tj
T*
( \221Why did God make you?\222)Tj
T*
( \221God made me to know him, love him, and serve him in this life, a\
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T*
(forever in the next.\222)Tj
T*
( \221What is the chief end of man?\222)Tj
T*
( \221To glorify God and to enjoy him for ever\222.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 7.84 Walter Sickert 1860-1942)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Nothing knits man to man, the Manchester School wisely taught, like \
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0 -1.2 TD
(from hand to hand of cash.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(\221New Age\222 28 July 1910 \221The Language of Art\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 381.7124 Tm
( 7.85 Algernon Sidney 1622-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Liars ought to have good memories.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221Discourses concerning Government\222 \(1698\) ch. 2, sect. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 323.25456 Tm
( Men lived like fishes; the great ones devoured the small.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(\221Discourses concerning Government\222 \(1698\) ch. 2, sect. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 286.50456 Tm
( \222Tis not necessary to light a candle to the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221Discourses concerning Government\222 \(1698\) ch. 2, sect. 23.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 238.4624 Tm
( 7.86 Sir Philip Sidney 1554-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Shallow brooks murmur most, deep silent slide away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.92047 Tm
(\221The Arcadia\222 \(1590\) bk. 1 \221First Eclogues: Lalus and Dorus\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 180.00456 Tm
( Who shoots at the mid-day sun, though he be sure he shall never hit \
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0 -1.2 TD
(he shall shoot higher than who aims but at a bush.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 146.17047 Tm
(\221The Arcadia\222 \(1590\) bk. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 125.25456 Tm
( My true love hath my heart and I have his,)Tj
T*
( By just exchange one for the other giv\222n;)Tj
T*
( I hold his dear, and mine he cannot miss,)Tj
T*
( There never was a better bargain driv\222n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.42047 Tm
(\221The Arcadia\222 \(1590\) bk. 3)Tj
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(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 1)Tj
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T*
( How silently, and with how wan a face.)Tj
T*
( What, may it be that even in heavenly place)Tj
T*
( That busy archer his sharp arrows tries?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 31)Tj
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( Do they call virtue there ungratefulness?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Come, sleep, O sleep, the certain knot of peace,)Tj
T*
( The baiting place of wit, the balm of woe,)Tj
T*
( The poor man\222s wealth, the prisoner\222s release,)Tj
T*
( Th\222 indifferent judge between the high and low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Take thou of me sweet pillows, sweetest bed,)Tj
T*
( A chamber deaf to noise and blind to light;)Tj
T*
( A rosy garland and a weary head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( That sweet enemy, France.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( They love indeed who quake to say they love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Doubt you to whom my Muse these songs intendeth,)Tj
T*
( Which now my breast, o\222ercharged, to music lendeth?)Tj
T*
( To you, to you, all song of praise is due;)Tj
T*
( Only in you my song begins and endeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) first song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Oh heav\222nly fool, thy most kiss-worthy face)Tj
T*
( Anger invests with such a lovely grace)Tj
T*
( That Anger\222s self I needs must kiss again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( I never drank of Aganippe well,)Tj
T*
( Nor ever did in shade of Tempe sit,)Tj
T*
( And Muses scorn with vulgar brains to dwell;)Tj
T*
( Poor layman I, for sacred rites unfit...)Tj
T*
( I am no pick-purse of another\222s wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( Highway, since you my chief Parnassus be,)Tj
T*
( And that my Muse, to some ears not unsweet,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Now blessed you, bear onward blessed me)Tj
T*
( To her, where I my heart, safeliest, shall meet.)Tj
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(\221Astrophel and Stella\222 \(1591\) sonnet 84)Tj
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( And thou, my mind, aspire to higher things;)Tj
T*
( Grow rich in that which never taketh rust;)Tj
T*
( Whatever fades, but fading pleasure brings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Certain Sonnets\222 \(written 1577-81; published 1598\) no. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( O fair! O sweet! When I do look on thee,)Tj
T*
( In whom all joys so well agree,)Tj
T*
( Heart and soul do sing in me,)Tj
T*
( Just accord all music makes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221To the Tune of a Spanish Song\222)Tj
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( With a tale forsooth he [the poet] cometh unto you, with a tale whic\
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T*
(play, and old men from the chimney corner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Defence of Poesie\222 \(1595\))Tj
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( Certainly I must confess mine own barbarousness, I never heard the o\
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T*
(Douglas, that I found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221The Defence of Poesie\222 \(1595\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Philip of Macedon reckoned a horse-race won at Olympus among his thr\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Defence of Poesie\222 \(1595\))Tj
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( I will not wish unto you the ass\222s ears of Midas, nor to be drive\
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T*
(Bubonax was, to hang himself, nor to be rhymed to death, as is said to b\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Defence of Poesie\222 \(1595\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Thy necessity is yet greater than mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(On giving his water-bottle to a dying soldier on the battle-field of Zut\
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T*
(Life of Sir Philip Sidney\222 \(1652\) ch. 12 \(\221necessity\222 more o\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.87 Emmanuel Joseph Siey\351s 1748-1836)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( La mort, sans phrases.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Death, without rhetoric.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(Attributed to Siey\351s on voting in the French Convention for the death\
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0 -1.2 TD
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( J\222ai v\350cu.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I survived.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(When asked what he had done during the French Revolution. F. A. M. Migne\
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Little man, you\222ve had a busy day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1934\))Tj
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T*
( The loneliness of the long-distance runner.)Tj
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(Title of novel \(1959\))Tj
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( J\222ai eu 10,000 femmes depuis l\222\342ge de 13 ans et demi. Ce n\222\
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(Interview with Federico Fellini in \221L\222Express\222 21 February 1977\
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15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Writing is not a profession but a vocation of unhappiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(Interview in \221Paris Review\222 Summer 1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 449.2124 Tm
( 7.91 Paul Simon 1942\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And here\222s to you, Mrs Robinson)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Jesus loves you more than you will know.)Tj
T*
( God bless you please, Mrs Robinson)Tj
T*
( Heaven holds a place for those who pray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Mrs Robinson\222 \(1968 song\) from \221The Graduate\222)Tj
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T*
( I will lay me down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221Bridge over Troubled Water\222 \(1970 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( 7.92 Simonides c.556-468 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Go, tell the Spartans, thou who passest by,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That here obedient to their laws we lie.)Tj
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(In Herodotus \221Histories\222 bk. 7, ch. 228)Tj
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( 7.93 Harold Simpson)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( Down in the forest something stirred:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It was only the note of a bird.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221Down in the Forest\222 \(1906 song\))Tj
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( 7.94 Kirke Simpson)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( [Warren] Harding of Ohio was chosen by a group of men in a smoke-fil\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Republican candidate for President.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.67047 Tm
(News report, 12 June 1920)Tj
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(\221One Way Pendulum\222 \(1960\) act 1)Tj
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(\221One Way Pendulum\222 \(1960\) act 1)Tj
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( And suppose we solve all the problems it presents? What happens? We\
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T*
(out dozens.)Tj
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(\221A Resounding Tinkle\222 act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( 7.96 George R. Sims 1847-1922)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( The morning light creaks down again.)Tj
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T*
( Grey leaves thick-furred)Tj
T*
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T*
( Conversation blurred)Tj
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( When)Tj
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( Where Proserpine first fell,)Tj
T*
( Blue as the gendarmerie were the waves of the sea,)Tj
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( Rocking and shocking the barmaid.)Tj
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T*
( Dark as the world of man, black as our loss\227)Tj
T*
( Blind as the nineteen hundred and forty nails)Tj
T*
( Upon the Cross.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221The Raids, 1940. Night and Dawn\222 \(1942\))Tj
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( Daisy and Lily,)Tj
T*
( Lazy and silly,)Tj
T*
( Walk by the shore of the wan grassy sea\227)Tj
T*
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(\221Waltz\222 \(1948\))Tj
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T*
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T*
( \221Selected Letters\222 \(1970\))Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( And does not die,)Tj
T*
( But, if it is ill,)Tj
T*
( It has a frightened look in its eyes.)Tj
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(\221At the House of Mrs Kinfoot\222 \(1921\) p. 8)Tj
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( In reality, killing time)Tj
T*
( Is only the name for another of the multifarious ways)Tj
T*
( By which Time kills us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221Milordo Inglese\222.)Tj
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( On the coast of Coromandel)Tj
T*
( Dance they to the tunes of Handel.)Tj
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(\221On the Coast of Coromandel\222)Tj
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( Educ: during the holidays from Eton.)Tj
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( She is the violet,)Tj
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T*
( The columbine commendable,)Tj
T*
( The jelofer amiable;)Tj
T*
( For this most goodly flower,)Tj
T*
( This blossom of fresh colour,)Tj
T*
( So Jupiter me succour,)Tj
T*
( She flourisheth new and new)Tj
T*
( In beauty and virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.42047 Tm
(\221The Commendations of Mistress Jane Scrope\222)Tj
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T*
( That was late slain at Carrow)Tj
T*
( Among the Nunnes Black,)Tj
T*
( For that sweet soul\222s sake)Tj
T*
( And for all sparrows\222 souls)Tj
T*
( Set in our bead-rolls,)Tj
T*
( Pater noster qui)Tj
T*
( With an Ave Mari.)Tj
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(\221Philip Sparrow\222)Tj
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( With solace and gladness,)Tj
T*
( Much mirth and no madness,)Tj
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( All good and no badness;)Tj
T*
( So joyously,)Tj
T*
( So maidenly,)Tj
T*
( So womanly,)Tj
T*
( Her demeaning.)Tj
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(\221To Mistress Margaret Hussey\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.00456 Tm
( Far may be sought)Tj
T*
( Erst that ye can find)Tj
T*
( So courteous, so kind,)Tj
T*
( As Merry Margaret,)Tj
T*
( This midsummer flower,)Tj
T*
( Gentle as falcon)Tj
T*
( Or hawk of the tower.)Tj
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(\221To Mistress Margaret Hussey\222)Tj
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( The real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do.)Tj
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(\221Contingencies of Reinforcement\222 \(1969\) ch. 9)Tj
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( Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgo\
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T*
( Far above their usual trim;)Tj
T*
( Birds on box and laurels listen,)Tj
T*
( As so near the cherubs hymn.)Tj
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( Whom no ills from good dissuade,)Tj
T*
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(\221Jubilate Agno\222 Fragment B, l. 30)Tj
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(\221Jubilate Agno\222 Fragment B, l. 40)Tj
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T*
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( For he counteracts the powers of darkness by his electrical skin and\
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T*
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T*
( How kind the visit that ye pay,)Tj
T*
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T*
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T*
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(\221A Song to David\222 \(1763\) st. 77)Tj
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T*
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T*
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(Title of book \(1945\).)Tj
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( We each day dig our graves with our teeth.)Tj
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(\221Duty\222 \(1880\) p. 418)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Invention and Industry\222 ch. 4)Tj
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(\221Self-Help\222 \(1859\) ch. 9)Tj
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( Cheerfulness gives elasticity to the spirit; spectres fly before it.\
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(\221Self-Help\222 \(1859\))Tj
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T*
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(\221Self-Help\222 \(1859\))Tj
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T*
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(\221Self-Help\222 \(1859\))Tj
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T*
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(\221The Theory of Moral Sentiments\222 1, 3, 2, 8)Tj
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T*
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( Consumption is the sole end and purpose of production; and the inter\
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T*
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of the consumer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.42047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\) bk. 4, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.50456 Tm
( People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment an\
d diversion, but the )Tj
T*
(conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contriv\
ance to raise prices.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 285.67047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.75456 Tm
( With the greater part of rich people, the chief enjoyment of riches \
consists in the parade of )Tj
T*
(riches, which in their eyes is never so complete as when they appear to \
possess those decisive )Tj
T*
(marks of opulence which nobody can possess but themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( To found a great empire for the sole purpose of raising up a people \
of customers, may at first )Tj
T*
(sight appear a project fit only for a nation of shopkeepers. It is, howe\
ver, a project altogether unfit )Tj
T*
(for a nation of shopkeepers; but extremely fit for a nation whose govern\
ment is influenced by )Tj
T*
(shopkeepers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 101.25456 Tm
( The discipline of colleges and universities is in general contrived,\
not for the benefit of the )Tj
T*
(students, but for the interest, or more properly speaking, for the ease \
of the masters.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( There is no art which one government sooner learns of another than t\
hat of draining money )Tj
ET
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(from the pockets of the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\))Tj
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( If any of the provinces of the British empire cannot be made to cont\
ribute towards the support )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the whole empire, it is surely time that Great Britain should free he\
rself from the expense of )Tj
T*
(defending those provinces in time of war, and of supporting any part of \
their civil or military )Tj
T*
(establishments in time of peace, and endeavour to accommodate her future\
views and designs to )Tj
T*
(the real mediocrity of her circumstances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Wealth of Nations\222 \(1776\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.2124 Tm
( 7.107 Alfred Emanuel Smith 1873-1944)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All the ills of democracy can be cured by more democracy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(Speech in Albany, 27 June 1933, in \221New York Times\222 28 June 1933)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( Unpack.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(Telegraphed message to the Pope, 1932, whom he had hoped would come to l\
ive in the United States, in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(event of Smith\222s campaign for the presidency being successful; attrib\
uted)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 7.108 Sir Cyril Smith 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The longest running farce in the West End.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.17047 Tm
(On the House of Commons, in \221Big Cyril\222 \(1977\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 404.9624 Tm
( 7.109 Dodie Smith 1896-1990)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The family\227that dear octopus from whose tentacles we never quite \
escape, nor, in our inmost )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(hearts, ever quite wish to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(\221Dear Octopus\222 \(1938\) p. 120)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 317.2124 Tm
( 7.110 Edgar Smith 1857-1938)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You may tempt the upper classes)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With your villainous demi-tasses,)Tj
T*
( But; Heaven will protect a working-girl!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Heaven Will Protect the Working-Girl\222 \(1909 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 211.4624 Tm
( 7.111 F. E. Smith \(Earl of Birkenhead\) 1872-1930)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have the highest authority for believing that the meek shall inhe\
rit the earth; though I have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(never found any particular corroboration of this aphorism in the records\
of Somerset House.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Contemporary Personalities\222 \(1924\) \221Marquess Curzon\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Nature has no cure for this sort of madness [Bolshevism], though I h\
ave known a legacy from a )Tj
T*
(rich relative work wonders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Law, Life and Letters\222 \(1927\) vol. 2, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( The world continues to offer glittering prizes to those who have sto\
ut hearts and sharp swords.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(Rectorial Address, Glasgow University, 7 November 1923, in \221The Times\
\222 8 November 1923)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( Judge: What do you suppose I am on the Bench for, Mr Smith? )Tj
ET
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( Smith: It is not for me, Your Honour, to attempt to fathom the insc\
rutable workings of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Providence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(In Second Earl of Birkenhead \221F. E. The Life of F. E. Smith First Ear\
l of Birkenhead\222 \(1959 ed.\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Judge: You are extremely offensive, young man.)Tj
T*
( Smith: As a matter of fact, we both are, and the only difference be\
tween us is that I am trying )Tj
T*
(to be, and you can\222t help it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(In Second Earl of Birkenhead \221Frederick Edwin Earl of Birkenhead\222 \
\(1933\) vol. 1, ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Judge Darling: And who is George Robey?)Tj
T*
( Smith: Mr George Robey is the Darling of the music halls, m\222lud.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(In A. E. Wilson \221The Prime Minister of Mirth\222 \(1956\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Good God, do you mean to say this place is a club?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(On being approached by the secretary of the Athenaeum, which he had been\
in the habit of using as a )Tj
T*
(convenience on the way to his office; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 7.112 Ian Smith 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I don\222t believe in black majority rule in Rhodesia\227not in a th\
ousand years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(Broadcast speech, 20 March 1976, in \221Sunday Times\222 21 March 1976)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 437.9624 Tm
( 7.113 Langdon Smith 1858-1918)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( When you were a tadpole, and I was a fish,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In the Palaeozoic time,)Tj
T*
( And side by side in the ebbing tide)Tj
T*
( We sprawled through the ooze and slime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(\221A Toast to a Lady\222 \(1906\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 314.2124 Tm
( 7.114 Logan Pearsall Smith 1865-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There is more felicity on the far side of baldness than young men ca\
n possibly imagine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.67047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Age and Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.75456 Tm
( The denunciation of the young is a necessary part of the hygiene of \
older people, and greatly )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(assists the circulation of their blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.92047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Age and Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 201.00456 Tm
( I cannot forgive my friends for dying; I do not find these vanishing\
acts of theirs at all amusing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Age and Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 164.25456 Tm
( The test of a vocation is the love of the drudgery it involves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 148.42047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Art and Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 127.50456 Tm
( A best-seller is the gilded tomb of a mediocre talent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.67047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Art and Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.75456 Tm
( To suppose, as we all suppose, that we could be rich and not behave \
as the rich behave, is like )Tj
T*
(supposing that we could drink all day and keep absolutely sober.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.92047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221In the World\222)Tj
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( An improper mind is a perpetual feast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Life and Human Nature\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Myself\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Those who set out to serve both God and Mammon soon discover that th\
ere is no God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Other People\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Most people sell their souls, and live with a good conscience on the\
proceeds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Other People\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( All Reformers, however strict their social conscience, live in house\
s just as big as they can pay )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Afterthoughts\222 \(1931\) \221Other People\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what he whispe\
rs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221All Trivia\222 \(1933\) \221Afterthoughts\222 pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( There is one thing that matters\227to set a chime of words tinkling \
in the minds of a few )Tj
T*
(fastidious people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(Said shortly before his death, in \221New Statesman\222 9 March 1946, ob\
ituary notice by Cyril Connolly)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 448.4624 Tm
( 7.115 Samuel Francis Smith 1808-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My country, \222tis of thee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sweet land of liberty,)Tj
T*
( Of thee I sing:)Tj
T*
( Land where my fathers died,)Tj
T*
( Land of the pilgrims\222 pride,)Tj
T*
( From every mountain-side)Tj
T*
( Let freedom ring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221America\222 \(1831\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 270.7124 Tm
( 7.116 Stevie Smith \(Florence Margaret Smith\) 1902-71)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh I am a cat that likes to)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Gallop about doing good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(\221The Galloping Cat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 194.25456 Tm
( Why does my Muse only speak when she is unhappy?)Tj
T*
( She does not, I only listen when I am unhappy)Tj
T*
( When I am happy I live and despise writing)Tj
T*
( For my Muse this cannot but be dispiriting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.42047 Tm
(\221My Muse\222 \(1964\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.50456 Tm
( Oh, no no no, it was too cold always)Tj
T*
( \(Still the dead one lay moaning\))Tj
T*
( I was much too far out all my life)Tj
T*
( And not waving but drowning.)Tj
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(\221Not Waving but Drowning\222 \(1957\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( People who are always praising the past)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And especially the times of faith as best)Tj
T*
( Ought to go and live in the Middle Ages)Tj
T*
( And be burnt at the stake as witches and sages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Past\222 \(1957\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Private Means is dead)Tj
T*
( God rest his soul, officers and fellow-rankers said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Private Means is Dead\222 \(1962\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( This Englishwoman is so refined)Tj
T*
( She has no bosom and no behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221This Englishwoman\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I long for the Person from Porlock)Tj
T*
( To bring my thoughts to an end,)Tj
T*
( I am growing impatient to see him)Tj
T*
( I think of him as a friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts about the \223Person from Porlock\224\222 \(1962\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( If you cannot have your dear husband for a comfort and a delight, fo\
r a breadwinner and a )Tj
T*
(crosspatch, for a sofa, chair or a hot-water bottle, one can use him as \
a Cross to be Borne.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Novel on Yellow Page\222 \(1936\) p. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( If there wasn\222t death, I think you couldn\222t go on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 9 November 1969)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 340.4624 Tm
( 7.117 Sydney Smith 1771-1845)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The moment the very name of Ireland is mentioned, the English seem t\
o bid adieu to common )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(feeling, common prudence, and common sense, and to act with the barbarit\
y of tyrants, and the )Tj
T*
(fatuity of idiots.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Peter Plymley\222s Letters\222 \(1929\) p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( A Curate\227there is something which excites compassion in the very \
name of a Curate!!!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Plymley\222s Letters\222 \(1929\) p. 127 \221Persecuting Bisho\
ps\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( Bishop Berkeley destroyed this world in one volume octavo; and nothi\
ng remained, after his )Tj
T*
(time, but mind; which experienced a similar fate from the hand of Mr Hum\
e in 1739.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221Sketches of Moral Philosophy\222 introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.50456 Tm
( We shall generally find that the triangular person has got into the \
square hole, the oblong into )Tj
T*
(the triangular, and a square person has squeezed himself into the round \
hole. The officer and the )Tj
T*
(office, the doer and the thing done, seldom fit so exactly that we can s\
ay they were almost made )Tj
T*
(for each other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Sketches of Moral Philosophy\222 Lecture 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( I never could find any man who could think for two minutes together.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Sketches of Moral Philosophy\222 Lecture 9)Tj
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( What bishops like best in their clergy is a dropping-down-deadness o\
f manner.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Works\222 \(1859\) vol. 2 \221First Letter to Archdeacon Singleton\222\
p. 271, note)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I look upon Switzerland as an inferior sort of Scotland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Letter to Lord Holland, 1815, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Tory and Whig in turns shall be my host,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I taste no politics in boiled and roast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Letter to John Murray, November 1834, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( I have no relish for the country; it is a kind of healthy grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Letter to Miss G. Harcourt, 1838, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( I have seen nobody since I saw you, but persons in orders. My only v\
arieties are vicars, rectors, )Tj
T*
(curates, and every now and then \(by way of turbot\) an archdeacon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Letter to Miss Berry, 28 January 1843, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( It requires a surgical operation to get a joke well into a Scotch un\
derstanding. Their only idea )Tj
T*
(of wit...is laughing immoderately at stated intervals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 2, p. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( That knuckle-end of England\227that land of Calvin, oat-cakes, and s\
ulphur.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 2, p. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Take short views, hope for the best, and trust in God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 6, p. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( No furniture so charming as books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 9, p. 240.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( How can a bishop marry? How can he flirt? The most he can say is, \221\
I will see you in the )Tj
T*
(vestry after service.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 9, p. 258)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Not body enough to cover his mind decently with; his intellect is im\
properly exposed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 9, p. 258)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( As the French say, there are three sexes\227men, women, and clergyme\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 9, p. 262)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( Daniel Webster struck me much like a steam-engine in trousers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.17047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 9, p. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 203.25456 Tm
( My definition of marriage:...it resembles a pair of shears, so joine\
d that they cannot be )Tj
T*
(separated; often moving in opposite directions, yet always punishing any\
one who comes between )Tj
T*
(them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 363)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( He [Macaulay] is like a book in breeches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 363)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( He [Macaulay] has occasional flashes of silence, that make his conve\
rsation perfectly )Tj
T*
(delightful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 363)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,)Tj
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( And, scarce-suspected, animate the whole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 373 \221Recip\
e for Salad\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( Serenely full, the epicure would say,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Fate cannot harm me, I have dined to-day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 373.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( Deserves to be preached to death by wild curates.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(In Lady Holland \221Memoir\222 \(1855\) vol. 1, ch. 11, p. 384)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 622.75456 Tm
( I never read a book before reviewing it; it prejudices a man so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.92047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 3, p. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.00456 Tm
( Minorities...are almost always in the right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 570.17047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 9, p. 220)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 549.25456 Tm
( \227\222s idea of heaven is, eating p\342t\350 de foie gras to the so\
und of trumpets.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.42047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 10, p. 236)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 512.50456 Tm
( What a pity it is that we have no amusements in England but vice and\
religion!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 496.67047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 10, p. 236)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 475.75456 Tm
( Let the Dean and Canons lay their heads together and the thing will \
be done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.92047 Tm
(On a proposal to surround St Paul\222s with a wooden pavement, in H. Pea\
rson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. )Tj
T*
(10, p. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Death must be distinguished from dying, with which it is often confu\
sed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 11, p. 271)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( What two ideas are more inseparable than Beer and Britannia?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.42047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 11, p. 272)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.50456 Tm
( I am just going to pray for you at St Paul\222s, but with no very li\
vely hope of success.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221The Smith of Smiths\222 \(1934\) ch. 13, p. 308)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( Poverty is no disgrace to a man, but it is confoundedly inconvenient\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.92047 Tm
(In \221Sidney Smith: His Wit and Wisdom\222 \(1900\) p. 89)Tj
T*
(Science is his forte, and omniscience his foible. On William Whewell, in\
Isaac Todhunter \221William )Tj
T*
(Whewell\222 \(1876\) vol. 1, p. 410)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 235.7124 Tm
( 7.118 Tobias Smollett 1721-71)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I think for my part one half of the nation is mad\227and the other n\
ot very sound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.17047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves\222 \(1762\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.25456 Tm
( That great Cham of literature, Samuel Johnson.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.42047 Tm
(Letter to John Wilkes, 16 March 1759, in James Boswell \221The Life of S\
amuel Johnson\222 \(1934\) vol. 1, p. 348)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.50456 Tm
( The capital [London] is become an overgrown monster; which, like a d\
ropsical head, will in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(time leave the body and extremities without nourishment and support.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.67047 Tm
(\221The Expedition of Humphry Clinker\222 \(1771\) vol. 1, letter from M\
atthew Bramble, 29 May)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 85.75456 Tm
( I am pent up in frowzy lodgings, where there is not room enough to s\
wing a cat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.92047 Tm
(\221The Expedition of Humphry Clinker\222 \(1771\) vol. 1, letter from M\
atthew Bramble, 8 June)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.00456 Tm
( \221Begging your honour\222s pardon, \(replied Clinker\) may not the\
new light of God\222s grace shine )Tj
ET
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(upon the poor and the ignorant in their humility, as well as upon the we\
althy, and the philosopher )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in all his pride of human learning?\222 \221What you imagine to be the n\
ew light of grace, \(said his )Tj
T*
(master\) I take to be a deceitful vapour, glimmering through a crack in \
your upper storey.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221The Expedition of Humphry Clinker\222 \(1771\) vol. 2, letter from J\
ery Melford, 10 June)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Mourn, hapless Caledonia, mourn)Tj
T*
( Thy banished peace, thy laurels torn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Tears of Scotland\222 \(1746\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 614.2124 Tm
( 7.119 C. P. Snow \(Baron Snow of Leicester\) 1905-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The official world, the corridors of power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(\221Homecomings\222 \(1956\) ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( I believe the intellectual life of the whole of western society is i\
ncreasingly being split into two )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(polar groups...Literary intellectuals at one pole\227at the other scient\
ists, and as the most )Tj
T*
(representative, the physical scientists. Between the two a gulf of mutua\
l incomprehension.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution\222 \(1959 Rede Lectu\
re\) p. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 471.7124 Tm
( 7.120 Philip Snowden \(Viscount Snowden\) 1864-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This is not Socialism. It is Bolshevism run mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(BBC radio election broadcast on the election programme of the Labour Par\
ty, 17 October 1931; in \221The )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Times\222 19 October 1931)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 386.9624 Tm
( 7.121 Socrates 469-399 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How many things I can do without!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(On looking at a multitude of wares exposed for sale, in Diogenes Laertiu\
s \221Lives of the Eminent )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Philosophers\222 bk. 2, ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(In Diogenes Laertius \221Lives of Eminent Philosophers\222 bk. 2, sect. \
32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.75456 Tm
( The unexamined life is not worth living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.92047 Tm
(In Plato \221Apology\222 38a)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.00456 Tm
( But already it is time to depart, for me to die, for you to go on li\
ving; which of us takes the )Tj
T*
(better course, is concealed from anyone except God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(In Plato \221Apology\222 42a)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( A man should feel confident concerning his soul, who has renounced t\
hose pleasures and )Tj
T*
(fineries that go with the body, as being alien to him, and considering t\
hem to result more in harm )Tj
T*
(than in good, but has pursued the pleasures that go with learning and ma\
de the soul fine with no )Tj
T*
(alien but rather its own proper refinements, moderation and justice and \
courage and freedom and )Tj
T*
(truth; thus it is ready for the journey to the world below.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(In Plato \221Phaedo\222 114d)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( \221What do you say about pouring a libation to some god from this c\
up? Is it allowed or not?\222 )Tj
T*
( \221We only prepare just the right amount to drink, Socrates,\222 he\
[the jailor] said. )Tj
T*
( \221I understand,\222 he went on; \221but it is allowed and necessar\
y to pray to the gods, that my moving )Tj
ET
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(from hence to there may be blessed; thus I pray, and so be it.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(In Plato \221Phaedo\222 117b)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( Crito, we owe a cock to Aesculapius; please pay it and don\222t let \
it pass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(In Plato \221Phaedo\222 118, last words)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 667.7124 Tm
( 7.122 Solon c.630-c.555 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I grow old ever learning many things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(Theodor Bergk \(ed.\) \221Poetae Lyrici Graeci\222 \(1843\) no. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( Laws are like spider\222s webs: if some poor weak creature come up a\
gainst them, it is caught; but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a bigger one can break through and get away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.42047 Tm
(In Diogenes Laertius \221Lives of the Eminent Philosophers\222 bk. 1, ch\
. 58.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.50456 Tm
( Call no man happy till he dies, he is at best but fortunate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.67047 Tm
(In Herodotus \221Histories\222 bk. 1, ch. 32)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 506.4624 Tm
( 7.123 Alexander Solzhenitsyn 1918\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You only have power over people as long as you don\222t take everyth\
ing away from them. But )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(when you\222ve robbed a man of everything he\222s no longer in your powe\
r\227he\222s free again.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.88535 Tm
(\221\221 )Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
(\(The First Circle, 1968\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.96944 Tm
( The Gulag Archipelago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.13535 Tm
(Title of book \(1973-5\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 381.92728 Tm
( 7.124 William Somerville 1675-1742)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My hoarse-sounding horn)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Invites thee to the chase, the sport of kings;)Tj
T*
( Image of war, without its guilt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.38535 Tm
(\221The Chase\222 \(1735\) bk. 1, l. 13.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 287.46944 Tm
( Hail, happy Britain! highly favoured isle,)Tj
T*
( And Heaven\222s peculiar care!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.63535 Tm
(\221The Chase\222 \(1735\) bk. 1, l. 84)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.42728 Tm
( 7.125 Anastasio Somoza 1925-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You won the elections, but I won the count.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.88535 Tm
(Reply to accusation of ballot-rigging, in \221Guardian\222 17 June 1977.\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 151.67728 Tm
( 7.126 Stephen Sondheim 1930\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Everything\222s coming up roses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.13535 Tm
(Title of song \(1959\); music by Jule Styne)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Send in the clowns. Title of song \(1973\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 66.92728 Tm
( 7.127 Susan Sontag 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art.)Tj
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(\221Evergreen Review\222 December 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people\222s reality, an\
d eventually in one\222s own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221New York Review of Books\222 18 April 1974)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Illness is the night-side of life, a more onerous citizenship. Every\
one who is born holds dual )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick. \
Although we all prefer to )Tj
T*
(use only the good passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at le\
ast for a spell, to identify )Tj
T*
(ourselves as citizens of that other place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221New York Review of Books\222 26 January 1978)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The white race is the cancer of human history, it is the white race,\
and it alone\227its ideologies )Tj
T*
(and inventions\227which eradicates autonomous civilizations wherever it \
spreads, which has upset )Tj
T*
(the ecological balance of the planet, which now threatens the very exist\
ence of life itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Partisan Review\222 Winter 1967, p. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( It is the nature of the pornographic imagination to prefer ready-mad\
e conventions of character, )Tj
T*
(setting, and action. Pornography is a theatre of types, never of individ\
uals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Pornographic Imagination\222 \(1967\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 467.9624 Tm
( 7.128 Donald Soper \(Baron Soper\) 1903\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is, I think, good evidence of life after death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(On the quality of debate in the House of Lords, in \221Listener\222 17 A\
ugust 1978)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.2124 Tm
( 7.129 Sophocles 496-406 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( My son, may you be happier than your father.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 360.67047 Tm
(\221Ajax\222 l. 550)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.75456 Tm
( Enemies\222 gifts are no gifts and do no good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.92047 Tm
(\221Ajax\222 l. 665)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.00456 Tm
( His death concerns the gods, not those men, no!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.17047 Tm
(\221Ajax\222 l. 970 \(referring to Ajax\222s enemies, the Greek leaders\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 266.25456 Tm
( There are many wonderful things, and nothing is more wonderful than \
man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.42047 Tm
(\221Antigone\222 l. 333)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 229.50456 Tm
( Not to be born is, past all prizing, best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 213.67047 Tm
(\221Oedipus Coloneus\222 l. 1224 \(translation by R. W. Jebb\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.75456 Tm
( Someone asked Sophocles, \221How do you feel now about sex? Are you \
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(from a mad and savage master.\222)Tj
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(In Plato \221Republic\222 bk. 1, 329b)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.130 Charles Hamilton Sorley 1895-1915)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When you see millions of the mouthless dead)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Across your dreams in pale battalions go,)Tj
T*
( Say not soft things as other men have said,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Give them not praise. For, deaf, how should they know)Tj
T*
( It is not curses heaped on each gashed head?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221A Sonnet\222 \(1916\))Tj
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( We swing ungirded hips,)Tj
T*
( And lightened are our eyes,)Tj
T*
( The rain is on our lips,)Tj
T*
( We do not run for prize.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Song of the Ungirt Runners\222 \(1916\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( We have the evil spirits too)Tj
T*
( That shake our soul with battle-din.)Tj
T*
( But we have an eviller spirit than you,)Tj
T*
( We have a dumb spirit within:)Tj
T*
( The exceeding bitter agony)Tj
T*
( But not the exceeding bitter cry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221To Poets\222 \(1916\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 451.4624 Tm
( 7.131 John L. B. Soule 1815-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Go West, young man, go West!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(\221Terre Haute\222 [Indiana] \221Express\222 \(1851\) editorial.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 381.7124 Tm
( 7.132 Robert South 1634-1716)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( An Aristotle was but the rubbish of an Adam, and Athens but the rudi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 vol. 1, no. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.9624 Tm
( 7.133 Thomas Southerne 1660-1746)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( When we\222re worn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hacked hewn with constant service, thrown aside)Tj
T*
( To rust in peace, or rot in hospitals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 238.42047 Tm
(\221The Loyal Brother\222 \(1682\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 217.50456 Tm
( Be wise, be wise, and do not try)Tj
T*
( How he can court, or you be won;)Tj
T*
( For love is but discovery:)Tj
T*
( When that is made, the pleasure\222s done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221Sir Anthony Love\222 \(1690\) act 2 \221Song\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 115.4624 Tm
( 7.134 Robert Southey 1774-1843)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It was a summer evening,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Old Kaspar\222s work was done,)Tj
T*
( And he before his cottage door)Tj
T*
( Was sitting in the sun,)Tj
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( And by him sported on the green)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His little grandchild Wilhelmine.)Tj
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(\221The Battle of Blenheim\222)Tj
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( Now tell us all about the war,)Tj
T*
( And what they fought each other for.)Tj
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(\221The Battle of Blenheim\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( \221And everybody praised the Duke,)Tj
T*
( Who this great fight did win.\222)Tj
T*
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T*
( Quoth little Peterkin.)Tj
T*
( \221Why that I cannot tell,\222 said he,)Tj
T*
( \221But \222twas a famous victory.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.42047 Tm
(\221The Battle of Blenheim\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.50456 Tm
( My name is Death: the last best friend am I.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.67047 Tm
(\221Carmen Nuptiale\222 \221The Lay of the Laureate. The Dream\222 87)Tj
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( Curses are like young chickens, they always come home to roost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.92047 Tm
(\221The Curse of Kehama\222 \(1810\) motto)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.00456 Tm
( Thou hast been called, O Sleep! the friend of Woe,)Tj
T*
( But \222tis the happy who have called thee so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.17047 Tm
(\221The Curse of Kehama\222 \(1810\) canto 15, st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.25456 Tm
( No stir in the air, no stir in the sea,)Tj
T*
( The ship was still as she could be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221The Inchcape Rock\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( Blue, darkly, deeply, beautifully blue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(\221Madoc\222 \(1805\) pt. 1, canto 5 \221Lincoya\222 l. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.75456 Tm
( We wage no war with women nor with priests.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.92047 Tm
(\221Madoc\222 \(1805\) pt. 1, canto 15 \221The Excommunication\222 l. 65\
)Tj
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( You are old, Father William, the young man cried,)Tj
T*
( The few locks which are left you are grey;)Tj
T*
( You are hale, Father William, a hearty old man,)Tj
T*
( Now tell me the reason, I pray.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Man\222s Comforts, and how he Gained them\222.)Tj
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( In the days of my youth I remembered my God!)Tj
T*
( And He hath not forgotten my age.)Tj
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(\221The Old Man\222s Comforts, and how he Gained them\222)Tj
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( The arts babblative and scribblative.)Tj
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(\221Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society\222 \(1829\) col\
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( The march of intellect.)Tj
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(\221Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society\222 \(1829\) col\
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( Your true lover of literature is never fastidious.)Tj
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(\221The Doctor\222 \(1812\) ch. 34)Tj
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(\221The Doctor\222 \(1812\) ch. 130)Tj
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( The death of Nelson was felt in England as something more than a pub\
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T*
(started at the intelligence, and turned pale, as if they had heard of th\
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(\221The Life of Nelson\222 \(1813\) ch. 9)Tj
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( She has made me in love with a cold climate, and frost and snow, wit\
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(Letter to his brother Thomas, 28 April 1797, in Charles C. Southey \221T\
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T*
(Southey\222 vol. 1 \(1849\) p. 311 \(on the letters of Mary Wollstonecra\
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( Surprised I was with sudden heat which made my heart to glow;)Tj
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( And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near,)Tj
T*
( A pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air appear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 432.42047 Tm
(\221The Burning Babe\222 \(1595\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 411.50456 Tm
( Times go by turns, and chances change by course,)Tj
T*
( From foul to fair, from better hap to worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 377.67047 Tm
(\221Times go by Turns\222 \(1595\).)Tj
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( Before my face the picture hangs,)Tj
T*
( That daily should put me in mind)Tj
T*
( Of those cold qualms, and bitter pangs,)Tj
T*
( That shortly I am like to find:)Tj
T*
( But yet alas full little I)Tj
T*
( Do think hereon that I must die.)Tj
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(\221Upon the Image of Death\222)Tj
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(\221The Comforters\222 \(1957\) ch. 1)Tj
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( I am putting old heads on your young shoulders and all my pupils are\
the cr\351me de la cr\351me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.42047 Tm
(\221The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie\222 \(1961\) ch. 1)Tj
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( Give me a girl at an impressionable age, and she is mine for life.)Tj
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(\221The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie\222 \(1961\) ch. 1)Tj
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( One\222s prime is elusive. You little girls, when you grow up, must \
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(your prime at whatever time of your life it may occur.)Tj
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(\221The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie\222 \(1961\) ch. 1)Tj
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(intrusion.)Tj
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(\221The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie\222 \(1961\) ch. 2)Tj
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( And Hell would not be Hell if you are there.)Tj
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(Epitaph for Maurice Bowra, in \221Times Literary Supplement\222 30 May 1\
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( That indefatigable and unsavoury engine of pollution, the dog.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
(Georgian Squares.)Tj
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(\221The Spencers on Spas\222 \(1983\) p. 14.)Tj
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( The Republican form of Government is the highest form of government;\
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0 -1.2 TD
(requires the highest type of human nature\227a type nowhere at present e\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1891\) vol. 3 \221The Americans\222)Tj
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( Science is organized knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 327.67047 Tm
(\221Education\222 \(1861\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 306.75456 Tm
( People are beginning to see that the first requisite to success in l\
ife is to be a good animal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 290.92047 Tm
(\221Education\222 \(1861\) ch. 2)Tj
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( Evolution...is\227a change from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneit\
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T*
(heterogeneity.)Tj
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(\221First Principles\222 \(1862\) ch. 16, 138)Tj
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( It cannot but happen...that those will survive whose functions happe\
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T*
(equilibrium with the modified aggregate of external forces...This surviv\
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T*
(multiplication of the fittest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 163.42047 Tm
(\221Principles of Biology\222 \(1865\) pt. 3, ch. 12, 164.)Tj
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( How often misused words generate misleading thoughts.)Tj
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(\221Principles of Ethics\222 bk. 1 \(1879\) pt. 2, ch. 8, 152)Tj
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( Absolute morality is the regulation of conduct in such a way that pa\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 89.92047 Tm
(\221Essays\222 \(1891\) vol. 3 \221Prison Ethics\222)Tj
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( Progress, therefore, is not an accident, but a necessity...It is a p\
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(\221Social Statics\222 \(1850\) pt. 1, ch. 2, 4)Tj
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(\221Social Statics\222 \(1850\) pt. 2, ch. 16, 3)Tj
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( Education has for its object the formation of character.)Tj
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(\221Social Statics\222 \(1850\) pt. 2, ch. 17, 4)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Social Statics\222 \(1850\) pt. 4, ch. 30, 8)Tj
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( No one can be perfectly free till all are free; no one can be perfec\
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T*
(one can be perfectly happy till all are happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Social Statics\222 \(1850\) pt. 4, ch. 30, 16)Tj
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( The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly, is t\
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(\221Essays\222 \(1891\) vol. 3 \221State Tamperings with Money and Banks\
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( It was remarked to me by the late Mr Charles Roupell...that to play \
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T*
(an ill-spent youth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(Duncan \221Life and Letters of Spencer\222 \(1908\) ch. 20, p. 298)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( French art, if not sanguinary, is usually obscene.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Home Life with Herbert Spencer\222 \(1906\) ch. 4, p. 115 \221Two\222\
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( 7.140 Stephen Spender 1909\227)Tj
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( After the first powerful plain manifesto)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The black statement of pistons, without more fuss)Tj
T*
( But gliding like a queen, she leaves the station.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Express\222 \(1933\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( The names of those who in their lives fought for life)Tj
T*
( Who wore at their hearts the fire\222s centre.)Tj
T*
( Born of the sun they travelled a short while towards the sun,)Tj
T*
( And left the vivid air signed with their honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.17047 Tm
(\221I think continually of those who were truly great\222 \(1933\))Tj
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( Never being, but always at the edge of Being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(Title of poem \(1933\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( My parents kept me from children who were rough)Tj
T*
( And who threw words like stones and who wore torn clothes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221My parents kept me from children who were rough\222 \(1933\))Tj
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( What I had not foreseen)Tj
T*
( Was the gradual day)Tj
T*
( Weakening the will)Tj
T*
( Leaking the brightness away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221What I expected, was\222 \(1933\))Tj
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( Who live under the shadow of a war,)Tj
T*
( What can I do that matters?)Tj
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(\221Who live under the shadow of a war\222 \(1933\))Tj
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( Their collected)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hearts wound up with love, like little watch springs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Past Values\222 \(1939\))Tj
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( Pylons, those pillars)Tj
T*
( Bare like nude, giant girls that have no secret.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Pylons\222 \(1933\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Consider: only one bullet in ten thousand kills a man.)Tj
T*
( Ask: was so much expenditure justified)Tj
T*
( On the death of one so young and so silly)Tj
T*
( Stretched under the olive trees, Oh, world, Oh, death?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Regum Ultimo Ratio\222 \(1933\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.141 Edmund Spenser c.1552-99)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( The merry cuckoo, messenger of Spring,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His trumpet shrill hath thrice already sounded.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Amoretti\222 \(1595\) sonnet 19)Tj
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( Most glorious Lord of life, that on this day)Tj
T*
( Didst make thy triumph over death and sin:)Tj
T*
( And, having harrowed hell, didst bring away)Tj
T*
( Captivity thence captive, us to win.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221Amoretti\222 \(1595\) sonnet 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( So let us love, dear Love, like as we ought,)Tj
T*
( \227Love is the lesson which the Lord us taught.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Amoretti\222 \(1595\) sonnet 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( Fresh spring the herald of love\222s mighty king,)Tj
T*
( In whose coat armour richly are displayed)Tj
T*
( All sorts of flowers the which on earth do spring)Tj
T*
( In goodly colours gloriously arrayed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.92047 Tm
(\221Amoretti\222 \(1595\) sonnet 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.00456 Tm
( One day I wrote her name upon the strand,)Tj
T*
( But came the waves and wash\351d it away:)Tj
T*
( Again I wrote it with a second hand,)Tj
T*
( But came the tide, and made my pains his prey.)Tj
T*
( Vain man, said she, that dost in vain assay,)Tj
T*
( A mortal thing so to immortalize,)Tj
T*
( For I myself shall like to this decay,)Tj
T*
( And eke my name be wip\351d out likewise.)Tj
T*
( Not so, quoth I, let baser things devise)Tj
T*
( To die in dust, but you shall live by fame:)Tj
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( My verse your virtues rare shall eternize,)Tj
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( And in the heavens write your glorious name,)Tj
T*
( Where when as death shall all the world subdue,)Tj
T*
( Our love shall live, and later life renew.)Tj
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(\221Amoretti\222 \(1595\) sonnet 75)Tj
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( So love is Lord of all the world by right.)Tj
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(\221Colin Clout\222s Come Home Again\222 \(1595\) l. 883)Tj
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( So you great Lord, that with your counsel sway)Tj
T*
( The burden of this kingdom mightily,)Tj
T*
( With like delights sometimes may eke delay,)Tj
T*
( The rugged brow of careful Policy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Dedicatory Sonnet to Sir Christopher Hatton\222)Tj
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( Open the temple gates unto my love,)Tj
T*
( Open them wide that she may enter in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Epithalamion\222 \(1595\) l. 204)Tj
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( Ah! when will this long weary day have end,)Tj
T*
( And lend me leave to come unto my love?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Epithalamion\222 \(1595\) l. 278)Tj
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( Song made in lieu of many ornaments,)Tj
T*
( With which my love should duly have been decked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221Epithalamion\222 \(1595\) l. 427)Tj
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( The general end therefore of all the book is to fashion a gentleman \
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T*
(and gentle discipline.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) preface)Tj
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( Fierce wars and faithful loves shall moralize my song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, introduction, st. 1)Tj
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( A gentle knight was pricking on the plain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 1, st. 1)Tj
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( But on his breast a bloody cross he bore,)Tj
T*
( The dear remembrance of his dying Lord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 1, st. 2)Tj
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( But of his cheer did seem too solemn sad;)Tj
T*
( Yet nothing did he dread, but ever was ydrad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 1, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( A bold bad man, that dared to call by name)Tj
T*
( Great Gorgon, Prince of darkness and dead night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 1, st. 37.)Tj
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( Her angel\222s face)Tj
T*
( As the great eye of heaven shin\351d bright,)Tj
T*
( And made a sunshine in the shady place;)Tj
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( Did never mortal eye behold such heavenly grace.)Tj
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(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 3, st. 4)Tj
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( And all the hinder parts, that few could spy,)Tj
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( Were ruinous and old, but painted cunningly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 4, st. 5)Tj
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( The noble heart, that harbours virtuous thought,)Tj
T*
( And is with child of glorious great intent,)Tj
T*
( Can never rest, until it forth have brought)Tj
T*
( Th\222 eternal brood of glory excellent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 5, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( A cruel crafty crocodile,)Tj
T*
( Which in false grief hiding his harmful guile,)Tj
T*
( Doth weep full sore, and sheddeth tender tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 5, st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Still as he fled, his eye was backward cast,)Tj
T*
( As if his fear still followed him behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 9, st. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( That darksome cave they enter, where they find)Tj
T*
( That curs\351d man, low sitting on the ground,)Tj
T*
( Musing full sadly in his sullen mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 9, st. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas,)Tj
T*
( Ease after war, death after life does greatly please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 9, st. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Death is the end of woes: die soon, O fairy\222s son.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 1, canto 9, st. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( So double was his pains, so double be his praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 2, st. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Upon her eyelids many Graces sate,)Tj
T*
( Under the shadow of her even brows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 3, st. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( And all for love, and nothing for reward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 8, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( So passeth, in the passing of a day,)Tj
T*
( Of mortal life the leaf, the bud, the flower,)Tj
T*
( No more doth flourish after first decay,)Tj
T*
( That erst was sought to deck both bed and bower,)Tj
T*
( Of many a lady, and many a paramour:)Tj
T*
( Gather therefore the rose, whilst yet is prime,)Tj
T*
( For soon comes age, that will her pride deflower:)Tj
ET
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( Gather the rose of love, whilst yet is time,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whilst loving thou mayst lov\351d be with equal crime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 12, st. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The dunghill kind)Tj
T*
( Delights in filth and foul incontinence:)Tj
T*
( Let Grill be Grill, and have his hoggish mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 2, canto 12, st. 87)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Whether it divine tobacco were,)Tj
T*
( Or panachaea, or polygony,)Tj
T*
( She found, and brought it to her patient dear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 3, canto 5, st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Hard is to teach an old horse amble true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 3, canto 8, st. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( And painful pleasure turns to pleasing pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 3, canto 10, st. 60)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( And as she looked about, she did behold,)Tj
T*
( How over that same door was likewise writ,)Tj
T*
( Be bold, be bold, and everywhere Be bold...)Tj
T*
( At last she spied at that room\222s upper end)Tj
T*
( Another iron door, on which was writ)Tj
T*
( Be not too bold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 3, canto 11, st. 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Dan Chaucer, well of English undefiled,)Tj
T*
( On Fame\222s eternal beadroll worthy to be filed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 4, canto 2, st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( For all that nature by her mother wit)Tj
T*
( Could frame in earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 4, canto 10, st. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( O sacred hunger of ambitious minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 5, canto 12, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( A monster, which the Blatant beast men call,)Tj
T*
( A dreadful fiend of gods and men ydrad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 5, canto 12, st. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( The gentle mind by gentle deeds is known.)Tj
T*
( For a man by nothing is so well bewray\222d,)Tj
T*
( As by his manners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 6, canto 3, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( What man that sees the ever-whirling wheel)Tj
T*
( Of Change, the which all mortal things doth sway,)Tj
T*
( But that thereby doth find, and plainly feel,)Tj
ET
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( How Mutability in them doth play)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her cruel sports, to many men\222s decay?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 7, canto 6, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( For all that moveth doth in Change delight:)Tj
T*
( But thenceforth all shall rest eternally)Tj
T*
( With Him that is the God of Sabbaoth hight:)Tj
T*
( O that great Sabbaoth God, grant me that Sabbaoth\222s sight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Faerie Queen\222 \(1596\) bk. 7, canto 8, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( That beauty is not, as fond men misdeem,)Tj
T*
( An outward show of things, that only seem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221An Hymn in Honour of Beauty\222 l. 90)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( For of the soul the body form doth take;)Tj
T*
( For soul is form, and doth the body make.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221An Hymn in Honour of Beauty\222 l. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( I was promised on a time,)Tj
T*
( To have reason for my rhyme;)Tj
T*
( From that time unto this season,)Tj
T*
( I received nor rhyme nor reason.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Lines on his Pension\222; attributed)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( What more felicity can fall to creature,)Tj
T*
( Than to enjoy delight with liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Muiopotmos\222 l. 209)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Of such deep learning little had he need,)Tj
T*
( Ne yet of Latin, ne of Greek that breed)Tj
T*
( Doubts \222mongst Divines, and difference of texts,)Tj
T*
( From whence arise diversity of sects,)Tj
T*
( And hateful heresies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Prosopopoia or Mother Hubbard\222s Tale\222 l. 385)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( Calm was the day, and through the trembling air,)Tj
T*
( Sweet breathing Zephyrus did softly play.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Prothalamion\222 \(1596\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( With that, I saw two swans of goodly hue,)Tj
T*
( Come softly swimming down along the Lee;)Tj
T*
( Two fairer birds I yet did never see:)Tj
T*
( The snow which doth the top of Pindus strew,)Tj
T*
( Did never whiter show,)Tj
T*
( Nor Jove himself when he a swan would be)Tj
T*
( For love of Leda, whiter did appear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Prothalamion\222 \(1596\) l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( So purely white they were,)Tj
ET
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( That even the gentle stream, the which them bare,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Seemed foul to them, and bade his billows spare)Tj
T*
( To wet their silken feathers, lest they might)Tj
T*
( Soil their fair plumes with water not so fair)Tj
T*
( And mar their beauties bright,)Tj
T*
( That shone as Heaven\222s light,)Tj
T*
( Against their bridal day, which was not long:)Tj
T*
( Sweet Thames, run softly, till I end my song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Prothalamion\222 \(1596\) l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( At length they all to merry London came,)Tj
T*
( To merry London, my most kindly nurse,)Tj
T*
( That to me gave this life\222s first native source.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Prothalamion\222 \(1596\) l. 127)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( To be wise and eke to love,)Tj
T*
( Is granted scarce to God above.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \(1579\) \221March. Willy\222s Emblem\
\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Bring hither the pink and purple columbine,)Tj
T*
( With gillyflowers:)Tj
T*
( Bring coronation, and sops in wine,)Tj
T*
( Worn of paramours.)Tj
T*
( Strew me the ground with daffadowndillies,)Tj
T*
( And cowslips, and kingcups, and loved lilies:)Tj
T*
( The pretty pawnce,)Tj
T*
( And the chevisaunce,)Tj
T*
( Shall match with the fair flower delice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 302.92047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \(1579\) \221April\222 l. 136 \(pawnc\
e pansy; chevisaunce wallflower?; flower delice iris\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.00456 Tm
( And he that strives to touch the stars,)Tj
T*
( Oft stumbles at a straw.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \(1579\) \221July\222 l. 99)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Uncouth unkist, said the old famous poet Chaucer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \221Letter to Gabriel Harvey\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 190.50456 Tm
( So now they have made our English tongue a gallimaufry or hodgepodge\
of all other speeches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221The Shepherd\222s Calendar\222 \221Letter to Gabriel Harvey\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 142.4624 Tm
( 7.142 Steven Spielberg 1947\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Close encounters of the third kind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(Title of film \(1977\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.7124 Tm
( 7.143 Baruch Spinoza 1632-77)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( By god I mean a being absolutely infinite\227that is, a substance co\
nsisting in infinite attributes, )Tj
ET
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(of which each expresses eternal and infinite essentiality.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Ethics\222 \(completed c.1665, published 1677\) bk. 1, definition 6 \
\221Deus, sive Natura [God, or in other words, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Nature]\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( Sedula curavi, humanas actiones non ridere, non lugere, neque detest\
are, sed intelligere.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I have striven not to laugh at human actions, not to weep at them, n\
or to hate them, but to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(understand them.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Politicus\222 1, 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 613.4624 Tm
( 7.144 Dr Benjamin Spock 1903\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( To win in Vietnam, we will have to exterminate a nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Dr Spock on Vietnam\222 \(1968\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 543.7124 Tm
( 7.145 William Archibald Spooner 1844-1930)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Mr Huxley assures me that it\222s no farther from the north coast of\
Spitzbergen to the North Pole )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than it is from Land\222s End to John of Gaunt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(Julian Huxley in \221SEAC\222 \(Calcutta\) 27 February 1944)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( You will find as you grow older that the weight of rages will press \
harder and harder upon the )Tj
T*
(employer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(In William Hayter \221Spooner\222 \(1977\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( Her late husband, you know, a very sad death\227eaten by missionarie\
s\227poor soul!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(In William Hayter \221Spooner\222 \(1977\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 364.4624 Tm
( 7.146 Sir Cecil Spring-Rice 1859-1918)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Wilson is the nation\222s shepherd and McAdoo his crook.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.92047 Tm
(Of President Woodrow Wilson and his secretary of the treasury, a joke co\
nsidered ill-timed in the light of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(attempts to draw the United States into the First World War; in Robert S\
kidelsky \221John Maynard Keynes\222 vol. )Tj
T*
(1 \(1983\) ch. 14, sect. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( I vow to thee, my country\227all earthly things above\227)Tj
T*
( Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love,)Tj
T*
( The love that asks no question: the love that stands the test,)Tj
T*
( That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best:)Tj
T*
( The love that never falters, the love that pays the price,)Tj
T*
( The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221I Vow to Thee, My Country\222 \(written on the eve of his departure \
from Washington, 12 January 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( And there\222s another country, I\222ve heard of long ago\227)Tj
T*
( Most dear to them that love her, most great to them that know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221I Vow to Thee, My Country\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Her ways are ways of gentleness and all her paths are Peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221I Vow to Thee, My Country\222 \(written 1918\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( I am the Dean of Christ Church, Sir:)Tj
T*
( There\222s my wife; look well at her.)Tj
ET
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( She\222s the Broad and I\222m the High;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We are the University.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Masque of Balliol\222 composed by and current among members of B\
alliol College, Oxford, in the 1870s; )Tj
T*
(in W. G. Hiscock \(ed.\) \221The Balliol Rhymes\222 \(1939\) p. 29. The\
first couplet was unofficially altered to: \221I am )Tj
T*
(the Dean, and this is Mrs Liddell, / She the first, and I the second fid\
dle.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 655.7124 Tm
( 7.147 Bruce Springsteen 1949\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Born down in a dead man\222s town)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The first kick I took was when I hit the ground.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 600.17047 Tm
(\221Born in the USA\222 \(1984 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 579.25456 Tm
( We gotta get out while we\222re young, )Tj
T*
( \222Cause tramps like us, baby, we were born to run.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.42047 Tm
(\221Born to Run\222 \(1974 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 524.50456 Tm
( Is a dream a lie if it don\222t come true,)Tj
T*
( Or is it something worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.67047 Tm
(\221The River\222 \(1980 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 458.4624 Tm
( 7.148 C. H. Spurgeon 1834-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you want truth to go round the world you must hire an express tra\
in to pull it; but if you want )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a lie to go round the world, it will fly: it is as light as a feather, a\
nd a breath will carry it. It is well )Tj
T*
(said in the old proverb, \221a lie will go round the world while truth i\
s pulling its boots on\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.92047 Tm
(\221Gems from Spurgeon\222 \(1859\) p. 74)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 352.7124 Tm
( 7.149 Sir J. C. Squire 1884-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( But I\222m not so think as you drunk I am.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.17047 Tm
(\221Ballade of Soporific Absorption\222 \(1931\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.25456 Tm
( It did not last: the Devil howling \221Ho!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let Einstein be!\222 restored the status quo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221In continuation of Pope on Newton\222 \(1926\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 228.2124 Tm
( 7.150 Mme de Sta\353l 1766-1817)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tout comprendre rend tr\351s indulgent.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( To be totally understanding makes one very indulgent.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.92047 Tm
(\221Corinne\222 \(1807\) bk. 4, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.00456 Tm
( Speech happens not to be his language.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.17047 Tm
(On being asked what one found to talk about with her new lover, a hussar\
; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 99.9624 Tm
( 7.151 Joseph Stalin \(Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili\) 1879-1953)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The State is an instrument in the hands of the ruling class, used to\
break the resistance of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(adversaries of that class.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.42047 Tm
(\221Foundations of Leninism\222 \(1924\) section 4/6)Tj
ET
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( The Pope! How many divisions has he got?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(When asked by Pierre Louval, French Foreign Minister, to encourage Catho\
licism in Russia by way of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(conciliating the Pope, 13 May 1935; in W. S. Churchill \221The Second Wo\
rld War\222 vol. 1 \221The Gathering Storm )Tj
T*
(\(1948\) ch. 8.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 674.9624 Tm
( 7.152 Sir Henry Morton Stanley 1841-1904)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dr Livingstone, I presume?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 637.42047 Tm
(\221How I found Livingstone\222 \(1872\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 605.2124 Tm
( 7.153 Charles E. Stanton 1859-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Lafayette, nous voila!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Lafayette, we are here.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(At the tomb of Lafayette in Paris, 4 July 1917, in \221New York Tribune\222\
6 September 1917)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 513.7124 Tm
( 7.154 Edwin Mcmasters Stanton 1814-69)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Now he belongs to the ages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 476.17047 Tm
(Of Abraham Lincoln, after his assassination, 15 April 1865, in I. M. Tar\
bell \221Life of Abraham )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Lincoln\222 \(1900\) vol. 2, p. 244)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 428.9624 Tm
( 7.155 Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1815-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Bible teaches that woman brought sin and death into the world, t\
hat she precipitated the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(fall of the race...marriage for her was to be a condition of bondage, ma\
ternity a period of )Tj
T*
(suffering and anguish, and in silence and subjection, she was to play th\
e role of a dependant on )Tj
T*
(man\222s bounty for all her material wants.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Woman\222s Bible\222 \(1895\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( Woman\222s degradation is in man\222s idea of his sexual rights. Our\
religion, laws, customs, are all )Tj
T*
(founded on the belief that woman was made for man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(Letter to Susan B. Anthony, 14 June 1860, in T. Stanton and H. Stanton B\
laher \(eds.\) \221Elizabeth Cady )Tj
T*
(Stanton\222 \(1922\) vol. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 235.4624 Tm
( 7.156 Frank L. Stanton 1857-1927)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sweetes\222 li\222l\222 feller,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Everybody knows;)Tj
T*
( Dunno what to call him,)Tj
T*
( But he\222s mighty lak\222 a rose!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(\221Mighty Lak\222 a Rose\222 \(1901 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 111.7124 Tm
( 7.157 John Stark 1728-1822)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We beat them to-day or Molly Stark\222s a widow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(Before the Battle of Bennington, 16 August 1777, in Appleton \221Cyclopa\
edia of American Biography\222 vol. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 41.9624 Tm
( 7.158 Christina Stead 1902-83)Tj
ET
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( A self-made man is one who believes in luck and sends his son to Oxf\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221House of All Nations\222 \(1938\) \221Credo\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.2124 Tm
( 7.159 Sir David Steel 1938\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Go back to your constituencies and prepare for government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.67047 Tm
(At the conclusion of the Liberal Party Assembly, Llandudno, 18 September\
1981; in \221The Times\222 19 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(September 1981)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.4624 Tm
( 7.160 Sir Richard Steele 1672-1729)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The insupportable labour of doing nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 579.92047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 54 \(2 May 1711\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 559.00456 Tm
( A woman seldom writes her mind but in her postscript.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 543.17047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 79 \(31 May 1711\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.25456 Tm
( We were in some little time fixed in our seats, and sat with that di\
slike which people not too )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(good-natured usually conceive of each other at first sight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.42047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 132 \(1 August 1711\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.50456 Tm
( There are so few who can grow old with a good grace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.67047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 263 \(1 January 1712\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 430.75456 Tm
( Will Honeycomb calls these over-offended ladies the outrageously vir\
tuous.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.92047 Tm
(\221The Spectator\222 no. 266 \(4 January 1712\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 394.00456 Tm
( It is to be noted that when any part of this paper appears dull ther\
e is a design in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.17047 Tm
(\221The Tatler\222 no. 38 \(7 July 1709\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.25456 Tm
( To love her is a liberal education.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.42047 Tm
(\221The Tatler\222 no. 49 \(2 August 1709\); referring to Lady Elizabeth\
Hastings)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.50456 Tm
( Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 304.67047 Tm
(\221The Tatler\222 no. 147 \(18 March 1710\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 283.75456 Tm
( It was very prettily said, that we may learn the little value of for\
tune by the persons on whom )Tj
T*
(heaven is pleased to bestow it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.92047 Tm
(\221The Tatler\222 no. 203 \(27 July 1710\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 217.7124 Tm
( 7.161 Lincoln Steffens 1866-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I have seen the future; and it works.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.17047 Tm
(Following a visit to the Soviet Union in 1919; letter to Marie Howe, 3 A\
pril 1919, in \221Letters\222 \(1938\) vol. 1, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(p. 463. John M. Thompson \221Russia, Bolshevism and the Versailles Treat\
y\222 \(1954\) p. 176, in which the US )Tj
T*
(diplomat with whom Steffens had been travelling recalls Steffens composi\
ng the expression even before he )Tj
T*
(had arrived in Russia)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 102.9624 Tm
( 7.162 Gertrude Stein 1874-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Remarks are not literature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.42047 Tm
(\221Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas\222 \(1933\) ch. 7 \(addressed to E\
rnest Hemingway\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.50456 Tm
( What was the use of my having come from Oakland...write about it if \
I like or anything if I like )Tj
ET
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(but not there, there is no there there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Everybody\222s Autobiography\222 \(1937\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Pigeons on the grass alas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Four Saints in Three Acts\222 \(1934\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( In the United States there is more space where nobody is than where \
anybody is. That is what )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(makes America what it is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Geographical History of America\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose, is a rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Sacred Emily\222 \(1913\) p. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( You are all a lost generation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(Referring to the young who served in World War I, the phrase having been\
borrowed \(in translation\) from a )Tj
T*
(French garage mechanic, whom she had heard address it disparagingly to a\
n incompetent apprentice. Ernest )Tj
T*
(Hemingway subsequently used it as the epigraph to \221The Sun Also Rises\
\222 \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( A village explainer, excellent if you were a village, but if you wer\
e not, not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(On Ezra Pound, in Janet Hobhouse \221Everyone who was Anybody\222 \(1975\
\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.2124 Tm
( 7.163 John Steinbeck 1902-68)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man, unlike any other thing organic or inorganic in the universe, gr\
ows beyond his work, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(walks up the stairs of his concepts, emerges ahead of his accomplishment\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(\221The Grapes of Wrath\222 \(1939\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.75456 Tm
( Okie use\222 ta mean you was from Oklahoma. Now it means you\222re a\
dirty son-of-a-bitch. Okie )Tj
T*
(means you\222re scum. Don\222t mean nothing itself, it\222s the way they\
say it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.92047 Tm
(\221The Grapes of Wrath\222 \(1939\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 330.7124 Tm
( 7.164 Gloria Steinem 1934\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We are becoming the men we wanted to marry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 293.17047 Tm
(\221Ms\222 July/August 1982)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 272.25456 Tm
( Outrageous acts and everyday rebellions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.42047 Tm
(Title of book)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.50456 Tm
( A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 187.4624 Tm
( 7.165 Sir James Fitzjames Stephen 1829-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The way in which the man of genius rules is by persuading an efficie\
nt minority to coerce an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(indifferent and self-indulgent majority.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.92047 Tm
(\221Liberty, Equality and Fraternity\222 \(1873\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 99.7124 Tm
( 7.166 J. K. Stephen 1859-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ah! Matt.: old age has brought to me)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thy wisdom, less thy certainty:)Tj
T*
( The world\222s a jest, and joy\222s a trinket:)Tj
ET
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( I knew that once: but now\227I think it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Senex to Matt. Prior\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Two voices are there: one is of the deep;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( It learns the storm-cloud\222s thunderous melody,)Tj
T*
( Now roars, now murmurs with the changing sea,)Tj
T*
( Now bird-like pipes, now closes soft in sleep:)Tj
T*
( And one is of an old half-witted sheep)Tj
T*
( Which bleats articulate monotony,)Tj
T*
( And indicates that two and one are three,)Tj
T*
( That grass is green, lakes damp, and mountains steep)Tj
T*
( And, Wordsworth, both are thine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221A Sonnet\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Will there never come a season)Tj
T*
( Which shall rid us from the curse)Tj
T*
( Of a prose which knows no reason)Tj
T*
( And an unmelodious verse...)Tj
T*
( When there stands a muzzled stripling,)Tj
T*
( Mute, beside a muzzled bore:)Tj
T*
( When the Rudyards cease from kipling)Tj
T*
( And the Haggards Ride no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.67047 Tm
(\221To R.K.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 361.4624 Tm
( 7.167 James Stephens 1882-1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Finality is death. Perfection is finality.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nothing is perfect. There are lumps in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 305.92047 Tm
(\221The Crock of Gold\222 \(1912\) bk. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.00456 Tm
( I hear a sudden cry of pain!)Tj
T*
( There is a rabbit in a snare:)Tj
T*
( Now I hear the cry again,)Tj
T*
( But I cannot tell from where....)Tj
T*
( Little one! Oh, little one!)Tj
T*
( I am searching everywhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.17047 Tm
(\221The Snare\222 \(1915\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 146.9624 Tm
( 7.168 Laurence Sterne 1713-68)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They order, said I, this matter better in France.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 109.42047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 88.50456 Tm
( As an Englishman does not travel to see Englishmen, I retired to my \
room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 72.67047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221Preface. In the Desobligeant\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 51.75456 Tm
( I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and cry, \222ti\
s all barren.)Tj
ET
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(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221In the Street. Calais\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( If I ever do a mean action, it must be in some interval betwixt one \
passion and another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221Montriul\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Vive l\222amour! et vive la bagatelle!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221The letter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Hail, ye small sweet courtesies of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221The Pulse. Paris\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( There are worse occupations in this world than feeling a woman\222s \
pulse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221The Pulse. Paris\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( God tempers the wind, said Maria, to the shorn lamb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221Maria\222 \(derived from a Fr\
ench proverb, but familiar in this form of words\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( Dear sensibility! source inexhausted of all that\222s precious in ou\
r joys, or costly in our sorrows!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221A Sentimental Journey\222 \(1768\) \221The Bourbonnois\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( I wish either my father or my mother, or indeed both of them, as the\
y were in duty both equally )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(bound to it, had minded what they were about when they begot me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 1, opening words)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( \221Pray, my dear,\222 quoth my mother, \221have you not forgot to w\
ind up the clock?\222\227\222Good G\227!\222 )Tj
T*
(cried my father, making an exclamation, but taking care to moderate his \
voice at the same time,)Tj
T*
(\227\222Did ever woman, since the creation of the world, interrupt a man\
with such a silly question?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.25456 Tm
( As we jog on, either laugh with me, or at me, or in short do anythin\
g,\227only keep your temper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Have not the wisest of men in all ages, not excepting Solomon himsel\
f,\227have they not had )Tj
T*
(their Hobby-Horses...and so long as a man rides his Hobby-Horse peaceabl\
y and quietly along )Tj
T*
(the King\222s highway, and neither compels you or me to get up behind hi\
m,\227pray, Sir, what have )Tj
T*
(either you or I to do with it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( He was in a few hours of giving his enemies the slip for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( \222Tis known by the name of perseverance in a good cause,\227and of\
obstinacy in a bad one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( What is the character of a family to an hypothesis? my father would \
reply.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( My uncle Toby would never offer to answer this by any other kind of \
argument, than that of )Tj
T*
(whistling half a dozen bars of Lillabullero.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( Digressions, incontestably, are the sunshine;\227they are the life, \
the soul of reading;\227take them )Tj
T*
(out of this book for instance,\227you might as well take the book along \
with them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( I should have no objection to this method, but that I think it must \
smell too strong of the lamp.)Tj
ET
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(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 1, ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 732.25456 Tm
( Writing, when properly managed \(as you may be sure I think mine is\)\
is but a different name )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for conversation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 2, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 677.50456 Tm
( \221I\222ll not hurt thee,\222 says my uncle Toby, rising from his c\
hair, and going across the room, with )Tj
T*
(the fly in his hand,\227\222I\222ll not hurt a hair of thy head:\227Go,\222\
says he, lifting up the sash, and )Tj
T*
(opening his hand as he spoke, to let it escape;\227\222go, poor devil, g\
et thee gone, why should I hurt )Tj
T*
(thee?\227This world surely is wide enough to hold both thee and me.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.75456 Tm
( Whenever a man talks loudly against religion,\227always suspect that\
it is not his reason, but his )Tj
T*
(passions which have got the better of his creed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 2, ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( It is the nature of an hypothesis, when once a man has conceived it,\
that it assimilates every )Tj
T*
(thing to itself, as proper nourishment; and, from the first moment of yo\
ur begetting it, it generally )Tj
T*
(grows the stronger by every thing you see, hear, read, or understand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 2, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.25456 Tm
( \221Our armies swore terribly in Flanders,\222 cried my uncle Toby,\227\
\222but nothing to this.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 3, ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.50456 Tm
( The corregiescity of Corregio.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 3, ch. 12.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.75456 Tm
( Of all the cants which are canted in this canting world,\227though t\
he cant of hypocrites may be )Tj
T*
(the worst,\227the cant of criticism is the most tormenting!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 3, ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.00456 Tm
( Is this a fit time, said my father to himself, to talk of Pensions a\
nd Grenadiers?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 4, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.25456 Tm
( True Shandeism, think what you will against it, opens the heart and \
lungs, and like all those )Tj
T*
(affections which partake of its nature, it forces the blood and other vi\
tal fluids of the body to run )Tj
T*
(freely through its channels, and makes the wheel of life run long and ch\
eerfully round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 4, ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.50456 Tm
( \221There is no terror, brother Toby, in its [death\222s] looks, but\
what it borrows from groans and )Tj
T*
(convulsions\227and the blowing of noses, and the wiping away of tears wi\
th the bottoms of )Tj
T*
(curtains, in a dying man\222s room\227Strip it of these, what is it?\222\
\227\222\222Tis better in battle than in bed\222, )Tj
T*
(said my uncle Toby.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 5, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( There is a North-west passage to the intellectual World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 5, ch. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( \221The poor soul will die:\227\222 \221He shall not die, by G\227\222\
, cried my uncle Toby.\227The Accusing )Tj
T*
(Spirit, which flew up to heaven\222s chancery with the oath, blushed as \
he gave it in;\227and the )Tj
T*
(Recording Angel, as he wrote it down, dropped a tear upon the word, and \
blotted it out for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 6, ch. 8)Tj
ET
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( To say a man is fallen in love,\227or that he is deeply in love,\227\
or up to the ears in love,\227and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sometimes even over head and ears in it,\227carries an idiomatical kind \
of implication, that love is )Tj
T*
(a thing below a man:\227this is recurring again to Plato\222s opinion, w\
hich, with all his divinityship,)Tj
T*
(\227I hold to be damnable and heretical:\227and so much for that. Let lo\
ve therefore be what it will,)Tj
T*
(\227my uncle Toby fell into it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 6, ch. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.50456 Tm
( My brother Toby, quoth she, is going to be married to Mrs Wadman.)Tj
T*
( Then he will never, quoth my father, lie diagonally in his bed again\
as long as he lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 6, ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.75456 Tm
( Now hang it! quoth I, as I look\222d towards the French coast\227a m\
an should know something of )Tj
T*
(his own country too, before he goes abroad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.92047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 7, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.00456 Tm
( \221A soldier,\222 cried my Uncle Toby, interrupting the corporal, \221\
is no more exempt from saying a )Tj
T*
(foolish thing, Trim, than a man of letters.\222\227\222But not so often,\
an\222 please your honour,\222 replied )Tj
T*
(the corporal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.17047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 8, ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.25456 Tm
( Everything presses on\227whilst thou art twisting that lock,\227see!\
it grows grey; and every time )Tj
T*
(I kiss thy hand to bid adieu, and every absence which follows it, are pr\
eludes to that eternal )Tj
T*
(separation which we are shortly to make.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.42047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 9, ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.50456 Tm
( \227d! said my mother, \221what is all this story about?\222)Tj
T*
( \227\222A Cock and a Bull,\222 said Yorick.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.67047 Tm
(\221Tristram Shandy\222 \(1759-67\) bk. 9, ch. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.75456 Tm
( This sad vicissitude of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.92047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 no. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.7124 Tm
( 7.169 Wallace Stevens 1879-1955)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The poet is the priest of the invisible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.17047 Tm
(\221Adagia\222 \(1957\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.25456 Tm
( I placed a jar in Tennessee,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And round it was, upon a hill.)Tj
T*
( It made the slovenly wilderness)Tj
T*
( Surround that hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.42047 Tm
(\221Anecdote of the Jar\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.50456 Tm
( The prologues are over. It is a question, now)Tj
T*
( Of final belief, So, say that final belief)Tj
T*
( Must be in a fiction. It is time to choose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.67047 Tm
(\221Asides on the Oboe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.75456 Tm
( Chieftain Iffucan of Azcan in caftan)Tj
T*
( Of tan with henna hackles, halt!)Tj
ET
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(\221Bantams in Pine Woods\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Only, here and there, an old sailor,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Drunk and asleep in his boots,)Tj
T*
( Catches tigers)Tj
T*
( In red weather.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Disillusionment of Ten O\222Clock\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Call the roller of big cigars,)Tj
T*
( The muscular one, and bid him whip)Tj
T*
( In kitchen cups concupiscent curds.)Tj
T*
( Let the wenches dawdle in such dress)Tj
T*
( As they are used to wear, and let the boys)Tj
T*
( Bring flowers in last month\222s newspapers.)Tj
T*
( Let be be finale of seem.)Tj
T*
( The only emperor is the emperor of ice-cream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Emperor of Ice-Cream\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Frogs Eat Butterflies. Snakes Eat Frogs.)Tj
T*
( Hogs Eat Snakes. Men Eat Hogs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(Title of poem \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Poetry is the supreme fiction, madame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221A High-Toned old Christian Woman\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( Oh! Blessed rage for order, pale Ram\363n,)Tj
T*
( The maker\222s rage to order words of the sea,)Tj
T*
( Words of the fragrant portals, dimly starred,)Tj
T*
( And of ourselves and of our origins,)Tj
T*
( In ghostlier demarcations, keener sounds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221The Idea of Order at Key West\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( They will get it straight one day at the Sorbonne.)Tj
T*
( We shall return at twilight from the lecture)Tj
T*
( Pleased that the irrational is rational.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221It must give Pleasure\222 \(1942\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( The man bent over his guitar,)Tj
T*
( A shearsman of sorts. The day was green.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( They said, \221You have a blue guitar,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You do not play things as they are.\222)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( The man replied, \221Things as they are)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Are changed upon the blue guitar.\222)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.42047 Tm
(\221The Man with the Blue Guitar\222 \(1937\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.50456 Tm
( Twenty men crossing a bridge,)Tj
T*
( Into a village,)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Are twenty men crossing twenty bridges,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Into twenty villages,)Tj
T*
( Or one man)Tj
T*
( Crossing a single bridge into a village.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Metaphors of a Magnifico\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( The inconceivable idea of the sun.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( You must become an ignorant man again)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And see the sun again with an ignorant eye)Tj
T*
( And see it clearly in the idea of it.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.67047 Tm
(\221Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction\222 \(1947\) \221It Must Be Abstract\222\
no. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 567.75456 Tm
( The palm at the end of the mind,)Tj
T*
( Beyond the last thought, rises...)Tj
T*
( A gold-feathered bird)Tj
T*
( Sings in the palm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221Of Mere Being\222 \(1957\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( We keep coming back and coming back)Tj
T*
( To the real: to the hotel instead of the hymns)Tj
T*
( That fall upon it out of the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221An Ordinary Evening in New Haven\222 \(1950\) no. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( A more severe,)Tj
T*
( More harassing master would extemporize)Tj
T*
( Subtler, more urgent proof that the theory)Tj
T*
( Of poetry is the theory of life,)Tj
T*
( As it is, in the intricate evasions of as,)Tj
T*
( In things seen and unseen, created from nothingness,)Tj
T*
( The heavens, the hells, the worlds,the longed-for lands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221An Ordinary Evening in New Haven\222 \(1950\) no. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Just as my fingers on these keys)Tj
T*
( Make music, so the self-same sounds)Tj
T*
( On my spirit make a music, too.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Music is feeling, then, not sound;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And thus it is that what I feel,)Tj
T*
( Here in this room, desiring you,)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Thinking of your blue-shadowed silk,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is music.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Quince at the Clavier\222 \(1923\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.25456 Tm
( Beauty is momentary in the mind\227)Tj
T*
( The fitful tracing of a portal;)Tj
T*
( But in the flesh it is immortal.)Tj
ET
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( The body dies; the body\222s beauty lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Quince at the Clavier\222 \(1923\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Susanna\222s music touched the bawdy strings)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of those white elders; but, escaping,)Tj
T*
( Left only Death\222s ironic scraping.)Tj
T*
( Now, in its immortality, it plays)Tj
T*
( On the clear viol of her memory,)Tj
T*
( And makes a constant sacrament of praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Peter Quince at the Clavier\222 \(1923\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Complacencies of the peignoir, and late)Tj
T*
( Coffee and oranges in a sunny chair,)Tj
T*
( And the green freedom of a cockatoo)Tj
T*
( Upon a rug mingle to dissipate)Tj
T*
( The holy hush of ancient sacrifice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Sunday Morning, I\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( We live in an old chaos of the sun,)Tj
T*
( Or old dependency of day and night,)Tj
T*
( Or island solitude, unsponsored, free,)Tj
T*
( Of that wide water, inescapable.)Tj
T*
( Deers walk upon our mountains, and the quail)Tj
T*
( Whistle about us their spontaneous cries;)Tj
T*
( Sweet berries ripen in the wilderness;)Tj
T*
( And, in the isolation of the sky,)Tj
T*
( At evening, casual flocks of pigeons make)Tj
T*
( Ambiguous undulations as they sink,)Tj
T*
( Downward to darkness, on extended wings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221Sunday Morning, I\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( I do not know which to prefer,)Tj
T*
( The beauty of inflections)Tj
T*
( Or the beauty of innuendoes,)Tj
T*
( The blackbird whistling)Tj
T*
( Or just after.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird\222 \(1923\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( What makes the poet the potent figure that he is, or was, or ought t\
o be, is that he creates the )Tj
T*
(world to which we turn incessantly and without knowing it and that he gi\
ves to life the supreme )Tj
T*
(fictions without which we are unable to conceive of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221The Noble Rider and the Sound of Words\222 \(1942\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 71.2124 Tm
( 7.170 Adlai Stevenson 1900-65)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I suppose flattery hurts no one, that is, if he doesn\222t inhale.)Tj
ET
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(Television broadcast, 30 March 1952, in N. F. Busch \221Adlai E. Stevens\
on\222 \(1952\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( If they [the Republicans] will stop telling lies about the Democrats\
, we will stop telling the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(truth about them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Speech during 1952 presidential campaign, in J. B. Martin \221Adlai Stev\
enson and Illinois\222 \(1976\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Let\222s talk sense to the American people. Let\222s tell them the t\
ruth, that there are no gains )Tj
T*
(without pains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(Speech of Acceptance at the Democratic National Convention, Chicago, Ill\
inois, 26 July 1952, in \221Speeches )Tj
T*
(of Adlai Stevenson\222 \(1952\) p. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.75456 Tm
( A hungry man is not a free man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.92047 Tm
(Speech at Kasson, Minnesota, 6 September 1952, in \221Speeches of Adlai \
Stevenson\222 \(1952\) \221Farm Policy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.00456 Tm
( There is no evil in the atom; only in men\222s souls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.17047 Tm
(Speech at Hartford, Connecticut, 18 September 1952, in \221Speeches of A\
dlai Stevenson\222 \(1952\) \221The Atomic )Tj
T*
(Future\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( In America any boy may become President.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(Speech in Indianapolis, 26 September 1952, in \221Major Campaign Speeche\
s of Adlai E. Stevenson; )Tj
T*
(1952\222 \(1953\) p. 174)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 469.50456 Tm
( A free society is a society where it is safe to be unpopular.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.67047 Tm
(Speech in Detroit, 7 October 1952, in \221Major Campaign Speeches of Adl\
ai E. Stevenson; 1952\222 \(1953\) p. 218)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.75456 Tm
( The Republican party did not have to accept the voice of the Senator\
from Wisconsin nor )Tj
T*
(encourage the excesses of its Vice-Presidential nominee [Richard Nixon]\227\
the young man who )Tj
T*
(asks you to set him one heart-beat from the Presidency of the United Sta\
tes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(Speech at Cleveland, Ohio, 23 October 1952, in \221New York Times\222 24\
October 1952, p. 14 \(commonly )Tj
T*
(quoted: \221just a heart-beat away...\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 345.00456 Tm
( A funny thing happened to me on the way to the White House.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.17047 Tm
(Speech in Washington, 13 December 1952, following his defeat in the Pres\
idential election, in Alden )Tj
T*
(Whitman \221Portrait: Adlai E. Stevenson\222 \(1965\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.25456 Tm
( We hear the Secretary of State [John Foster Dulles] boasting of his \
brinkmanship\227the art of )Tj
T*
(bringing us to the edge of the abyss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(Speech in Hartford, Connecticut, 25 February 1956, in \221New York Times\
\222 26 February 1956, p. 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.50456 Tm
( She [Eleanor Roosevelt] would rather light a candle than curse the d\
arkness, and her glow has )Tj
T*
(warmed the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(On learning of Mrs Roosevelt\222s death, in \221New York Times\222 8 Nov\
ember 1962)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 172.4624 Tm
( 7.171 Anne Stevenson 1933\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Blackbirds are the cellos of the deep farms.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Green Mountain, Black Mountain\222 \(1982\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 102.7124 Tm
( 7.172 Robert Louis Stevenson 1850-94)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The harmless art of knucklebones has seen the fall of the Roman empi\
re and the rise of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(United States.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.17047 Tm
(\221Across the Plains\222 \(1892\) \221The Lantern-Bearers\222 pt. 1)Tj
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( The bright face of danger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Across the Plains\222 \(1892\) \221The Lantern-Bearers\222 pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Every one lives by selling something.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Across the Plains\222 \(1892\) \221Beggars\222 pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( A mortified appetite is never a wise companion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Across the Plains\222 \(1892\) \221A Christmas Sermon\222 pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Here lies one who meant well, tried a little, failed much:\227surely\
that may be his epitaph, of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which he need not be ashamed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Across the Plains\222 \(1892\) \221A Christmas Sermon\222 pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Politics is perhaps the only profession for which no preparation is \
thought necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Familiar Studies of Men and Books\222 \(1882\) \221Yoshida-Torajiro\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( Am I no a bonny fighter?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Kidnapped\222 \(1886\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( I\222ve a grand memory for forgetting, David.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221Kidnapped\222 \(1886\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( I have thus played the sedulous ape to Hazlitt, to Lamb, to Wordswor\
th, to Sir Thomas )Tj
T*
(Browne, to Defoe, to Hawthorne, to Montaigne, to Baudelaire and to Oberm\
ann.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.92047 Tm
(\221Memories and Portraits\222 \(1887\) ch. 4 \221A College Magazine\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.00456 Tm
( He who was prepared to help the escaping murderer or to embrace the \
impenitent thief, found, )Tj
T*
(to the overthrow of all his logic, that he objected to the use of dynami\
te.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221More New Arabian Nights: The Dynamiter\222 \(1885\) \221The Superflu\
ous Mansion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( These are my politics: to change what we can; to better what we can;\
but still to bear in mind )Tj
T*
(that man is but a devil weakly fettered by some generous beliefs and imp\
ositions; and for no )Tj
T*
(word however sounding, and no cause however just and pious, to relax the\
stricture of these )Tj
T*
(bonds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221More New Arabian Nights: The Dynamiter\222 \(1885\) \221Epilogue of \
the Cigar Divan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( The devil, depend upon it, can sometimes do a very gentlemanly thing\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221The New Arabian Nights\222 \(1882\) \221The Suicide Club: Story of t\
he Young Man with the Cream Tarts\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( I regard you with an indifference closely bordering on aversion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221The New Arabian Nights\222 \(1882\) \221The Rajah\222s Diamond: Stor\
y of the Bandbox\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( The web, then, or the pattern, a web at once sensuous and logical, a\
n elegant and pregnant )Tj
T*
(texture: that is style, that is the foundation of the art of literature.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221On some technical Elements of Style in Literature\222 \(1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for tr\
avel\222s sake. The great affair is )Tj
T*
(to move.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Travels with a Donkey\222 \(1879\) \221Cheylard and Luc\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( I own I like definite form in what my eyes are to rest upon; and if \
landscapes were sold, like )Tj
T*
(the sheets of characters of my boyhood, one penny plain and twopence col\
oured, I should go the )Tj
T*
(length of twopence every day of my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Travels with a Donkey\222 \(1879\) \221Father Apollinaris\222)Tj
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( A faddling hedonist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Travels with a Donkey\222 \(1879\) \221The Boarders\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( Fifteen men on the dead man\222s chest)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!)Tj
T*
( Drink and the devil had done for the rest\227)Tj
T*
( Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221Treasure Island\222 \(1883\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Tip me the black spot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221Treasure Island\222 \(1883\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.50456 Tm
( Many\222s the long night I\222ve dreamed of cheese\227toasted, mostl\
y.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.67047 Tm
(\221Treasure Island\222 \(1883\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.75456 Tm
( Even if the doctor does not give you a year, even if he hesitates ab\
out a month, make one brave )Tj
T*
(push and see what can be accomplished in a week.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Aes Triplex\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.00456 Tm
( There is no duty we so much underrate as the duty of being happy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.17047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221An Apology for Idlers\222)Tj
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( He sows hurry and reaps indigestion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 443.42047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221An Apology for Idlers\222)Tj
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( Old and young, we are all on our last cruise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.67047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Crabbed Age and Youth\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.75456 Tm
( To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive, and the true s\
uccess is to labour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.92047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221El Dorado\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.00456 Tm
( In marriage, a man becomes slack and selfish, and undergoes a fatty \
degeneration of his moral )Tj
T*
(being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.17047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 294.25456 Tm
( Even if we take matrimony at its lowest, even if we regard it as no \
more than a sort of )Tj
T*
(friendship recognised by the police.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.42047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.50456 Tm
( A little amateur painting in water-colours shows the innocent and qu\
iet mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 223.67047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.75456 Tm
( Lastly \(and this is, perhaps, the golden rule\), no woman should ma\
rry a teetotaller, or a man )Tj
T*
(who does not smoke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.92047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.00456 Tm
( Marriage is a step so grave and decisive that it attracts light-head\
ed, variable men by its very )Tj
T*
(awfulness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.17047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.25456 Tm
( Marriage is like life in this\227that it is a field of battle, and n\
ot a bed of roses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.42047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 1\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 56.50456 Tm
( To marry is to domesticate the Recording Angel. Once you are married\
, there is nothing left for )Tj
T*
(you, not even suicide, but to be good.)Tj
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(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 2\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 731.75456 Tm
( Man is a creature who lives not upon bread alone, but principally by\
catchwords.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.92047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 2\222\
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15 0 0 15 10 695.00456 Tm
( The cruellest lies are often told in silence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.17047 Tm
(\221Virginibus Puerisque\222 \(1881\) \221Virginibus Puerisque, pt. 4: T\
ruth of Intercourse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.25456 Tm
( What hangs people...is the unfortunate circumstance of guilt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.42047 Tm
(\221The Wrong Box\222 \(with Lloyd Osbourne, 1889\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.50456 Tm
( Nothing like a little judicious levity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 605.67047 Tm
(\221The Wrong Box\222 \(with Lloyd Osbourne, 1889\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 584.75456 Tm
( Between the possibility of being hanged in all innocence, and the ce\
rtainty of a public and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(merited disgrace, no gentleman of spirit could long hesitate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 550.92047 Tm
(\221The Wrong Box\222 \(with Lloyd Osbourne, 1889\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 530.00456 Tm
( I believe in an ultimate decency of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.17047 Tm
(Letter to Sidney Colvin, 23 August 1893, in Sidney Colvin \(ed.\) \221T\
he Letters of Robert Louis )Tj
T*
(Stevenson\222 \(1911\) vol. 4, p. 211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.25456 Tm
( In winter I get up at night)Tj
T*
( And dress by yellow candle-light.)Tj
T*
( In summer, quite the other way,\227)Tj
T*
( I have to go to bed by day.)Tj
T*
( I have to go to bed and see)Tj
T*
( The birds still hopping on the tree,)Tj
T*
( Or hear the grown-up people\222s feet)Tj
T*
( Still going past me in the street.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.42047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Bed in Summmer\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.50456 Tm
( The world is so full of a number of things,)Tj
T*
( I\222m sure we should all be as happy as kings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.67047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Happy Thought\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.75456 Tm
( When I was sick and lay a-bed,)Tj
T*
( I had two pillows at my head,)Tj
T*
( And all my toys beside me lay)Tj
T*
( To keep me happy all the day...)Tj
T*
( I was the giant great and still)Tj
T*
( That sits upon the pillow-hill,)Tj
T*
( And sees before him, dale and plain,)Tj
T*
( The pleasant land of counterpane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.92047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221The Land of Counterpa\
ne\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.00456 Tm
( When I am grown to man\222s estate)Tj
T*
( I shall be very proud and great,)Tj
T*
( And tell the other girls and boys)Tj
T*
( Not to meddle with my toys.)Tj
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(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Looking Forward\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Must we to bed indeed? Well then,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let us arise and go like men,)Tj
T*
( And face with an undaunted tread)Tj
T*
( The long black passage up to bed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221North-West Passage. G\
ood-Night\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The child that is not clean and neat,)Tj
T*
( With lots of toys and things to eat,)Tj
T*
( He is a naughty child, I\222m sure\227)Tj
T*
( Or else his dear papa is poor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221System\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( A birdie with a yellow bill)Tj
T*
( Hopped upon the window-sill,)Tj
T*
( Cocked his shining eye and said:)Tj
T*
( \222Ain\222t you \222shamed, you sleepy-head?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Time to Rise\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( A child should always say what\222s true,)Tj
T*
( And speak when he is spoken to,)Tj
T*
( And behave mannerly at table:)Tj
T*
( At least as far as he is able.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Whole Duty of Childre\
n\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( Whenever the moon and stars are set,)Tj
T*
( Whenever the wind is high,)Tj
T*
( All night long in the dark and wet,)Tj
T*
( A man goes riding by.)Tj
T*
( Late in the night when the fires are out,)Tj
T*
( Why does he gallop and gallop about?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Garden of Verses\222 \(1885\) \221Windy Nights\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( But all that I could think of, in the darkness and the cold,)Tj
T*
( Was that I was leaving home and my folks were growing old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.67047 Tm
(\221Christmas at Sea\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.75456 Tm
( Give to me the life I love,)Tj
T*
( Let the lave go by me,)Tj
T*
( Give the jolly heaven above)Tj
T*
( And the byway nigh me.)Tj
T*
( Bed in the bush with stars to see,)Tj
T*
( Bread I dip in the river\227)Tj
T*
( There\222s the life for a man like me,)Tj
T*
( There\222s the life for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221The Vagabond\222)Tj
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( Let the blow fall soon or late,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Let what will be o\222er me;)Tj
T*
( Give the face of earth around)Tj
T*
( And the road before me.)Tj
T*
( Wealth I seek not, hope nor love,)Tj
T*
( Nor a friend to know me;)Tj
T*
( All I seek, the heaven above)Tj
T*
( And the road below me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 611.17047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221The Vagabond\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( I will make you brooches and toys for your delight)Tj
T*
( Of bird-song at morning and star-shine at night.)Tj
T*
( I will make a palace fit for you and me)Tj
T*
( Of green days in forests and blue days at sea.)Tj
T*
( I will make my kitchen, and you shall keep your room,)Tj
T*
( Where white flows the river and bright blows the broom,)Tj
T*
( And you shall wash your linen and keep your body white)Tj
T*
( In rainfall at morning and dewfall at night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221I will make you brooches and toys f\
or your delight\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( In the highlands, in the country places,)Tj
T*
( Where the old plain men have rosy faces,)Tj
T*
( And the young fair maidens)Tj
T*
( Quiet eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 357.67047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221In the highlands, in the country pl\
aces\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( Trusty, dusky, vivid, true,)Tj
T*
( With eyes of gold and bramble-dew,)Tj
T*
( Steel-true and blade-straight,)Tj
T*
( The great artificer)Tj
T*
( Made my mate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221My Wife\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Sing me a song of a lad that is gone,)Tj
T*
( Say, could that lad be I?)Tj
T*
( Merry of soul he sailed on a day)Tj
T*
( Over the sea to Skye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.17047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221Sing me a song of a lad that is gon\
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15 0 0 15 10 137.25456 Tm
( Be it granted to me to behold you again in dying,)Tj
T*
( Hills of home! and to hear again the call;)Tj
T*
( Hear about the graves of the martyrs the peewees crying,)Tj
T*
( And hear no more at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.42047 Tm
(\221Songs of Travel\222 \(1896\) \221To S.R. Crockett\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 46.50456 Tm
( Of all my verse, like not a single line;)Tj
ET
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( But like my title, for it is not mine.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That title from a better man I stole;)Tj
T*
( Ah, how much better, had I stol\222n the whole!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Underwoods\222 \(1887\) foreword.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Go, little book, and wish to all)Tj
T*
( Flowers in the garden, meat in the hall,)Tj
T*
( A bin of wine, a spice of wit,)Tj
T*
( A house with lawns enclosing it,)Tj
T*
( A living river by the door,)Tj
T*
( A nightingale in the sycamore!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Underwoods\222 \(1887\) \221Envoy\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( The gauger walked with willing foot,)Tj
T*
( And aye the gauger played the flute;)Tj
T*
( And what should Master Gauger play)Tj
T*
( But \221Over the hills and far away\222?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Underwoods\222 \(1887\) \221A Song of the Road\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Under the wide and starry sky)Tj
T*
( Dig the grave and let me lie.)Tj
T*
( Glad did I live and gladly die,)Tj
T*
( And I laid me down with a will.)Tj
T*
( This be the verse you grave for me:)Tj
T*
( \221Here he lies where he longed to be;)Tj
T*
( Home is the sailor, home from sea,)Tj
T*
( And the hunter home from the hill.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.92047 Tm
(\221Underwoods\222 \(1887\) \221Requiem\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.00456 Tm
( If I have faltered more or less)Tj
T*
( In my great task of happiness;)Tj
T*
( If I have moved among my race)Tj
T*
( And shown no glorious morning face;)Tj
T*
( If beams from happy human eyes)Tj
T*
( Have moved me not; if morning skies,)Tj
T*
( Books, and my food, and summer rain)Tj
T*
( Knocked on my sullen heart in vain:\227)Tj
T*
( Lord, thy most pointed pleasure take)Tj
T*
( And stab my spirit broad awake;)Tj
T*
( Or, Lord, if too obdurate I,)Tj
T*
( Choose thou, before that spirit die,)Tj
T*
( A piercing pain, a killing sin,)Tj
T*
( And to my dead heart run them in!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221Underwoods\222 \(1887\) \221The Celestial Surgeon\222)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 747.9624 Tm
( 7.173 Caskie Stinnett 1911\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A diplomat...is a person who can tell you to go to hell in such a wa\
y that you actually look )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(forward to the trip.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 692.42047 Tm
(\221Out of the Red\222 \(1960\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 660.2124 Tm
( 7.174 Tom Stoppard 1937\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s not the voting that\222s democracy, it\222s the counting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 622.67047 Tm
(\221Jumpers\222 \(1972\) act 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 601.75456 Tm
( The House of Lords, an illusion to which I have never been able to s\
ubscribe\227responsibility )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(without power, the prerogative of the eunuch throughout the ages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 567.92047 Tm
(\221Lord Malquist and Mr Moon\222 \(1966\) pt. 6.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 547.00456 Tm
( A foreign correspondent is someone who lives in foreign parts and co\
rresponds, usually in the )Tj
T*
(form of essays containing no new facts. Otherwise he\222s someone who fl\
ies around from hotel to )Tj
T*
(hotel and thinks that the most interesting thing about any story is the \
fact that he has arrived to )Tj
T*
(cover it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 477.17047 Tm
(\221Night and Day\222 \(1978\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 456.25456 Tm
( The media. It sounds like a convention of spiritualists.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.42047 Tm
(\221Night and Day\222 \(1978\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 419.50456 Tm
( I\222m with you on the free press. It\222s the newspapers I can\222t\
stand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.67047 Tm
(\221Night and Day\222 \(1978\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 382.75456 Tm
( Comment is free but facts are on expenses.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 366.92047 Tm
(\221Night and Day\222 \(1978\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 346.00456 Tm
( You\222re familiar with the tragedies of antiquity, are you? The gre\
at homicidal classics?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.17047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.25456 Tm
( All your life you live so close to truth, it becomes a permanent blu\
r in the corner of your eye, )Tj
T*
(and when something nudges it into outline it is like being ambushed by a\
grotesque.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.42047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 254.50456 Tm
( I can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and I can do you b\
lood and rhetoric without )Tj
T*
(the love, and I can do you all three concurrent or consecutive, but I ca\
n\222t do you love and rhetoric )Tj
T*
(without the blood. Blood is compulsory\227they\222re all blood, you see.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.67047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.75456 Tm
( Eternity\222s a terrible thought. I mean, where\222s it all going to\
end?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.92047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 145.00456 Tm
( The bad end unhappily, the good unluckily. That is what tragedy mean\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.17047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 2.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.25456 Tm
( Life is a gamble at terrible odds\227if it was a bet, you wouldn\222\
t take it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.42047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.50456 Tm
( Death is not anything...death is not...It\222s the absence of presen\
ce, nothing more...the endless )Tj
T*
(time of never coming back...a gap you can\222t see, and when the wind bl\
ows through it, it makes no )Tj
ET
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(sound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\222 \(1967\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( War is capitalism with the gloves off and many who go to war know it\
but they go to war )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(because they don\222t want to be a hero.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Travesties\222 \(1975\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 7.175 Harriet Beecher Stowe 1811-96)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Never was born!\222 persisted Topsy; \221never had no father, no\
r mother, nor nothin\222. I was raised )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(by a speculator.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221Uncle Tom\222s Cabin\222 \(1852\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 573.75456 Tm
( Don\222t think nobody never made me. I \222spect I growed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(\221Uncle Tom\222s Cabin\222 \(1852\) ch. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.7124 Tm
( 7.176 Lord Stowell 1745-1836)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The elegant simplicity of the three per cents.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(In Lord Campbell \221Lives of the Lord Chancellors\222 \(1857\) vol. 10,\
ch. 212.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( A precedent embalms a principle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 451.42047 Tm
(An opinion, while Advocate-General, 1788; attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 419.2124 Tm
( 7.177 Lytton Strachey 1880-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Francis Bacon has been described more than once with the crude vigou\
r of antithesis...He was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(not striped frieze; he was shot silk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(\221Elizabeth and Essex\222 \(1928\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 342.75456 Tm
( Ignorance is the first requisite of the historian\227ignorance, whic\
h simplifies and clarifies, )Tj
T*
(which selects and omits, with a placid perfection unattainable by the hi\
ghest art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.92047 Tm
(\221Eminent Victorians\222 \(1918\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.00456 Tm
( Was it he who had been supple and yielding? he who had won by art wh\
at he could never have )Tj
T*
(won by force, and who had managed, so to speak, to be one of the leaders\
of the procession less )Tj
T*
(through merit than through a superior faculty for gliding adroitly to th\
e front rank?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.17047 Tm
(\221Eminent Victorians\222 \(1918\) \221Cardinal Manning\222 introductio\
n)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 215.25456 Tm
( The time was out of joint, and he was only too delighted to have bee\
n born to set it right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221Eminent Victorians\222 \(1918\) \221Cardinal Manning\222 pt. 2 \(ref\
erring to Hurrell Froude\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( Her conception of God was certainly not orthodox. She felt towards H\
im as she might have felt )Tj
T*
(towards a glorified sanitary engineer; and in some of her speculations s\
he seems hardly to )Tj
T*
(distinguish between the Deity and the Drains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.67047 Tm
(\221Eminent Victorians\222 \(1918\) \221Florence Nightingale\222 pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 105.75456 Tm
( [Chairman of military tribunal:] What would you do if you saw a Ger\
man soldier trying to )Tj
T*
(violate your sister?)Tj
T*
( [Strachey:] I would try to get between them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(In Robert Graves \221Good-bye to All That\222 \(1929\) ch. 23 \(otherwis\
e quoted \221I should interpose my body\222\))Tj
ET
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( Discretion is not the better part of biography.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In Michael Holroyd \221Lytton Strachey\222 vol. 1 \(1967\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The verses, when they were written, resembled nothing so much as spo\
onfuls of boiling oil, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(ladled out by a fiendish monkey at an upstairs window upon such passers-\
by whom the wretch )Tj
T*
(had a grudge against.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Leslie Stephen Lecture 1925\222 \221On Alexander Pope\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( The really interesting question is always the particular one, though\
it\222s always the general one )Tj
T*
(that it\222s possible to discuss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Really Interesting Question\222 title essay)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( If this is dying, then I don\222t think much of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(On his deathbed, in Michael Holroyd \221Lytton Strachey\222 vol. 2 \(196\
8\) pt. 2, ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.7124 Tm
( 7.178 Igor Stravinsky 1882-1971)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Tradition is entirely different from habit, even from an excellent h\
abit, since habit is by )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(definition an unconscious acquisition and tends to become mechanical, wh\
ereas tradition results )Tj
T*
(from a conscious and deliberate acceptance...Tradition presupposes the r\
eality of what endures.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Poetics of Music\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 446.25456 Tm
( Conductors\222 careers are made for the most part with \221romantic\222\
music. \221Classic\222 music )Tj
T*
(eliminates the conductor; we do not remember him in it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 412.42047 Tm
(In Robert Craft \221Conversations with Igor Stravinsky\222 \(1958\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.50456 Tm
( Academism results when the reasons for the rule change, but not the \
rule.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(In Robert Craft \221Conversations with Igor Stravinsky\222 \(1958\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 343.4624 Tm
( 7.179 William Stubbs 1825-1901)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Froude informs the Scottish youth)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That parsons do not care for truth.)Tj
T*
( The Reverend Canon Kingsley cries)Tj
T*
( History is a pack of lies.)Tj
T*
( What cause for judgements so malign?)Tj
T*
( A brief reflection solves the mystery\227)Tj
T*
( Froude believes Kingsley a divine,)Tj
T*
( And Kingsley goes to Froude for history.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.92047 Tm
(Letter to J. R. Green, 17 December 1871, in \221Letters of Stubbs\222 \(\
1904\) p. 162)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 147.7124 Tm
( 7.180 G. A. Studdert Kennedy 1883-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Waste of Muscle, waste of Brain,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Waste of Patience, waste of Pain,)Tj
T*
( Waste of Manhood, waste of Health,)Tj
T*
( Waste of Beauty, waste of Wealth,)Tj
T*
( Waste of Blood, and waste of Tears,)Tj
ET
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( Waste of youth\222s most precious years,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Waste of ways the saints have trod,)Tj
T*
( Waste of Glory, waste of God,)Tj
T*
( War!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221More Rough Rhymes of a Padre\222 by \221Woodbine Willie\222 \(1919\)\
\221Waste\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( When Jesus came to Golgotha they hanged Him on a tree,)Tj
T*
( They drave great nails through hands and feet, and made a Calvary.)Tj
T*
( They crowned Him with a crown of thorns, red were His wounds and dee\
p,)Tj
T*
( For those were crude and cruel days, and human flesh was cheap.)Tj
T*
( When Jesus came to Birmingham they simply passed Him by,)Tj
T*
( They never hurt a hair of Him, they only let Him die.)Tj
T*
( For men had grown more tender and they would not give Him pain,)Tj
T*
( They only just passed down the street, and left Him in the rain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.42047 Tm
(\221Peace Rhymes of a Padre\222 \(1921\) \221Indifference\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 488.2124 Tm
( 7.181 Sir John Suckling 1609-42)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Why so pale and wan, fond lover?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Prithee, why so pale?)Tj
T*
( Will, when looking well can\222t move her,)Tj
T*
( Looking ill prevail?)Tj
T*
( Prithee, why so pale?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 378.67047 Tm
(\221Aglaura\222 \(1637\) act 4, sc. 1, song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 357.75456 Tm
( Quit, quit, for shame, this will not move:)Tj
T*
( This cannot take her.)Tj
T*
( If of herself she will not love,)Tj
T*
( Nothing can make her:)Tj
T*
( The devil take her!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221Aglaura\222 \(1637\) act 4, sc. 1, song)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( Her feet beneath her petticoat,)Tj
T*
( Like little mice, stole in and out,)Tj
T*
( As if they feared the light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.17047 Tm
(\221A Ballad upon a Wedding\222 \(1646\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 176.25456 Tm
( For streaks of red were mingled there,)Tj
T*
( Such as are on a Catherine pear)Tj
T*
( \(The side that\222s next the sun\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.42047 Tm
(\221A Ballad upon a Wedding\222 \(1646\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.50456 Tm
( Her lips were red, and one was thin,)Tj
T*
( Compared to that was next her chin)Tj
T*
( \(Some bee had stung it newly\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(\221A Ballad upon a Wedding\222 \(1646\) st. 11)Tj
ET
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( At length the candle\222s out, and now)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All that they had not done they do:)Tj
T*
( What that is, who can tell?)Tj
T*
( But I believe it was no more)Tj
T*
( Than thou and I have done before)Tj
T*
( With Bridget, and with Nell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 647.17047 Tm
(\221A Ballad upon a Wedding\222 \(1646\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 626.25456 Tm
( Out upon it, I have loved)Tj
T*
( Three whole days together;)Tj
T*
( And am like to love three more,)Tj
T*
( If it prove fair weather.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Time shall moult away his wings,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( In the whole wide world again)Tj
T*
( Such a constant lover.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221A Poem with the Answer\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( Had it any been but she,)Tj
T*
( And that very face,)Tj
T*
( There had been at least ere this)Tj
T*
( A dozen dozen in her place.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221A Poem with the Answer\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 357.7124 Tm
( 7.182 Louis Henri Sullivan 1856-1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Form ever follows function.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered\222 \(1896\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 287.9624 Tm
( 7.183 Terry Sullivan)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( She sells sea-shells on the sea-shore,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The shells she sells are sea-shells, I\222m sure,)Tj
T*
( For if she sells sea-shells on the sea-shore,)Tj
T*
( Then I\222m sure she sells sea-shore shells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 196.42047 Tm
(\221She Sells Sea-Shells\222 \(1908 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 164.2124 Tm
( 7.184 Maximilien de B\350thune, Duc de Sully 1559-1641)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Labourage et p\342turage sont les deux mamelles dont la France est a\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Tilling and grazing are the two breasts by which France is fed.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221Economies Royales\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Les Anglais s\222amusent tristement selon l\222usage de leur pays.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The English take their pleasures sadly after the fashion of their co\
untry.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs\222 \(c.1630\))Tj
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( 7.185 Arthur Hays Sulzberger 1891-1968)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We tell the public which way the cat is jumping. The public will tak\
e care of the cat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 706.67047 Tm
(On journalism, in \221Time\222 8 May 1950)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 674.4624 Tm
( 7.186 Edith Summerskill 1901-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The housewife is the Cinderella of the affluent state...She is wholl\
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0 -1.2 TD
(an individual to give her money for the essentials of life. If she compl\
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T*
(nagging is the repetition of unpalatable truths.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 600.92047 Tm
(Speech to the Married Women\222s Association, House of Commons, 14 July \
1960; in \221The Times\222 15 July 1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 568.7124 Tm
( 7.187 Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey c.1517-47)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Martial, the things for to attain)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The happy life be these, I find:)Tj
T*
( The riches left, not got with pain;)Tj
T*
( The fruitful ground, the quiet mind;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
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0 -1.2 TD
( No charge of rule, nor governance;)Tj
T*
( Without disease the healthful life;)Tj
T*
( The household of continuance.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.42047 Tm
(\221The Happy Life\222 \(1547\); translation of Martial\222s \221Epigram\
s\222 bk. 10, no. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.50456 Tm
( The chaste wife, wise, without debate;)Tj
T*
( Such sleeps as may beguile the night;)Tj
T*
( Contented with thine own estate;)Tj
T*
( Neither wish death nor fear his might.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.67047 Tm
(\221The Happy Life\222 \(1547\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.4624 Tm
( 7.188 R. S. Surtees 1803-64)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( More people are flattered into virtue than bullied out of vice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(\221The Analysis of the Hunting Field\222 \(1846\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.00456 Tm
( The only infallible rule we know is, that the man who is always talk\
ing about being a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(gentleman never is one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(\221Ask Mamma\222 \(1858\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.25456 Tm
( Major Yammerton was rather a peculiar man, inasmuch as he was an ass\
, without being a fool.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.42047 Tm
(\221Ask Mamma\222 \(1858\) ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 128.50456 Tm
( \222Unting is all that\222s worth living for\227all time is lost wot\
is not spent in \222unting\227it is like the )Tj
T*
(hair we breathe\227if we have it not we die\227it\222s the sport of king\
s, the image of war without its )Tj
T*
(guilt, and only five-and-twenty per cent of its danger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.67047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 7.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.75456 Tm
( \222Unting fills my thoughts by day, and many a good run I have in m\
y sleep. Many a dig in the )Tj
ET
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(ribs I gives Mrs J when I think they\222re running into the warmint \(re\
newed cheers\). No man is fit )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to be called a sportsman wot doesn\222t kick his wife out of bed on a ha\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Tell me a man\222s a fox-hunter, and I loves him at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( I\222ll fill hup the chinks wi\222 cheese.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Well did that great man, I think it was Sir Walter Scott, but if it \
warn\222t, \222twas little Bartley, the )Tj
T*
(bootmaker, say, that there was no young man wot would not rather have a \
himputation on his )Tj
T*
(morality than on his \222ossmanship.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( It ar\222n\222t that I loves the fox less, but that I loves the \222\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( Unless a man has a good many servants, he had better have them clean\
in\222 his \222oss than cleanin\222 )Tj
T*
(his breeches.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221Handley Cross\222 \(1843\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( Three things I never lends\227my \222oss, my wife, and my name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221Hillingdon Hall\222 \(1845\) ch. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Every man shouting in proportion to the amount of his subscription.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221Jorrocks\222s Jaunts and Jollities\222 \(1838\) no. 1 \221Swell and \
the Surrey\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( Jorrocks, who is not afraid of \221the pace\222 so long as there is \
no leaping.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Jorrocks\222s Jaunts and Jollities\222 \(1838\) no. 1 \221Swell and \
the Surrey\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Champagne certainly gives one werry gentlemanly ideas, but for a con\
tinuance, I don\222t know )Tj
T*
(but I should prefer mild hale.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221Jorrocks\222s Jaunts and Jollities\222 \(1838\) no. 9 \221Mr Jorrock\
s in Paris\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Better be killed than frightened to death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Mr Facey Romford\222s Hounds\222 \(1865\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Life would be very pleasant if it were not for its enjoyments.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.92047 Tm
(\221Mr Facey Romford\222s Hounds\222 \(1865\) ch. 32.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.00456 Tm
( These sort of boobies think that people come to balls to do nothing \
but dance; whereas )Tj
T*
(everyone knows that the real business of a ball is either to look out fo\
r a wife, to look after a wife, )Tj
T*
(or to look after somebody else\222s wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.17047 Tm
(\221Mr Facey Romford\222s Hounds\222 \(1865\) ch. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 149.25456 Tm
( The young ladies entered the drawing-room in the full fervour of sis\
terly animosity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 133.42047 Tm
(\221Mr Sponge\222s Sporting Tour\222 \(1853\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 112.50456 Tm
( Women never look so well as when one comes in wet and dirty from hun\
ting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.67047 Tm
(\221Mr Sponge\222s Sporting Tour\222 \(1853\) ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.75456 Tm
( He was a gentleman who was generally spoken of as having nothing a-y\
ear, paid quarterly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.92047 Tm
(\221Mr Sponge\222s Sporting Tour\222 \(1853\) ch. 24)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.00456 Tm
( There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.)Tj
ET
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(\221Mr Sponge\222s Sporting Tour\222 \(1853\) ch. 31)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 720.9624 Tm
( 7.189 David Sutton)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sorrow in all lands, and grievous omens.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Great anger in the dragon of the hills,)Tj
T*
( And silent now the earth\222s green oracles)Tj
T*
( That will not speak again of innocence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.42047 Tm
(\221Settlements\222 \(1991\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 597.2124 Tm
( 7.190 Hannen Swaffer 1879-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Freedom of the press in Britain means freedom to print such of the p\
roprietor\222s prejudices as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the advertisers don\222t object to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.67047 Tm
(In Tom Driberg \221Swaff\222 \(1974\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 509.4624 Tm
( 7.191 Jonathan Swift 1667-1745)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I conceive some scattered notions about a superior power to be of si\
ngular use for the common )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(people, as furnishing excellent materials to keep children quiet when th\
ey grow peevish, and )Tj
T*
(providing topics of amusement in a tedious winter-night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 435.92047 Tm
(\221An Argument Against Abolishing Christianity\222 \(1708\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 415.00456 Tm
( Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover e\
verybody\222s face but their )Tj
T*
(own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 381.17047 Tm
(\221The Battle of the Books\222 \(1704\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.25456 Tm
( Instead of dirt and poison we have rather chosen to fill our hives w\
ith honey and wax; thus )Tj
T*
(furnishing mankind with the two noblest of things, which are sweetness a\
nd light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.42047 Tm
(\221The Battle of the Books\222 \(1704\) preface.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.50456 Tm
( Laws are like cobwebs, which may catch small flies, but let wasps an\
d hornets break through.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.67047 Tm
(\221A Critical Essay upon the Faculties of the Mind\222 \(1709\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.75456 Tm
( There is nothing in this world constant, but inconstancy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 252.92047 Tm
(\221A Critical Essay upon the Faculties of the Mind\222 \(1709\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.00456 Tm
( I have heard of a man who had a mind to sell his house, and therefor\
e carried a piece of brick )Tj
T*
(in his pocket, which he shewed as a pattern to encourage purchasers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.17047 Tm
(\221The Drapier\222s Letters\222 \(1724\) no. 2 \(4 August 1724\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.25456 Tm
( He [the emperor] is taller by almost the breadth of my nail than any\
of his court, which alone is )Tj
T*
(enough to strike an awe into the beholders.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.42047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Lilliput\222 ch. \
2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 122.50456 Tm
( He put this engine [a watch] to our ears, which made an incessant no\
ise like that of a water-)Tj
T*
(mill; and we conjecture it is either some unknown animal, or the god tha\
t he worships; but we are )Tj
T*
(more inclined to the latter opinion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.67047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Lilliput\222 ch. \
2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.75456 Tm
( It is alleged indeed, that the high heels are most agreeable to our \
ancient constitution: but )Tj
ET
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(however this be, his Majesty hath determined to make use of only low hee\
ls in the administration )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the government.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Lilliput\222 ch. \
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I cannot but conclude the bulk of your natives to be the most pernic\
ious race of little odious )Tj
T*
(vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Brobdingnag\222 c\
h. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( And he gave it for his opinion, that whoever could make two ears of \
corn or two blades of )Tj
T*
(grass to grow upon a spot of ground where only one grew before, would de\
serve better of )Tj
T*
(mankind, and do more essential service to his country than the whole rac\
e of politicians put )Tj
T*
(together.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Brobdingnag\222 c\
h. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( He had been eight years upon a project for extracting sun-beams out \
of cucumbers, which were )Tj
T*
(to be put into vials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in\
raw inclement summers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Laputa, etc.\222 \
ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( These unhappy people were proposing schemes for persuading monarchs \
to choose favourites )Tj
T*
(upon the score of their wisdom, capacity and virtue; of teaching ministe\
rs to consult the public )Tj
T*
(good; of rewarding merit, great abilities and eminent services; of instr\
ucting princes to know their )Tj
T*
(true interest by placing it on the same foundation with that of their pe\
ople: of choosing for )Tj
T*
(employment persons qualified to exercise them; with many other wild impo\
ssible chimeras, that )Tj
T*
(never entered before into the heart of man to conceive, and confirmed in\
me the old observation, )Tj
T*
(that there is nothing so extravagant and irrational which some philosoph\
ers have not maintained )Tj
T*
(for truth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to Laputa, etc.\222 \
ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( He replied that I must needs be mistaken, or that I said the thing w\
hich was not. \(For they have )Tj
T*
(no word in their language to express lying or falsehood\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to the Houyhnhnms\222\
ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( I told him...that we ate when we were not hungry, and drank without \
the provocation of thirst.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(\221Gulliver\222s Travels\222 \(1726\) \221A Voyage to the Houyhnhnms\222\
ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.75456 Tm
( We are so fond of one another, because our ailments are the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Journal to Stella\222 \(published in \221Works\222, 1768\) 1 Februar\
y 1711)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Will she pass in a crowd? Will she make a figure in a country church\
?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Journal to Stella\222 \(published in \221Works\222, 1768\) 9 Februar\
y 1711)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( I love good creditable acquaintance; I love to be the worst of the c\
ompany.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Journal to Stella\222 \(published in \221Works\222, 1768\) 17 May 17\
11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( He showed me his bill of fare to tempt me to dine with him; poh, sai\
d I, I value not your bill of )Tj
T*
(fare, give me your bill of company.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Journal to Stella\222 \(published in \221Works\222, 1768\) 2 Septemb\
er 1711)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( We were to do more business after dinner; but after dinner is after \
dinner\227an old saying and a )Tj
T*
(true, \221much drinking, little thinking\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Journal to Stella\222 \(published in \221Works\222, 1768\) 26 Februa\
ry 1712)Tj
ET
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( Proper words in proper places, make the true definition of a style.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to a Young Clergyman, 9 January 1720)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( If Heaven had looked upon riches to be a valuable thing, it would no\
t have given them to such )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a scoundrel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(Letter to Miss Vanhomrigh, 12-13 August 1720 \(commonly echoed in the fo\
rm: \221If you want to know what )Tj
T*
(God thinks of money, look at the people he gives it to\222\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 646.50456 Tm
( I have ever hated all nations, professions and communities, and all \
my love is towards )Tj
T*
(individuals...But principally I hate and detest that animal called man; \
although I heartily love )Tj
T*
(John, Peter, Thomas, and so forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Letter to Pope, 29 September 1725, in Harold Williams \(ed.\) \221The C\
orrespondence of Jonathan Swift\222 vol. 3 )Tj
T*
(\(1963\) p. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.75456 Tm
( Not die here in a rage, like a poisoned rat in a hole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(Letter to Bolingbroke, 21 March 1730, in Harold Williams \(ed.\) \221Th\
e Correspondence of Jonathan Swift\222 vol. )Tj
T*
(3 \(1963\) p. 382)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 507.00456 Tm
( Surely man is a broomstick!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(\221A Meditation upon a Broomstick\222 \(1710\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 470.25456 Tm
( I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in\
London, that a young )Tj
T*
(healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing,\
and wholesome food, )Tj
T*
(whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled, and I make no doubt that it w\
ill equally serve in a )Tj
T*
(fricassee, or a ragout.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 400.42047 Tm
(\221A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of Ireland from being \
a Burden to their Parents or )Tj
T*
(Country\222 \(1729\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 364.50456 Tm
( I mean, you lie\227under a mistake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.67047 Tm
(\221Polite Conversation\222 \(1738\) dialogue 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 327.75456 Tm
( She wears her clothes, as if they were thrown on her with a pitchfor\
k.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(\221Polite Conversation\222 \(1738\) dialogue 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.00456 Tm
( Faith, that\222s as well said, as if I had said it myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.17047 Tm
(\221Polite Conversation\222 \(1738\) dialogue 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 254.25456 Tm
( I always love to begin a journey on Sundays, because I shall have th\
e prayers of the church, to )Tj
T*
(preserve all that travel by land, or by water.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.42047 Tm
(\221Polite Conversation\222 \(1738\) dialogue 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.50456 Tm
( Books, like men their authors, have no more than one way of coming i\
nto the world, but there )Tj
T*
(are ten thousand to go out of it, and return no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(\221A Tale of a Tub\222 \(1704\) \221The Epistle Dedicatory\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.75456 Tm
( Satire, being levelled at all, is never resented for an offence by a\
ny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.92047 Tm
(\221A Tale of a Tub\222 \(1704\) \221The Author\222s Preface\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 108.00456 Tm
( What though his head be empty, provided his commonplace book be full\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221A Tale of a Tub\222 \(1704\) ch. 7 \221A Digression in Praise of Dig\
ressions\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( Last week I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe, how muc\
h it altered her person )Tj
T*
(for the worse.)Tj
ET
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(\221A Tale of a Tub\222 \(1704\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I never saw, heard, nor read, that the clergy were beloved in any na\
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0 -1.2 TD
(the religion of the country. Nothing can render them popular, but some d\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Religion\222 \(1765\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make\
us love one another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this si\
gn, that the dunces are )Tj
T*
(all in confederacy against him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( What they do in heaven we are ignorant of; what they do not we are t\
old expressly, that they )Tj
T*
(neither marry, nor are given in marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( The reasons why so few marriages are happy, is, because young ladies\
spend their time in )Tj
T*
(making nets, not in making cages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Few are qualified to shine in company; but it is in most men\222s po\
wer to be agreeable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( Every man desires to live long; but no man would be old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( A nice man is a man of nasty ideas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( Old men and comets have been reverenced for the same reason; their l\
ong beards, and )Tj
T*
(pretences to foretell events.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( The stoical scheme of supplying our wants, by lopping off our desire\
s, is like cutting off our )Tj
T*
(feet when we want shoes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221Thoughts on Various Subjects\222 \(1706\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( How haughtily he cocks his nose,)Tj
T*
( To tell what every schoolboy knows.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(\221The Country Life\222 l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( A coming shower your shooting corns presage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(\221A Description of a City Shower\222 \(1710\) l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( They never would hear,)Tj
T*
( But turn the deaf ear,)Tj
T*
( As a matter they had no concern in.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221Dingley and Brent\222 \(1724\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( I often wished that I had clear,)Tj
T*
( For life, six hundred pounds a-year,)Tj
T*
( A handsome house to lodge a friend,)Tj
T*
( A river at my garden\222s end,)Tj
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( A terrace walk, and half a rood)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of land, set out to plant a wood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Imitation of Horace\222 \(1714\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( Nor do they trust their tongue alone,)Tj
T*
( But speak a language of their own;)Tj
T*
( Can read a nod, a shrug, a look,)Tj
T*
( Far better than a printed book;)Tj
T*
( Convey a libel in a frown,)Tj
T*
( And wink a reputation down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.92047 Tm
(\221The Journal of a Modern Lady\222 \(1729\) l. 188)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.00456 Tm
( Hail, fellow, well met,)Tj
T*
( All dirty and wet:)Tj
T*
( Find out, if you can,)Tj
T*
( Who\222s master, who\222s man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221My Lady\222s Lamentation\222 \(1728\) l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.25456 Tm
( Th\222 artillery of words.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to...Sancroft\222 \(1692\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.50456 Tm
( Philosophy! the lumber of the schools.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to Sir W. Temple\222 \(1692\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.75456 Tm
( Say, Britain, could you ever boast,\227)Tj
T*
( Three poets in an age at most?)Tj
T*
( Our chilling climate hardly bears)Tj
T*
( A sprig of bays in fifty years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.92047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.00456 Tm
( Then, rising with Aurora\222s light,)Tj
T*
( The Muse invoked, sit down to write;)Tj
T*
( Blot out, correct, insert, refine,)Tj
T*
( Enlarge, diminish, interline.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.17047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 85)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.25456 Tm
( As learned commentators view)Tj
T*
( In Homer more than Homer knew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.42047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.50456 Tm
( So geographers, in Afric-maps,)Tj
T*
( With savage-pictures fill their gaps;)Tj
T*
( And o\222er unhabitable downs)Tj
T*
( Place elephants for want of towns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.67047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 177)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.75456 Tm
( He gives directions to the town,)Tj
T*
( To cry it up, or run it down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.92047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 269)Tj
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( Hobbes clearly proves, that every creature)Tj
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( Lives in a state of war by nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 319)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( So, naturalists observe, a flea)Tj
T*
( Hath smaller fleas that on him prey;)Tj
T*
( And these have smaller fleas to bite \222em,)Tj
T*
( And so proceed ad infinitum.)Tj
T*
( Thus every poet, in his kind,)Tj
T*
( Is bit by him that comes behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221On Poetry\222 \(1733\) l. 337)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Walls have tongues, and hedges ears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221A Pastoral Dialogue between Richmond Lodge and Marble Hill\222 \(172\
7\) l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Humour is odd, grotesque, and wild,)Tj
T*
( Only by affectation spoiled;)Tj
T*
( \222Tis never by invention got,)Tj
T*
( Men have it when they know it not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221To Mr Delany\222 \(1718\) l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( Hated by fools, and fools to hate,)Tj
T*
( Be that my motto and my fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221To Mr Delany\222 \(1718\) l. 171)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( In all distresses of our friends,)Tj
T*
( We first consult our private ends;)Tj
T*
( While nature, kindly bent to ease us,)Tj
T*
( Points out some circumstance to please us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Verses on the Death of Dr Swift\222 \(1731\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.50456 Tm
( Poor Pope will grieve a month, and Gay)Tj
T*
( A week, and Arbuthnot a day.)Tj
T*
( St John himself will scarce forbear)Tj
T*
( To bite his pen, and drop a tear.)Tj
T*
( The rest will give a shrug, and cry,)Tj
T*
( \221I\222m sorry\227but we all must die!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Verses on the Death of Dr Swift\222 \(1731\) l. 207)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Yet malice never was his aim;)Tj
T*
( He lashed the vice, but spared the name;)Tj
T*
( No individual could resent,)Tj
T*
( Where thousands equally were meant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Verses on the Death of Dr Swift\222 \(1731\) l. 512)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( He gave the little wealth he had)Tj
T*
( To build a house for fools and mad;)Tj
T*
( And showed, by one satiric touch,)Tj
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( No nation wanted it so much.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Verses on the Death of Dr Swift\222 \(1731\) l. 538)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( In Church your grandsire cut his throat;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To do the job too long he tarried,)Tj
T*
( He should have had my hearty vote,)Tj
T*
( To cut his throat before he married.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Verses on the Upright Judge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( \221Libertas et natale solum\222:)Tj
T*
( Fine words! I wonder where you stole \222em.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Whitshed\222s Motto on his Coach\222 \(1724\) \(Libertas... Freedom \
and the land of my birth\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Good God! what a genius I had when I wrote that book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(On A Tale of a Tub, in Sir Walter Scott \221Life of Swift. Works of Swif\
t\222 \(1824\) vol. 1, p. 89)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I shall be like that tree, I shall die at the top.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(In Sir Walter Scott \221Life of Swift\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( Ubi saeva indignatio ulterius cor lacerare nequit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Where fierce indignation can no longer tear his heart.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.67047 Tm
(Swift\222s epitaph)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 427.4624 Tm
( 7.192 Algernon Charles Swinburne 1837-1909)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Superflux of pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Anactoria\222 l. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( Maiden, and mistress of the months and stars)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Now folded in the flowerless fields of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( When the hounds of spring are on winter\222s traces,)Tj
T*
( The mother of months in meadow or plain)Tj
T*
( Fills the shadows and windy places)Tj
T*
( With lisp of leaves and ripple of rain;)Tj
T*
( And the brown bright nightingale amorous)Tj
T*
( Is half assuaged for Itylus,)Tj
T*
( For the Thracian ships and the foreign faces,)Tj
T*
( The tongueless vigil and all the pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.42047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\) \221First Chorus\222 st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.50456 Tm
( For winter\222s rains and ruins are over,)Tj
T*
( And all the season of snows and sins;)Tj
T*
( The days dividing lover and lover,)Tj
T*
( The light that loses, the night that wins;)Tj
T*
( And time remembered is grief forgotten,)Tj
T*
( And frosts are slain and flowers begotten,)Tj
T*
( And in green underwood and cover)Tj
ET
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( Blossom by blossom the spring begins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\) \221First Chorus\222 st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( And soft as lips that laugh and hide)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The laughing leaves of the tree divide,)Tj
T*
( And screen from seeing and leave in sight)Tj
T*
( The god pursuing, the maiden hid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\) \221First Chorus\222 st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Before the beginning of years)Tj
T*
( There came to the making of man)Tj
T*
( Time with a gift of tears,)Tj
T*
( Grief with a glass that ran.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\) chorus \221Before the beginning of \
years\222 st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Strength without hands to smite,)Tj
T*
( Love that endures for a breath;)Tj
T*
( Night, the shadow of light,)Tj
T*
( And Life, the shadow of death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( For words divide and rend;)Tj
T*
( But silence is most noble till the end.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221Atalanta in Calydon\222 \(1865\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( For a day and a night Love sang to us, played with us,)Tj
T*
( Folded us round from the dark and the light;)Tj
T*
( And our hearts were fulfilled with the music he made with us,)Tj
T*
( Made with our hands and our lips while he stayed with us,)Tj
T*
( Stayed in mid passage his pinions from flight)Tj
T*
( For a day and a night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221At Parting\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.50456 Tm
( The deep division of prodigious breasts,)Tj
T*
( The solemn slope of mighty limbs asleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(\221Ave atque Vale\222 st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.75456 Tm
( Sleep; and if life was bitter to thee, pardon,)Tj
T*
( If sweet, give thanks; thou hast no more to live;)Tj
T*
( And to give thanks is good, and to forgive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.92047 Tm
(\221Ave atque Vale\222 st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.00456 Tm
( Villon, our sad bad glad mad brother\222s name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.17047 Tm
(\221Ballad of Fran\347ois Villon\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 98.25456 Tm
( O slain and spent and sacrificed)Tj
T*
( People, the grey-grown speechless Christ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Before a Crucifix\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( We shift and bedeck and bedrape us,)Tj
ET
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( Thou art noble and nude and antique.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Dolores\222 \(1866\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Change in a trice)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The lilies and languors of virtue)Tj
T*
( For the raptures and roses of vice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Dolores\222 \(1866\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( O splendid and sterile Dolores,)Tj
T*
( Our Lady of Pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Dolores\222 \(1866\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Ah beautiful passionate body)Tj
T*
( That never has ached with a heart!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Dolores\222 \(1866\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( For the crown of our life as it closes)Tj
T*
( Is darkness, the fruit thereof dust;)Tj
T*
( No thorns go as deep as a rose\222s,)Tj
T*
( And love is more cruel than lust.)Tj
T*
( Time turns the old days to derision,)Tj
T*
( Our loves into corpses or wives;)Tj
T*
( And marriage and death and division)Tj
T*
( Make barren our lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.17047 Tm
(\221Dolores\222 \(1866\) st. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.25456 Tm
( I shall remember while the light lives yet)Tj
T*
( And in the night time I shall not forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Erotion\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( In a coign of the cliff between lowland and highland,)Tj
T*
( At the sea-down\222s edge between windward and lee,)Tj
T*
( Walled round with rocks as an inland island,)Tj
T*
( The ghost of a garden fronts the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221A Forsaken Garden\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( As a god self-slain on his own strange altar,)Tj
T*
( Death lies dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221A Forsaken Garden\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Pale, beyond porch and portal,)Tj
T*
( Crowned with calm leaves, she stands)Tj
T*
( Who gathers all things mortal)Tj
T*
( With cold immortal hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221The Garden of Proserpine\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Fiddle, we know, is diddle: and diddle, we take it, is dee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221The Heptalogia\222 \(1880\) \221The Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell\222\
.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( But God, if a God there be, is the substance of men which is man.)Tj
ET
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(\221Hymn of Man\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Glory to Man in the highest! for Man is the master of things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Hymn of Man\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( Yea, is not even Apollo, with hair and harpstring of gold,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A bitter God to follow, a beautiful God to behold?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Proserpine\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Thou hast conquered, O pale Galilean; the world has grown grey from \
Thy breath;)Tj
T*
( We have drunken of things Lethean, and fed on the fullness of death.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Proserpine\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Though these that were Gods are dead, and thou being dead art a God,\
)Tj
T*
( Though before thee the throned Cytherean be fallen, and hidden her h\
ead,)Tj
T*
( Yet thy kingdom shall pass, Galilean, thy dead shall go down to thee\
dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Hymn to Proserpine\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( I remember the way we parted,)Tj
T*
( The day and the way we met;)Tj
T*
( You hoped we were both broken-hearted,)Tj
T*
( And knew we should both forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221An Interlude\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( And the best and the worst of this is)Tj
T*
( That neither is most to blame,)Tj
T*
( If you have forgotten my kisses)Tj
T*
( And I have forgotten your name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221An Interlude\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( Swallow, my sister, O sister swallow,)Tj
T*
( How can thine heart be full of the spring?)Tj
T*
( A thousand summers are over and dead.)Tj
T*
( What hast thou found in the spring to follow?)Tj
T*
( What hast thou found in thine heart to sing?)Tj
T*
( What wilt thou do when the summer is shed?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Itylus\222 \(1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Till life forget and death remember,)Tj
T*
( Till thou remember and I forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Itylus\222 \(1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( Ah, yet would God this flesh of mine might be)Tj
T*
( Where air might wash and long leaves cover me;)Tj
T*
( Where tides of grass break into foam of flowers,)Tj
T*
( Or where the wind\222s feet shine along the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 82.42047 Tm
(\221Laus Veneris\222 \(1866\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 61.50456 Tm
( If love were what the rose is,)Tj
T*
( And I were like the leaf,)Tj
ET
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( Our lives would grow together)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In sad or singing weather,)Tj
T*
( Blown fields or flowerful closes,)Tj
T*
( Green pleasure or grey grief.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221A Match\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( There was a poor poet named Clough,)Tj
T*
( Whom his friends all united to puff,)Tj
T*
( But the public, though dull,)Tj
T*
( Had not such a skull)Tj
T*
( As belonged to believers in Clough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Essays and Studies\222 \(1875\) \221Matthew Arnold\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( I will go back to the great sweet mother,)Tj
T*
( Mother and lover of men, the sea.)Tj
T*
( I will go down to her, I and no other,)Tj
T*
( Close with her, kiss her and mix her with me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221The Triumph of Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( I shall sleep, and move with the moving ships,)Tj
T*
( Change as the winds change, veer in the tide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221The Triumph of Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( There lived a singer in France of old)Tj
T*
( By the tideless dolorous midland sea.)Tj
T*
( In a land of sand and ruin and gold)Tj
T*
( There shone one woman, and none but she.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Triumph of Time\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 305.9624 Tm
( 7.193 Eric Sykes and Max Bygraves 1922\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Eric Sykes had this quick ear and could tell by any inflection I put\
into a line how to make it a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(catch phrase\227at one time I had more catch phrases than I could handle\
. I had the whole country )Tj
T*
(saying things like \221I\222ve arrived and to prove it I\222m here!\222 \
\221A good idea\227son\222 \221Bighead!\222 \221Dollar )Tj
T*
(lolly\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(Max Bygraves \221I Wanna Tell You a Story!\222 \(1976\) p. 96 \(describi\
ng catch-phrases on \221Educating Archie\222, )Tj
T*
(1950-3 BBC radio comedy series\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.2124 Tm
( 7.194 John Addington Symonds 1840-93)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( These things shall be! A loftier race)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Than e\222er the world hath known shall rise,)Tj
T*
( With flame of freedom in their souls,)Tj
T*
( And light of knowledge in their eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(Hymn)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 43.4624 Tm
( 7.195 John Millington Synge 1871-1909)Tj
ET
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( \221A man who is not afraid of the sea will soon be drownded,\222 he\
said \221for he will be going out )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(on a day he shouldn\222t. But we do be afraid of the sea, and we do only\
be drownded now and )Tj
T*
(again.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221The Aran Islands\222 \(1907\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( \221A translation is no translation,\222 he said, \221unless it will\
give you the music of a poem along )Tj
T*
(with the words of it.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221The Aran Islands\222 \(1907\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Oh my grief, I\222ve lost him surely. I\222ve lost the only Playboy \
of the Western World.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.42047 Tm
(\221The Playboy of the Western World\222 \(1907\) act 3 \(last lines\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 576.2124 Tm
( 7.196 Thomas Szasz 1920\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A child becomes an adult when he realizes that he has a right not on\
ly to be right but also to be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 520.67047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Childhood\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 499.75456 Tm
( A teacher should have maximal authority and minimal power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.92047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Education\222)Tj
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( Happiness is an imaginary condition, formerly often attributed by th\
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T*
(usually attributed by adults to children, and by children to adults.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.17047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Emotions\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.25456 Tm
( The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the na\357ve forgive and forg\
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T*
(forget.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.42047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Personal Conduct\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.50456 Tm
( If you talk to God, you are praying; if God talks to you, you have s\
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T*
(talk to you, you are a spiritualist; if God talks to you, you are a schi\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.67047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Schizophrenia\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.75456 Tm
( Formerly, when religion was strong and science weak, men mistook mag\
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T*
(when science is strong and religion weak, men mistake medicine for magic\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.92047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Science and Scientism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.00456 Tm
( Masturbation: the primary sexual activity of mankind. In the ninetee\
nth century, it was a )Tj
T*
(disease; in the twentieth, it\222s a cure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 210.17047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Sex\222)Tj
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( Two wrongs don\222t make a right, but they make a good excuse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.42047 Tm
(\221The Second Sin\222 \(1973\) \221Social Relations\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 7.197 Albert von Szent-Gy\366rgyi 1893-1986)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen and thinking wh\
at nobody has thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.67047 Tm
(In Irving Good \(ed.\) \221The Scientist Speculates\222 \(1962\) p. 15)Tj
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( 8.0 T)Tj
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( Nunc terminus Britanniae patet, atque omne ignotum pro magnifico est\
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( Now the boundary of Britain is revealed, and everything unknown is h\
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(\221Agricola\222 ch. 30, reporting the speech of a British leader, Calga\
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( Solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant.)Tj
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( Proprium humani ingenii est odisse quem laeseris.)Tj
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( It is part of human nature to hate the man you have hurt.)Tj
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(\221Agricola\222 ch. 42)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( Tu vero felix, Agricola, non vitae tantum claritate, sed etiam oppor\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( You were indeed fortunate, Agricola, not only in the distinction of \
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(lucky timing of your death.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Agricola\222 ch. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Sine ira et studio.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( With neither anger nor partiality.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.67047 Tm
(\221Annals\222 bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 420.75456 Tm
( Elegantiae arbiter.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The arbiter of taste.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.17047 Tm
(\221Annals\222 bk. 16, ch. 18, on Petronius)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 362.25456 Tm
( Rara temporum felicitate ubi sentire quae velis et quae sentias dice\
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0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( These times having the rare good fortune that you may think what you\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(\221Histories\222 bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( Maior privato visus dum privatus fuit, et omnium consensu capax impe\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He seemed much greater than a private citizen while he still was a p\
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0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Histories\222 bk. 1, ch. 49 \(on the Emperor Galba\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( Etiam sapientibus cupido gloriae novissima exuitur.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Love of fame is the last thing even learned men can bear to be parte\
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Histories\222 bk. 4, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( Deos fortioribus adesse.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The gods are on the side of the stronger.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.17047 Tm
(\221Histories\222 bk. 4, ch. 17.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 80.9624 Tm
( 8.2 Sir Rabindranath Tagore 1861-1941)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Bigotry tries to keep truth safe in its hand)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With a grip that kills it.)Tj
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( 8.3 Nellie Talbot)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Jesus wants me for a sunbeam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Title of hymn \(1921\), in \221CSSM Choruses\222 No. 1)Tj
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( Surtout, Messieurs, point de z\351le.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Above all, gentlemen, not the slightest zeal.)Tj
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(In P. Chasles \221Voyages d\222un critique \341 travers la vie et les li\
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( Qui n\222a pas v\350cu dans les ann\350es voisines de 1789 ne sait p\
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0 -1.2 TD
(vivre.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He who has not lived during the years around 1789 can not know what \
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(In M. Guizot \221M\350moires pour servir \341 l\222histoire de mon temps\
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( Ils n\222ont rien appris, ni rien oubli\350.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( They have learnt nothing, and forgotten nothing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.92047 Tm
(Attributed to Talleyrand by the Chevalier de Panat in a letter to Mallet\
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0 -1.2 TD
(\(ed.\) \221M\350moires et correspondance de Mallet du Pan\222 \(1851\)\
vol. 2, p. 196.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Quelle triste vieillesse vous vous pr\350parez.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What a sad old age you are preparing for yourself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 367.42047 Tm
(Addressed to a young diplomat who boasted of his ignorance of whist in T\
alleyrand\222s presence, in J. J. M. C. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Am\350d\350e Pichot \221Souvenirs Intimes sur M. de Talleyrand\222 \(187\
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15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( Voil\341 le commencement de la fin.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( This is the beginning of the end.)Tj
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(Attributed; on the announcement of Napoleon\222s defeat at Borodino, 181\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Talleyrand\222 \(1870\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 246.7124 Tm
( 8.5 Booth Tarkington 1869-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There are two things that will be believed of any man whatsoever, an\
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0 -1.2 TD
(has taken to drink.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Penrod\222 \(1914\) ch. 10)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.9624 Tm
( 8.6 Nahum Tate 1652-1715)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When I am laid in earth my wrongs create.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( No trouble in thy breast,)Tj
T*
( Remember me, but ah! forget my fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Dido and Aeneas\222 \(1689\) act 3 \(\221Dido\222s Lament\222\))Tj
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( While shepherds watched their flocks by night,)Tj
T*
( All seated on the ground,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( And glory shone around.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Supplement to the New Version of the Psalms\222 \(1700\) \221While S\
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( 8.7 Nahum Tate 1652-1715 and Nicholas Brady 1659-1726)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As pants the hart for cooling streams)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When heated in the chase.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221New Version of the Psalms\222 \(1696\) Psalm 42.)Tj
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( Through all the changing scenes of life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(\221New Version of the Psalms\222 \(1696\) Psalm 34)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 562.4624 Tm
( 8.8 R. H. Tawney 1880-1962)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Militarism...is fetish worship. It is the prostration of men\222s so\
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0 -1.2 TD
(bodies to appease an idol.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.92047 Tm
(\221The Acquisitive Society\222 \(1921\) ch. 4)Tj
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( The characteristic virtue of Englishmen is power of sustained practi\
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T*
(characteristic vice a reluctance to test the quality of that activity by\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221The Acquisitive Society\222 \(1921\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( Inequality, again, leads to misdirection of production. For, since t\
he demand of one income of )Tj
T*
(\24350,000 is as powerful a magnet as the demand of 500 incomes of \2431\
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T*
(the creation of wealth to the multiplication of luxuries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221The Acquisitive Society\222 \(1921\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Those who dread a dead-level of income or wealth...do not dread, it \
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T*
(and order, and of security of life and property.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Equality\222 \(4th ed., 1931\) p. 85)Tj
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( Both the existing economic order and too many of the projects advanc\
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T*
(break down through their neglect of the truism that, since even quite co\
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T*
(increase in material wealth will compensate them for arrangements which \
insult their self-respect )Tj
T*
(and impair their freedom. A reasonable estimate of economic organisation\
must allow for the fact )Tj
T*
(that, unless industry is to be paralysed by recurrent revolts on the par\
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T*
(it must satisfy criteria which are not purely economic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(\221Religion and the Rise of Capitalism\222 \(1926\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.00456 Tm
( What harm have I ever done to the Labour Party?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(On declining the offer of a peerage, in \221Evening Standard\222 18 Janu\
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( 8.9 A. J. P. Taylor 1906-90)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( History gets thicker as it approaches recent times.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 91.42047 Tm
(\221English History 1914-45\222 Bibliography)Tj
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( \221That\222s their Westminster Abbey! That\222s their Houses of Par\
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(Establishment.)Tj
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(\221Essays in English History\222 \221William Cobbett\222)Tj
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( The war that would not boil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Of the Crimean War, in \221Essays in English History\222)Tj
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( Like most of those who study history, he [Napoleon III] learned from\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Listener\222 6 June 1963)Tj
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( Human blunders usually do more to shape history than human wickednes\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Origins of the Second World War\222 \(1961\) ch. 10)Tj
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( If men are to respect each other for what they are, they must cease \
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T*
(what they own.)Tj
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(\221Politicians, Socialism and Historians\222 \(1980\) ch. 33)Tj
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( The origins of the First World War are to be found in the railway ti\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221War by Timetable\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.10 Ann Taylor 1782-1866 and Jane Taylor 1783-1824)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( I thank the goodness and the grace)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Which on my birth have smiled,)Tj
T*
( And made me, in these Christian days,)Tj
T*
( A happy English child.)Tj
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(\221Hymns for Infant Minds\222 \(1810\) \221A Child\222s Hymn of Praise\222\
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( \222Tis a credit to any good girl to be neat,)Tj
T*
( But quite a disgrace to be fine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221Hymns for Sunday Schools\222 \(1810\) \221The Folly of Finery\222)Tj
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( Who ran to help me when I fell,)Tj
T*
( And would some pretty story tell,)Tj
T*
( Or kiss the place to make it well?)Tj
T*
( My Mother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Original Poems for Infant Minds\222 \(1804\) \221My Mother\222 \(by \
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15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( Twinkle, twinkle, little star,)Tj
T*
( How I wonder what you are!)Tj
T*
( Up above the world so high,)Tj
T*
( Like a diamond in the sky!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Rhymes for the Nursery\222 \(1806\) \221The Star\222 \(by Jane Taylo\
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15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( How pleasant it is, at the end of the day,)Tj
T*
( No follies to have to repent;)Tj
T*
( But reflect on the past, and be able to say,)Tj
T*
( That my time has been properly spent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Rhymes for the Nursery\222 \(1806\) \221The Way to be Happy\222 \(by\
Jane Taylor\))Tj
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( Till the sun grows cold,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the stars are old,)Tj
T*
( And the leaves of the Judgement Book unfold.)Tj
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(\221Bedouin Song\222)Tj
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( 8.12 Jeremy Taylor 1613-67)Tj
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(\221Ductor Dubitantium\222 \(1660\) 1.1.5; usually quoted: \221When in R\
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( As our life is very short, so it is very miserable, and therefore it\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 551.17047 Tm
(\221The Rule and Exercise of Holy Dying\222 \(1651\) ch. 1, sect. 4)Tj
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( How many people there are that weep with want, or are mad with oppre\
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0 -1.2 TD
(by too quick a sense of a constant infelicity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 496.42047 Tm
(\221The Rule and Exercise of Holy Dying\222 \(1651\) ch. 1, sect. 5)Tj
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( This thing...that can be understood and not expressed, may take a ne\
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T*
(schoolboy knows it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 441.67047 Tm
(\221The Real Presence and Of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament\222 sect. 5\
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15 0 0 15 10 420.75456 Tm
( The union of hands and hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 404.92047 Tm
(\221XXV Sermons Preached at Golden Grove\222 \(1653\) \221The Marriage R\
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/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 372.7124 Tm
( 8.13 Tom Taylor 1817-80)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hawkshaw, the detective.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221The Ticket-of-leave Man\222 \(1863\) act 4, sc. 1; usually quoted: \221\
I am Hawkshaw, the detective\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 302.9624 Tm
( 8.14 Norman Tebbit 1931\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( I grew up in the Thirties with our unemployed father. He did not rio\
t, he got on his bike and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(looked for work.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(Speech at Conservative Party Conference, 15 October 1981, in \221Daily T\
elegraph\222 16 October 1981)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 215.2124 Tm
( 8.15 Sir William Temple 1628-99)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When all is done, human life is, at the greatest and the best, but l\
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0 -1.2 TD
(be played with and humoured a little to keep it quiet till it falls asle\
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(\221Miscellanea. The Second Part\222 \(1690\) \221Of Poetry\222 ad fin.)Tj
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( 8.16 William Temple 1881-1944)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Human status ought not to depend upon the changing demands of the ec\
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(\221The Malvern Manifesto\222 \(1941\))Tj
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( It is a mistake to suppose that God is only, or even chiefly, concer\
ned with religion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.17047 Tm
(In R. V. C. Bodley \221In Search of Serenity\222 \(1955\) ch. 12)Tj
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( Personally, I have always looked on cricket as organized loafing.)Tj
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(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.17 Sir John Tenniel 1820-1914)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dropping the pilot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(Cartoon caption and title of poem on Bismarck\222s departure from office\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.18 Alfred, Lord Tennyson 1809-92)Tj
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T*
( For nothing worthy proving can be proven,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor yet disproven: wherefore thou be wise,)Tj
T*
( Cleave ever to the sunnier side of doubt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221The Ancient Sage\222 \(1885\) l. 66)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( Break, break, break,)Tj
T*
( On thy cold grey stones, O Sea!)Tj
T*
( And I would that my tongue could utter)Tj
T*
( The thoughts that arise in me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.92047 Tm
(\221Break, Break, Break\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.00456 Tm
( And the stately ships go on)Tj
T*
( To their haven under the hill;)Tj
T*
( But O for the touch of a vanished hand,)Tj
T*
( And the sound of a voice that is still!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.17047 Tm
(\221Break, Break, Break\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 359.25456 Tm
( I come from haunts of coot and hern,)Tj
T*
( I make a sudden sally)Tj
T*
( And sparkle out among the fern,)Tj
T*
( To bicker down a valley.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.42047 Tm
(\221The Brook\222 \(1855\) l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.50456 Tm
( For men may come and men may go,)Tj
T*
( But I go on for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.67047 Tm
(\221The Brook\222 \(1855\) l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 213.75456 Tm
( Half a league, half a league,)Tj
T*
( Half a league onward,)Tj
T*
( All in the valley of Death)Tj
T*
( Rode the six hundred.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 143.92047 Tm
(\221The Charge of the Light Brigade\222 \(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.00456 Tm
( \221Forward, the Light Brigade!\222)Tj
T*
( Was there a man dismayed?)Tj
T*
( Not though the soldier knew)Tj
T*
( Some one had blundered:)Tj
T*
( Their\222s not to make reply,)Tj
ET
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( Their\222s not to reason why,)Tj
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( Their\222s but to do and die:)Tj
T*
( Into the valley of Death)Tj
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( Rode the six hundred.)Tj
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( Cannon to right of them,)Tj
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( Volleyed and thundered.)Tj
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(\221The Charge of the Light Brigade\222 \(1854\))Tj
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( Into the jaws of Death,)Tj
T*
( Into the mouth of Hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.67047 Tm
(\221The Charge of the Light Brigade\222 \(1854\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.75456 Tm
( Come not, when I am dead,)Tj
T*
( To drop thy foolish tears upon my grave,)Tj
T*
( To trample round my fallen head,)Tj
T*
( And vex the unhappy dust thou wouldst not save.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Come not, when I am dead\222 \(1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( Sunset and evening star,)Tj
T*
( And one clear call for me!)Tj
T*
( And may there be no moaning of the bar,)Tj
T*
( When I put out to sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Crossing the Bar\222 \(1889\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Twilight and evening bell,)Tj
T*
( And after that the dark!)Tj
T*
( And may there be no sadness of farewell,)Tj
T*
( When I embark;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
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( For though from out our bourne of time and place)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The flood may bear me far,)Tj
T*
( I hope to see my pilot face to face)Tj
T*
( When I have crossed the bar.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(\221Crossing the Bar\222 \(1889\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( O Love, what hours were thine and mine,)Tj
T*
( In lands of palm and southern pine;)Tj
T*
( In lands of palm, of orange-blossom,)Tj
T*
( Of olive, aloe, and maize and vine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 113.92047 Tm
(\221The Daisy\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.00456 Tm
( A daughter of the gods, divinely tall,)Tj
T*
( And most divinely fair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221A Dream of Fair Women\222 \(1832\) l. 87)Tj
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( He clasps the crag with crook\351d hands;)Tj
ET
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( Ringed with the azure world, he stands.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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( And like a thunderbolt he falls.)Tj
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(\221The Eagle\222 \(1851\))Tj
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( And when they buried him the little port)Tj
T*
( Had seldom seen a costlier funeral.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 603.92047 Tm
(\221Enoch Arden\222 \(1864\) closing words)Tj
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( The mellow lin-lan-lone of evening bells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 567.17047 Tm
(\221Far-Far-Away\222 \(1889\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 546.25456 Tm
( O Love, O fire! once he drew)Tj
T*
( With one long kiss my whole soul through)Tj
T*
( My lips, as sunlight drinketh dew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.42047 Tm
(\221Fatima\222 \(1832\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 473.50456 Tm
( More black than ashbuds in the front of March.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.67047 Tm
(\221The Gardener\222s Daughter\222 \(1842\) l. 28)Tj
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( A sight to make an old man young.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.92047 Tm
(\221The Gardener\222s Daughter\222 \(1842\) l. 140)Tj
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( Then she rode forth, clothed on with chastity.)Tj
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(\221Godiva\222 \(1842\) l. 53)Tj
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( With twelve great shocks of sound, the shameless noon)Tj
T*
( Was clashed and hammered from a hundred towers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.42047 Tm
(\221Godiva\222 \(1842\) l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 308.50456 Tm
( Ah! when shall all men\222s good)Tj
T*
( Be each man\222s rule, and universal peace)Tj
T*
( Lie like a shaft of light across the land?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 256.67047 Tm
(\221The Golden Year\222 \(1846\) l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 235.75456 Tm
( Through all the circle of the golden year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.92047 Tm
(\221The Golden Year\222 \(1846\) l. 51)Tj
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( That a lie which is all a lie may be met and fought with outright,)Tj
T*
( But a lie which is part a truth is a harder matter to fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.17047 Tm
(\221The Grandmother\222 \(1859\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 144.25456 Tm
( That man\222s the true Conservative)Tj
T*
( Who lops the mouldered branch away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.42047 Tm
(\221Hands all Round\222 \(1882\) l. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 89.50456 Tm
( Pray God our greatness may not fail)Tj
T*
( Through craven fears of being great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 55.67047 Tm
(\221Hands all Round\222 \(1882\) l. 31)Tj
ET
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( O you chorus of indolent reviewers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Milton: Hendecasyllabics\222 \(1863\))Tj
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( Gigantic daughter of the West,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We drink to thee across the flood,)Tj
T*
( We know thee most, we love thee best,)Tj
T*
( For art thou not of British blood?)Tj
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(\221Hands all Round\222 \(1852\) st. 4)Tj
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( Speak to Him thou for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit can meet\227)Tj
T*
( Closer is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.)Tj
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(\221The Higher Pantheism\222 \(1869\))Tj
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( Wearing the white flower of a blameless life,)Tj
T*
( Before a thousand peering littlenesses,)Tj
T*
( In that fierce light which beats upon a throne,)Tj
T*
( And blackens every blot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) Dedication \(1862\) l. 24)Tj
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( Man\222s word is God in man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Coming of Arthur\222 \(18\
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( Clothed in white samite, mystic, wonderful.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Coming of Arthur\222 \(18\
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( Rain, rain, and sun! a rainbow in the sky!)Tj
T*
( A young man will be wiser by and by;)Tj
T*
( An old man\222s wit may wander ere he die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Coming of Arthur\222 \(18\
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( From the great deep to the great deep he goes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Coming of Arthur\222 \(18\
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( Blow trumpet, for the world is white with May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Coming of Arthur\222 \(18\
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( Live pure, speak true, right wrong, follow the King\227)Tj
T*
( Else, wherefore born?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Gareth and Lynette\222 \(1872\
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( The city is built)Tj
T*
( To music, therefore never built at all,)Tj
T*
( And therefore built for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Gareth and Lynette\222 \(1872\
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( To reverence the King, as if he were)Tj
T*
( Their conscience, and their conscience as their King,)Tj
T*
( To break the heathen and uphold the Christ,)Tj
T*
( To ride abroad redressing human wrongs,)Tj
T*
( To speak no slander, no, nor listen to it,)Tj
T*
( To honour his own word as if his God\222s.)Tj
ET
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( To love one maiden only, cleave to her,)Tj
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( And worship her by years of noble deeds,)Tj
T*
( Until they won her; for indeed I knew)Tj
T*
( Of no more subtle master under heaven)Tj
T*
( Than is the maiden passion for a maid,)Tj
T*
( Not only to keep down the base in man,)Tj
T*
( But teach high thought, and amiable words)Tj
T*
( And courtliness, and the desire of fame,)Tj
T*
( And love of truth, and all that makes a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Guinevere\222 \(1859\) l. 472\
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( I thought I could not breathe in that fine air)Tj
T*
( That pure severity of perfect light\227)Tj
T*
( I yearned for warmth and colour which I found)Tj
T*
( In Lancelot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Guinevere\222 \(1859\) l. 640\
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( It was my duty to have loved the highest:)Tj
T*
( It surely was my profit had I known:)Tj
T*
( It would have been my pleasure had I seen.)Tj
T*
( We needs must love the highest when we see it,)Tj
T*
( Not Lancelot, nor another.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Guinevere\222 \(1859\) l. 652\
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( For good ye are and bad, and like to coins,)Tj
T*
( Some true, some light, but every one of you)Tj
T*
( Stamped with the image of the King.)Tj
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(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Holy Grail\222 \(1869\) l\
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( I will be deafer than the blue-eyed cat,)Tj
T*
( And thrice as blind as any noonday owl,)Tj
T*
( To holy virgins in their ecstasies,)Tj
T*
( Henceforward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 211.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Holy Grail\222 \(1869\) l\
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( Elaine the fair, Elaine the loveable,)Tj
T*
( Elaine, the lily maid of Astolat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Lancelot and Elaine\222 \(185\
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( He is all fault who hath no fault at all:)Tj
T*
( For who loves me must have a touch of earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Lancelot and Elaine\222 \(185\
9\) l. 132)Tj
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( In me there dwells)Tj
T*
( No greatness, save it be some far-off touch)Tj
T*
( Of greatness to know well I am not great.)Tj
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( I know there is none other I can love.)Tj
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T*
( His honour rooted in dishonour stood,)Tj
T*
( And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Lancelot and Elaine\222 \(185\
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( Never yet)Tj
T*
( Was noble man but made ignoble talk.)Tj
T*
( He makes no friend who never made a foe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Lancelot and Elaine\222 \(185\
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( The dirty nurse, Experience, in her kind)Tj
T*
( Hath fouled me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Last Tournament\222 \(185\
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( The greater man, the greater courtesy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Last Tournament\222 \(185\
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( Our hoard is little, but our hearts are great.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Marriage of Geraint\222 \(\
1859\) l. 352)Tj
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( For man is man and master of his fate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Marriage of Geraint\222 \(\
1859\) l. 355)Tj
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( They take the rustic murmur of their bourg)Tj
T*
( For the great wave that echoes round the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Marriage of Geraint\222 \(\
1859\) l. 419)Tj
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( It is the little rift within the lute,)Tj
T*
( That by and by will make the music mute,)Tj
T*
( And ever widening slowly silence all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
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( And trust me not at all or all in all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
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( Man dreams of fame while woman wakes to love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
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( With this for motto, \221Rather use than fame.\222)Tj
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(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
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( Where blind and naked Ignorance)Tj
T*
( Delivers brawling judgements, unashamed,)Tj
T*
( On all things all day long.)Tj
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(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
l. 662)Tj
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( But every page having an ample marge,)Tj
ET
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0 -1.2 TD
( A square of text that looks a little blot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
l. 667)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( And none can read the text, not even I;)Tj
T*
( And none can read the comment but myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221Merlin and Vivien\222 \(1859\)\
l. 679)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.00456 Tm
( I found Him in the shining of the stars,)Tj
T*
( I marked Him in the flowering of His fields,)Tj
T*
( But in His ways with men I find Him not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.25456 Tm
( So all day long the noise of battle rolled)Tj
T*
( Among the mountains by the winter sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 170)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.50456 Tm
( On one side lay the Ocean, and on one)Tj
T*
( Lay a great water, and the moon was full.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 179)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.75456 Tm
( Authority forgets a dying king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 289)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( Clothed with his breath, and looking, as he walked,)Tj
T*
( Larger than human on the frozen hills.)Tj
T*
( He heard the deep behind him, and a cry)Tj
T*
( Before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 350)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.25456 Tm
( And the days darken round me, and the years,)Tj
T*
( Among new men, strange faces, other minds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 405)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.50456 Tm
( The old order changeth, yielding place to new,)Tj
T*
( And God fulfils himself in many ways,)Tj
T*
( Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 408)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.75456 Tm
( If thou shouldst never see my face again,)Tj
T*
( Pray for my soul. More things are wrought by prayer)Tj
T*
( Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice)Tj
T*
( Rise like a fountain for me night and day.)Tj
T*
( For what are men better than sheep or goats)Tj
T*
( That nourish a blind life within the brain,)Tj
T*
( If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer)Tj
T*
( Both for themselves and those who call them friend?)Tj
T*
( For so the whole round earth is every way)Tj
T*
( Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 414)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I am going a long way)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With these thou se\353st\227if indeed I go)Tj
T*
( \(For all my mind is clouded with a doubt\)\227)Tj
T*
( To the island-valley of Avilion;)Tj
T*
( Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,)Tj
T*
( Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies)Tj
T*
( Deep-meadowed, happy, fair with orchard lawns)Tj
T*
( And bowery hollows crowned with summer sea,)Tj
T*
( Where I will heal me of my grievous wound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 424)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Like some full-breasted swan)Tj
T*
( That, fluting a wild carol ere her death,)Tj
T*
( Ruffles her pure cold plume, and takes the flood)Tj
T*
( With swarthy webs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Idylls of the King\222 \(1842-85\) \221The Passing of Arthur\222 \(1\
869\) l. 434)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( Thou madest man, he knows not why,)Tj
T*
( He thinks he was not made to die;)Tj
T*
( And thou hast made him: thou art just.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( Our little systems have their day;)Tj
T*
( They have their day and cease to be:)Tj
T*
( They are but broken lights of thee,)Tj
T*
( And thou, O Lord, art more than they.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Let knowledge grow from more to more,)Tj
T*
( But more of reverence in us dwell;)Tj
T*
( That mind and soul, according well,)Tj
T*
( May make one music as before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( I held it truth, with him who sings)Tj
T*
( To one clear harp in divers tones,)Tj
T*
( That men may rise on stepping-stones)Tj
T*
( Of their dead selves to higher things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( For words, like Nature, half reveal)Tj
T*
( And half conceal the Soul within.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( But, for the unquiet heart and brain,)Tj
T*
( A use in measured language lies;)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( The sad mechanic exercise,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Like dull narcotics, numbing pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( And common is the commonplace,)Tj
T*
( And vacant chaff well meant for grain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Never morning wore)Tj
T*
( To evening, but some heart did break.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( His heavy-shotted hammock-shroud)Tj
T*
( Drops in his vast and wandering grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Dark house, by which once more I stand)Tj
T*
( Here in the long unlovely street,)Tj
T*
( Doors, where my heart was used to beat)Tj
T*
( So quickly, waiting for a hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( And ghastly through the drizzling rain)Tj
T*
( On the bald street breaks the blank day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( The last red leaf is whirled away,)Tj
T*
( The rooks are blown about the skies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( There twice a day the Severn fills;)Tj
T*
( The salt sea-water passes by,)Tj
T*
( And hushes half the babbling Wye,)Tj
T*
( And makes a silence in the hills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( The Shadow cloaked from head to foot,)Tj
T*
( Who keeps the keys of all the creeds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( And Thought leapt out to wed with Thought)Tj
T*
( Ere Thought could wed itself with Speech.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( I envy not in any moods)Tj
T*
( The captive void of noble rage,)Tj
T*
( The linnet born within the cage,)Tj
T*
( That never knew the summer woods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
( \221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( \222Tis better to have loved and lost)Tj
ET
EMC
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0 0 612 792 re
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Than never to have loved at all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 27.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( A solemn gladness even crowned)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The purple brows of Olivet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Her eyes are homes of silent prayer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Short swallow-flights of song, that dip)Tj
T*
( Their wings in tears, and skim away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Be near me when my light is low,)Tj
T*
( When the blood creeps, and the nerves prick)Tj
T*
( And tingle; and the heart is sick,)Tj
T*
( And all the wheels of Being slow.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Be near me when the sensuous frame)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is racked with pains that conquer trust;)Tj
T*
( And Time, a maniac scattering dust,)Tj
T*
( And Life, a Fury slinging flame.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.50456 Tm
( Oh yet we trust that somehow good)Tj
T*
( Will be the final goal of ill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.75456 Tm
( That nothing walks with aimless feet;)Tj
T*
( That not one life shall be destroyed,)Tj
T*
( Or cast as rubbish to the void,)Tj
T*
( When God hath made the pile complete.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( Behold, we know not anything;)Tj
T*
( I can but trust that good shall fall)Tj
T*
( At last\227far off\227at last, to all,)Tj
T*
( And every winter change to spring.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( So runs my dream: but what am I?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( An infant crying in the night:)Tj
T*
( An infant crying for the light:)Tj
T*
( And with no language but a cry.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 54)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.50456 Tm
( So careful of the type she seems,)Tj
T*
( So careless of the single life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 55 \(of Nature\))Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( The great world\222s altar-stairs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That slope through darkness up to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Man...)Tj
T*
( Who trusted God was love indeed)Tj
T*
( And love Creation\222s final law\227)Tj
T*
( Though Nature, red in tooth and claw)Tj
T*
( With ravine, shrieked against his creed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Peace; come away: the song of woe)Tj
T*
( Is after all an earthly song:)Tj
T*
( Peace; come away: we do him wrong)Tj
T*
( To sing so wildly: let us go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 519.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.75456 Tm
( O Sorrow, wilt thou live with me)Tj
T*
( No casual mistress, but a wife.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( As some divinely gifted man,)Tj
T*
( Whose life in low estate began)Tj
T*
( And on a simple village green;)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Who breaks his birth\222s invidious bar,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And grasps the skirts of happy chance,)Tj
T*
( And breasts the blows of circumstance,)Tj
T*
( And grapples with his evil star.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 64)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( So many worlds, so much to do,)Tj
T*
( So little done, such things to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 73)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Death has made)Tj
T*
( His darkness beautiful with thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( And round thee with the breeze of song)Tj
T*
( To stir a little dust of praise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( O last regret, regret can die!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.50456 Tm
( Laburnums, dropping-wells of fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 57.75456 Tm
( God\222s finger touched him, and he slept.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 85)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 751.00456 Tm
( He brought an eye for all he saw;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( He mixed in all our simple sports;)Tj
T*
( They pleased him, fresh from brawling courts)Tj
T*
( And dusty purlieus of the law.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 89.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.25456 Tm
( You tell me, doubt is Devil-born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 623.50456 Tm
( There lives more faith in honest doubt,)Tj
T*
( Believe me, than in half the creeds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 96)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.75456 Tm
( Their meetings made December June,)Tj
T*
( Their every parting was to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.00456 Tm
( He seems so near and yet so far.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 97)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,)Tj
T*
( The flying cloud, the frosty light:)Tj
T*
( The year is dying in the night;)Tj
T*
( Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ring out the old, ring in the new,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ring, happy bells, across the snow:)Tj
T*
( The year is going, let him go;)Tj
T*
( Ring out the false, ring in the true.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.75456 Tm
( Ring out the want, the care, the sin,)Tj
T*
( The faithless coldness of the times;)Tj
T*
( Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes,)Tj
T*
( But ring the fuller minstrel in.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Ring out false pride in place and blood,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The civic slander and the spite;)Tj
T*
( Ring in the love of truth and right,)Tj
T*
( Ring in the common love of good.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Ring out old shapes of foul disease;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;)Tj
T*
( Ring out the thousand wars of old,)Tj
T*
( Ring in the thousand years of peace.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Ring in the valiant man and free,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The larger heart, the kindlier hand;)Tj
T*
( Ring out the darkness of the land;)Tj
ET
EMC
Q
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.11667 Tm
( Ring in the Christ that is to be.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Not the schoolboy heat,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The blind hysterics of the Celt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Now fades the last long streak of snow,)Tj
T*
( Now burgeons every maze of quick)Tj
T*
( About the flowering squares, and thick)Tj
T*
( By ashen roots the violets blow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( And drowned in yonder living blue)Tj
T*
( The lark becomes a sightless song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 115)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( There, where the long street roars, hath been)Tj
T*
( The stillness of the central sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 123)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( And thou art worthy; full of power;)Tj
T*
( As gentle; liberal-minded, great,)Tj
T*
( Consistent; wearing all that weight)Tj
T*
( Of learning lightly like a flower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.42047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 131, st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.50456 Tm
( One God, one law, one element,)Tj
T*
( And one far-off divine event,)Tj
T*
( To which the whole creation moves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221In Memoriam A. H. H.\222 \(1850\) canto 131, closing lines)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.75456 Tm
( The voice of the dead was a living voice to me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(\221In the Valley of Cauteretz\222 \(1864\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( Below the thunders of the upper deep;)Tj
T*
( Far, far beneath in the abysmal sea,)Tj
T*
( His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep)Tj
T*
( The Kraken sleepeth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Kraken\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( There hath he lain for ages and will lie)Tj
T*
( Battening upon huge seaworms in his sleep,)Tj
T*
( Until the latter fire shall heat the deep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221The Kraken\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( At me you smiled, but unbeguiled)Tj
T*
( I saw the snare, and I retired:)Tj
T*
( The daughter of a hundred Earls,)Tj
T*
( You are not one to be desired.)Tj
ET
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(\221Lady Clara Vere de Vere\222 \(1842\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( From yon blue heavens above us bent)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The gardener Adam and his wife)Tj
T*
( Smile at the claims of long descent.)Tj
T*
( Howe\222er it be, it seems to me,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis only noble to be good.)Tj
T*
( Kind hearts are more than coronets,)Tj
T*
( And simple faith than Norman blood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Lady Clara Vere de Vere\222 \(1842\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( On either side the river lie)Tj
T*
( Long fields of barley and of rye,)Tj
T*
( That clothe the wold and meet the sky;)Tj
T*
( And through the field the road runs by)Tj
T*
( To many-towered Camelot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Willows whiten, aspens quiver,)Tj
T*
( Little breezes dusk and shiver.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Only reapers, reaping early)Tj
T*
( In among the bearded barley,)Tj
T*
( Hear a song that echoes cheerly)Tj
T*
( From the river winding clearly,)Tj
T*
( Down to towered Camelot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Or when the moon was overhead,)Tj
T*
( Came two young lovers lately wed;)Tj
T*
( \221I am half sick of shadows,\222 said)Tj
T*
( The Lady of Shalott.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( A bow-shot from her bower-eaves,)Tj
T*
( He rode between the barley-sheaves,)Tj
T*
( The sun came dazzling through the leaves,)Tj
T*
( And flamed upon the brazen greaves)Tj
T*
( Of bold Sir Lancelot.)Tj
T*
( A red-cross knight for ever kneeled)Tj
T*
( To a lady in his shield,)Tj
T*
( That sparkled on the yellow field,)Tj
T*
( Beside remote Shalott.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( All in the blue unclouded weather)Tj
ET
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( Thick-jewelled shone the saddle-leather,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The helmet and the helmet-feather)Tj
T*
( Burned like one burning flame together,)Tj
T*
( As he rode down to Camelot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( She left the web, she left the loom,)Tj
T*
( She made three paces through the room,)Tj
T*
( She saw the water-lily bloom,)Tj
T*
( She saw the helmet and the plume,)Tj
T*
( She looked down to Camelot.)Tj
T*
( Out flew the web and floated wide;)Tj
T*
( The mirror cracked from side to side;)Tj
T*
( \221The curse is come upon me,\222 cried)Tj
T*
( The Lady of Shalott.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221The Lady of Shalott\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) pt. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( Slander, meanest spawn of Hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Letters\222 \(1855\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( Airy, fairy Lilian.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.92047 Tm
(\221Lilian\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.00456 Tm
( In the spring a livelier iris changes on the burnished dove;)Tj
T*
( In the spring a young man\222s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of lo\
ve.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( And our spirits rushed together at the touching of the lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( He will hold thee, when his passion shall have spent its novel force\
,)Tj
T*
( Something better than his dog, a little dearer than his horse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 49)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( This is truth the poet sings,)Tj
T*
( That a sorrow\222s crown of sorrow is remembering happier things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 75.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( Like a dog, he hunts in dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( But the jingling of the guinea helps the hurt that Honour feels.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 105)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( Men, my brothers, men the workers, ever reaping something new:)Tj
T*
( That which they have done but earnest of the things that they shall \
do:)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For I dipped into the future, far as human eye could see,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Saw the vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails,)Tj
ET
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( Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bales;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rained a ghastly dew\
)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the nations\222 airy navies grappling in the central blue;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Far along the world-wide whisper of the south-wind rushing warm,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With the standards of the peoples plunging through the thunder-storm\
;)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Till the war-drum throbbed no longer, and the battle-flags were furl\
ed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In the Parliament of man, the Federation of the world.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 617.92047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 597.00456 Tm
( Science moves, but slowly slowly, creeping on from point to point.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 581.17047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 134)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 560.25456 Tm
( Yet I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs,)Tj
T*
( And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 526.42047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 137)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 505.50456 Tm
( Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.75456 Tm
( I will take some savage woman, she shall rear my dusky race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 168)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 432.00456 Tm
( I the heir of all the ages, in the foremost files of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 178)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( Forward, forward let us range,)Tj
T*
( Let the great world spin for ever down the ringing grooves of change\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 181)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 340.50456 Tm
( Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Locksley Hall\222 \(1842\) l. 184)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( Music that gentlier on the spirit lies,)Tj
T*
( Than tired eyelids upon tired eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(\221The Lotos-Eaters\222 \(1832\) Choric Song, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( There is no joy but calm!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 233.17047 Tm
(\221The Lotos-Eaters\222 \(1832\) Choric Song, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 212.25456 Tm
( Death is the end of life; ah, why)Tj
T*
( Should life all labour be?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 178.42047 Tm
(\221The Lotos-Eaters\222 \(1832\) Choric Song, st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 157.50456 Tm
( Live and lie reclined)Tj
T*
( On the hills like Gods together, careless of mankind.)Tj
T*
( For they lie beside their nectar, and the bolts are hurled)Tj
T*
( Far below them in the valleys, and the clouds are lightly curled)Tj
T*
( Round their golden houses, girdled with the gleaming world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(\221The Lotos-Eaters\222 \(1832\) Choric Song, st. 8 \(1842 revision\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( Surely, surely, slumber is more sweet than toil, the shore)Tj
ET
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( Than labour in the deep mid-ocean, wind and wave and oar;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Oh rest ye, brother mariners, we will not wander more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Lotos-Eaters\222 \(1832\) Choric Song, st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( I saw the flaring atom-streams)Tj
T*
( And torrents of her myriad universe,)Tj
T*
( Ruining along the illimitable inane.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Lucretius\222 \(1868\) l. 38)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Nor at all can tell)Tj
T*
( Whether I mean this day to end myself,)Tj
T*
( Or lend an ear to Plato where he says,)Tj
T*
( That men like soldiers may not quit the post)Tj
T*
( Allotted by the Gods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Lucretius\222 \(1868\) l. 145)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Passionless bride, divine Tranquillity,)Tj
T*
( Yearned after by the wisest of the wise,)Tj
T*
( Who fail to find thee, being as thou art)Tj
T*
( Without one pleasure and without one pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Lucretius\222 \(1868\) l. 265)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( Weeded and worn the ancient thatch)Tj
T*
( Upon the lonely moated grange.)Tj
T*
( She only said, \221My life is dreary,)Tj
T*
( He cometh not,\222 she said;)Tj
T*
( She said, \221I am aweary, aweary,)Tj
T*
( I would that I were dead!\222)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Her tears fell with the dews at even;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Her tears fell ere the dews were dried.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.42047 Tm
(\221Mariana\222 \(1830\) st. 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.50456 Tm
( Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null,)Tj
T*
( Dead perfection, no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( The passionate heart of the poet is whirled into folly and vice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 4, st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( And most of all would I flee from the cruel madness of love,)Tj
T*
( The honey of poison-flowers and all the measureless ill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 4, st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( That jewelled mass of millinery,)Tj
T*
( That oiled and curled Assyrian Bull.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 6, st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( She came to the village church,)Tj
T*
( And sat by a pillar alone;)Tj
ET
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( An angel watching an urn)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wept over her, carved in stone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.67047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.75456 Tm
( I heard no longer)Tj
T*
( The snowy-banded, dilettante,)Tj
T*
( Delicate-handed priest intone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.92047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.00456 Tm
( Ah God, for a man with heart, head, hand,)Tj
T*
( Like some of the simple great ones gone)Tj
T*
( For ever and ever by,)Tj
T*
( One still strong man in a blatant land,)Tj
T*
( Whatever they call him, what care I,)Tj
T*
( Aristocrat, democrat, autocrat\227one)Tj
T*
( Who can rule and dare not lie.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 10, st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.25456 Tm
( I kissed her slender hand,)Tj
T*
( She took the kiss sedately;)Tj
T*
( Maud is not seventeen,)Tj
T*
( But she is tall and stately.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 12, st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.50456 Tm
( Gorgonised me from head to foot)Tj
T*
( With a stony British stare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.67047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 13, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.75456 Tm
( A livelier emerald twinkles in the grass,)Tj
T*
( A purer sapphire melts into the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.92047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 18, st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.00456 Tm
( Come into the garden, Maud,)Tj
T*
( For the black bat, night, has flown,)Tj
T*
( Come into the garden, Maud,)Tj
T*
( I am here at the gate alone;)Tj
T*
( And the woodbine spices are wafted abroad,)Tj
T*
( And the musk of the rose is blown.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( For a breeze of morning moves,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the planet of Love is on high,)Tj
T*
( Beginning to faint in the light that she loves)Tj
T*
( On a bed of daffodil sky.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 22, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.50456 Tm
( All night has the casement jessamine stirred)Tj
T*
( To the dancers dancing in tune;)Tj
T*
( Till a silence fell with the waking bird,)Tj
ET
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( And a hush with the setting moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 22, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Queen rose of the rosebud garden of girls.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 22, st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( There has fallen a splendid tear)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the passion-flower at the gate.)Tj
T*
( She is coming, my dove, my dear;)Tj
T*
( She is coming, my life, my fate;)Tj
T*
( The red rose cries, \221She is near, she is near;\222)Tj
T*
( And the white rose weeps, \221She is late;\222)Tj
T*
( The larkspur listens, \221I hear, I hear;\222)Tj
T*
( And the lily whispers, \221I wait.\222)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
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( She is coming, my own, my sweet;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Were it ever so airy a tread,)Tj
T*
( My heart would hear her and beat,)Tj
T*
( Were it earth in an earthy bed;)Tj
T*
( My dust would hear her and beat;)Tj
T*
( Had I lain for a century dead;)Tj
T*
( Would start and tremble under her feet,)Tj
T*
( And blossom in purple and red.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 1, sect. 22, st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( O that \222twere possible)Tj
T*
( After long grief and pain)Tj
T*
( To find the arms of my true love)Tj
T*
( Round me once again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 2, sect. 4, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( But the churchmen fain would kill their church,)Tj
T*
( As the churches have killed their Christ.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 2, sect. 5, st. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( O me, why have they not buried me deep enough?)Tj
T*
( Is it kind to have made me a grave so rough,)Tj
T*
( Me, that was never a quiet sleeper?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 2, sect. 5, st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( My life has crept so long on a broken wing)Tj
T*
( Through cells of madness, haunts of horror and fear,)Tj
T*
( That I come to be grateful at last for a little thing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 3, sect. 6, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( When the face of night is fair on the dewy downs,)Tj
T*
( And the shining daffodil dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 3, sect. 6, st. 1)Tj
ET
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( The blood-red blossom of war with a heart of fire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 3, sect. 6, st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( It is better to fight for the good, than to rail at the ill;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I have felt with my native land, I am one with my kind,)Tj
T*
( I embrace the purpose of God, and the doom assigned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Maud\222 \(1855\) pt. 3, sect. 6, st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( You must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear;)Tj
T*
( Tomorrow \222ill be the happiest time of all the glad New-year;)Tj
T*
( Of all the glad New-year, mother, the maddest merriest day;)Tj
T*
( For I\222m to be Queen o\222 the May, mother, I\222m to be Queen o\222\
the May.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The May Queen\222 \(1832\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Launch your vessel,)Tj
T*
( And crowd your canvas,)Tj
T*
( And, ere it vanishes)Tj
T*
( Over the margin,)Tj
T*
( After it, follow it,)Tj
T*
( Follow The Gleam.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Merlin and The Gleam\222 \(1889\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( O mighty-mouthed inventor of harmonies,)Tj
T*
( O skilled to sing of time or eternity,)Tj
T*
( God-gifted organ-voice of England,)Tj
T*
( Milton, a name to resound for ages.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.17047 Tm
(\221Milton: Alcaics\222 \(1863\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.25456 Tm
( All that bowery loneliness,)Tj
T*
( The brooks of Eden mazily murmuring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Milton: Alcaics\222 \(1863\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( But I knaw\222d a Qua\344ker feller as often \222as towd ma this:)Tj
T*
( \221Do\344nt thou marry for munny, but go\344 wheer munny is!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221Northern Farmer. New Style\222 \(1869\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( Ta\344ke my word for it, Sammy, the poor in a loomp is bad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Northern Farmer. New Style\222 \(1869\) st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( The last great Englishman is low.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington\222 \(1852\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.25456 Tm
( O good grey head which all men knew!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington\222 \(1852\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( O fall\222n at length that tower of strength)Tj
T*
( Which stood four-square to all the winds that blew!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington\222 \(1852\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( That world-earthquake, Waterloo!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington\222 \(1852\) st. 6)Tj
ET
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( Who never sold the truth to serve the hour,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor paltered with Eternal God for power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington\222 \(1852\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Naked they came to that smooth-swarded bower,)Tj
T*
( And at their feet the crocus brake like fire,)Tj
T*
( Violet, amaracus, and asphodel,)Tj
T*
( Lotos and lilies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Oenone\222 \(1832, revised 1842\) l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( I built my soul a lordly pleasure-house,)Tj
T*
( Wherein at ease for aye to dwell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Palace of Art\222 \(1832\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Still as, while Saturn whirls, his steadfast shade)Tj
T*
( Sleeps on his luminous ring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Palace of Art\222 \(1832\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( An English home\227grey twilight poured)Tj
T*
( On dewy pasture, dewy trees,)Tj
T*
( Softer than sleep\227all things in order stored,)Tj
T*
( A haunt of ancient Peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Palace of Art\222 \(1832\) st. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( Vex not thou the poet\222s mind)Tj
T*
( With thy shallow wit:)Tj
T*
( Vex not thou the poet\222s mind;)Tj
T*
( For thou canst not fathom it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 337.42047 Tm
(\221The Poet\222s Mind\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.50456 Tm
( With prudes for proctors, dowagers for deans,)Tj
T*
( And sweet girl-graduates in their golden hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.67047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) \221Prologue\222 l. 141)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.75456 Tm
( And blessings on the falling out)Tj
T*
( That all the more endears,)Tj
T*
( When we fall out with those we love)Tj
T*
( And kiss again with tears!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 2, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( A classic lecture, rich in sentiment,)Tj
T*
( With scraps of thundrous epic lilted out)Tj
T*
( By violet-hooded Doctors, elegies)Tj
T*
( And quoted odes, and jewels five-words-long,)Tj
T*
( That on the stretched forefinger of all Time)Tj
T*
( Sparkle for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 2, l. 352)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( Sweet and low, sweet and low,)Tj
ET
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( Wind of the western sea,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Low, low, breathe and blow,)Tj
T*
( Wind of the western sea!)Tj
T*
( Over the rolling waters go,)Tj
T*
( Come from the dying moon, and blow,)Tj
T*
( Blow him again to me;)Tj
T*
( While my little one, while my pretty one, sleeps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 629.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 3, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 608.25456 Tm
( The splendour falls on castle walls)Tj
T*
( And snowy summits old in story:)Tj
T*
( The long light shakes across the lakes,)Tj
T*
( And the wild cataract leaps in glory.)Tj
T*
( Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,)Tj
T*
( Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O hark, O hear! how thin and clear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And thinner, clearer, farther going!)Tj
T*
( O sweet and far from cliff and scar)Tj
T*
( The horns of Elfland faintly blowing!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( O love, they die in yon rich sky,)Tj
T*
( They faint on hill or field or river:)Tj
T*
( Our echoes roll from soul to soul,)Tj
T*
( And grow for ever and for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean,)Tj
T*
( Tears from the depth of some divine despair)Tj
T*
( Rise in the heart, and gather to the eyes,)Tj
T*
( In looking on the happy autumn-fields,)Tj
T*
( And thinking of the days that are no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, l. 21, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.25456 Tm
( So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, l. 30, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 169.50456 Tm
( Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawns)Tj
T*
( The earliest pipe of half-awakened birds)Tj
T*
( To dying ears, when unto dying eyes)Tj
T*
( The casement slowly grows a glimmering square;)Tj
T*
( So sad, so strange, the days that are no more.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Dear as remembered kisses after death,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feigned)Tj
T*
( On lips that are for others; deep as love,)Tj
ET
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( Deep as first love, and wild with all regret;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O Death in Life, the days that are no more.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, l. 31, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( O Swallow, Swallow, flying, flying South,)Tj
T*
( Fly to her, and fall upon her gilded eaves,)Tj
T*
( And tell her, tell her, what I tell to thee.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O tell her, Swallow, thou that knowest each,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That bright and fierce and fickle is the South,)Tj
T*
( And dark and true and tender is the North.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.42047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, l. 75, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 566.50456 Tm
( O tell her, Swallow, that thy brood is flown:)Tj
T*
( Say to her, I do but wanton in the South,)Tj
T*
( But in the North long since my nest is made.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 514.67047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 4, l. 90, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 493.75456 Tm
( Man is the hunter; woman is his game:)Tj
T*
( The sleek and shining creatures of the chase,)Tj
T*
( We hunt them for the beauty of their skins;)Tj
T*
( They love us for it, and we ride them down.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 423.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 5, l. 147)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.00456 Tm
( Home they brought her warrior dead.)Tj
T*
( She nor swooned, nor uttered cry:)Tj
T*
( All her maidens, watching said,)Tj
T*
( \221She must weep or she will die.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 6, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.25456 Tm
( Rose a nurse of ninety years,)Tj
T*
( Set his child upon her knee\227)Tj
T*
( Like summer tempest came her tears\227)Tj
T*
( \221Sweet my child, I live for thee.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.42047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 6, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.50456 Tm
( The woman is so hard)Tj
T*
( Upon the woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.67047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 6, l. 205)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 166.75456 Tm
( Ask me no more: what answer should I give?)Tj
T*
( I love not hollow cheek or faded eye:)Tj
T*
( Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!)Tj
T*
( Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 7, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white;)Tj
T*
( Nor waves the cypress in the palace walk;)Tj
T*
( Nor winks the gold fin in the porphyry font:)Tj
ET
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( The fire-fly wakens: waken thou with me.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Now droops the milk white peacock like a ghost,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And like a ghost she glimmers on to me.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Now lies the Earth all Dana\353 to the stars,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all thy heart lies open unto me.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Now slides the silent meteor on, and leaves)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A shining furrow, as thy thoughts in me.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Now folds the lily all her sweetness up,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And slips into the bosom of the lake:)Tj
T*
( So fold thyself, my dearest, thou, and slip)Tj
T*
( Into my bosom and be lost in me.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 7, l. 161, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 520.25456 Tm
( Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height:)Tj
T*
( What pleasure lives in height?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 486.42047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 7, l. 177, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 465.50456 Tm
( For Love is of the valley, come thou down)Tj
T*
( And find him; by the happy threshold, he,)Tj
T*
( Or hand in hand with Plenty in the maize,)Tj
T*
( Or red with spirted purple of the vats,)Tj
T*
( Or foxlike in the vine; nor cares to walk)Tj
T*
( With Death and Morning on the silver horns.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.67047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 7, l. 184, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 338.75456 Tm
( Sweet is every sound,)Tj
T*
( Sweeter thy voice, but every sound is sweet;)Tj
T*
( Myriads of rivulets hurrying through the lawn,)Tj
T*
( The moan of doves in immemorial elms,)Tj
T*
( And murmuring of innumerable bees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 250.92047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) pt. 7, l. 203, song \(added 1850\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.00456 Tm
( No little lily-handed baronet he,)Tj
T*
( A great broad-shouldered genial Englishman,)Tj
T*
( A lord of fat prize-oxen and of sheep,)Tj
T*
( A raiser of huge melons and of pine,)Tj
T*
( A patron of some thirty charities,)Tj
T*
( A pamphleteer on guano and on grain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.17047 Tm
(\221The Princess\222 \(1847\) \221Conclusion\222 l. 84)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.25456 Tm
( At Flores in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay,)Tj
T*
( And a pinnace, like a fluttered bird, came flying from far away:)Tj
T*
( \221Spanish ships of war at sea! we have sighted fifty-three!\222)Tj
T*
( Then sware Lord Thomas Howard: \221\221Fore God I am no coward;)Tj
ET
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( But I cannot meet them here, for my ships are out of gear,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the half my men are sick. I must fly, but follow quick.)Tj
T*
( We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty-three?\222)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Then spake Sir Richard Grenville: \221I know you are no coward;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( You fly them for a moment to fight with them again.)Tj
T*
( But I\222ve ninety men and more that are lying sick ashore.)Tj
T*
( I should count myself the coward if I left them, my Lord Howard,)Tj
T*
( To these Inquisition dogs and the devildoms of Spain.\222)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( So Lord Howard passed away with five ships of war that day,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Till he melted like a cloud in the silent summer heaven.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 567.67047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1878\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 546.75456 Tm
( And Sir Richard said again: \221We be all good English men.)Tj
T*
( Let us bang these dogs of Seville, the children of the devil,)Tj
T*
( For I never turned my back upon Don or devil yet.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 494.92047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1878\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.00456 Tm
( And the sun went down, and the stars came out far over the summer se\
a,)Tj
T*
( But never a moment ceased the fight of the one and the fifty-three.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 440.17047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1878\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 419.25456 Tm
( \221Sink me the ship, Master Gunner\227sink her, split her in twain!\
)Tj
T*
( Fall into the hands of God, not into the hands of Spain!\222)Tj
T*
( And the gunner said \221Ay, ay,\222 but the seamen made reply:)Tj
T*
( \221We have children we have wives,)Tj
T*
( And the Lord hath spared our lives.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 331.42047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1878\) st. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 310.50456 Tm
( And they praised him to his face with their courtly foreign grace;)Tj
T*
( But he rose upon their decks, and he cried:)Tj
T*
( \221I have fought for Queen and Faith like a valiant man and true;)Tj
T*
( I have only done my duty as a man is bound to do:)Tj
T*
( With a joyful spirit I Sir Richard Grenville die!\222)Tj
T*
( And he fell upon their decks, and he died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 204.67047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1878\) st. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.75456 Tm
( And the little Revenge herself went down by the island crags)Tj
T*
( To be lost evermore in the main.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 149.92047 Tm
( \221The Revenge\222 1878\) st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 129.00456 Tm
( My strength is as the strength of ten,)Tj
T*
( Because my heart is pure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.17047 Tm
(\221Sir Galahad\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 74.25456 Tm
( A man had given all other bliss,)Tj
T*
( And all his worldly worth for this,)Tj
T*
( To waste his whole heart in one kiss)Tj
ET
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( Upon her perfect lips.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 713.50456 Tm
( Alone and warming his five wits,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The white owl in the belfry sits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.67047 Tm
(\221Song\227The Owl\222 \(1830\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.75456 Tm
( The woods decay, the woods decay and fall,)Tj
T*
( The vapours weep their burthen to the ground,)Tj
T*
( Man comes and tills the field and lies beneath,)Tj
T*
( And after many a summer dies the swan.)Tj
T*
( Me only cruel immortality)Tj
T*
( Consumes: I wither slowly in thine arms,)Tj
T*
( Here at the quiet limit of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.92047 Tm
(\221Tithonus\222 \(1860, revised 1864\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.00456 Tm
( Why wilt thou ever scare me with thy tears,)Tj
T*
( And make me tremble lest a saying learnt,)Tj
T*
( In days far-off, on that dark earth, be true?)Tj
T*
( \221The gods themselves cannot recall their gifts.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.17047 Tm
(\221Tithonus\222 \(1860, revised 1864\) l. 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.25456 Tm
( Of happy men that have the power to die,)Tj
T*
( And grassy barrows of the happier dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.42047 Tm
(\221Tithonus\222 \(1860, revised 1864\) l. 70)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.50456 Tm
( You\222ll have no scandal while you dine,)Tj
T*
( But honest talk and wholesome wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(\221To the Revd F. D. Maurice\222 \(1855\) st. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.75456 Tm
( All the charm of all the Muses)Tj
T*
( often flowering in a lonely word.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.92047 Tm
(\221To Virgil\222 \(1882\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.00456 Tm
( I salute thee, Mantovano,)Tj
T*
( I that loved thee since my day began,)Tj
T*
( Wielder of the stateliest measure)Tj
T*
( ever moulded by the lips of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.17047 Tm
(\221To Virgil\222 \(1889\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.25456 Tm
( This truth within thy mind rehearse,)Tj
T*
( That in a boundless universe)Tj
T*
( Is boundless better, boundless worse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.42047 Tm
(\221The Two Voices\222 \(1842\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.50456 Tm
( No life that breathes with human breath)Tj
T*
( Has ever truly longed for death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.67047 Tm
(\221The Two Voices\222 \(1842\) st. 132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.75456 Tm
( It little profits that an idle king,)Tj
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( By this still hearth, among these barren crags,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Matched with an ag\351d wife, I mete and dole)Tj
T*
( Unequal laws unto a savage race.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.92047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1842\) l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.00456 Tm
( I will drink)Tj
T*
( Life to the lees: all times I have enjoyed)Tj
T*
( Greatly, have suffered greatly, both with those)Tj
T*
( That loved me, and alone; on shore, and when)Tj
T*
( Through scudding drifts the rainy Hyades)Tj
T*
( Vext the dim sea: I am become a name;)Tj
T*
( For always roaming with a hungry heart)Tj
T*
( Much have I seen and known; cities of men)Tj
T*
( And manners, climates, councils, governments,)Tj
T*
( Myself not least, but honoured of them all;)Tj
T*
( And drunk delight of battle with my peers,)Tj
T*
( Far on the ringing plains of windy Troy.)Tj
T*
( I am a part of all that I have met;)Tj
T*
( Yet all experience is an arch wherethrough)Tj
T*
( Gleams that untravelled world, whose margin fades)Tj
T*
( For ever and for ever when I move.)Tj
T*
( How dull it is to pause, to make an end,)Tj
T*
( To rust unburnished, not to shine in use!)Tj
T*
( As though to breathe were life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 340.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1842\) l. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 319.25456 Tm
( This grey spirit yearning in desire)Tj
T*
( To follow knowledge like a sinking star,)Tj
T*
( Beyond the utmost bound of human thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.42047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1842\) l. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.50456 Tm
( This is my son, mine own Telemachus.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.67047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1842\) l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.75456 Tm
( There lies the port; the vessel puffs her sail:)Tj
T*
( There gloom the dark broad seas. My mariners,)Tj
T*
( Souls that have toiled, and wrought, and thought with me\227)Tj
T*
( That ever with a frolic welcome took)Tj
T*
( The thunder and the sunshine, and opposed)Tj
T*
( Free hearts, free foreheads\227you and I are old;)Tj
T*
( Old age hath yet his honour and his toil;)Tj
T*
( Death closes all: but something ere the end,)Tj
T*
( Some work of noble note, may yet be done,)Tj
T*
( Not unbecoming men that strove with gods.)Tj
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( The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The long day wanes: the slow moon climbs: the deep)Tj
T*
( Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis not too late to seek a newer world.)Tj
T*
( Push off, and sitting well in order smite)Tj
T*
( The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds)Tj
T*
( To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths)Tj
T*
( Of all the western stars, until I die.)Tj
T*
( It may be that the gulfs will wash us down:)Tj
T*
( It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,)Tj
T*
( And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.)Tj
T*
( Though much is taken, much abides; and though)Tj
T*
( We are not now that strength which in old days)Tj
T*
( Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;)Tj
T*
( One equal temper of heroic hearts,)Tj
T*
( Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will)Tj
T*
( To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Ulysses\222 \(1842\) l. 44)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( Every moment dies a man,)Tj
T*
( Every moment one is born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221The Vision of Sin\222 \(1842\) pt. 4, st. 9.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( I grow in worth, and wit, and sense,)Tj
T*
( Unboding critic-pen,)Tj
T*
( Or that eternal want of pence,)Tj
T*
( Which vexes public men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221Will Waterproof\222s Lyrical Monologue\222 \(1842\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( A land of settled government,)Tj
T*
( A land of just and old renown,)Tj
T*
( Where Freedom slowly broadens down)Tj
T*
( From precedent to precedent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221You ask me, why, though ill at ease\222 \(1842\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( A louse in the locks of literature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(Said of Churton Collins to Edmund Gosse, in Evan Charteris \221Life and \
Letters of Sir Edmund Gosse\222 \(1931\) )Tj
T*
(ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.9624 Tm
( 8.19 Terence c.190-159 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hinc illae lacrimae.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hence all those tears shed.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 69.67047 Tm
(\221Andria\222 l. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( Amantium irae amoris integratio est.)Tj
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( Lovers\222 rows make love whole again.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Andria\222 l. 555)Tj
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( Nullumst iam dictum quod non dictum sit prius.)Tj
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( Nothing has yet been said that\222s not been said before.)Tj
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(\221Eunuchus\222 prologue l. 41)Tj
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( Homo sum; humani nil a me alienum puto.)Tj
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( I am a man, I count nothing human foreign to me.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 620.17047 Tm
(\221Heauton Timorumenos\222 l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 599.25456 Tm
( Fortis fortuna adiuvat.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Fortune assists the brave.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221Phormio\222 l. 203.)Tj
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( Quot homines tot sententiae: suo\222 quoique mos.)Tj
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( There are as many opinions as there are people: each has his own cor\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221Phormio\222 l. 454)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.20 St Teresa of \301vila 1512-82)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh, v lame Dios, Se\361or c\363mo apret is a vestros amadores!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Alas, O Lord, to what a state dost Thou bring those who love Thee!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.67047 Tm
(\221Interior Castle\222 Mansion 6, ch. 11, para. 6; translated by the Be\
nedictines of Stanbrook, 1921)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 379.4624 Tm
( 8.21 Tertullian A.D. c.160-c.225)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( O testimonium animae naturaliter Christianae.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O evidence of a naturally Christian soul!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Apologeticus\222 ch. 17, sect. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Plures efficimus quoties metimur a vobis, semen est sanguis Christia\
norum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( As often as we are mown down by you, the more we grow in numbers; th\
e blood of Christians )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(is the seed.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Apologeticus\222 ch. 50, sect. 13; traditionally quoted: \221The blo\
od of the martyrs is the seed of the Church\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Certum est quia impossibile est.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is certain because it is impossible.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(\221De Carne Christi\222 ch. 5; often quoted: \221Credo quia impossibil\
e\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 152.9624 Tm
( 8.22 A. S. J. Tessimond 1902-62)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Cats, no less liquid than their shadows,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Offer no angles to the wind.)Tj
T*
( They slip, diminished, neat, through loopholes)Tj
T*
( Less than themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221Cats\222 \(1934\) p. 20)Tj
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( 8.23 William Makepeace Thackeray 1811-63)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( He who meanly admires mean things is a Snob.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 715.42047 Tm
(\221The Book of Snobs\222 \(1848\) ch. 2)Tj
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( \222Tis not the dying for a faith that\222s so hard, Master Harry\227\
every man of every nation has done )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that\227\222tis the living up to it that is difficult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 660.67047 Tm
(\221The History of Henry Esmond\222 \(1852\) bk. 1, ch. 6)Tj
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( \222Tis strange what a man may do, and a woman yet think him an ange\
l.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 623.92047 Tm
(\221The History of Henry Esmond\222 \(1852\) bk. 1, ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 603.00456 Tm
( What money is better bestowed than that of a school-boy\222s tip?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 587.17047 Tm
(\221The Newcomes\222 \(1853-5\) vol. 1, ch. 16)Tj
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( He lifted up his head a little, and quickly said, \221Adsum!\222 and\
fell back...he, whose heart was as )Tj
T*
(that of a little child, had answered to his name, and stood in the prese\
nce of The Master.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.42047 Tm
(\221The Newcomes\222 \(1853-5\) vol. 1, ch. 80)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 511.50456 Tm
( Yes, I am a fatal man, Madame Fribsbi. To inspire hopeless passion i\
s my destiny.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 495.67047 Tm
(\221Pendennis\222 \(1848-50\) ch. 23 \(Mirobolant\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 474.75456 Tm
( Remember, it is as easy to marry a rich woman as a poor woman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.92047 Tm
(\221Pendennis\222 \(1848-50\) ch. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 438.00456 Tm
( For a slashing article, sir, there\222s nobody like the Capting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.17047 Tm
(\221Pendennis\222 \(1848-50\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 401.25456 Tm
( The Pall Mall Gazette is written by gentlemen for gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 385.42047 Tm
(\221Pendennis\222 \(1848-50\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 364.50456 Tm
( Business first; pleasure afterwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 348.67047 Tm
(The Queen of Paflagonia in \221The Rose and the Ring\222 \(1855\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 327.75456 Tm
( A woman with fair opportunities and without a positive hump, may mar\
ry whom she likes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.00456 Tm
( Whenever he met a great man he grovelled before him, and my-lorded h\
im as only a free-born )Tj
T*
(Briton can do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.17047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 236.25456 Tm
( If a man\222s character is to be abused, say what you will, there\222\
s nobody like a relation to do the )Tj
T*
(business.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 202.42047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 181.50456 Tm
( Them\222s my sentiments!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.67047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 21 \(Fred Bullock\))Tj
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( Darkness came down on the field and city: and Amelia was praying for\
)Tj
T*
( George, who was lying on his face, dead, with a bullet through his h\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 110.92047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.00456 Tm
( Nothing like blood, sir, in hosses, dawgs, and men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.17047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 35 \(James Crawley\))Tj
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( How to live well on nothing a year.)Tj
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(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 36 \(title\))Tj
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( I think I could be a good woman if I had five thousand a year.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 36)Tj
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( Ah! Vanitas Vanitatum! Which of us is happy in this world? Which of\
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(having it, is satisfied?\227Come, children, let us shut up the box and t\
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T*
(played out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Vanity Fair\222 \(1847-8\) ch. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Werther had a love for Charlotte)Tj
T*
( Such as words could never utter;)Tj
T*
( Would you know how first he met her?)Tj
T*
( She was cutting bread and butter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Sorrows of Werther\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( Oh, Vanity of vanities!)Tj
T*
( How wayward the decrees of Fate are;)Tj
T*
( How very weak the very wise,)Tj
T*
( How very small the very great are!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Vanitas Vanitatum\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 431.9624 Tm
( 8.24 Margaret Thatcher 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We must try to find ways to starve the terrorist and the hijacker of\
the oxygen of publicity on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which they depend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(Speech to American Bar Association in London, 15 July 1985, in \221The T\
imes\222 16 July 1985)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( No one would remember the Good Samaritan if he\222d only had good in\
tentions.)Tj
T*
( He had money as well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(Television interview, 6 January 1986, in \221The Times\222 12 January 19\
86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( It is exciting to have a real crisis on your hands, when you have sp\
ent half your political life )Tj
T*
(dealing with humdrum issues like the environment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(On the Falklands campaign, 1982, in Chris Rose \221The Dirty Man of Euro\
pe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( There is no such thing as Society. There are individual men and wome\
n, and there are families.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(In \221Woman\222s Own\222 31 October 1987)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 197.9624 Tm
( 8.25 Theocritus c.310-350 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Sweet is the whispering music of yonder pine that sings.)Tj
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(\221Idylls\222 bk. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.26 Louis Adolphe Thiers 1797-1877)Tj
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T*
( [Le roi] r\351gne et le peuple se gouverne.)Tj
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( The king reigns, and the people govern themselves.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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( 8.27 Thomas \341 Kempis c.1380-1471)Tj
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( Opto magis sentire compunctionem: quam scire eius definitionem.)Tj
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(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 1, sect. 3)Tj
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( O quam cito transit gloria mundi.)Tj
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( Oh how quickly the glory of the world passes away!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 633.92047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 3, sect. 6.)Tj
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( Non quaeras quis hoc dixerit: sed, quid dicitur attende.)Tj
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(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 5, sect. 1)Tj
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( Multo tutius est stave in subiectione: quam in praelatura.)Tj
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( It is much safer to be in a subordinate position than in authority.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 9, sect. 1)Tj
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( Nam homo proponit, sed Deus disponit.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( Man proposes, but God disposes.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 458.42047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 19, sect. 2)Tj
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( Numquam sis ex toto otiosus, sed aut legens, aut scribens, aut orans\
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(utilitatis pro communi laborans.)Tj
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(useful work for the common good.)Tj
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/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.92047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 9, sect. 4)Tj
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( Hodie homo est: et cras non comparet. Cum autem sublatus fuerit ab o\
culis: etiam cito transit a )Tj
T*
(mente.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Today the man is here; tomorrow he is gone. And when he is \221out o\
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(out of mind.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.42047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 23, sect. 1)Tj
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( Utinam per unam diem bene essemus conversati in hoc mundo.)Tj
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(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 1, ch. 23, sect. 2)Tj
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( Passione interdum movemur: et zelum putamus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( We are sometimes stirred by emotion and take it for zeal.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.42047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 2, ch. 5, sect. 1)Tj
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( Si libenter crucem portas portabit te.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( If you bear the cross gladly, it will bear you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.92047 Tm
(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 2, ch. 12, sect. 5)Tj
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( De duobus malis minus est semper eligendum.)Tj
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T*
( Of the two evils the lesser is always to be chosen.)Tj
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(\221De Imitatione Christi\222 bk. 3, ch. 12, sect. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.28 St Thomas Aquinas c.1225-74)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Pange, lingua, gloriosi)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Corporis mysterium,)Tj
T*
( Sanguinisque pretiosi,)Tj
T*
( Quem in mundi pretium)Tj
T*
( Fructus ventris generosi)Tj
T*
( Rex effudit gentium.)Tj
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( Sing, my tongue, of the mystery of the glorious Body, and of the pre\
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(\221Pange Lingua Gloriosi\222 \(Corpus Christi hymn\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Tantum ergo sacramentum)Tj
T*
( Veneremur cernui;)Tj
T*
( Et antiquum documentum)Tj
T*
( Novo cedat ritui.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Therefore we, before him bending,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( This great Sacrament revere;)Tj
T*
( Types and shadows have their ending,)Tj
T*
( For the newer rite is here.)Tj
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(\221Pange Lingua Gloriosi\222 \(Corpus Christi hymn, translated by J. M.\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.29 Brandon Thomas 1856-1914)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m Charley\222s aunt from Brazil\227where the nuts come from.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.42047 Tm
(\221Charley\222s Aunt\222 \(1892\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 287.2124 Tm
( 8.30 Dylan Thomas 1914-53)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Though they go mad they shall be sane,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Though they sink through the sea they shall rise again;)Tj
T*
( Though lovers be lost love shall not;)Tj
T*
( And death shall have no dominion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(\221And death shall have no dominion\222 \(1936\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( Do not go gentle into that good night,)Tj
T*
( Old age should burn and rave at close of day;)Tj
T*
( Rage, rage against the dying of the light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night\222 \(1952\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 102.00456 Tm
( Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs)Tj
T*
( About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.17047 Tm
(\221Fern Hill\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.25456 Tm
( Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means,)Tj
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( Time held me green and dying)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Though I sang in my chains like the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Fern Hill\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( The force that through the green fuse drives the flower)Tj
T*
( Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees)Tj
T*
( Is my destroyer.)Tj
T*
( And I am dumb to tell the crooked rose)Tj
T*
( My youth is bent by the same wintry fever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The force that through the green fuse drives the flower\222 \(1934\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( And I am dumb to tell the lover\222s tomb)Tj
T*
( How at my sheet goes the same crooked worm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The force that through the green fuse drives the flower\222 \(1934\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( The hand that signed the paper felled a city;)Tj
T*
( Five sovereign fingers taxed the breath,)Tj
T*
( Doubled the globe of dead and halved a country;)Tj
T*
( These five kings did a king to death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The hand that signed the paper felled a city\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( The hand that signed the treaty bred a fever,)Tj
T*
( And famine grew, and locusts came;)Tj
T*
( Great is the hand that holds dominion over)Tj
T*
( Man by a scribbled name.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221The hand that signed the paper felled a city\222 \(1936\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 353.25456 Tm
( Light breaks where no sun shines;)Tj
T*
( Where no sea runs, the waters of the heart)Tj
T*
( Push in their tides.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.42047 Tm
(\221Light breaks where no sun shines\222 \(1934\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.50456 Tm
( It was my thirtieth year to heaven)Tj
T*
( Woke to my hearing from harbour and neighbour wood)Tj
T*
( And the mussel pooled and the heron)Tj
T*
( Priested shore.)Tj
T*
( The morning beckon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221Poem in October\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( Pale rain over the dwindling harbour)Tj
T*
( And over the sea wet church the size of a snail)Tj
T*
( With its horns through mist and the castle)Tj
T*
( Brown as owls)Tj
T*
( But all the gardens)Tj
T*
( Of spring and summer were blooming in the tall vales)Tj
T*
( Beyond the border and under the lark full cloud.)Tj
T*
( There could I marvel)Tj
ET
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( My birthday)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Away but the weather turned around.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Poem in October\222 \(1946\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Deep with the first dead lies London\222s daughter,)Tj
T*
( Robed in the long friends,)Tj
T*
( The grains beyond age, the dark veins of her mother,)Tj
T*
( Secret by the unmourning water)Tj
T*
( Of the riding Thames.)Tj
T*
( After the first death, there is no other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London\222 \(19\
46\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( There is only one position for an artist anywhere: and that is, upri\
ght.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Quite Early One Morning\222 \(1954\) pt. 2 \221Wales and the Artist\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( To begin at the beginning: It is spring, moonless night in the small\
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T*
(black.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221Under Milk Wood\222 \(1954\) p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( Before you let the sun in, mind it wipes its shoes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Under Milk Wood\222 \(1954\) p. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Gomer Owen who kissed her once by the pig-sty when she wasn\222t loo\
king and never kissed her )Tj
T*
(again although she was looking all the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Under Milk Wood\222 \(1954\) p. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Oh, isn\222t life a terrible thing, thank God?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Under Milk Wood\222 \(1954\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Chasing the naughty couples down the grassgreen gooseberried double \
bed of the wood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221Under Milk Wood\222 \(1954\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( The land of my fathers. My fathers can have it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.17047 Tm
(On Wales, in \221Adam\222 December 1953)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 278.25456 Tm
( [An alcoholic:] A man you don\222t like who drinks as much as you do\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.42047 Tm
(In Constantine Fitzgibbon \221Life of Dylan Thomas\222 \(1965\) ch. 6)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 230.2124 Tm
( 8.31 Edward Thomas 1878-1917)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Yes; I remember Adlestrop\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The name, because one afternoon)Tj
T*
( Of heat the express-train drew up there)Tj
T*
( Unwontedly. It was late June.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Adlestrop\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( The past is the only dead thing that smells sweet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.92047 Tm
(\221Early one morning in May I set out\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.00456 Tm
( If I should ever by chance grow rich)Tj
T*
( I\222ll buy Codham, Cockridden, and Childerditch,)Tj
T*
( Roses, Pyrgo, and Lapwater,)Tj
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( And let them all to my elder daughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Household Poems: Bronwen\222 \(1917\))Tj
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( I have come to the borders of sleep,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The unfathomable deep)Tj
T*
( Forest where all must lose)Tj
T*
( Their way, however straight)Tj
T*
( Or winding, soon or late;)Tj
T*
( They can not choose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Lights Out\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( As for myself)Tj
T*
( Where first I met the bitter scent, etc.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Old Man\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( Out in the dark over the snow)Tj
T*
( The fallow fawns invisible go)Tj
T*
( With the fallow doe;)Tj
T*
( And the winds blow)Tj
T*
( Fast as the stars are slow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221Out in the dark\222 \(1917\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( As well as any bloom upon a flower)Tj
T*
( I like the dust on the nettles, never lost)Tj
T*
( Except to prove the sweetness of a shower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.17047 Tm
(\221Tall Nettles\222 \(1917\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 341.9624 Tm
( 8.32 Elizabeth Thomas 1675-1731)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From marrying in haste, and repenting at leisure;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Not liking the person, yet liking his treasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221A New Litany, occasioned by an invitation to a wedding\222 \(1722\).\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 254.2124 Tm
( 8.33 Irene Thomas)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Protestant women may take the pill. Roman Catholic women must keep t\
aking The Tablet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 216.67047 Tm
(In \221Guardian\222 28 December 1990, p. 27)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 184.4624 Tm
( 8.34 R. S. Thomas)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( He is that great void)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( we must enter, calling)Tj
T*
( to one another on our way)Tj
T*
( in the direction from which)Tj
T*
( he blows. What matter)Tj
T*
( if we should never arrive)Tj
T*
( to breed or to winter)Tj
ET
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( in the climate of our conception?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Migrants\222 \(1990\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.35 Francis Thompson 1859-1907)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( As the run-stealers flicker to and fro,)Tj
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( To and fro:\227)Tj
T*
( O my Hornby and my Barlow long ago!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221At Lord\222s\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( The fairest things have fleetest end,)Tj
T*
( Their scent survives their close:)Tj
T*
( But the rose\222s scent is bitterness)Tj
T*
( To him that loved the rose!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 540.67047 Tm
(\221Daisy\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.75456 Tm
( Nothing begins, and nothing ends,)Tj
T*
( That is not paid with moan;)Tj
T*
( For we are born in other\222s pain,)Tj
T*
( And perish in our own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(\221Daisy\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( I fled Him, down the nights and down the days;)Tj
T*
( I fled Him, down the arches of the years;)Tj
T*
( I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways)Tj
T*
( Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears)Tj
T*
( I hid from Him, and under running laughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( But with unhurrying chase,)Tj
T*
( And unperturb\351d pace,)Tj
T*
( Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,)Tj
T*
( They beat\227and a Voice beat)Tj
T*
( More instant than the Feet\227)Tj
T*
( All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( I said to Dawn: Be sudden\227to Eve:)Tj
T*
( Be soon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( To all swift things for swiftness did I sue;)Tj
T*
( Clung to the whistling mane of every wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Such is: what is to be?)Tj
T*
( The pulp so bitter, how shall taste the rind?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 4)Tj
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( Yet ever and anon a trumpet sounds)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From the hid battlements of Eternity;)Tj
T*
( Those shaken mists a space unsettle, then)Tj
T*
( Round the half-glimps\351d turrets slowly wash again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Now of that long pursuit)Tj
T*
( Comes on at hand the bruit;)Tj
T*
( That Voice is round me like a bursting sea:)Tj
T*
( \221And is thy earth so marred,)Tj
T*
( Shattered in shard on shard?)Tj
T*
( Lo, all things fly thee, for thou fliest Me!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221The Hound of Heaven\222 \(1913\) pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( There is no expeditious road)Tj
T*
( To pack and label men for God,)Tj
T*
( And save them by the barrel-load.)Tj
T*
( Some may perchance, with strange surprise,)Tj
T*
( Have blundered into Paradise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221A Judgement in Heaven\222 \(1913\) epilogue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( O world invisible, we view thee,)Tj
T*
( O world intangible, we touch thee,)Tj
T*
( O world unknowable, we know thee,)Tj
T*
( Inapprehensible, we clutch thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221The Kingdom of God\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( The angels keep their ancient places;\227)Tj
T*
( Turn but a stone, and start a wing!)Tj
T*
( \222Tis ye, \222tis your estrang\351d faces,)Tj
T*
( That miss the many-splendoured thing.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( But \(when so sad thou canst not sadder\))Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cry;\227and upon thy so sore loss)Tj
T*
( Shall shine the traffic of Jacob\222s ladder)Tj
T*
( Pitched betwixt Heaven and Charing Cross.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Yea, in the night, my Soul, my daughter,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Cry,\227clinging Heaven by the hems;)Tj
T*
( And lo, Christ walking on the water)Tj
T*
( Not of Gennesareth, but Thames!)Tj
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(\221The Kingdom of God\222 \(1913\))Tj
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( Look for me in the nurseries of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 77.92047 Tm
(\221To My Godchild Francis M.W.M.\222 \(1913\))Tj
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( What heart could have thought you?\227)Tj
T*
( Past our devisal)Tj
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( \(O filigree petal!\))Tj
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( Fashioned so purely,)Tj
T*
( Fragilely, surely,)Tj
T*
( From what Paradisal)Tj
T*
( Imagineless metal,)Tj
T*
( Too costly for cost?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221To a Snowflake\222 \(1913\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.25456 Tm
( Insculped and embossed,)Tj
T*
( With His hammer of wind,)Tj
T*
( And His graver of frost.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.42047 Tm
(\221To a Snowflake\222 \(1913\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 540.2124 Tm
( 8.36 Hunter S. Thompson 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fear and loathing in Las Vegas.)Tj
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(Title of two articles in \221Rolling Stone\222 11 and 25 Nov. 1971 \(und\
er the pseudonym \221Raoul Duke\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.37 William Hepworth Thompson 1810-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( What time he can spare from the adornment of his person he devotes t\
o the neglect of his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(duties.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.92047 Tm
(On Sir Richard Jebb, later Professor of Greek at Cambridge University, i\
n M. R. Bobbit \221With Dearest Love )Tj
T*
(to All\222 \(1960\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.38 James Thomson 1700-48)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When Britain first, at heaven\222s command,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Arose from out the azure main,)Tj
T*
( This was the charter of the land,)Tj
T*
( And guardian angels sung this strain:)Tj
T*
( \221Rule, Britannia, rule the waves;)Tj
T*
( Britons never will be slaves.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(\221Alfred: a Masque\222 \(1740\) act 2, closing scene)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.25456 Tm
( A pleasing land of drowsyhead it was.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.42047 Tm
(\221The Castle of Indolence\222 \(1748\) canto 1, st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.50456 Tm
( A bard here dwelt, more fat than bard beseems)Tj
T*
( Who, void of envy, guile, and lust of gain,)Tj
T*
( On virtue still, and nature\222s pleasing themes,)Tj
T*
( Poured forth his unpremeditating strain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.67047 Tm
(\221The Castle of Indolence\222 \(1748\) canto 1, st. 68)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.75456 Tm
( Delightful task! to rear the tender thought,)Tj
T*
( To teach the young idea how to shoot.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.92047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Spring\222 l. 1152)Tj
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( An elegant sufficiency, content,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Spring\222 l. 1161)Tj
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( The sober-suited songstress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Summer\222 l. 746 \(referring to the ni\
ghtingale\))Tj
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( Ships, dim-discovered, dropping from the clouds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Summer\222 l. 946)Tj
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( Or sighed and looked unutterable things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Summer\222 l. 1188)Tj
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( Autumn nodding o\222er the yellow plain)Tj
T*
( Comes jovial on.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( While listening senates hang upon thy tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( For loveliness)Tj
T*
( Needs not the foreign aid of ornament,)Tj
T*
( But is when unadorned adorned the most.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 204)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Poor is the triumph o\222er the timid hare!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 401)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( He stands at bay,)Tj
T*
( And puts his last weak refuge in despair.)Tj
T*
( The big round tears run down his dappled face;)Tj
T*
( He groans in anguish; while the growling pack,)Tj
T*
( Blood-happy, hang at his fair jutting chest,)Tj
T*
( And mark his beauteous chequered sides with gore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 452 \(referring to a stag\
\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( Find other lands beneath another sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Autumn\222 l. 1286)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( See, Winter comes to rule the varied year,)Tj
T*
( Sullen and sad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Winter\222 l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( Welcome, kindred glooms!)Tj
T*
( Congenial horrors, hail!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Winter\222 l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( The redbreast, sacred to the household gods,)Tj
T*
( Wisely regardful of the embroiling sky,)Tj
T*
( In joyless fields and thorny thickets leaves)Tj
T*
( His shivering mates, and pays to trusted man)Tj
T*
( His annual visit.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Winter\222 l. 246)Tj
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( Studious let me sit,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And hold high converse with the mighty dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Seasons\222 \(1728\) \221Winter\222 l. 431)Tj
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( Oh! Sophonisba! Sophonisba! oh!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Sophonisba\222 \(1730\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
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( How the heart listened while he pleading spoke!)Tj
T*
( While on the enlightened mind, with winning art,)Tj
T*
( His gentle reason so persuasive stole)Tj
T*
( That the charmed hearer thought it was his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221To the Memory of the Right Honourable the Lord Talbot\222 \(1737\) l\
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/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.39 James Thomson 1834-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( The City is of Night; perchance of Death,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But certainly of Night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The City of Dreadful Night\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( As we rush, as we rush in the train,)Tj
T*
( The trees and the houses go wheeling back,)Tj
T*
( But the starry heavens above that plain)Tj
T*
( Come flying on our track.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 394.42047 Tm
(\221Sunday at Hampstead\222 st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 373.50456 Tm
( Give a man a horse he can ride,)Tj
T*
( Give a man a boat he can sail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 339.67047 Tm
(\221Sunday up the River\222 st. 15)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 307.4624 Tm
( 8.40 Lord Thomson \(Roy Herbert Thomson, Baron Thomson of Fleet\) 1894-\
1976)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Like having your own licence to print money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(On the profitability of commercial television in Britain, in R. Braddon \
\221Roy Thomson\222 \(1965\) ch. 32)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 237.7124 Tm
( 8.41 Henry David Thoreau 1817-62)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I heartily accept the motto, \221That government is best which gover\
ns least\222; and I should like to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(see it acted up to more rapidly and systematically. Carried out, it fina\
lly amounts to this, which I )Tj
T*
(also believe,\227\222That government is best which governs not at all.\222\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 164.17047 Tm
(\221Civil Disobedience\222 \(1849\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 143.25456 Tm
( Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for \
a just man is also a prison.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 127.42047 Tm
(\221Civil Disobedience\222 \(1849\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 106.50456 Tm
( Some circumstantial evidence is very strong, as when you find a trou\
t in the milk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 11 November 1850 \(published 1903\))Tj
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( I do not perceive the poetic and dramatic capabilities of an anecdot\
e or story which is told me, )Tj
T*
(its significance, till some time afterwards...We do not enjoy poetry unl\
ess we know it to be poetry.)Tj
ET
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(\221Journal\222 1 October 1856 \(published 1903\))Tj
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( Not that the story need be long, but it will take a long while to ma\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mr B., 16 November 1857.)Tj
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( I have travelled a good deal in Concord.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
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( As if you could kill time without injuring eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222 \(in Histoire da ma vie vol. 4 \(\
1854\) p. 438 George Sand describes Chopin as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(being in a state of \221d\350seperance tranquille\222 in the period 1838\
-9\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.25456 Tm
( It is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( I have lived some thirty years on this planet, and I have yet to hea\
r the first syllable of valuable )Tj
T*
(or even earnest advice from my seniors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( There are now-a-days professors of philosophy but not philosophers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( I long ago lost a hound, a bay horse, and a turtle-dove, and am stil\
l on their trail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( In any weather, at any hour of the day or night, I have been anxious\
to improve the nick of )Tj
T*
(time, and notch it on my stick too; to stand on the meeting of two etern\
ities, the past and the )Tj
T*
(future, which is precisely the present moment; to toe that line.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( It is true, I never assisted the sun materially in his rising, but, \
doubt not, it was of the last )Tj
T*
(importance only to be present at it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Tall arrowy white pines.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( The owner of the axe, as he released his hold on it, said that it wa\
s the apple of his eye; but I )Tj
T*
(returned it sharper than I received it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( For more than five years I maintained myself thus solely by the labo\
r of my hands, and I )Tj
T*
(found, that by working about six weeks in a year, I could meet all the e\
xpenses of living.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.42047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.50456 Tm
( As for Doing-good, that is one of the professions which are full. Mo\
reover, I have tried it )Tj
T*
(fairly, and, strange as it may seem, am satisfied that it does not agree\
with my constitution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.67047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.75456 Tm
( The government of the world I live in was not framed, like that of B\
ritain, in after-dinner )Tj
T*
(conversations over the wine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Economy\222 conclusion)Tj
ET
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( The three-o\222-clock in the morning courage, which Bonaparte though\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Sounds\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Wherever a man goes, men will pursue him and paw him with their dirt\
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0 -1.2 TD
(they can, constrain him to belong to their desperate oddfellow society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221The Village\222)Tj
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( I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life...to drive\
life into a corner, and reduce )Tj
T*
(it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to get th\
e whole and genuine )Tj
T*
(meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world; or if it were sub\
lime, to know it by )Tj
T*
(experience, and be able to give a true account of it in my next excursio\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Where I lived, and what I lived for\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Our life is frittered away by detail...Simplify, simplify.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Where I lived, and what I lived for\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( I frequently tramped eight or ten miles through the deepest snow to \
keep an appointment with )Tj
T*
(a beech-tree, or a yellow birch, or an old acquaintance among the pines.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Winter Visitors\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( I once had a sparrow alight upon my shoulder for a moment while I wa\
s hoeing in a village )Tj
T*
(garden, and I felt that I was more distinguished by that circumstance th\
an I should have been by )Tj
T*
(any epaulet I could have worn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Walden\222 \(1854\) \221Winter Visitors\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( It has been proposed that the town should adopt for its coat of arms\
a field verdant, with the )Tj
T*
(Concord circling nine times round.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers\222 \(1849\) \221Concord \
River\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( It takes two to speak the truth,\227one to speak, and another to hea\
r.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.92047 Tm
(\221A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers\222 \(1849\) \221Wednesda\
y\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.00456 Tm
( It were treason to our love)Tj
T*
( And a sin to God above)Tj
T*
( One iota to abate)Tj
T*
( Of a pure impartial hate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.17047 Tm
(\221Indeed, Indeed I Cannot Tell\222 \(1852\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 224.25456 Tm
( Emerson: Why are you here?)Tj
T*
( Thoreau: Why are you not here?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 190.42047 Tm
(Thoreau was in prison for failure to pay taxes. Oral tradition in the fa\
mily of Ralph Waldo Emerson, relating )Tj
T*
(to Thoreau\222s imprisonment for non-payment of taxes, but discounted fo\
r lack of documentary evidence. )Tj
T*
(Harding \221A Thoreau Handbook\222 \(1959\) p. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.2124 Tm
( 8.42 Jeremy Thorpe 1929\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his friends for\
his life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(Referring to the sacking by Harold Macmillan of a number of his Cabinet,\
13 July 1962, in D. E. Butler and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Anthony King \221The General Election of 1964\222 \(1965\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 43.4624 Tm
( 8.43 James Thurber 1894-1961)Tj
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( I suppose that the high-water mark of my youth in Columbus, Ohio, wa\
s the night the bed fell )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(on my father.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221My Life and Hard Times\222 \(1933\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( Her own mother lived the latter years of her life in the horrible su\
spicion that electricity was )Tj
T*
(dripping invisibly all over the house.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221My Life and Hard Times\222 \(1933\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far backwa\
rd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221The Bear Who Let It Alone\222 in \221New Yorker\222 29 April 1939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( There is no safety in numbers, or in anything else.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.67047 Tm
(\221The Fairly Intelligent Fly\222 in \221New Yorker\222 4 February 1939\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.75456 Tm
( You can fool too many of the people too much of the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.92047 Tm
(\221The Owl who was God\222 in \221New Yorker\222 29 April 1939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.00456 Tm
( Then, with that faint fleeting smile playing about his lips, he face\
d the firing squad; erect and )Tj
T*
(motionless, proud and disdainful, Walter Mitty, the undefeated, inscruta\
ble to the last.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.17047 Tm
(\221The Secret Life of Walter Mitty\222 in \221New Yorker\222 18 March 1\
939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.25456 Tm
( Early to rise and early to bed makes a male healthy and wealthy and \
dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.42047 Tm
(\221The Shrike and the Chipmunks\222 in \221New Yorker\222 18 February 1\
939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.50456 Tm
( All right, have it your own way\227you heard a seal bark!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 424.67047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221New Yorker\222 30 January 1932)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 403.75456 Tm
( That\222s my first wife up there and this is the present Mrs Harris.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 387.92047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221New Yorker\222 16 March 1933)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.00456 Tm
( The war between men and women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.17047 Tm
(Cartoon series title in \221New Yorker\222 20 January-28 April 1934)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.25456 Tm
( It\222s a na\357ve domestic Burgundy without any breeding, but I thi\
nk you\222ll be amused by its )Tj
T*
(presumption.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.42047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221New Yorker\222 27 March 1937)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 275.50456 Tm
( Well, if I called the wrong number, why did you answer the phone?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.67047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221New Yorker\222 5 June 1937)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 238.75456 Tm
( It\222s our own story exactly! He bold as a hawk, she soft as the da\
wn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 222.92047 Tm
(Cartoon caption in \221New Yorker\222 25 February 1939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 202.00456 Tm
( Humour is emotional chaos remembered in tranquillity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.17047 Tm
(In \221New York Post\222 29 February 1960.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 153.9624 Tm
( 8.44 Edward, First Baron Thurlow 1731-1806)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Corporations have neither bodies to be punished, nor souls to be con\
demned, they therefore do )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(as they like.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.42047 Tm
(In Poynder \221Literary Extracts\222 \(1844\) vol. 1 \(usually quoted as\
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T*
(conscience, when it has no soul to be damned, and no body to be kicked?\222\
\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 51.2124 Tm
( 8.45 Edward, Second Baron Thurlow 1781-1829)Tj
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( Nature is always wise in every part.)Tj
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(\221To a Bird, that haunted the Waters of Lacken, in the Winter\222)Tj
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( 8.46 Tibullus c.50-19 B.C.)Tj
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( Te spectem, suprema mihi cum venerit hora,)Tj
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(\221Elegies\222 bk. 1, no. 1, l. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Te propter nullos tellus tua postulat imbres,)Tj
T*
( Arida nec pluvio supplicat herba Iovi.)Tj
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(\221Elegies\222 bk. 1, no. 7, l. 25 \(referring to the Nile in Egypt\))Tj
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( 8.47 Chidiock Tichborne c.1558-86)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( My prime of youth is but a frost of cares;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( My feast of joy is but a dish of pain;)Tj
T*
( My crop of corn is but a field of tares;)Tj
T*
( And all my good is but vain hope of gain.)Tj
T*
( The day is past, and yet I saw no sun;)Tj
T*
( And now I live, and now my life is done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221Elegy\222 \(composed in the Tower of London before his execution\))Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 323.2124 Tm
( 8.48 Thomas Tickell 1686-1740)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( There taught us how to live; and \(oh! too high)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The price for knowledge\) taught us how to die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Epitaph. On the Death of Mr Addison\222 l. 81, in Tickell\222s editi\
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15 0 0 15 10 235.4624 Tm
( 8.49 Paul Tillich 1886-1965)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Neurosis is the way of avoiding non-being by avoiding being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(\221The Courage To Be\222 \(1952\) pt. 2, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.00456 Tm
( He who knows about depth knows about God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.17047 Tm
(\221The Shaking of the Foundations\222 \(1948\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 128.9624 Tm
( 8.50 Matthew Tindal 1657-1733)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Matters of fact, which as Mr Budgell somewhere observes, are very st\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 91.42047 Tm
(\221The Will of Matthew Tindal\222 \(1733\) p. 23)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 59.2124 Tm
( 8.51 Dion Titheradge)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1921, music by Ivor Novello\))Tj
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( 8.52 Emperor Titus A.D. 39-81)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Amici, diem perdidi.)Tj
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( 8.53 John Tobin 1770-1804)Tj
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( The man that lays his hand upon a woman,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Save in the way of kindness, is a wretch)Tj
T*
( Whom \222t were gross flattery to name a coward.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221The Honeymoon\222 act 2, sc. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 8.54 Alexis De Tocqueville 1805-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( L\222esprit fran\347ais est de ne pas vouloir de sup\350rieur. L\222\
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(Le Fran\347ais l\351ve les yeux sans cesse au-dessus de lui avec inqui\350\
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T*
(dessous de lui avec complaisance. C\222est de part et d\222autre de l\222\
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T*
(diff\350rente.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The French want no-one to be their superior. The English want inferi\
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T*
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way.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221Voyage en Angleterre et en Irlande de 1835\222 18 May)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.50456 Tm
( C\222est au milieu de ce cloaque infect que le plus grand fleuve de \
l\222industrie humaine prend sa )Tj
T*
(source et va f\350conder l\222univers. De cet \350gout immonde, l\222or \
pur s\222\350coule. C\222est l\341 que l\222esprit )Tj
T*
(humain se perfectionne et s\222abrutit; que la civilisation produit ses \
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T*
(civilis\350e redevient presque sauvage.)Tj
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( It is from the midst of this putrid sewer that the greatest river of\
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ws forth. Here it is that )Tj
T*
(humanity achieves for itself both perfection and brutalization, that civ\
ilization produces its )Tj
T*
(wonders, and that civilized man becomes again almost a savage.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(Writing about Manchester in \221Voyage en Angleterre et en Irlande de 18\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.7124 Tm
( 8.55 Alvin Toffler 1928\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Future shock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1970\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.56 J. R. R. Tolkien 1892-1973)Tj
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T*
( In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, we\
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(eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Hobbit\222 \(1937\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Lord of the Rings\222 \(1954-5\) pt. 1 \221The Fellowship of the\
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( 8.57 Leo Tolstoy 1828-1910)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( All happy families resemble one another, but each unhappy family is \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Anna Karenina\222 \(1875-7\) pt. 1, ch. 1 \(translated by Maude\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( It is amazing how complete is the delusion that beauty is goodness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221The Kreutzer Sonata\222 5 \(translated by Maude\))Tj
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( Our body is a machine for living. It is organized for that, it is it\
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0 -1.2 TD
(unhindered and let it defend itself, it will do more than if you paralys\
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T*
(remedies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221War and Peace\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 10, ch. 29 \(translated by A. and L\
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15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( Pure and complete sorrow is as impossible as pure and complete joy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.42047 Tm
(\221War and Peace\222 \(1868-9\) bk. 15, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.50456 Tm
( Art is not a handicraft, it is the transmission of feeling the artis\
t has experienced.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(\221What is Art?\222 \(1898\) ch. 19 \(translated by Maude\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( I sit on a man\222s back, choking him and making him carry me, and y\
et assure myself and others )Tj
T*
(that I am very sorry for him and wish to ease his lot by all possible me\
ans\227except by getting off )Tj
T*
(his back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221What Then Must We Do?\222 \(1886\) ch. 16 \(translated by Maude\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 324.7124 Tm
( 8.58 Nicholas Tomalin)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The only qualities for real success in journalism are ratlike cunnin\
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0 -1.2 TD
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.17047 Tm
(\221Sunday Times Magazine\222 26 October 1969 \(where the phrase ratlike\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.9624 Tm
( 8.59 Barry Took and Marty Feldman)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hello, I\222m Julian and this is my friend, Sandy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(Catch-phrase in \221Round the Horne\222 \(BBC radio series, 1965-8\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.2124 Tm
( 8.60 Cyril Tourneur c.1575-1626)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Does the silk-worm expend her yellow labours)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For thee? for thee does she undo herself?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.67047 Tm
(\221The Revenger\222s Tragedy\222 \(1607\) act 3, sc. 5, l. 71)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 79.4624 Tm
( 8.61 Pete Townshend 1945\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hope I die before I get old.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(\221My Generation\222 \(1965 song\))Tj
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( You never enjoy the world aright, till the sea itself floweth in you\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
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T*
(Till you can sing and rejoice and delight in God, as misers do in gold, \
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T*
(never enjoy the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(\221Centuries of Meditations\222 Century 1, 29)Tj
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( The corn was orient and immortal wheat, which never should be reaped\
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T*
(thought it had stood from everlasting to everlasting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.42047 Tm
(\221Centuries of Meditations\222 Century 3, 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 554.50456 Tm
( The Men! O what venerable and reverend creatures did the aged seem! \
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T*
( And young men glittering and sparkling Angels, and maids strange seraph\
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T*
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T*
(they were born or should die; but all things abided eternally as they we\
re in their proper places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 484.67047 Tm
(\221Centuries of Meditations\222 Century 3, 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 463.75456 Tm
( The hands are a sort of feet, which serve us in our passage towards \
Heaven, curiously )Tj
T*
(distinguished into joints and fingers, and fit to be applied to any thin\
g which reason can imagine )Tj
T*
(or desire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.92047 Tm
(\221Meditations on the Six Days of Creation\222 \(1717\) vi, p. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 391.00456 Tm
( Contentment is a sleepy thing)Tj
T*
( If it in death alone must die;)Tj
T*
( A quiet mind is worse than poverty,)Tj
T*
( Unless it from enjoyment spring!)Tj
T*
( That\222s blessedness alone that makes a King!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.17047 Tm
(\221Of Contentment\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.25456 Tm
( I within did flow)Tj
T*
( With seas of life, like wine.)Tj
T*
( I nothing in this world did know,)Tj
T*
( But \222twas divine!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.42047 Tm
(\221Wonder\222 st. 3)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 180.2124 Tm
( 8.63 Henry Duff Traill 1842-1900)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Look in my face. My name is Used-to-was;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I am also called Played-out and Done-to-death,)Tj
T*
( And It-will-wash-no-more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 106.67047 Tm
(\221After Dilettante Concetti\222 \(i.e. Dante Gabriel Rossetti\) st. 8.\
)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 74.4624 Tm
( 8.64 Joseph Trapp 1679-1747)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The King, observing with judicious eyes)Tj
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( The state of both his universities,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To Oxford sent a troop of horse, and why?)Tj
T*
( That learned body wanted loyalty;)Tj
T*
( To Cambridge books, as very well discerning)Tj
T*
( How much that loyal body wanted learning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(Lines written on George I\222s Donation of the Bishop of Ely\222s Librar\
y to Cambridge University, in John )Tj
T*
(Nichols \221Literary Anecdotes\222 \(1812-6\) vol. 3, p. 330.)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 617.9624 Tm
( 8.65 Ben Travers 1886\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One night Mr and Mrs Reginald Bingham went to Ciro\222s. They had be\
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
(seeing his wife there, was considerable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 544.42047 Tm
(\221Mischief\222 \(1926\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 512.2124 Tm
( 8.66 Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree 1852-1917)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My poor fellow, why not carry a watch?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 474.67047 Tm
(To a man in the street, carrying a grandfather clock, in Hesketh Pearson\
\221Beerbohm Tree\222 \(1956\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 453.75456 Tm
( Sirs, I have tested your machine. It adds a new terror to life and m\
akes death a long-felt want.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 437.92047 Tm
(When pressed by a gramophone company for a written testimonial, in Heske\
th Pearson \221Beerbohm )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Tree\222 \(1956\) ch. 19; Beerbohm later insisted \221the immortalism mu\
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15 0 0 15 10 402.00456 Tm
( He is an old bore. Even the grave yawns for him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 386.17047 Tm
(In Max Beerbohm \221Herbert Beerbohm Tree\222 \(1920\) appendix 4 \(refe\
rring to Israel Zangwill\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 365.25456 Tm
( Ladies, just a little more virginity, if you don\222t mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(To a motley collection of women, assembled to play ladies in waiting to \
a queen, in Alexander Woollcott )Tj
T*
(\221Shouts and Murmurs\222 \(1923\) \221Capsule Criticism\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 302.2124 Tm
( 8.67 Herbert Trench 1865-1923)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Come, let us make love deathless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.67047 Tm
(Title of poem)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 232.4624 Tm
( 8.68 Richard Trench, Archbishop Of Dublin 1807-86)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( England, we love thee better than we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.92047 Tm
(\221Gibraltar\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 162.7124 Tm
( 8.69 G. M. Trevelyan 1876-1962)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Disinterested intellectual curiosity is the life-blood of real civil\
ization.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221English Social History\222 \(1942\) introduction)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( It [education] has produced a vast population able to read but unabl\
e to distinguish what is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(worth reading, an easy prey to sensations and cheap appeals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 70.42047 Tm
(\221English Social History\222 \(1942\) ch. 18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 38.2124 Tm
( 8.70 Calvin Trillin)Tj
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( The shelf life of the modern hardback writer is somewhere between th\
e milk and the yoghurt.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 8.71 Lionel Trilling 1905-75)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Immature artists imitate. Mature artists steal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 675.92047 Tm
(In \221Esquire\222 September 1962.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 643.7124 Tm
( 8.72 Tommy Trinder 1909-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Overpaid, overfed, oversexed, and over here.)Tj
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(Referring to American troops in Britain during World War II and attribut\
ed to Trinder)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 8.73 Anthony Trollope 1815-82)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( He must have known me had he seen me as he was wont to see me, for h\
e was in the habit of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(flogging me constantly. Perhaps he did not recognize me by my face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.42047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1883\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.50456 Tm
( Take away from English authors their copyrights, and you would very \
soon take away from )Tj
T*
(England her authors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.67047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1883\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.75456 Tm
( Three hours a day will produce as much as a man ought to write.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.92047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1883\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.00456 Tm
( Of all the needs a book has the chief need is that it be readable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.17047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1883\) ch. 19.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.25456 Tm
( I think that Plantagenet Palliser, Duke of Omnium, is a perfect gent\
leman. If he be not, then I )Tj
T*
(am unable to describe a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.42047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1883\) ch. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.50456 Tm
( She was rich in apparel, but not bedizened with finery...she well kn\
ew the great architectural )Tj
T*
(secret of decorating her constructions, and never descended to construct\
a decoration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 280.67047 Tm
(Describing Mrs Stanhope in \221Barchester Towers\222 \(1857\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.75456 Tm
( \221Unhand it, sir!\222 said Mrs Proudie. From what scrap of dramati\
c poetry she had extracted the )Tj
T*
(word cannot be said; but it must have rested on her memory, and now seem\
ed opportunely )Tj
T*
(dignified for the occasion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.92047 Tm
(\221Barchester Towers\222 \(1857\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.00456 Tm
( No man thinks there is much ado about nothing when the ado is about \
himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(\221The Bertrams\222 \(1859\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.25456 Tm
( Those who have courage to love should have courage to suffer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.42047 Tm
(\221The Bertrams\222 \(1859\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.50456 Tm
( How I did respect you when you dared to speak the truth to me! Men d\
on\222t know women, or )Tj
T*
(they would be harder to them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.67047 Tm
(\221The Claverings\222 \(1867\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.75456 Tm
( There is no road to wealth so easy and respectable as that of matrim\
ony.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.92047 Tm
(\221Doctor Thorne\222 \(1858\) ch. 16)Tj
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( The comic almanacs give us dreadful pictures of January and February\
; but, in truth, the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(months which should be made to look gloomy in England are March and Apri\
l. Let no man boast )Tj
T*
(himself that he has got through the perils of winter till at least the s\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.17047 Tm
(\221Doctor Thorne\222 \(1858\) ch. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.25456 Tm
( For the most of us, if we do not talk of ourselves, or at any rate o\
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T*
(which we are the centres, we can talk of nothing. I cannot hold with tho\
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T*
(the insignificant chatter of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.42047 Tm
(\221Framley Parsonage\222 \(1860\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.50456 Tm
( She understood how much louder a cock can crow in its own farmyard t\
han elsewhere.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.67047 Tm
(\221The Last Chronicle of Barset\222 \(1867\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.75456 Tm
( It\222s dogged as does it. It ain\222t thinking about it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.92047 Tm
(\221The Last Chronicle of Barset\222 \(1867\) ch. 61)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.00456 Tm
( With many women I doubt whether there be any more effectual way of t\
ouching their hearts )Tj
T*
(than ill-using them and then confessing it. If you wish to get the sweet\
est fragrance from the herb )Tj
T*
(at your feet, tread on it and bruise it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.17047 Tm
(\221Miss Mackenzie\222 \(1865\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.25456 Tm
( We cannot bring ourselves to believe it possible that a foreigner sh\
ould in any respect be wiser )Tj
T*
(than ourselves. If any such point out to us our follies, we at once clai\
m those follies as the special )Tj
T*
(evidences of our wisdom.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.42047 Tm
(\221Orley Farm\222 \(1862\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.50456 Tm
( It is because we put up with bad things that hotel-keepers continue \
to give them to us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.67047 Tm
(\221Orley Farm\222 \(1862\) ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.75456 Tm
( As for conceit, what man will do any good who is not conceited? Nobo\
dy holds a good opinion )Tj
T*
(of a man who has a low opinion of himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.92047 Tm
(\221Orley Farm\222 \(1862\) ch. 22)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.00456 Tm
( A fain\350ant government is not the worst government that England ca\
n have.)Tj
T*
( It has been the great fault of our politicians that they have all wa\
nted to do something.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.17047 Tm
(\221Phineas Finn\222 \(1869\) ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.25456 Tm
( Mr Turnbull had predicted evil consequences...and was now doing the \
best in his power to )Tj
T*
(bring about the verification of his own prophecies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.42047 Tm
(\221Phineas Finn\222 \(1869\) ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.50456 Tm
( Perhaps there is no position more perilous to a man\222s honesty tha\
n that...of knowing himself to )Tj
T*
(be quite loved by a girl whom he almost loves himself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.67047 Tm
(\221Phineas Finn\222 \(1869\) ch. 50)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.75456 Tm
( She knew how to allure by denying, and to make the gift rich by dela\
ying it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 115.92047 Tm
(\221Phineas Finn\222 \(1869\) ch. 57)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.00456 Tm
( Men are so seldom really good. They are so little sympathetic. What \
man thinks of changing )Tj
T*
(himself so as to suit his wife? And yet men expect that women shall put \
on altogether new )Tj
T*
(characters when they are married, and girls think that they can do so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 43.17047 Tm
(\221Phineas Redux\222 \(1874\) ch. 3)Tj
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( It is the necessary nature of a political party in this country to a\
void, as long as it can be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(avoided, the consideration of any question which involves a great change\
...The best carriage )Tj
T*
(horses are those which can most steadily hold back against the coach as \
it trundles down the hill.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Phineas Redux\222 \(1874\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( To think of one\222s absent love is very sweet; but it becomes monot\
onous after a mile or two of a )Tj
T*
(towing-path, and the mind will turn away to Aunt Sally, the Cremorne Gar\
dens, and financial )Tj
T*
(questions. I doubt whether any girl would be satisfied with her lover\222\
s mind if she knew the )Tj
T*
(whole of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Small House at Allington\222 \(1864\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Why is it that girls so constantly do this,\227so frequently ask men\
who have loved them to be )Tj
T*
(present at their marriages with other men? There is no triumph in it. It\
is done in sheer kindness )Tj
T*
(and affection. They intend to offer something which shall soften and not\
aggravate the sorrow )Tj
T*
(that they have caused...I fully appreciate the intention, but in honest \
truth, I doubt the eligibility )Tj
T*
(of the proffered entertainment.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Small House at Allington\222 \(1864\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( It may almost be a question whether such wisdom as many of us have i\
n our mature years has )Tj
T*
(not come from the dying out of the power of temptation, rather than as t\
he results of thought and )Tj
T*
(resolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 428.17047 Tm
(\221The Small House at Allington\222 \(1864\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 407.25456 Tm
( And, above all things, never think that you\222re not good enough yo\
urself. A man should never )Tj
T*
(think that. My belief is that in life people will take you very much at \
your own reckoning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Small House at Allington\222 \(1864\) ch. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( The tenth Muse, who now governs the periodical press.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221The Warden\222 \(1855\) ch. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Is it not singular how some men continue to obtain the reputation of\
popular authorship )Tj
T*
(without adding a word to the literature of their country worthy of note?\
...To puff and to get one\222s )Tj
T*
(self puffed have become different branches of a new profession.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.92047 Tm
(\221The Way We Live Now\222 \(1875\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.00456 Tm
( Love is like any other luxury. You have no right to it unless you ca\
n afford it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.17047 Tm
(\221The Way We Live Now\222 \(1875\) ch. 84)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 194.9624 Tm
( 8.74 Leon Trotsky \(Lev Davidovich Bronstein\) 1879-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Old age is the most unexpected of all things that happen to a man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Diary in Exile\222 \(1959\) 8 May 1935)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Civilization has made the peasantry its pack animal. The bourgeoisie\
in the long run only )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(changed the form of the pack.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221History of the Russian Revolution\222 \(1933\) vol. 3, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( You [the Mensheviks] are pitiful isolated individuals; you are bankr\
upts; your role is played )Tj
T*
(out. Go where you belong from now on\227into the dustbin of history!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 47.92047 Tm
(\221History of the Russian Revolution\222 \(1933\) vol. 3, ch. 10)Tj
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( Where force is necessary, there it must be applied boldly, decisivel\
y and completely. But one )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(must know the limitations of force; one must know when to blend force wi\
th a manoeuvre, a )Tj
T*
(blow with an agreement.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221What Next?\222 \(1932\) ch. 14)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 8.75 Harry S. Truman 1884-1972)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( All the President is, is a glorified public relations man who spends\
his time flattering, kissing )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and kicking people to get them to do what they are supposed to do anyway\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(Letter to his sister, 14 November 1947, in \221Off the Record: the Priva\
te Papers of Harry S. Truman\222 \(1980\) p. )Tj
T*
(119)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 577.50456 Tm
( The buck stops here.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(Unattributed motto on Truman\222s desk. \221Public Papers 1952-53\222 \(\
1966\) p. 1094)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( Wherever you have an efficient government you have a dictatorship.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.92047 Tm
(Lecture at Columbia University, 28 April 1959, in \221Truman Speaks\222 \
\(1960\) p. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.00456 Tm
( I never give them [the public] hell. I just tell the truth, and they\
think it is hell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 488.17047 Tm
(In \221Look\222 3 April 1956)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 467.25456 Tm
( A politician is a man who understands government, and it takes a pol\
itician to run a )Tj
T*
(government. A statesman is a politician who\222s been dead 10 or 15 year\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(In \221New York World Telegram and Sun\222 12 April 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( It\222s a recession when your neighbour loses his job; it\222s a dep\
ression when you lose yours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 13 April 1958)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( I didn\222t fire him [General MacArthur] because he was a dumb son o\
f a bitch, although he was, )Tj
T*
(but that\222s not against the law for generals. If it was, half to three\
-quarters of them would be in jail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.92047 Tm
(In Merle Miller \221Plain Speaking\222 \(1974\) ch. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 309.7124 Tm
( 8.76 Barbara W. Tuchman 1912-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dead battles, like dead generals, hold the military mind in their de\
ad grip and Germans, no less )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(than other peoples, prepare for the last war.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.17047 Tm
(\221August 1914\222 \(1962\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 233.25456 Tm
( No more distressing moment can ever face a British government than t\
hat which requires it to )Tj
T*
(come to a hard, fast and specific decision.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221August 1914\222 \(1962\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 178.50456 Tm
( For one August in its history Paris was French\227and silent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 162.67047 Tm
(\221August 1914\222 \(1962\) ch. 20)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 130.4624 Tm
( 8.77 Sophie Tucker 1884-1966)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( From birth to 18 a girl needs good parents. From 18 to 35, she needs\
good looks. From 35 to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(55, good personality. From 55 on, she needs good cash. I\222m saving my \
money.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.92047 Tm
(In Michael Freedland \221Sophie\222 \(1978\) p. 214)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 42.7124 Tm
( 8.78 Martin Tupper 1810-89)Tj
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( A good book is the best of friends, the same to-day and for ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221Proverbial Philosophy\222 Series I \(1838\) \221Of Reading\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.9624 Tm
( 8.79 A.-R.-J. Turgot 1727-81)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( He snatched the lightning shaft from heaven, and the sceptre from ty\
rants.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(Inscription for a bust of Benjamin Franklin, inventor of the lightning c\
onductor in \221Oeuvres )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Compl\351tes\222 \(Paris, 1804\)vol. 5, p. 230. A. N. de Condorcet \221V\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 596.4624 Tm
( 8.80 Walter James Redfern Turner 1889-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When I was but thirteen or so)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I went into a golden land,)Tj
T*
( Chimborazo, Cotopaxi)Tj
T*
( Took me by the hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 504.92047 Tm
(\221Romance\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 472.7124 Tm
( 8.81 Mark Twain \(Samuel Langhorne Clemens\) 1835-1910)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221The Adventures of Tom Sawyer\222...was made by Mr Mark Twain, an\
d he told the truth, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mainly. There was things which he stretched, but mainly he told the trut\
h.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.17047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\222 \(1884\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.25456 Tm
( There was some books....One was \221Pilgrim\222s Progress\222, about\
a man that left his family it )Tj
T*
(didn\222t say why. I read considerable in it now and then. The statement\
s was interesting, but tough. )Tj
T*
(Another was \221Friendship\222s Offering\222, full of beautiful stuff an\
d poetry; but I didn\222t read the )Tj
T*
(poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 326.42047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\222 \(1884\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 305.50456 Tm
( All kings is mostly rapscallions.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 289.67047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\222 \(1884\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 268.75456 Tm
( Hain\222t we got all the fools in town on our side? and ain\222t tha\
t a big enough majority in any )Tj
T*
(town?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 234.92047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\222 \(1884\) ch. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 214.00456 Tm
( If there was two birds setting on a fence, he would bet you which on\
e would fly first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 198.17047 Tm
(\221The Celebrated Jumping Frog\222 \(1867\) p. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.25456 Tm
( I don\222t see no p\222ints about that frog that\222s any better\222\
n any other frog.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.42047 Tm
(\221The Celebrated Jumping Frog\222 \(1867\) p. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 140.50456 Tm
( Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are mor\
e deadly in the long run.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 124.67047 Tm
(\221Facts concerning the Recent Resignation\222 in \221A Curious Dream\222\
\(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 103.75456 Tm
( Be virtuous and you will be eccentric.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 87.92047 Tm
(\221Mental Photographs\222 in \221A Curious Dream\222 \(1872\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.00456 Tm
( Barring that natural expression of villainy which we all have, the m\
an looked honest enough.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.17047 Tm
(\221A Mysterious Visit\222 in \221A Curious Dream\222 \(1872\))Tj
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( Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 7.)Tj
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( It is by the goodness of God that in our country we have those three\
unspeakably precious )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(things: freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, and the prudence never\
to practise either of )Tj
T*
(them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 20)Tj
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( \221Classic.\222 A book which people praise and don\222t read.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 25; in \221Speeches\222 \(191\
0\) p. 194 Twain offers Professor Caleb )Tj
T*
(Winchester\222s definition of a classic as \221something that everybody \
wants to have read and nobody wants to )Tj
T*
(read\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 576.75456 Tm
( Man is the Only Animal that Blushes. Or needs to.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( Let us be thankful for the fools. But for them the rest of us could \
not succeed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 524.17047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 28)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 503.25456 Tm
( There are several good protections against temptations, but the sure\
st is cowardice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 487.42047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 466.50456 Tm
( By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity. Another man\222s,\
I mean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( It takes your enemy and your friend, working together, to hurt you t\
o the heart: the one to )Tj
T*
(slander you and the other to get the news to you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.92047 Tm
(\221Following the Equator\222 \(1897\) ch. 45)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.00456 Tm
( I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a \
week, sometimes, to make )Tj
T*
(it up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 341.17047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 320.25456 Tm
( They spell it Vinci and pronounce it Vinchy; foreigners always spell\
better than they )Tj
T*
(pronounce.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( I do not want Michael Angelo for breakfast\227for luncheon\227for di\
nner\227for tea\227for supper\227)Tj
T*
(for between meals.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.67047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 27.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.75456 Tm
( Lump the whole thing! say that the Creator made)Tj
T*
( Italy from designs by Michael Angelo!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.92047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 156.00456 Tm
( That joke was lost on the foreigner\227guides cannot master the subt\
leties of the American joke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 140.17047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 119.25456 Tm
( If you\222ve got a nice fresh corpse, fetch him out!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 103.42047 Tm
(\221The Innocents Abroad\222 \(1869\) ch. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 82.50456 Tm
( What a good thing Adam had. When he said a good thing he knew nobody\
had said it before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.67047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1935\) p. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.75456 Tm
( Familiarity breeds contempt\227and children.)Tj
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(\221Notebooks\222 \(1935\) p. 237)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Good breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves \
and how little we think )Tj
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(of the other person.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Notebooks\222 \(1935\) p. 345)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Adam was but human\227this explains it all. He did not want the appl\
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T*
(wanted it only because it was forbidden.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Whoever has lived long enough to find out what life is, knows how de\
ep a debt of gratitude we )Tj
T*
(owe to Adam, the first great benefactor of our race. He brought death in\
to the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflo\
wer is nothing but cabbage )Tj
T*
(with a college education.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( One of the most striking differences between a cat and a lie is that\
a cat has only nine lives.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( When angry, count four; when very angry, swear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( As to the Adjective: when in doubt, strike it out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.92047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.00456 Tm
( Put all your eggs in the one basket, and\227watch that basket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good ex\
ample.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 352.42047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 331.50456 Tm
( It were not best that we should all think alike; it is difference of\
opinion that makes horse-races.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.67047 Tm
(\221Pudd\222nhead Wilson\222 \(1894\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.75456 Tm
( There is a sumptuous variety about the New England weather that comp\
els the stranger\222s )Tj
T*
(admiration\227and regret. The weather is always doing something there; a\
lways attending strictly )Tj
T*
(to business; always getting up new designs and trying them on the people\
to see how they will go. )Tj
T*
(But it gets through more business in spring than in any other season. In\
the spring I have counted )Tj
T*
(one hundred and thirty-six different kinds of weather inside of four-and\
-twenty hours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(Speech to New England Society, 22 December 1876, in \221Speeches\222 \(1\
910\) p. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( There\222s plenty of boys that will come hankering and grovelling ar\
ound you when you\222ve got )Tj
T*
(an apple, and beg the core off of you; but when they\222ve got one, and \
you beg for the core and )Tj
T*
(remind them how you give them a core one time, they say thank you \222mo\
st to death, but there )Tj
T*
(ain\222t-a-going to be no core.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221Tom Sawyer Abroad\222 \(1894\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( There ain\222t no way to find out why a snorer can\222t hear himself\
snore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221Tom Sawyer Abroad\222 \(1894\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( The cross of the Legion of Honour has been conferred upon me. Howeve\
r, few escape that )Tj
T*
(distinction.)Tj
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(\221A Tramp Abroad\222 \(1880\) ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( An experienced, industrious, ambitious, and quite often picturesque \
liar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221Private History of a Campaign that Failed\222 in \221Century Magazin\
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15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( The report of my death was an exaggeration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221New York Journal\222 2 June 1897 \(often misquoted as \221Reports of\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Twain was correcting newspaper reports to the effect that he was ill or \
dead, and confusing him with his )Tj
T*
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15 0 0 15 10 630.25456 Tm
( He [Thomas Carlyle] said it in a moment of excitement, when chasing \
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T*
(backyard with brickbats. They used to go there and worship. At bottom he\
was probably fond of )Tj
T*
(them, but he was always able to conceal it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 578.42047 Tm
(\221Mark Twain\222s Christmas Book\222 in \221New York World\222 10 Dece\
mber 1899)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 557.50456 Tm
( All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence; then success \
is sure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 541.67047 Tm
(Letter to Mrs Foote, 2 December 1887, in B. DeCasseres \221When Huck Fin\
n Went Highbrow\222 \(1934\) p. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 509.4624 Tm
( 8.82 Kenneth Tynan 1927-80)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Forty years ago he was Slightly in Peter Pan, and you might say that\
he has been wholly in )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Peter Pan ever since.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 453.92047 Tm
(Referring to Noel Coward in \221Curtains\222 \(1961\) pt. 1, p. 59)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.00456 Tm
( What, when drunk, one sees in other women, one sees in Garbo sober.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.17047 Tm
(\221Curtains\222 \(1961\) pt. 2, p. 347)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.25456 Tm
( A good drama critic is one who perceives what is happening in the th\
eatre of his time. A great )Tj
T*
(drama critic also perceives what is not happening.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.42047 Tm
(\221Tynan Right and Left\222 \(1967\) foreword)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.50456 Tm
( A critic is a man who knows the way but can\222t drive the car.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.67047 Tm
(In \221New York Times Magazine\222 9 January 1966, p. 27)Tj
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17.5 0 0 17.5 10 291.28038 Tm
( 9.0 U)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 268.75456 Tm
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 9.1 Domitius Ulpian d. 228)Tj
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0 -1.44719 TD
( Nulla iniuria est, quae in volentem fiat.)Tj
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( No injustice is done to someone who wants that thing done.)Tj
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(Corpus Iuris Civilis Digests 47, X.i.5 \(usually cited in the form Volen\
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0 -1.2 TD
(wants it no injustice occurs\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 129.2124 Tm
( 9.2 Miguel de Unamuno 1864-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La vida es duda,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( y la fe sin la duda es s\363lo muerte.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Life is doubt,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And faith without doubt is nothing but death.)Tj
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(\221Po\350sias\222 \(1907\) \221Salmo II\222)Tj
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( C\371rate de la affeccion de preocuparte c\363mo aparez\355as a los \
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( Cure yourself of the condition of bothering about how you look to ot\
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you.)Tj
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(\221Vida de Don Quixote y Sancho\222 \(1905\) pt. 1)Tj
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( 9.3 John Updike 1932\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One out of three hundred and twelve Americans is a bore, for instanc\
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0 -1.2 TD
(adult bore consumes each year one and a half times his own weight in oth\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221Confessions of a Wild Bore\222 in \221Assorted Prose\222 \(1965\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( The difficulty with humorists is that they will mix what they believ\
e with what they don\222t; )Tj
T*
(whichever seems likelier to win an effect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221Rabbit, Run\222 \(1960\) p. 160)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 485.9624 Tm
( 9.4 Archbishop James Ussher 1581-1656)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Which beginning of time [the Creation] according to our Chronologie,\
fell upon the entrance of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the night preceding the twenty third day of October in the year of the J\
ulian Calendar, 710.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221The Annals of the World\222 \(1658\) p. 1 \(i.e. BC 4004\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 398.2124 Tm
( 9.5 Sir Peter Ustinov 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I was irrevocably betrothed to laughter, the sound of which has alwa\
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0 -1.2 TD
(civilized music in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(\221Dear Me\222 \(1977\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( I do not believe that friends are necessarily the people you like be\
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T*
(who got there first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221Dear Me\222 \(1977\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 267.00456 Tm
( Laughter would be bereaved if snobbery died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 13 March 1955)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 230.25456 Tm
( If Botticelli were alive today he\222d be working for Vogue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 21 October 1962.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.50456 Tm
( At the age of four with paper hats and wooden swords we\222re all Ge\
nerals.)Tj
T*
( Only some of us never grow out of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.67047 Tm
(\221Romanoff and Juliet\222 \(1956\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.75456 Tm
( A diplomat these days is nothing but a head-waiter who\222s allowed \
to sit down occasionally.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.92047 Tm
(\221Romanoff and Juliet\222 \(1956\) act 1)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 88.53038 Tm
( 10.0 V)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 54.7124 Tm
( 10.1 Paul Val\350ry 1871-1945)Tj
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( Un po\351me n\222est jamais achev\350\227c\222est toujours un accide\
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0 -1.44254 TD
( A poem is never finished; it\222s always an accident that puts a sto\
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0 -1.2 TD
(public.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Litt\350rature\222 \(1930\) p. 46)Tj
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( Il faut n\222appeler Science: que l\222ensemble des recettes qui r\350\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( \221Science\222 means simply the aggregate of all the recipes that a\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.92047 Tm
(\221Moralit\350s\222 \(1932\) p. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 564.00456 Tm
( Dieu cr\350a l\222homme, et ne le trouvant pas assez seul, il lui do\
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T*
(mieux sentir sa solitude.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God created man and, finding him not sufficiently alone, gave him a \
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 490.42047 Tm
(\221Tel Quel 1\222 \(1941\) \221Moralit\350s\222)Tj
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( La politique est l\222art d\222emp\352cher les gens de se m\352ler d\
e ce qui les regarde.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Politics is the art of preventing people from taking part in affairs\
which properly concern them.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(\221Tel Quel 2\222 \(1943\) \221Rhumbs\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 10.2 Sir John Vanbrugh 1664-1726)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The want of a thing is perplexing enough, but the possession of it i\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(\221The Confederacy\222 \(1705\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 341.25456 Tm
( Much of a muchness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(\221The Provoked Husband\222 \(1728\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( Belinda: Ay, but you know we must return good for evil.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lady Brute: That may be a mistake in the translation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 270.67047 Tm
(\221The Provoked Wife\222 \(1697\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( Thinking is to me the greatest fatigue in the world.)Tj
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(\221The Relapse\222 \(1696\) act 2, sc. 1)Tj
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( No man worth having is true to his wife, or can be true to his wife,\
or ever was, or ever will be )Tj
T*
(so.)Tj
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(\221The Relapse\222 \(1696\) act 3, sc. 2)Tj
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( 10.3 Paul Vance and Lee Pockriss)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Itsy bitsy teenie weenie, yellow polkadot bikini.)Tj
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(Title of song \(1960\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 77.2124 Tm
( 10.4 Vivien van Damm c.1889-1960)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We never closed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.67047 Tm
(Referring to the Windmill Theatre in London during World War II, in \221\
Tonight and Every Night\222 \(1952\) ch. )Tj
ET
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(18)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.4624 Tm
( 10.5 William Henry Vanderbilt 1821-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The public be damned!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 684.92047 Tm
(Replying to whether the public should be consulted about luxury trains, \
in a letter from A. W. Cole to New )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(York Times 25 August 1918)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 637.7124 Tm
( 10.6 Laurens van der Post 1906\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Human beings are perhaps never more frightening than when they are c\
onvinced beyond doubt )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that they are right.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 582.17047 Tm
(\221The Lost World of the Kalahari\222 \(1958\) ch. 3)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 549.9624 Tm
( 10.7 Bartolomeo Vanzetti 1888-1927)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If it had not been for these thing, I might have live out my life ta\
lking at street corners to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(scorning men. I might have die, unmarked, unknown, a failure. Now we are\
not a failure. This is )Tj
T*
(our career and our triumph. Never in our full life could we hope to do s\
uch work for tolerance, )Tj
T*
(for joostice, for man\222s onderstanding of man as now we do by accident\
. Our words\227our lives\227)Tj
T*
(our pains\227nothing! The taking of our lives\227lives of a good shoemak\
er and a poor fish-peddler)Tj
T*
(\227all! That last moment belongs to us\227that agony is our triumph.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.42047 Tm
(Statement after being sentenced to death on 9 April 1927, in M. D. Frank\
furter and G. Jackson \221Letters of )Tj
T*
(Sacco and Vanzetti\222 \(1928\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 386.50456 Tm
( Sacco\222s name will live in the hearts of the people and in their g\
ratitude when Katzmann\222s and )Tj
T*
(yours bones will be dispersed by time, when your name, his name, your la\
ws, institutions, and )Tj
T*
(your false god are but a deem rememoring of a cursed past in which man w\
as wolf to the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.67047 Tm
(Note of what he wanted to say at his trial on 9 April 1927, in M. D. Fra\
nkfurter and G. Jackson \221Letters of )Tj
T*
(Sacco and Vanzetti\222 \(1928\) p. 380)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 287.4624 Tm
( 10.8 Charles John Vaughan 1816-97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Must you go? Can\222t you stay?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.92047 Tm
(His formula for breaking up breakfast parties of schoolboys too shy to l\
eave \(retold with the words )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(transposed, \221Can\222t you go? Must you stay?\222\) in G. W. E. Russe\
ll \221Collections and Recollections\222 ch. 24)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 202.7124 Tm
( 10.9 Harry Vaughan)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If you can\222t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 165.17047 Tm
(In \221Time\222 28 April 1952 \(associated with Harry S. Truman, but att\
ributed by him to Vaughan, his \221military )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(jester\222\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 117.9624 Tm
( 10.10 Henry Vaughan 1622-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Man is the shuttle, to whose winding quest)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And passage through these looms)Tj
T*
( God ordered motion, but ordained no Nest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.42047 Tm
(\221Man\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( Wise Nicodemus saw such light)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As made him know his God by night.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Most blest believer he!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who in that land of darkness and blind eyes)Tj
T*
( Thy long expected healing wings could see)Tj
T*
( When Thou didst rise!)Tj
T*
( And, what can never more be done,)Tj
T*
( Did at midnight speak with the Sun!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 607.42047 Tm
(\221The Night\222 l. 5 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 586.50456 Tm
( Dear Night! this world\222s defeat;)Tj
T*
( The stop to busy fools; care\222s check and curb;)Tj
T*
( The day of spirits; my soul\222s calm retreat)Tj
T*
( Which none disturb!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.67047 Tm
(\221The Night\222 l. 25 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 495.75456 Tm
( My soul, there is a country)Tj
T*
( Far beyond the stars,)Tj
T*
( Where stands a wing\351d sentry)Tj
T*
( All skilful in the wars;)Tj
T*
( There, above noise and danger,)Tj
T*
( Sweet Peace is crowned with smiles,)Tj
T*
( And One born in a manger)Tj
T*
( Commands the beauteous files.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.92047 Tm
(\221Peace\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.00456 Tm
( Happy those early days, when I)Tj
T*
( Shined in my angel-infancy.)Tj
T*
( Before I understood this place)Tj
T*
( Appointed for my second race,)Tj
T*
( Or taught my soul to fancy aught)Tj
T*
( But a white, celestial thought;)Tj
T*
( When yet I had not walked above)Tj
T*
( A mile or two from my first love,)Tj
T*
( And looking back\227at that short space\227)Tj
T*
( Could see a glimpse of His bright face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221The Retreat\222 l. 1 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( And in those weaker glories spy)Tj
T*
( Some shadows of eternity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 100.42047 Tm
(\221The Retreat\222 l. 13 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.50456 Tm
( But felt through all this fleshly dress)Tj
T*
( Bright shoots of everlastingness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Retreat\222 l.19 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
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( Some men a forward motion love,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( But I by backward steps would move,)Tj
T*
( And when this dust falls to the urn,)Tj
T*
( In that state I came, return.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Retreat\222 l.29 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( They are all gone into the world of light,)Tj
T*
( And I alone sit lingering here;)Tj
T*
( Their very memory is fair and bright,)Tj
T*
( And my sad thoughts doth clear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221They Are All Gone\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( I see them walking in an air of glory,)Tj
T*
( Whose light doth trample on my days:)Tj
T*
( My days, which are at best but dull and hoary,)Tj
T*
( Mere glimmering and decays.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221They Are All Gone\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Dear, beauteous death! the jewel of the just,)Tj
T*
( Shining nowhere but in the dark;)Tj
T*
( What mysteries do lie beyond thy dust,)Tj
T*
( Could man outlook that mark!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221They Are All Gone\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( And yet, as angels in some brighter dreams)Tj
T*
( Call to the soul when man doth sleep,)Tj
T*
( So some strange thoughts transcend our wonted themes,)Tj
T*
( And into glory peep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221They Are All Gone\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( I saw Eternity the other night,)Tj
T*
( Like a great ring of pure and endless light,)Tj
T*
( All calm, as it was bright;)Tj
T*
( And round beneath it, Time in hours, days, years,)Tj
T*
( Driv\222n by the spheres)Tj
T*
( Like a vast shadow moved; in which the world)Tj
T*
( And all her train were hurled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.42047 Tm
(\221The World\222 from \221Silex Scintillans\222 \(1650-5\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 143.2124 Tm
( 10.11 Ralph Vaughan Williams 1872-1958)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I don\222t know whether I like it, but it\222s what I meant.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 105.67047 Tm
(Referring to his 4th symphony, in Christopher Headington \221Bodley Head\
History of Western Music\222 \(1974\) p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(293)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 69.75456 Tm
( It\222s a Rum Go!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(His reply when asked what he thought about music, in Leslie Ayr \221The \
Wit of Music\222 \(1966\) p. 43)Tj
ET
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0 0 612 792 re
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0 0 0 rg
0 i
BT
/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 751.7124 Tm
( 10.12 Thorstein Veblen 1857-1929)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Conspicuous consumption of valuable goods is a means of reputability\
to the gentleman of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(leisure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.17047 Tm
(\221Theory of the Leisure Class\222 \(1899\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 675.25456 Tm
( So it is something of a homiletical commonplace to say that the outc\
ome of any serious )Tj
T*
(research can only be to make two questions grow where one question grew \
before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 641.42047 Tm
(\221Evolution of the Scientific Point of View\222 in \221University of C\
alifornia Chronicle\222 \(1908\) vol. 10, no. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 609.2124 Tm
( 10.13 Vegetius 4th-5th century A.D.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let him who desires peace, prepare for war.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 549.92047 Tm
(\221De Rei Militari\222 3, prologue \(usually cited in the form Si vis p\
acem, para bellum If you want peace, prepare )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(for war\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 502.7124 Tm
( 10.14 Venantius Fortunatus c.530-c.610)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pange, lingua, gloriosi)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Proelium certaminis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Sing, my tongue, of the battle in the glorious struggle.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.42047 Tm
(\221Pange lingua gloriosi\222 in J. P. Migne \221Patrologia Latina\222 \(\
1844-64\) vol. 88 \(Passiontide hymn \221Sing, my )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(tongue, the glorious battle\222\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.50456 Tm
( Vexilla regis prodeunt,)Tj
T*
( Fulget crucis mysterium;)Tj
T*
( Qua vita mortem pertulit,)Tj
T*
( Et morte vitam protulit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The banners of the king advance, the mystery of the cross shines bri\
ght; where his life went )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(through with death, and from death brought forth life.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.92047 Tm
(\221Vexilla Regis\222 in \221Analecta Hymnica\222 vol. 50, no. 67, p. 74\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 259.00456 Tm
( Regnavit a ligno Deus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( God reigned from the wood.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 221.42047 Tm
(\221Vexilla Regis\222 in \221Analecta Hymnica\222 vol. 50, no. 67, p. 74\
)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 189.2124 Tm
( 10.15 Pierre Vergniaud 1753-93)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Il a \350t\350 permis de craindre que la R\350volution, comme Saturn\
e, d\350vor\342t successivement tous ses )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(enfants.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( There was reason to fear that the Revolution, like Saturn, might dev\
our in turn each one of her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(children.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 93.92047 Tm
(Alphonse de Lamartine \221Histoire des Girondins\222 \(1847\) bk. 38, ch\
. 20)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 61.7124 Tm
( 10.16 Paul Verlaine 1844-96)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Et tout le reste est litt\350rature.)Tj
ET
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0 i
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 748.36667 Tm
( All the rest is mere fine writing.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 732.42047 Tm
(\221L\222art po\350tique\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 711.50456 Tm
( Les sanglots longs)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Des violons)Tj
T*
( De l\222automne)Tj
T*
( Blessent mon coeur)Tj
T*
( D\222une langueur)Tj
T*
( Monotone.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The drawn-out sobs of autumn\222s violins wound my heart with a mono\
tonous languor.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 583.92047 Tm
(\221Chanson de l\222automne\222 \(1866\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.00456 Tm
( Et, \364 ces voix d\222enfants chantants dans la coupole!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( And oh those children\222s voices, singing beneath the dome!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.42047 Tm
(\221Parsifal, A Jules Tellier\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 493.2124 Tm
( 10.17 Emperor Vespasian A.D. 9-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Pecunia non olet.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Money has no smell.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.92047 Tm
(Traditional summary of Suetonius \221Vespasian\222 23, 3. Vespasian was \
answering Titus\222s objection to his tax on )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(public lavatories; holding a coin to Titus\222s nose and being told it d\
idn\222t smell, he replied: Atque e lotio est )Tj
T*
(Yes, that\222s made from urine.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.00456 Tm
( Vae, puto deus fio.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Woe is me, I think I am becoming a god.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 345.42047 Tm
(When fatally ill, in Suetonius \221Vespasian\222 23, 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 313.2124 Tm
( 10.18 Queen Victoria 1819-1901)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Queen is most anxious to enlist every one who can speak or write\
to join in checking this )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mad, wicked folly of \221Woman\222s Rights\222, with all its attendant h\
orrors, on which her poor feeble )Tj
T*
(sex is bent, forgetting every sense of womanly feeling and propriety. La\
dy\227ought to get a good )Tj
T*
(whipping. It is a subject which makes the Queen so furious that she cann\
ot contain herself. God )Tj
T*
(created men and women different\227then let them remain each in their ow\
n position.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.67047 Tm
(Letter to Sir Theodore Martin, 29 May 1870)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.75456 Tm
( The danger to the country, to Europe, to her vast Empire, which is i\
nvolved in having all these )Tj
T*
(great interests entrusted to the shaking hand of an old, wild, and incom\
prehensible man of 82, is )Tj
T*
(very great!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.92047 Tm
(On Gladstone\222s last appointment as Prime Minister, in a letter to Lor\
d Lansdowne, 12 August 1892)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.00456 Tm
( We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat; they do not ex\
ist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 94.17047 Tm
(To A. J. Balfour, in \221Black Week\222, December 1899)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 73.25456 Tm
( We are not amused.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.42047 Tm
(Attributed, in \221Notebooks of a Spinster Lady\222 2 January 1900)Tj
ET
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( I will be good.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(On being shown a chart of the line of succession for the first time, 11 \
March 1830, in Martin \221The Prince )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Consort\222 \(1875\) vol. 1, p. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 701.25456 Tm
( Move Queen Anne? Most certainly not! Why it might some day be sugges\
ted that my statue )Tj
T*
(should be moved, which I should much dislike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 667.42047 Tm
(When it was suggested that the statue of Queen Anne outside St. Paul\222\
s should be moved, on the occasion of )Tj
T*
(the Diamond Jubilee in 1887. Duke of Portland \221Men, Women and Things\222\
ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 631.50456 Tm
( He [Mr Gladstone] speaks to Me as if I was a public meeting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 615.67047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 1\
4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 583.4624 Tm
( 10.19 Gore Vidal 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( American writers want to be not good but great; and so are neither.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 545.92047 Tm
(\221Two Sisters\222 \(1970\) p. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 525.00456 Tm
( It is not enough to succeed. Others must fail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.17047 Tm
(In G. Irvine \221Antipanegyric for Tom Driberg\222 8 December 1976, p. 2\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 488.25456 Tm
( It is the spirit of the age to believe that any fact, no matter how \
suspect, is superior to any )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(imaginative exercise, no matter how true.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 454.42047 Tm
(\221French Letters: Theories of the New Novel\222 in \221Encounter\222 D\
ecember 1967)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 433.50456 Tm
( A triumph of the embalmer\222s art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 417.67047 Tm
(Describing Ronald Reagan in \221Observer\222 26 April 1981)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 396.75456 Tm
( I\222m all for bringing back the birch, but only between consenting \
adults.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 380.92047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Times Magazine\222 16 September 1973)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 360.00456 Tm
( Whenever a friend succeeds, a little something in me dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 344.17047 Tm
(In \221Sunday Times Magazine\222 16 September 1973)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 311.9624 Tm
( 10.20 King Vidor 1895-1982)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Take it from me, marriage isn\222t a word...it\222s a sentence!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 274.42047 Tm
(\221The Crowd\222 \(1928 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 242.2124 Tm
( 10.21 Jos\350 Antonio Viera Gallo 1943\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( El socialismo puede llegar solo en bicicleta.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Socialism can only arrive by bicycle.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.92047 Tm
(Said when Assistant Secretary of Justice in Chilean Government, in Ivan \
Illich \221Energy and Equity\222 \(1974\) p. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 135.7124 Tm
( 10.22 Alfred De Vigny 1797-1863)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( J\222aime la majest\350 des souffrances humaines.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I love the majesty of human suffering.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.42047 Tm
(\221La Maison du Berger\222 \(1844\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.50456 Tm
( Seul le silence est grand; tout le reste est faiblesse...)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
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( Fais \350nergiquement ta longue et lourde t\342che...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Puis, apr\351s, comme moi, souffre et meurs sans parler.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Silence alone is great; all else is feebleness...)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Perform with all your heart your long and heavy task...)Tj
T*
( Then as do I, say naught, but suffer and die.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221La mort du loup\222 \(1838\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.2124 Tm
( 10.23 Philippe-Auguste Villiers De L\222Isle-Adam 1838-89)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Vivre? les serviteurs feront cela pour nous.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Living? The servants will do that for us.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 569.92047 Tm
(\221Ax\353l\222 \(1890\) 4, sect. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 537.7124 Tm
( 10.24 Fran\347ois Villon b. 1431)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fr\351res humains qui apr\351s nous vivez,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( N\222ayez les cuers contre nous endurcis,)Tj
T*
( Car, se piti\350 de nous povres avez,)Tj
T*
( Dieu en aura plus tost de vous mercis...)Tj
T*
( Mais priez Dieu que tous nous veuille absouldre!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Brothers in humanity who live after us, let not your hearts be harde\
ned against us, for, if you )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(take pity on us poor ones, God will be more likely to have mercy on you.\
But pray God that he )Tj
T*
(may be willing to absolve us all.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 370.42047 Tm
(\221Ballade des pendus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 349.50456 Tm
( Mais o\373 sont les neiges d\222antan?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But where are the snows of yesteryear?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 311.92047 Tm
(\221Ballade des dames du temps jadis\222 from \221Le Grand Testament\222\
\(1461\) \(translation by D. G. Rossetti\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 291.00456 Tm
( En ceste foy je veuil vivre et mourir.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( In this faith I wish to live and to die.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221Ballade pour prier Nostre Dame\222 from \221Le Grand Testament\222 \(\
1461\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.2124 Tm
(10.25 St Vincent Of Lerins d. c.450)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Quod semper, quod ubique, quod ab omnibus creditum est.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What is always, what is everywhere, what is by all people believed.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221Commonitorium\222 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 129.7124 Tm
( 10.26 Virgil \(Publius Virgilius Maro\) 70-19 B.C.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Arma virumque cano, Troiae qui primus ab oris)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Italiam fato profugus Laviniaque venit)Tj
T*
( Litora, multum ille et terris iactatus et alto)Tj
T*
( Vi superum, saevae memorem Iunonis ob iram.)Tj
ET
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( I sing of arms and the man who first from the shores of Troy came de\
stined an exile to Italy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and the Lavinian beaches, much buffeted he on land and on the deep by fo\
rce of the gods because )Tj
T*
(of fierce Juno\222s never-forgetting anger.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Tantaene animis caelestibus irae?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Why such great anger in those heavenly minds?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.75456 Tm
( Tantae molis erat Romanam condere gentem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( So massive was the effort to found the Roman nation.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( Apparent rari nantes in gurgite vasto.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Odd figures swimming were glimpsed in the waste of waters.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 118)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 504.75456 Tm
( Constitit hic arcumque manu celerisque sagittas)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Corripuit fidus quae tela gerebat Achates.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Hereupon he stopped and took up in his hand a bow and swift arrows, \
the weapons that trusty )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Achates carried.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( O passi graviora, dabit deus his quoque finem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O you who have borne even heavier things, God will grant an end to t\
hese too.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 199)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Maybe one day we shall be glad to remember even these things.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 203)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.25456 Tm
( Dux femina facti.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The leader of the enterprise a woman.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 255.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 364)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.75456 Tm
( Dixit et avertens rosea cervice refulsit,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Ambrosiaeque comae divinum vertice odorem)Tj
T*
( Spiravere; pedes vestis defluxit ad imos,)Tj
T*
( Et vera incessu patuit dea.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( She said no more and as she turned away there was a bright glimpse o\
f the rosy glow of her )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(neck, and from her ambrosial head of hair a heavenly fragrance wafted; h\
er dress flowed down )Tj
T*
(right to her feet, and in her walk it showed, she was in truth a goddess\
.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 402)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( \221En Priamus. Sunt hic etiam sua praemia laudi,)Tj
T*
( Sunt lacrimae rerum et mentem mortalia tangunt.)Tj
T*
( Solve metus; feret haec aliquam tibi fama salutem.\222)Tj
ET
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( Sic ait atque animum pictura pascit inani.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( \221Look, there\222s Priam! Even here prowess has its due rewards, t\
here are tears shed for things )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(even here and mortality touches the heart. Abandon your fears; I tell yo\
u, this fame will stand us )Tj
T*
(somehow in good stead.\222 So he spoke, and fed his thoughts on the unre\
al painting.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 679.42047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 461)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 658.50456 Tm
( Di tibi, si qua pios respectant numina, si quid)Tj
T*
( Usquam iustitiae est et mens sibi conscia recti,)Tj
T*
( Praemia digna ferant.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Surely as the divine powers take note of the dutiful, surely as ther\
e is any justice anywhere and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a mind recognizing in itself what is right, may the gods bring you your \
earned rewards.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 566.92047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 603)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 546.00456 Tm
( Non ignara mali miseris succurrere disco.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( No stranger to trouble myself I am learning to care for the unhappy.\
)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 508.42047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 1, l. 630)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 487.50456 Tm
( Infandum, regina, iubes renovare dolorem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( A grief too much to be told, O queen, you bid me renew.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.00456 Tm
( Quaeque ipse miserrima vidi)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et quorum pars magna fui.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( And the most miserable things which I myself saw and of which I was \
a major part.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Equo ne credite, Teucri.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Quidquid id est, timeo Danaos et dona ferentis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Do not trust the horse, Trojans. Whatever it is, I fear the Greeks e\
ven when they bring gifts.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( Crimine ab uno)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Disce omnis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( From the one crime recognize them all as culprits.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.42047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 65)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.50456 Tm
( Tacitae per amica silentia lunae.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Through the friendly silence of the soundless moonlight.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 161.92047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 255)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 141.00456 Tm
( Tempus erat quo prima quies mortalibus aegris Incipit et dono divum \
gratissima serpit.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( It was the time when first sleep begins for weary mortals and by the\
gift of the gods creeps )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(over them most welcomely.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 268)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Quantum mutatus ab illo)Tj
T*
( Hectore qui redit exuvias indutus Achilli.)Tj
ET
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.11667 Tm
( How greatly changed from that Hector who comes home wearing the armo\
ur stripped from )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Achilles!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 274)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Fuimus Troes, fuit Ilium et ingens)Tj
T*
( Gloria Teucrorum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( We Trojans are at an end, Ilium has ended and the vast glory of the \
Teucrians.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 325)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 621.75456 Tm
( Moriamur et in media arma ruamus.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Una salus victis nullam sperare salutem.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let us die even as we rush into the midst of the battle. The only sa\
fe course for the defeated is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to expect no safety.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 548.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 353)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 527.25456 Tm
( Dis aliter visum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The gods thought otherwise.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 489.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 428)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 468.75456 Tm
( Non tali auxilio nec defensoribus istis)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Tempus eget.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Now is not the hour that requires such help, nor those defenders.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 2, l. 521)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 392.25456 Tm
( Quid non mortalia pectora cogis,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Auri sacra fames!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What do you not drive human hearts into, cursed craving for gold!)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 3, l. 56)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Monstrum horrendum, informe, ingens, cui lumen ademptum.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( A monster horrendous, hideous and vast, deprived of sight.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 3, l. 658)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 257.25456 Tm
( Quis fallere possit amantem?)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Who could deceive a lover?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 219.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 4, l. 296)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.75456 Tm
( Nec me meminisse pigebit Elissae)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dum memor ipse mei, dum spiritus hos regit artus.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Nor will it ever upset me to remember Elissa so long as I can rememb\
er who I am, so long as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the breath of life controls these limbs.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 4, l. 335 \(Aeneas, of Dido\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Varium et mutabile semper)Tj
T*
( Femina.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Fickle and changeable always is woman.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 48.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 4, l. 569 \(\221A windfane changabil huf puffe / Alwa\
ys is a woomman\222 in Richard Stanyhurst\222s )Tj
ET
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(translation, 1582\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Exoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus ultor.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Arise, you avenger someone, from my bones.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 4, l. 625)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 675.75456 Tm
( Hos successus alit: possunt, quia posse videntur.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( These success encourages: they can because they think they can.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 638.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 5, l. 231)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 617.25456 Tm
( Bella, horrida bella,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Et Thybrim multo spumantem sanguine cerno.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I see wars, horrible wars, and the Tiber foaming with much blood.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( Facilis descensus Averno:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Noctes atque dies patet atri ianua Ditis;)Tj
T*
( Sed revocare gradum superasque evadere ad auras,)Tj
T*
( Hoc opus, hic labor est.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Easy is the way down to the Underworld: by night and by day dark Dis\
\222s door stands open; but )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(to withdraw one\222s steps and to make a way out to the upper air, that\222\
s the task, that is the labour.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 410.25456 Tm
( Procul, o procul este, profani.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Far off, Oh keep far off, you uninitiated ones.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 258)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Ibant obscuri sola sub nocte per umbram)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Perque domos Ditis vacuas et inania regna.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 268)Tj
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( Vestibulum ante ipsum primisque in faucibus Orci)Tj
T*
( Luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae,)Tj
T*
( Pallentesque habitant Morbi tristisque Senectus,)Tj
T*
( Et Metus et malesuada Fames ac turpis Egestas,)Tj
T*
( Terribiles visu formae, Letumque Labosque.)Tj
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T*
(to wrongdoing, and shaming Destitution, figures terrible to see, and Dea\
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/TT0 1 Tf
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 273)Tj
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( Stabant orantes primi transmittere cursum)Tj
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( Tendebantque manus ripae ulterioris amore.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
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( They stood begging to be the first to make the voyage over and they \
reached out their hands in )Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 313)Tj
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( Quique sui memores aliquos fecere merendo:)Tj
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( Omnibus his nivea cinguntur tempora vitta.)Tj
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( Or those who have improved life by the knowledge they have found out\
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T*
(snow-white band.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 663)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.75456 Tm
( Spiritus intus alit, totamque infusa per artus)Tj
T*
( Mens agitat molem et magno se corpore miscet.)Tj
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( The spirit within nourishes, and mind instilled throughout the livin\
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(mass and mingles with the vast frame.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 512.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 726)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 491.25456 Tm
( Excudent alii spirantia mollius aera)Tj
T*
( \(Credo equidem\), vivos ducent de marmore vultus,)Tj
T*
( Orabunt causas melius, caelique meatus)Tj
T*
( Describent radio et surgentia sidera dicent:)Tj
T*
( Tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento)Tj
T*
( \(Hae tibi erunt artes\), pacique imponere morem,)Tj
T*
( Parcere subiectis et debellare superbos.)Tj
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( Others shall shape bronzes more smoothly so that they seem alive \(y\
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T*
(a pointer the motions of the heavenly bodies and tell the stars as they \
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T*
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T*
(upon a state of peace, to spare those who have submitted and to subdue t\
he arrogant.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 273.67047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 847)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.75456 Tm
( Heu, miserande puer, si qua fata aspera rumpas,)Tj
T*
( Tu Marcellus eris. Manibus date lilia plenis.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Alas, pitiable boy\227if only you might break your cruel fate!\227yo\
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(me lilies in armfuls.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 882)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 158.25456 Tm
( Sunt geminae Somni portae, quarum altera fertur)Tj
T*
( Cornea, qua veris facilis datur exitus umbris,)Tj
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( Altera candenti perfecta nitens elephanto,)Tj
T*
( Sed falsa ad caelum mittunt insomnia Manes.)Tj
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( There are two gates of Sleep, one of which it is held is made of hor\
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ceptive are the visions the )Tj
T*
(Underworld sends that way to the light.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 6, l. 893)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Geniumque loci primamque deorum)Tj
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( Tellurem Nymphasque et adhuc ignota precatur)Tj
T*
( Flumina.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( He prays to the spirit of the place and to Earth the first of the go\
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 7, l. 136)Tj
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( If I am unable to make the gods above relent, I shall move Hell.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 7, l. 312)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( O mihi praeteritos referat si Iuppiter annos.)Tj
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T*
( Oh if only Jupiter would give me back my past years.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 8, l. 560)Tj
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( Quadripedante putrem sonitu quatit ungula campum.)Tj
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T*
( Hooves with a galloping sound are shaking the powdery plain.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 8, l. 596)Tj
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( Macte nova virtute, puer, sic itur ad astra.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( Blessings on your young courage, boy; that\222s the way to the stars\
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 9, l. 641)Tj
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( Audentis Fortuna iuvat.)Tj
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T*
( Fortune assists the bold.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 10, l. 284)Tj
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( Experto credite.)Tj
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T*
( Trust one who has gone through it.)Tj
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(\221Aeneid\222 bk. 11, l. 283)Tj
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( Tityre, tu patulae recubans sub tegmine fagi)Tj
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( Silvestrem tenui Musam meditaris avena.)Tj
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( Tityrus, you who lie under cover of the spreading beech-tree, you ar\
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(music on a thin stalk.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 1, l. 1)Tj
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( O Meliboee, deus nobis haec otia fecit.)Tj
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( O Meliboeus, it is a god that has made this peaceful life for us.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 1, l. 6)Tj
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( At nos hinc alii sitientis ibimus Afros,)Tj
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( Pars Scythiam et rapidum cretae veniemus Oaxen)Tj
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( Et penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos.)Tj
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( But we from here are to go some to arid Africa, another group to Scy\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 1, l. 64)Tj
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( Formosum pastor Corydon ardebat Alexin,)Tj
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( Delicias domini, nec quid speraret habebat.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 2, l. 1)Tj
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( O formose puer, nimium ne crede colori.)Tj
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( O handsome lad, don\222t trust too much in your complexion.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 2, l. 17)Tj
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( Quem fugis, a! demens? Habitarunt di quoque silvas.)Tj
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( Ah, madman! Whom are you running away from? Gods too have lived in t\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 2, l. 60)Tj
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( Trahit sua quemque voluptas.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Everyone is dragged on by their favourite pleasure.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 2, l. 65)Tj
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( Malo me Galatea petit, lasciva puella,)Tj
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( Et fugit ad salices et se cupit ante videri.)Tj
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( Galatea throws an apple at me, sexy girl, and runs away into the wil\
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0 -1.2 TD
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 3, l. 64)Tj
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( Latet anguis in herba.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( There\222s a snake hidden in the grass.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 3, l. 93)Tj
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( Non nostrum inter vos tantas componere lites.)Tj
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T*
( It\222s not in my power to decide such a great dispute between you.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 3, l. 108)Tj
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( Claudite iam rivos, pueri; sat prata biberunt.)Tj
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( Close the sluices now, lads; the fields have drunk enough.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 3, l. 111)Tj
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( Sicelides Musae, paulo maiora canamus!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Non omnis arbusta iuvant humilesque myricae;)Tj
T*
( Si canimus silvas, silvae sint consule dignae.)Tj
T*
( Ultima Cumaei venit iam carminis aetas;)Tj
T*
( Magnus ab integro saeclorum nascitur ordo.)Tj
T*
( Iam redit et virgo, redeunt Saturnia regna,)Tj
T*
( Iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto.)Tj
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( Sicilian Muses, let us sing of rather greater things. Not everyone l\
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ET
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0 -1.2 TD
(age according to the oracle at Cumae; the great series of lifetimes star\
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T*
(goddess returns, the golden days of Saturn\222s reign return, now a new \
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T*
(heaven.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 4, l. 1)Tj
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( Incipe, parve puer, risu cognoscere matrem.)Tj
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( Begin, baby boy, to recognize your mother with a smile.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 4, l. 60)Tj
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( Incipe, parve puer: qui non risere parenti,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nec deus hunc mensa, dea nec dignata cubili est.)Tj
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( Begin, baby boy: if you haven\222t had a smile for your parent, then\
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0 -1.2 TD
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 530.17047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 4, l. 62)Tj
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( Ambo florentes aetatibus, Arcades ambo,)Tj
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( Et cantare pares et respondere parati.)Tj
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( Both in the flower of their youth, Arcadians both, and matched and r\
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(and to respond.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 7, l. 4)Tj
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( Saepibus in nostris parvam te roscida mala)Tj
T*
( \(Dux ego vester eram\) vidi cum matre legentem.)Tj
T*
( Alter ab undecimo tum me iam acceperat annus,)Tj
T*
( Iam fragilis poteram a terra contingere ramos:)Tj
T*
( Ut vidi, ut perii, ut me malus abstulit error!)Tj
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( In our orchard I saw you picking dewy apples with your mother \(I wa\
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T*
(saw you! how I fell in love! how an awful madness swept me away!)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 8, l. 37)Tj
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( Nunc scio quid sit Amor.)Tj
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( Now I know what Love is.)Tj
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(\221Eclogue\222 no. 8, l. 43)Tj
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( Non omnia possumus omnes.)Tj
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( We can\222t all do everything.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 8, l. 63 \(attributed to Lucilius, Macrobius \221Sat\
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( Et me fecere poetam)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pierides, sunt et mihi carmina, me quoque dicunt)Tj
T*
( Vatem pastores; sed non ego credulus illis.)Tj
T*
( Nam neque adhuc Vario videor nec dicere Cinna)Tj
T*
( Digna, sed argutos inter strepere anser olores.)Tj
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T*
(Varius or as Cinna, but to be a goose honking amongst tuneful swans.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 9, l. 32)Tj
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( Omnia vincit Amor: et nos cedamus Amori.)Tj
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( Love conquers all things: let us too give in to Love.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 642.67047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 10, l. 69)Tj
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( Ite domum saturae, venit Hesperus, ite capellae.)Tj
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T*
( Go on home, you have fed full, the evening star is coming, go on, my\
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0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Eclogue\222 no. 10, l. 77)Tj
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( Ultima Thule.)Tj
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T*
( Farthest Thule.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 525.67047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 1, l. 30)Tj
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( Nosque ubi primus equis Oriens adflavit anhelis)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Illic sera rubens accendit lumina Vesper.)Tj
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( And when the rising sun has first breathed on us with his panting ho\
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0 -1.2 TD
(evening-star is lighting his late lamps.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.17047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 1, l. 250)Tj
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( Ter sunt conati imponere Pelio Ossam)Tj
T*
( Scilicet atque Ossae frondosum involvere Olympum;)Tj
T*
( Ter pater exstructos disiecit fulmine montis.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Three times they endeavoured to pile Ossa on Pelion, no less, and to\
roll leafy Olympus on top )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of Ossa; three times our Father scattered the heaped-up mountains with a\
thunderbolt.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.67047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 1, l. 281)Tj
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( O fortunatos nimium, sua si bona norint,)Tj
T*
( Agricolas!)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( O farmers excessively fortunate if only they recognized their blessi\
ngs!)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 2, l. 458)Tj
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( Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.)Tj
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T*
( Lucky is he who has been able to understand the causes of things.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.67047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 2, l. 490)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.75456 Tm
( Fortunatus et ille deos qui novit agrestis.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Fortunate too is the man who has come to know the gods of the countr\
yside.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 125.17047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 2, l. 493)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 104.25456 Tm
( Optima quaeque dies miseris mortalibus aevi)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Prima fugit; subeunt morbi tristisque senectus)Tj
T*
( Et labor, et durae rapit inclementia mortis.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( All the best days of life slip away from us poor mortals first; illn\
esses and dreary old age and )Tj
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(pain sneak up, and the fierceness of harsh death snatches away.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 3, l. 66)Tj
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( Sed fugit interea, fugit inreparabile tempus.)Tj
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( But meanwhile it is flying, irretrievable time is flying.)Tj
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(\221Georgics\222 no. 3, l. 284)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 657.75456 Tm
( Hi motus animorum atque haec certamina tanta)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Pulveris exigui iactu compressa quiescent.)Tj
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( All these spirited movements and such great contests as these will b\
e contained and quieten )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(down by the throwing of a little dust.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 584.17047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 4, l. 86 \(referring to the battle of the bees\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 563.25456 Tm
( Non aliter, si parva licet componere magnis,)Tj
T*
( Cecropias innatus apes amor urget habendi)Tj
T*
( Munere quamque suo.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Just so, if one may compare small things with great, an innate love \
of getting drives these Attic )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(bees each with his own function.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(\221Georgics\222 no. 4, l. 176)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.75456 Tm
( Sic vos non vobis mellificatis apes.)Tj
T*
( Sic vos non vobis nidificatis aves.)Tj
T*
( Sic vos non vobis vellera fertis oves.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Thus you bees make honey not for yourselves. Thus you birds build ne\
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0 -1.2 TD
(Thus you sheep bear fleeces not for yourselves.)Tj
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(Attributed, on Bathyllus claiming authorship of certain lines by Virgil)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 326.9624 Tm
( 10.27 Voltaire 1694-1778)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Si nous ne trouvons pas des choses agr\350ables, nous trouverons du \
moins des choses nouvelles.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( If we do not find anything pleasant, at least we shall find somethin\
g new.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 267.67047 Tm
(\221Candide\222 \(1759\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.75456 Tm
( Dans ce pays-ci il est bon de tuer de temps en temps un amiral pour \
encourager les autres.)Tj
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T*
( In this country [England] it is thought well to kill an admiral from\
time to time to encourage )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the others.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Candide\222 \(1759\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Tout est pour le mieux dans le meilleur des mondes possibles.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( All is for the best in the best of possible worlds.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 132.67047 Tm
(\221Candide\222 \(1759\) ch. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 111.75456 Tm
( Cela est bien dit, r\350pondit Candide, mais il faut cultiver notre \
jardin.)Tj
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T*
( \221That is well said,\222 replied Candide, \221but we must cultivat\
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0 -1.2 TD
(attend to our own affairs\222\))Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 56.17047 Tm
(\221Candide\222 \(1759\) ch. 30)Tj
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( Ils ne se servent de la pens\350e que pour autoriser leurs injustice\
s, et n\222emploient les paroles que )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pour d\350guiser leurs pens\350es.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( [Men] use thought only to justify their injustices, and speech only \
to conceal their thoughts.)Tj
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(\221Dialogues\222 no. 14 \221Le Chapon et la Poularde\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.50456 Tm
( Le mieux est l\222ennemi du bien.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
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T*
( The best is the enemy of the good.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 638.92047 Tm
(\221Art Dramatique\222 in \221Dictionnaire Philosophique\222 \(1764\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 618.00456 Tm
( La superstition met le monde entier en flammes; la philosophie les \350\
teint.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Superstition sets the whole world in flames; philosophy quenches the\
m.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 580.42047 Tm
(\221Superstition\222 in \221Dictionnaire Philosophique\222 \(1764\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 559.50456 Tm
( Tous les genres sont bons hors le genre ennuyeux.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( All styles are good save the tiresome kind.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221L\222Enfant Prodigue\222 \(1736\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 501.00456 Tm
( Si Dieu n\222existait pas, il faudrait l\222inventer.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221\310p\356tres\222 no. 96 \221A l\222Auteur du livre des trois impost\
eurs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Ce corps qui s\222appelait et qui s\222appelle encore le saint empir\
e romain n\222\350tait en aucune )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mani\351re ni saint, ni romain, ni empire.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( This agglomeration which was called and which still calls itself the\
Holy Roman Empire was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 368.92047 Tm
(\221Essai sur les moeurs et l\222esprit des nations\222 \(1769\) lxx)Tj
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( En effet, l\222histoire n\222est que le tableau des crimes et des ma\
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Indeed, history is nothing more than a tableau of crimes and misfort\
unes.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 310.42047 Tm
(\221L\222Ing\350nu\222 \(1767\) ch. 10.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 289.50456 Tm
( Quoi que vous fassiez, \350crasez l\222inf\342me, et aimez qui vous \
aime.)Tj
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T*
( Whatever you do, stamp out abuses, and love those who love you.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.92047 Tm
(Letter to M. d\222Alembert, 28 November 1762)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 231.00456 Tm
( Il est plaisant qu\222on fait une vertu du vice de chastet\350; et v\
oil\341 encore une dr\364le de chastet\350 que )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(celle qui m\351ne tout droit les hommes au p\350ch\350 d\222Onan, et les\
filles aux p\342les couleurs!)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is amusing that a virtue is made of the vice of chastity; and it\222\
s a pretty odd sort of chastity at )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that, which leads men straight into the sin of Onan, and girls to the wa\
ning of their colour.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(Letter to M. Mariott, 28 March 1766)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( Je ne suis pas comme une dame de la cour de Versailles, qui disait: \
c\222est bien dommage que )Tj
T*
(l\222aventure de la tour de Babel ait produit la confusion des langues; \
sans cela tout le monde aurait )Tj
T*
(toujours parl\350 fran\347ais.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I am not like a lady at the court of Versailles, who said: \221What \
a dreadful pity that the bother at )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the tower of Babel should have got language all mixed up; but for that, \
everyone would always )Tj
T*
(have spoken French.\222)Tj
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(Letter to Catherine the Great, 26 May 1767)Tj
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( Le superflu, chose tr\351s n\350cessaire.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The superfluous is very necessary.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.67047 Tm
(\221Le Mondain\222 \(1736\) v.22)Tj
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( C\222est une des superstitions de l\222esprit humain d\222avoir imag\
in\350 que la virginit\350 pouvait \352tre une )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(vertu.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( It is one of the superstitions of the human mind to have imagined th\
at virginity could be a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(virtue.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.17047 Tm
(\221The Leningrad Notebooks\222 \(c.1735-c.1750\) in T. Besterman \(ed.\)\
\221Notebooks\222 \(2nd ed., 1968\) vol. 2, p. 455)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 581.25456 Tm
( Il faut qu\222il y ait des moments tranquilles dans les grands ouvra\
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T*
(les instants de passions, mais non pas des moments de d\350go\373t.)Tj
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( There ought to be moments of tranquillity in great works, as in life\
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0 -1.2 TD
(passions, but not moments of disgust.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 507.67047 Tm
(\221The Piccini Notebooks\222 \(c.1735-c.1750\) in T. Besterman \(ed.\) \
\221Notebooks\222 \(2nd ed., 1968\) vol. 2, p. 500)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 486.75456 Tm
( Il faut, dans le gouvernement, des bergers et des bouchers.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Governments need to have both shepherds and butchers.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221The Piccini Notebooks\222 \(c.1735-c.1750\) in T. Besterman \(ed.\) \
\221Notebooks\222 \(2nd ed., 1968\) vol. 2, p. 517)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( Dieu n\222est pas pour les gros bataillons, mais pour ceux qui tiren\
t le mieux.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( God is on the side not of the heavy batallions, but of the best shot\
s.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221The Piccini Notebooks\222 \(c.1735-c.1750\) in T. Besterman \(ed.\) \
\221Notebooks\222 \(2nd ed., 1968\) vol. 2, p. 547.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( On doit des \350gards aux vivants; on ne doit aux morts que la v\350\
rit\350.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( We owe respect to the living; to the dead we owe only truth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.17047 Tm
(\221Premi\350re Lettre sur Oedipe\222 in \221Oeuvres\222 \(1785\) vol. 1\
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15 0 0 15 10 311.25456 Tm
( La foi consiste \341 croire ce que la raison ne croit pas...Il ne su\
ffit pas qu\222une chose soit possible )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(pour la croire.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Faith consists in believing when it is beyond the power of reason to\
believe. It is not enough )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(that a thing be possible for it to be believed.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 237.67047 Tm
(\221Questions sur l\222Encyclop\350die\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 216.75456 Tm
( Le secret d\222ennuyer est...de tout dire.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The way to be a bore is to say everything.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 179.17047 Tm
(\221Sur la Nature de l\222Homme\222 v.174-5 in \221Sept Discours en vers\
sur l\222homme\222)Tj
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( The composition of a tragedy requires testicles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 142.42047 Tm
(When asked \221why no woman has ever written a tolerable tragedy\222, in\
a letter from Lord Byron to John )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Murray, 2 April 1817)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 106.50456 Tm
( Habacuc \350tait capable de tout.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Habakkuk was capable of anything.)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 68.92047 Tm
(Attributed, in \221Notes & Queries\222 vol. 181, p. 46)Tj
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( I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your ri\
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(Attributed to Voltaire, the words are in fact S. G. Tallentyre\222s summ\
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(Helv\350tius, following the ban on De l\222Esprit in \221The Friends of \
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( 11.0 W)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 683.25456 Tm
( )Tj
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( 11.1 Richard Wagner 1813-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
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( Frisch weht der Wind)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( der Heimat zu:\227)Tj
T*
( mein irisch Kind,)Tj
T*
( wo weilest du?)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Freshly blows the wind to the homeland: my Irish child, where are yo\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Tristan und Isolde\222 act 1, sc. 1)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 504.7124 Tm
( 11.2 John Wain 1925\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Poetry is to prose as dancing is to walking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(BBC radio broadcast, 13 January 1976)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.9624 Tm
( 11.3 Jerry Wald 1911-1962 and Richard Macaulay)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Naughty but nice.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(Title of film \(1939\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.2124 Tm
( 11.4 Prince of Wales)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See Prince Charles \(3.78\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 11.5 Arthur Waley 1889-1966)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( What is hard today is to censor one\222s own thoughts\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To sit by and see the blind man)Tj
T*
( On the sightless horse, riding into the bottomless abyss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 236.92047 Tm
(\221Censorship\222)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 204.7124 Tm
( 11.6 Edgar Wallace 1875-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dreamin\222 of thee! Dreamin\222 of thee!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(\221T. A. in Love\222 \(popularised in 1930 broadcast by Cyril Fletcher\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 146.25456 Tm
( What is a highbrow? He is a man who has found something more interes\
ting than women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 24 January 1932, sect. 8, p. 6)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 98.2124 Tm
( 11.7 George Wallace 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Segregation now, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Inaugural speech as Governor of Alabama, January 1963, in \221Birmingham\
World\222 19 January 1963)Tj
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( 11.8 Henry Wallace 1888-1965)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The century on which we are entering\227the century which will come \
out of this war\227can be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and must be the century of the common man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(Speech, 8 May 1942, in \221Vital Speeches\222 \(1942\) vol. 8, p. 483)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 11.9 William Ross Wallace d. 1881)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The hand that rocks the cradle)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is the hand that rules the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(J .K. Hoyt \221Cyclopedia of Practical Quotations\222 \(1896\) 402)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 577.4624 Tm
( 11.10 Graham Wallas 1858-1932)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The little girl had the making of a poet in her who, being told to b\
e sure of her meaning before )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(she spoke, said, \221How can I know what I think till I see what I say?\222\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 521.92047 Tm
(\221The Art of Thought\222 \(1926\) ch. 4.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 489.7124 Tm
( 11.11 Edmund Waller 1606-1687)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( So was the huntsman by the bear oppressed,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Whose hide he sold\227before he caught the beast!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 434.17047 Tm
(\221Battle of the Summer Islands\222 2, l. 111)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 413.25456 Tm
( Poets that lasting marble seek)Tj
T*
( Must carve in Latin or in Greek.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221Of English Verse\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 358.50456 Tm
( Others may use the ocean as their road,)Tj
T*
( Only the English make it their abode.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 324.67047 Tm
(\221Of a War with Spain\222 l. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 303.75456 Tm
( The soul\222s dark cottage, battered and decayed)Tj
T*
( Lets in new light through chinks that time has made;)Tj
T*
( Stronger by weakness, wiser men become,)Tj
T*
( As they draw near to their eternal home.)Tj
T*
( Leaving the old, both worlds at once they view,)Tj
T*
( That stand upon the threshold of the new.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 197.92047 Tm
(\221On the Foregoing Divine Poems\222 l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 177.00456 Tm
( That which her slender waist confined)Tj
T*
( Shall now my joyful temples bind;)Tj
T*
( No monarch but would give his crown)Tj
T*
( His arms might do what this has done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 107.17047 Tm
(\221On a Girdle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 86.25456 Tm
( Rome, though her eagle through the world had flown,)Tj
T*
( Could never make this island all her own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 52.42047 Tm
(\221Panegyric to My Lord Protector\222 17)Tj
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( Illustrious acts high raptures do infuse,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And every conqueror creates a Muse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Panegyric to My Lord Protector\222 46)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Go, lovely Rose!)Tj
T*
( Tell her, that wastes her time and me,)Tj
T*
( That now she knows,)Tj
T*
( When I resemble her to thee,)Tj
T*
( How sweet and fair she seems to be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Go Lovely Rose!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Small is the worth)Tj
T*
( Of beauty from the light retired;)Tj
T*
( Bid her come forth,)Tj
T*
( Suffer herself to be desired,)Tj
T*
( And not blush so to be admired.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Go Lovely Rose!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Why came I so untimely forth)Tj
T*
( Into a world which, wanting thee,)Tj
T*
( Could entertain us with no worth,)Tj
T*
( Or shadow of felicity?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221To My Young Lady Lucy Sidney\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( So all we know)Tj
T*
( Of what they do above,)Tj
T*
( Is that they happy are, and that they love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.17047 Tm
(\221Upon the Death of My Lady Rich\222 l. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 317.25456 Tm
( Under the tropic is our language spoke,)Tj
T*
( And part of Flanders hath receiv\222d our yoke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.42047 Tm
(\221Upon the Death of the Lord Protector\222 l. 21)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 251.2124 Tm
( 11.12 Horace Walpole, Fourth Earl Of Orford 1717-97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Alexander at the head of the world never tasted the true pleasure th\
at boys of his own age have )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(enjoyed at the head of a school.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 195.67047 Tm
(Letter to Montagu, 6 May 1736, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 174.75456 Tm
( Our supreme governors, the mob.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 158.92047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 7 September 1743, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.00456 Tm
( [Lovat] was beheaded yesterday, and died extremely well, without pas\
sion, affectation, )Tj
T*
(buffoonery or timidity: his behaviour was natural and intrepid.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.17047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 10 April 1747, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 83.25456 Tm
( [Strawberry Hill] is a little plaything-house that I got out of Mrs \
Chenevix\222s shop, and is the )Tj
T*
(prettiest bauble you ever saw. It is set in enamelled meadows, with fili\
gree hedges.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 49.42047 Tm
(Letter to Conway, 8 June 1747, in \221Letters\222)Tj
ET
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BT
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( But, thank God! the Thames is between me and the Duchess of Queensbe\
rry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Letter to Conway, 8 June 1747, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Every drop of ink in my pen ran cold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Letter to Montagu, 3 July 1752, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( It has the true rust of the Barons\222 Wars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(Letter to Bentley, September 1753, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( At present, nothing is talked of, nothing admired, but what I cannot\
help calling a very insipid )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and tedious performance: it is a kind of novel, called The Life and Opin\
ions of Tristram Shandy; )Tj
T*
(the great humour of which consists in the whole narration always going b\
ackwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Letter to Dalrymple, 4 April 1760, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( One of the greatest geniuses that ever existed, Shakespeare, undoubt\
edly wanted taste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(Letter to Wren, 9 August 1764, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( The works of Richardson...which are pictures of high life as conceiv\
ed by a bookseller, and )Tj
T*
(romances as they would be spiritualized by a Methodist preacher.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 20 December 1764, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( At Madame du Deffand\222s, an old blind d\350bauch\350e of wit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
(Letter to Conway, 6 October 1765, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.75456 Tm
( What has one to do, when one grows tired of the world, as we both do\
, but to draw nearer and )Tj
T*
(nearer, and gently waste the remains of life with friends with whom one \
began it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(Letter to Montagu, 21 November 1765, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( It is charming to totter into vogue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(Letter to Selwyn, 2 December 1765, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Yes, like Queen Eleanor in the ballad, I sunk at Charing Cross, and \
have risen in the Faubourg )Tj
T*
(St Germain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(Letter to Gray, 25 January 1766, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( The best sun we have is made of Newcastle coal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(Letter to Montagu, 15 June 1768, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Everybody talks of the constitution, but all sides forget that the c\
onstitution is extremely well, )Tj
T*
(and would do very well, if they would but let it alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 224.92047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 18-19 January 1770, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.00456 Tm
( It was easier to conquer it [the East] than to know what to do with \
it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.17047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 27 March 1772, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 167.25456 Tm
( The way to ensure summer in England is to have it framed and glazed \
in a comfortable room.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.42047 Tm
(Letter to Cole, 28 May 1774, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.50456 Tm
( The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic. T\
here will, perhaps, be a )Tj
T*
(Thucydides at Boston, a Xenophon at New York, and, in time, a Virgil at \
Mexico, and a Newton )Tj
T*
(at Peru. At last, some curious traveller from Lima will visit England an\
d give a description of the )Tj
T*
(ruins of St Paul\222s, like the editions of Balbec and Palmyra.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 24 November 1774, in \221Letters\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( By the waters of Babylon we sit down and weep, when we think of thee\
, O America!)Tj
ET
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(Letter to Mason, 12 June 1775, in \221Letters\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( This world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those that \
feel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(Letter to the Countess of Upper Ossory, 16 August 1776, in \221Letters\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( Tell me, ye divines, which is the most virtuous man, he who begets t\
wenty bastards, or he who )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sacrifices an hundred thousand lives?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 662.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 7 July 1778, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 641.50456 Tm
( When will the world know that peace and propagation are the two most\
delightful things in it?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 625.67047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 7 July 1778, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 604.75456 Tm
( The life of any man written under the direction of his family, did n\
obody honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 588.92047 Tm
(Letter to Cole, 1 September 1778, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.00456 Tm
( When men write for profit, they are not very delicate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 552.17047 Tm
(Letter to Cole, 1 September 1778, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 531.25456 Tm
( Easy I am so far, that the ill success of the American war has saved\
us from slavery\227in truth, I )Tj
T*
(am content that liberty will exist anywhere, and amongst Englishmen, eve\
n cross the Atlantic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(Letter to Mann, 25 February 1779, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( When people will not weed their own minds, they are apt to be overru\
n with nettles.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(Letter to Lady Ailesbury, 10 July 1779, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.75456 Tm
( Prognostics do not always prove prophecies,\227at least the wisest p\
rophets make sure of the )Tj
T*
(event first.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 405.92047 Tm
(Letter to Thos. Walpole, 19 February 1785, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.00456 Tm
( It is the story of a mountebank and his zany.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 369.17047 Tm
(Referring to Boswell\222s \221Tour to the Hebrides\222 in a letter to Co\
nway, 6 October 1785, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.25456 Tm
( All his [Sir Joshua Reynolds\222s] own geese are swans, as the swans\
of others are geese.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 332.42047 Tm
(Letter to the Countess of Upper Ossory, 1 December 1786, in \221Letters\222\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 311.50456 Tm
( I do not dislike the French from the vulgar antipathy between neighb\
ouring nations, but for )Tj
T*
(their insolent and unfounded airs of superiority.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.67047 Tm
(Letter to Hannah More, 14 October 1787, in \221Letters\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 256.75456 Tm
( Virtue knows to a farthing what it has lost by not having been vice.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.92047 Tm
(In L. Kronenberger \221The extraordinary Mr Wilkes\222 \(1974\) pt. 3, c\
h. 2 \221The Ruling Class\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 208.7124 Tm
( 11.13 Sir Hugh Walpole 1884-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \222Tisn\222t life that matters! \222Tis the courage you bring to it\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(\221Fortitude\222 \(1913\) bk.1, ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 138.9624 Tm
( 11.14 Sir Robert Walpole, First Earl Of Orford 1676-1745)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The balance of power.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.42047 Tm
(House of Commons, 13 February 1741)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.50456 Tm
( They now ring the bells, but they will soon wring their hands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.67047 Tm
(On the declaration of war with Spain, 1739, in W. Coxe \221Memoirs of Si\
r Robert Walpole\222 \(1798\) vol. 1, p. 618)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.75456 Tm
( Madam, there are fifty thousand men slain this year in Europe, and n\
ot one Englishman.)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(To Queen Caroline, 1734, in Hervey \221Memoirs\222 \(1848\) vol. 1, p. 3\
98)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( My Lord Bath, you and I are now two as insignificant men as any in E\
ngland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(To Pulteney, Earl of Bath, on their promotion to the House of Lords, in \
W. King \221Political & Literary )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Anecdotes\222 \(1819\) p. 43)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 671.2124 Tm
( 11.15 William Walsh 1663-1708)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And sadly reflecting,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That a lover forsaken)Tj
T*
( A new love may get,)Tj
T*
( But a neck when once broken)Tj
T*
( Can never be set.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 561.67047 Tm
(\221The Despairing Lover\222 l. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.75456 Tm
( By partners, in each other kind,)Tj
T*
( Afflictions easier grow;)Tj
T*
( In love alone we hate to find)Tj
T*
( Companions of our woe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.92047 Tm
(\221Song: Of All the Torments\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.00456 Tm
( I can endure my own despair,)Tj
T*
( But not another\222s hope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221Song: Of All the Torments\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 383.9624 Tm
( 11.16 Izaak Walton 1593-1683)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics, that it can never\
be fully learnt.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 346.42047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) \221Epistle to the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 325.50456 Tm
( And for winter fly-fishing it is as useful as an almanac out of date\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) \221Epistle to the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( As no man is born an artist, so no man is born an angler.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.92047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) \221Epistle to the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 252.00456 Tm
( I shall stay him no longer than to wish him a rainy evening to read \
this following discourse; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(and that if he be an honest angler, the east wind may never blow when he\
goes a-fishing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) \221Epistle to the Reader\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 197.25456 Tm
( I am, Sir, a Brother of the Angle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 160.50456 Tm
( Angling is somewhat like poetry, men are to be born so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 144.67047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 123.75456 Tm
( Sir Henry Wotton...was also a most dear lover, and a frequent practi\
ser of the art of angling; of )Tj
T*
(which he would say, \221it was an employment for his idle time, which wa\
s then not idly spent...a )Tj
T*
(rest to his mind, a cheerer of his spirits, a diverter of sadness, a cal\
mer of unquiet thoughts, a )Tj
T*
(moderator of passions, a procurer of contentedness; and that it begat ha\
bits of peace and patience )Tj
T*
(in those that professed and practised it.\222)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Good company and good discourse are the very sinews of virtue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( An excellent angler, and now with God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( I love such mirth as does not make friends ashamed to look upon one \
another next morning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.00456 Tm
( A good, honest, wholesome, hungry breakfast.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.17047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 587.25456 Tm
( No man can lose what he never had.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 571.42047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 550.50456 Tm
( In so doing, use him as though you loved him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 8 \(instructions for bai\
ting a hook with a live frog\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( This dish of meat is too good for any but anglers, or very honest me\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.92047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( I love any discourse of rivers, and fish and fishing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.17047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 440.25456 Tm
( Look to your health; and if you have it, praise God, and value it ne\
xt to a good conscience; for )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(health is the second blessing that we mortals are capable of; a blessing\
that money cannot buy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 406.42047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 385.50456 Tm
( Let the blessing of St Peter\222s Master be...upon all that are love\
rs of virtue; and dare trust in His )Tj
T*
(providence; and be quiet; and go a-Angling.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 351.67047 Tm
(\221The Compleat Angler\222 \(1653\) pt. 1, ch. 21)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 330.75456 Tm
( But God, who is able to prevail, wrestled with him, as the Angel did\
with Jacob, and marked )Tj
T*
(him; marked him for his own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 296.92047 Tm
(\221Life of Donne\222 \(1640\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 276.00456 Tm
( The great Secretary of Nature and all learning, Sir Francis Bacon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Life of Herbert\222 \(1670\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( Of this blest man, let his just praise be given,)Tj
T*
( Heaven was in him, before he was in heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(Written in Dr Richard Sibbes\222s Returning Backslider, now preserved in\
Salisbury Cathedral Library)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 173.2124 Tm
( 11.17 Bishop William Warburton 1698-1779)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Orthodoxy is my doxy; heterodoxy is another man\222s doxy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 135.67047 Tm
(To Lord Sandwich, in Priestley \221Memoirs\222 \(1807\) vol. 1, p. 372)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 103.4624 Tm
( 11.18 Artemus Ward \(Charles Farrar Browne\) 1834-67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I now bid you a welcome adoo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221The Shakers\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( \221Mister Ward, don\222t yur blud bile at the thawt that three mill\
ion and a half of your culled )Tj
ET
EMC
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(brethren air a clanking their chains in the South?\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Sez I, \221not a bile! Let \222em clank!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Oberlin\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( If you mean gettin hitched, I\222M IN!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221The Showman\222s Courtship\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( My pollertics, like my religion, bein of a exceedin accommodatin cha\
racter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221The Crisis\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( Shall we sell our birthrite for a mess of potash?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221The Crisis\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( N.B. This is rote Sarcasticul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221A Visit to Brigham Young\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 551.25456 Tm
( I girdid up my Lions & fled the Seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 535.42047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221A Visit to Brigham Young\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 514.50456 Tm
( Did you ever hav the measels, and if so how many?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 498.67047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221The Census\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.75456 Tm
( The female woman is one of the greatest institooshuns of which this \
land can boste.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 461.92047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Woman\222s Rights\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 441.00456 Tm
( By a sudden and adroit movement I placed my left eye agin the Secesh\
er\222s fist.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Thrilling Scenes in Dixie\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( The ground flew up and hit me in the hed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 388.42047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Thrilling Scenes in Dixie\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 367.50456 Tm
( I presunted myself at Betty\222s bedside late at nite, with consider\
bul licker koncealed about my )Tj
T*
(persun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Betsy-Jain Re-orgunised\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 312.75456 Tm
( The happy marrid man dies in good stile at home, surrounded by his w\
eeping wife and )Tj
T*
(children. The old batchelor don\222t die at all\227he sort of rots away,\
like a polly-wog\222s tail.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 278.92047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward His Book\222 \221Draft in Baldinsville\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.00456 Tm
( It is a pity that Chawcer, who had geneyus, was so unedicated. He\222\
s the wuss speller I know of.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.17047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward in London\222 ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.25456 Tm
( He [Brigham Young] is dreadfully married. He\222s the most married m\
an I ever saw in my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 205.42047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward\222s Lecture\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 184.50456 Tm
( Why is this thus? What is the reason of this thusness?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 168.67047 Tm
(\221Artemus Ward\222s Lecture\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.75456 Tm
( I am happiest when I am idle. I could live for months without perfor\
ming any kind of labour, )Tj
T*
(and at the expiration of that time I should feel fresh and vigorous enou\
gh to go right on in the )Tj
T*
(same way for numerous more months.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 95.92047 Tm
(\221Pyrotechny\222, 3 \221Pettingill\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 75.00456 Tm
( Why care for grammar as long as we are good?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 59.17047 Tm
(\221Pyrotechny\222, 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 38.25456 Tm
( Let us all be happy, and live within our means, even if we have to b\
orrer the money to do it )Tj
ET
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(with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.42047 Tm
(\221Science and Natural History\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 702.2124 Tm
( 11.19 Mrs Humphry Ward 1851-1920)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221Propinquity does it\222\227as Mrs Thornburgh is always reminding\
us.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.67047 Tm
(\221Robert Elsmere\222 \(1888\) bk. 1, ch. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 632.4624 Tm
( 11.20 Revd Nathaniel Ward 1578-1652)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The world is full of care, much like unto a bubble;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Woman and care, and care and women, and women and care and trouble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.92047 Tm
(Epigram, attributed by Ward to a lady at the Court of the Queen of Bohem\
ia, in \221Simple Cobler\222s Boy\222 \(1648\) )Tj
T*
(p. 25)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 529.7124 Tm
( 11.21 Andy Warhol 1927-87)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s the place where my prediction from the sixties finally came \
true: \221In the future everyone )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(will be famous for fifteen minutes.\222 I\222m bored with that line. I n\
ever use it anymore. My new line )Tj
T*
(is, \221In fifteen minutes everybody will be famous.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 456.17047 Tm
(\221Andy Warhol\222s Exposures\222 \(1979\) \221Studio 54\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 435.25456 Tm
( An artist is someone who produces things that people don\222t need t\
o have but that he\227for some )Tj
T*
(reason\227thinks it would be a good idea to give them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 401.42047 Tm
(\221Philosophy of Andy Warhol \(From A to B and Back Again\)\222 \(1975\)\
ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 380.50456 Tm
( Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 1 March 1987)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 332.4624 Tm
( 11.22 Jack Warner \(Horace Waters\) 1895-1981)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Mind my bike!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 294.92047 Tm
(Catch-phrase used in the BBC radio series \221Garrison Theatre\222, 1939\
onwards)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 262.7124 Tm
( 11.23 George Washington 1732-99)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Father, I cannot tell a lie, I did it with my little hatchet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.17047 Tm
(Attributed by Mark Twain in \221Mark Twain as George Washington\222. Ano\
ther version is: I can\222t tell a lie, Pa; )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you know I can\222t tell a lie. I did cut it with my hatchet. Weems \221\
Washington\222 \(Fifth ed. 1806\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.25456 Tm
( It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliance with any \
portion of the foreign world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.42047 Tm
(Farewell address to the people of the United States, 17 September 1796)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 152.50456 Tm
( Labour to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial f\
ire, called conscience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.67047 Tm
(Rules of Civility and Decent Behaviour. Sparks \221Life of Washington\222\
\(1839\) vol. 2, p. 109)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.75456 Tm
( We must consult Brother Jonathan.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(Said to have been a frequent remark of his during the American Revolutio\
n, referring to Jonathan Trumbull, )Tj
T*
(1710-85, Governor of Connecticut. \221Publications of the Colonial Socie\
ty of Massachusetts\222 \(1905\) vol. 7, p. )Tj
T*
(94)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 49.00456 Tm
( Put none but Americans on guard to-night.)Tj
ET
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(Attributed; based on his circular letter to regimental commanders, 30 Ap\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 722.9624 Tm
( 11.24 Ned Washington)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hi diddle dee dee \(an actor\222s life for me\).)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 685.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1940\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 664.50456 Tm
( When you wish upon a star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 648.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1940\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 616.4624 Tm
( 11.25 Rowland Watkyns fl.1662)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I love him not, but shew no reason can)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Wherefore, but this,I do not love the man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.92047 Tm
(\221Antipathy\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 540.00456 Tm
( For every marriage then is best in tune,)Tj
T*
( When that the wife is May, the husband June.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(\221To the most Courteous and Fair Gentlewoman, Mrs Elinor Williams\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.9624 Tm
( 11.26 William Watson c.1559-1603)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Fiat justitia et ruant coeli.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Let justice be done though the heavens fall.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 414.67047 Tm
(\221A Decacordon of Ten Quodlibeticall Questions Concerning Religion and\
State\222 \(1602\) \(first citation in an )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(English work of a famous maxim\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 367.4624 Tm
( 11.27 Sir William Watson 1858-1935)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( April, April,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Laugh thy girlish laughter;)Tj
T*
( Then, the moment after,)Tj
T*
( Weep thy girlish tears!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(\221Song\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 255.00456 Tm
( These and a thousand tricks and ways and traits)Tj
T*
( I noted as of Demos at their root,)Tj
T*
( And foreign to the staid, conservative)Tj
T*
( Came-over-with-the Conqueror type of mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 185.17047 Tm
(\221A Study in Contrasts\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 152.9624 Tm
( 11.28 Isaac Watts 1674-1748)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( One sickly sheep infects the flock,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And poisons all the rest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221Against Evil Company\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \(17\
15\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( How doth the little busy bee)Tj
T*
( Improve each shining hour,)Tj
T*
( And gather honey all the day)Tj
ET
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( From every opening flower!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221Against Idleness and Mischief\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\
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15 0 0 15 10 715.75456 Tm
( In works of labour, or of skill,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I would be busy too;)Tj
T*
( For Satan finds some mischief still)Tj
T*
( For idle hands to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.92047 Tm
(\221Against Idleness and Mischief\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\
\222 \(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.00456 Tm
( Let me be dressed fine as I will,)Tj
T*
( Flies, worms, and flowers, exceed me still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.17047 Tm
(\221Against Pride in Clothes\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \
\(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.25456 Tm
( Let dogs delight to bark and bite,)Tj
T*
( For God hath made them so;)Tj
T*
( Let bears and lions growl and fight,)Tj
T*
( For \222tis their nature too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.42047 Tm
(\221Against Quarrelling\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \(171\
5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.50456 Tm
( But, children, you should never let)Tj
T*
( Such angry passions rise;)Tj
T*
( Your little hands were never made)Tj
T*
( To tear each other\222s eyes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.67047 Tm
(\221Against Quarrelling\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \(171\
5\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.75456 Tm
( I\222ll not willingly offend,)Tj
T*
( Nor be easily offended;)Tj
T*
( What\222s amiss I\222ll strive to mend,)Tj
T*
( And endure what can\222t be mended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.92047 Tm
(\221Good Resolution\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.00456 Tm
( Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.17047 Tm
(\221Hark! from the Tombs\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.25456 Tm
( There is a dreadful Hell,)Tj
T*
( And everlasting pains;)Tj
T*
( There sinners must with devils dwell)Tj
T*
( In darkness, fire, and chains.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.42047 Tm
(\221Heaven and Hell\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.50456 Tm
( How rude are the boys that throw pebbles and mire.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.67047 Tm
(\221Innocent Play\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.75456 Tm
( Whatever brawls disturb the street,)Tj
T*
( There should be peace at home.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(\221Love between Brothers and Sisters\222 from \221Divine Songs for Chil\
dren\222 \(1715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.00456 Tm
( Birds in their little nests agree)Tj
T*
( And \222tis a shameful sight,)Tj
T*
( When children of one family)Tj
ET
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( Fall out, and chide, and fight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Love between Brothers and Sisters\222 from \221Divine Songs for Chil\
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15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Lord, I ascribe it to Thy grace,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And not to chance, as others do,)Tj
T*
( That I was born of Christian race,)Tj
T*
( And not a Heathen, or a Jew.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Praise for the Gospel\222 from \221Divine Songs for Children\222 \(1\
715\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( \222Tis the voice of the sluggard; I heard him complain,)Tj
T*
( \221You have waked me too soon, I must slumber again\222.)Tj
T*
( As the door on its hinges, so he on his bed,)Tj
T*
( Turns his sides and his shoulders and his heavy head.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221The Sluggard\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( There\222s no repentance in the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Solemn Thoughts of God and Death\222 from \221Divine Songs for Child\
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/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 486.7124 Tm
( 11.29 Evelyn Waugh 1903-66)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Brideshead revisited.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1945\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 428.25456 Tm
( A shriller note could now be heard rising from Sir Alastair\222s roo\
ms; any who have heard that )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(sound will shrink at the recollection of it; it is the sound of English \
county families baying for )Tj
T*
(broken glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 376.42047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) \221Prelude\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 355.50456 Tm
( I expect you\222ll be becoming a schoolmaster, sir. That\222s what m\
ost of the gentlemen does, sir, )Tj
T*
(that gets sent down for indecent behaviour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 321.67047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) \221Prelude\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 300.75456 Tm
( \221We class schools, you see, into four grades: Leading School, Fir\
st-rate School, Good School, )Tj
T*
(and School. Frankly,\222 said Mr Levy, \221School is pretty bad.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( For generations the British bourgeoisie have spoken of themselves as\
gentlemen, and by that )Tj
T*
(they have meant, among other things, a self-respecting scorn of irregula\
r perquisites. It is the )Tj
T*
(quality that distinguishes the gentleman from both the artist and the ar\
istocrat.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 194.17047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 1, ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 173.25456 Tm
( \221I often think,\222 he continued, \221that we can trace almost al\
l the disasters of English history to the )Tj
T*
(influence of Wales!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 1, ch. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( I haven\222t been to sleep for over a year. That\222s why I go to be\
d early. One needs more rest if )Tj
T*
(one doesn\222t sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 2, ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.75456 Tm
( Apparently he has been reading a series of articles by a popular bis\
hop and has discovered that )Tj
T*
(there is a species of person called a \221Modern Churchman\222 who draws\
the full salary of a )Tj
ET
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(beneficed clergyman and need not commit himself to any religious belief.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 2, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I came to the conclusion many years ago that almost all crime is due\
to the repressed desire for )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(aesthetic expression.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 3, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Any one who has been to an English public school will always feel co\
mparatively at home in )Tj
T*
(prison. It is the people brought up in the gay intimacy of the slums, Pa\
ul learned, who find prison )Tj
T*
(so soul-destroying.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Decline and Fall\222 \(1928\) pt. 3, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( You never find an Englishman among the under-dogs\227except in Engla\
nd, of course.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Loved One\222 \(1948\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( In the dying world I come from quotation is a national vice. No one \
would think of making an )Tj
T*
(after-dinner speech without the help of poetry. It used to be the classi\
cs, now it\222s lyric verse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.17047 Tm
(\221The Loved One\222 \(1948\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 497.25456 Tm
( \221The Beast stands for strong mutually antagonistic governments ev\
erywhere,\222 he [Lord )Tj
T*
(Copper] said. \221Self-sufficiency at home, self-assertion abroad.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( Mr Salter\222s side of the conversation was limited to expressions o\
f assent.)Tj
T*
( When Lord Copper was right, he said, \221Definitely, Lord Copper\222\
; when he was wrong, \221Up to a )Tj
T*
(point\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.67047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.75456 Tm
( \221He [Boot]\222s supposed to have a particularly high-class style:\
\221Feather-footed through the )Tj
T*
(plashy fen passes the questing vole\222...would that be it?\222 \221Yes,\
\222 said the Managing Editor. \221That )Tj
T*
(must be good style.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( News is what a chap who doesn\222t care much about anything wants to\
read.)Tj
T*
( And it\222s only news until he\222s read it. After that it\222s dead\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( \221I will not stand for being called a woman in my own house,\222 s\
he [Mrs Earl Russell Jackson] )Tj
T*
(said.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( Other nations use \221force\222; we Britons alone use \221Might\222.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Scoop\222 \(1938\) bk. 2, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( All this fuss about sleeping together. For physical pleasure I\222d \
sooner go to my dentist any day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.92047 Tm
(\221Vile Bodies\222 \(1930\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 114.00456 Tm
( Lady Peabury was in the morning room reading a novel; early training\
gave a guilty spice to )Tj
T*
(this recreation, for she had been brought up to believe that to read a n\
ovel before luncheon was )Tj
T*
(one of the gravest sins it was possible for a gentlewoman to commit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 62.17047 Tm
(\221Work Suspended\222 \(1942\) \221An Englishman\222s Home\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 41.25456 Tm
( Punctuality is the virtue of the bored.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Michael Davie \(ed.\) \221Diaries of Evelyn Waugh\222 \(1976\) \221Irre\
gular Notes 1960-65\222, 26 March 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Randolph Churchill went into hospital...to have a lung removed. It w\
as announced that the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(trouble was not \221malignant\222. Seeing Ed Stanley in White\222s, on m\
y way to Rome, I remarked that )Tj
T*
(it was a typical triumph of modern science to find the only part of Rand\
olph that was not )Tj
T*
(malignant and remove it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(Michael Davie \(ed.\) \221Diaries of Evelyn Waugh\222 \(1976\) \221Irre\
gular Notes 1960-65\222, March 1964)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Manners are especially the need of the plain. The pretty can get awa\
y with anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 15 April 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( The trouble with the Conservative Party is that it has not turned th\
e clock back a single second.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Attributed)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 11.30 Frederick Weatherly 1848-1929)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Where are the boys of the old Brigade,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who fought with us side by side?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221The Old Brigade\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 482.25456 Tm
( Roses are flowering in Picardy,)Tj
T*
( But there\222s never a rose like you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 448.42047 Tm
(\221Roses of Picardy\222 \(1916 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 416.2124 Tm
( 11.31 Beatrice Webb 1858-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If I ever felt inclined to be timid as I was going into a room full \
of people, I would say to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(myself, \221You\222re the cleverest member of one of the cleverest famil\
ies in the cleverest class of the )Tj
T*
(cleverest nation in the world, why should you be frightened?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(In Bertrand Russell \221Autobiography\222 \(1967\) vol. 1, ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( See also Sidney Webb and Beatrice Webb \(11.35\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 11.32 Geoffrey Webb and Edward J. Mason)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( An everyday story of country folk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 251.17047 Tm
(Introduction to \221The Archers\222 \(BBC radio serial, 1950 onwards\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 218.9624 Tm
( 11.33 Jim Webb 1946\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Up, up and away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 181.42047 Tm
(Title of song \(1967\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 149.2124 Tm
( 11.34 Sidney Webb \(Baron Passfield\) 1859-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( First let me insist on what our opponents habitually ignore, and ind\
eed, what they seem )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(intellectually incapable of understanding, namely the inevitable gradual\
ness of our scheme of )Tj
T*
(change.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 75.67047 Tm
(Presidential address at Labour Party Conference in London, 26 June 1923,\
in \221Report\222 \(1923\) p. 178)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 43.4624 Tm
( 11.35 Sidney Webb \(Baron Passfield\) 1859-1947 and Beatrice Webb 1858-\
1943)Tj
ET
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( Sidney would remark, \221I know just what Beatrice is saying at this\
moment.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( She is saying, \223as Sidney always says, marriage is the waste-pape\
r basket of the emotions.\224\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(In Bertrand Russell \221Autobiography\222 \(1967\) vol. 1, ch. 4)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 685.7124 Tm
( 11.36 Daniel Webster 1782-1852)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The people\222s government, made for the people, made by the people,\
and answerable to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 630.17047 Tm
(Second speech in the Senate on Foot\222s Resolution, 26 January 1830.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.42047 Tm
(Second speech in the Senate on Foot\222s Resolution, 26 January 1830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.50456 Tm
( On this question of principle, while actual suffering was yet afar o\
ff, they [the Colonies] raised )Tj
T*
(their flag against a power, to which, for purposes of foreign conquest a\
nd subjugation, Rome, in )Tj
T*
(the height of her glory, is not to be compared; a power which has dotted\
over the surface of the )Tj
T*
(whole globe with her possessions and military posts, whose morning drum-\
beat, following the )Tj
T*
(sun, and keeping company with the hours, circles the earth with one cont\
inuous and unbroken )Tj
T*
(strain of the martial airs of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 466.67047 Tm
(Speech in the Senate on the President\222s Protest, 7 May 1834)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 445.75456 Tm
( Thank God, I\227I also\227am an American!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.92047 Tm
(Speech on the Completion of Bunker Hill Monument, 17 June 1843)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.00456 Tm
( The Law: It has honoured us, may we honour it.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 393.13535 Tm
(xxx)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 372.25456 Tm
(I was born an American; I will live an American; I shall die an American\
.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.42047 Tm
(Speech in the Senate on \221The Compromise Bill\222, 17 July 1850)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.50456 Tm
( Fearful concatenation of circumstances.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 319.67047 Tm
(Argument on the Murder of Captain Joseph White)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.75456 Tm
( There is always room at the top.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.92047 Tm
(When advised not to become a lawyer as the profession was overcrowded)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 250.7124 Tm
( 11.37 John Webster c.1580-c.1625)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Vain the ambition of kings)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who seek by trophies and dead things,)Tj
T*
( To leave a living name behind,)Tj
T*
( And weave but nets to catch the wind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 159.17047 Tm
(\221The Devil\222s Law-Case\222 \(1623\) act 5, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 138.25456 Tm
( Ferdinand: And women like that part which, like the lamprey, )Tj
T*
( Hath never a bone in\222t.)Tj
T*
( Duchess: Fie, sir!)Tj
T*
( Ferdinand: Nay,)Tj
T*
( I mean the tongue; variety of courtship:)Tj
T*
( What cannot a neat knave with a smooth tale)Tj
ET
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( Make a woman believe?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 43. References ar\
e to C. B. Wheeler\222s edition, 1915)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Unequal nature, to place women\222s hearts)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( So far upon the left side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 2, sc. 5, l. 33)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Why should only I...)Tj
T*
( Be cased up, like a holy relic? I have youth)Tj
T*
( And a little beauty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 135)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Raised by that curious engine, your white hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 3, sc. 2, l. 297)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( O, that it were possible,)Tj
T*
( We might but hold some two days\222 conference)Tj
T*
( With the dead!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( I have made a soap-boiler costive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.42047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 117)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.50456 Tm
( I am Duchess of Malfi still.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 146)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( Glories, like glow-worms, afar off shine bright,)Tj
T*
( But looked to near, have neither heat nor light.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.92047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.00456 Tm
( I know death hath ten thousand several doors)Tj
T*
( For men to take their exits.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.17047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 296.25456 Tm
( Ferdinand: Cover her face; mine eyes dazzle: she died young. )Tj
T*
( Bosola: I think not so; her infelicity)Tj
T*
( Seemed to have years too many.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 244.42047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 4, sc. 2, l. 267)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 223.50456 Tm
( Physicians are like kings,\227they brook no contradiction.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.67047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 5, sc. 2, l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.75456 Tm
( We are merely the stars\222 tennis-balls, struck and bandied)Tj
T*
( Which way please them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221The Duchess of Malfi\222 \(1623\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 53)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burn \
brightest, old linen wash )Tj
T*
(whitest? Old soldiers, sweethearts, are surest, and old lovers are sound\
est.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.17047 Tm
(\221Westward Hoe\222 \(1607\) act 2, sc. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 77.25456 Tm
( Fortune\222s a right whore:)Tj
T*
( If she give aught, she deals it in small parcels,)Tj
T*
( That she may take away all at one swoop.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 1, sc. 1, l. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( \222Tis just like a summer birdcage in a garden; the birds that are \
without despair to get in, and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(the birds that are within despair, and are in a consumption, for fear th\
ey shall never get out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 1, sc. 2, l. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( A mere tale of a tub, my words are idle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 2, sc. 1, l. 92)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( Only the deep sense of some deathless shame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 2, sc. 2, l. 67)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Cowardly dogs bark loudest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.17047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 163)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.25456 Tm
( A rape! a rape!...)Tj
T*
( Yes, you have ravished justice;)Tj
T*
( Forced her to do your pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 3, sc. 1, l. 271)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( There\222s nothing sooner dry than women\222s tears.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 480.67047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 3, l. 192)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.75456 Tm
( Call for the robin-red-breast and the wren,)Tj
T*
( Since o\222er shady groves they hover,)Tj
T*
( And with leaves and flowers do cover)Tj
T*
( The friendless bodies of unburied men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 100)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( But keep the wolf far thence that\222s foe to men,)Tj
T*
( For with his nails he\222ll dig them up again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 335.17047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.25456 Tm
( We think caged birds sing, when indeed they cry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 298.42047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 4, l. 128)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 277.50456 Tm
( And of all axioms this shall win the prize,\227)Tj
T*
( \222Tis better to be fortunate than wise.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 183)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( There\222s nothing of so infinite vexation)Tj
T*
( As man\222s own thoughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 206)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( My soul, like to a ship in a black storm,)Tj
T*
( Is driven, I know not whither.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 248)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( Prosperity doth bewitch men, seeming clear;)Tj
T*
( But seas do laugh, show white, when rocks are near.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 250)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( I have caught)Tj
T*
( An everlasting cold; I have lost my voice)Tj
ET
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( Most irrecoverably.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.67047 Tm
(\221The White Devil\222 \(1612\) act 5, sc. 6, l. 270)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.4624 Tm
( 11.38 Josiah Wedgwood 1730-95)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Am I not a man and a brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 666.92047 Tm
(Legend on Wedgwood cameo depicting a kneeling negro slave in chains, rep\
roduced in facsimile in E. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Darwin \221The Botanic Garden\222 pt. 1 \(1791\) facing p. 87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 619.7124 Tm
( 11.39 Anthony Wedgewood Benn)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( See Tony Benn \(2.84\) in Volume I)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 11.40 Simone Weil 1909-43)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( La culture est un instrument mani\350 par des professeurs pour fabri\
quer des professeurs qui \341 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(leur tour fabriqueront des professeurs.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Culture is an instrument wielded by professors, to manufacture profe\
ssors, who when their turn )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(comes will manufacture professors.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 469.67047 Tm
(\221L\222Enracinement\222 \(The Need for Roots, 1949\) \221D\350racineme\
nt ouvrier\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 448.75456 Tm
( Tous les P\350ch\350s sont des tentatives pour combler des vides.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( All sins are attempts to fill voids.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.17047 Tm
(\221La Pesanteur et la gr\342ce\222 \(Gravity and Grace, 1948\) p. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.25456 Tm
( What a country calls its vital economic interests are not the things\
which enable its citizens to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(live, but the things which enable it to make war. Gasoline is much more \
likely than wheat to be a )Tj
T*
(cause of international conflict.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.42047 Tm
(In W. H. Auden \221A Certain World\222 \(1971\) p. 384)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 306.2124 Tm
( 11.41 Johnny Weissmuller 1904-84)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I didn\222t have to act in \221Tarzan, the Ape Man\222\227just said,\
\221Me Tarzan, you Jane.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 268.67047 Tm
(\221Photoplay Magazine\222 June 1932 \(the words \221Me Tarzan, you Jane\
\222 do not occur in the 1932 film\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 236.4624 Tm
( 11.42 Thomas Earle Welby 1881-1933)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( \221Turbot, Sir,\222 said the waiter, placing before me two fishbone\
s, two eyeballs, and a bit of black )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mackintosh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 180.92047 Tm
(\221The Dinner Knell\222 \(1932\) \221Birmingham or Crewe?\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 148.7124 Tm
( 11.43 Fay Weldon 1931\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Natalie had left the wives and joined the women.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.17047 Tm
(\221The Heart of the Country\222 \(1987\) p. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 90.25456 Tm
( The life and loves of a she-devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 74.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1984\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 42.2124 Tm
( 11.44 Colin Welland 1934\227)Tj
ET
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/TT0 1 Tf
0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 750.50456 Tm
( The British are coming.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 734.67047 Tm
(Speech accepting an Oscar for his \221Chariots of Fire\222 screenplay, 3\
0 March 1982, in \221Sight & Sound\222 Summer )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1982)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 687.4624 Tm
( 11.45 Orson Welles 1915-85)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror\
, murder, bloodshed\227they )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzer\
land they had )Tj
T*
(brotherly love, five hundred years of democracy and peace and what did t\
hat produce...? The )Tj
T*
(cuckoo clock.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.92047 Tm
(\221The Third Man\222 \(1949 film; words added by Welles to the script, \
in Graham Greene and Carol Reed \221The )Tj
T*
(Third Man\222 \(1969\) p. 114\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 560.00456 Tm
( To his associate, Richard Wilson...Orson [Welles] then declared, \221\
This [the RKO studio] is the )Tj
T*
(biggest electric train set any boy ever had!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 526.17047 Tm
(Peter Noble \221The Fabulous Orson Welles\222 \(1956\) ch. 7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 493.9624 Tm
( 11.46 Duke Of Wellington 1769-1852)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Beginning reform is beginning revolution.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 456.42047 Tm
(Mrs Arbuthnot\222s Journal, 7 November 1830)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 435.50456 Tm
( Up Guards and at them again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.67047 Tm
(Letter from Captain Batty 22 June 1815, in Booth \221Battle of Waterloo\222\
, also Croker \221Correspondence and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Diaries\222 \(1884\) 3, 280)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 383.75456 Tm
( Not upon a man from the colonel to the private in a regiment\227both\
inclusive. We may pick up )Tj
T*
(a marshal or two perhaps; but not worth a damn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.92047 Tm
(On being asked whether he calculated upon any desertion in Buonaparte\222\
s army, in \221Creevey Papers\222 ch. 10, )Tj
T*
(p. 228)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 314.00456 Tm
( It has been a damned serious business\227Bl\374cher and I have lost \
30,000 men. It has been a )Tj
T*
(damned nice thing\227the nearest run thing you ever saw in your life...B\
y God! I don\222t think it )Tj
T*
(would have done if I had not been there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 262.17047 Tm
(Referring to the battle of Waterloo, in \221Creevey Papers\222 ch. 10, p\
. 236)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.25456 Tm
( All the business of war, and indeed all the business of life, is to \
endeavour to find out what you )Tj
T*
(don\222t know by what you do; that\222s what I called \221guessing what \
was at the other side of the hill\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 207.42047 Tm
(\221The Croker Papers\222 \(1885\) vol. 3, p. 276)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.50456 Tm
( When I reflect upon the characters and attainments of some of the ge\
neral officers of this army, )Tj
T*
(and consider that these are the persons on whom I am to rely to lead col\
umns against the French, )Tj
T*
(I tremble; and as Lord Chesterfield said of the generals of his day, \221\
I only hope that when the )Tj
T*
(enemy reads the list of their names, he trembles as I do.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.67047 Tm
(Dispatch to Torrens, 29 August 1810 \(usually quoted as \221I don\222t k\
now what effect these men will have upon )Tj
T*
(the enemy, but, by God, they frighten me\222, and also attributed to Geo\
rge III\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.75456 Tm
( I never saw so many shocking bad hats in my life.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.92047 Tm
(On seeing the first Reformed Parliament, in Sir William Fraser \221Words\
on Wellington\222 \(1889\) p. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.00456 Tm
( You must build your House of Parliament upon the river: so...that th\
e populace cannot exact )Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
(their demands by sitting down round you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In Sir William Fraser \221Words on Wellington\222 \(1889\) p. 163)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I believe I forgot to tell you I was made a Duke.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Postscript to a letter to his nephew Henry Wellesley, 22 May 1814)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(Montalembert \221De l\222Avenir Politique de l\222Angleterre\222 \(1856\)\
. The attribution was refuted by the 7th Duke.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( I hate the whole race...There is no believing a word they say\227you\
r professional poets, I mean)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\227there never existed a more worthless set than Byron and his friends \
for example.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 608.92047 Tm
(Noted in Lady Salisbury\222s diary, 26 October 1833, in C. Oman \221The \
Gascoyne Heiress\222 \(1968\) 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.00456 Tm
( Publish and be damned.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(Attributed. According to legend, Wellington wrote these words across a b\
lackmailing letter from Stockdale, )Tj
T*
(publisher of Harriette Wilson\222s Memoirs, and posted it back to him. E\
lizabeth Pakenham \221Wellington: The )Tj
T*
(Years of the Sword\222 \(1969\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 521.25456 Tm
( The next greatest misfortune to losing a battle is to gain such a vi\
ctory as this.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 505.42047 Tm
(In S. Rogers \221Recollections\222 \(1859\) p. 215)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 484.50456 Tm
( \221What a glorious thing must be a victory, Sir.\222 \221The greate\
st tragedy in the world, Madam, )Tj
T*
(except a defeat.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 450.67047 Tm
(In S. Rogers \221Recollections\222 \(1859\) p. 215, footnote)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 429.75456 Tm
( So he is a fool, and a d\227d fool; but he can take Rangoon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 413.92047 Tm
(On its being objected that he had always spoken of Lord Combermere as a \
fool, and yet had proposed him as )Tj
T*
(commander of an expedition to take Rangoon, in G. W. E. Russell \221Coll\
ections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. )Tj
T*
(2 \(the story is probably apocryphal: Wellington thought highly of Combe\
rmere, who, moreover, was never )Tj
T*
(involved in the Rangoon campaign\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 348.00456 Tm
( In my situation as Chancellor of the University of Oxford, I have be\
en much exposed to )Tj
T*
(authors.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 314.17047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 2\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 293.25456 Tm
( Not half so surprised as I am now, Mum!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 277.42047 Tm
(On being asked by Mrs Arbuthnot if he had not been surprised at Waterloo\
, in G. W. E. Russell \221Collections )Tj
T*
(and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 241.50456 Tm
( I have no small talk and Peel has no manners.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.67047 Tm
(In G. W. E. Russell \221Collections and Recollections\222 \(1898\) ch. 1\
4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 204.75456 Tm
( Hard pounding this, gentlemen; let\222s see who will pound longest.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(At Waterloo, in Sir W. Scott \221Paul\222s Letters\222 \(1815\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( I always say that, next to a battle lost, the greatest misery is a b\
attle gained.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(In Frances, Lady Shelley \221Diary\222 p. 102)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( I used to say of him [Napoleon] that his presence on the field made \
the difference of forty )Tj
T*
(thousand men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(Stanhope \221Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington\222 2 No\
vember 1831)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Ours [our army] is composed of the scum of the earth\227the mere scu\
m of the earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Stanhope \221Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington\222 4 No\
vember 1831)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 39.75456 Tm
( My rule always was to do the business of the day in the day.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 753.92047 Tm
(Stanhope \221Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington\222 2 No\
vember 1835)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.00456 Tm
( What is the best to be done for the country? How can the Government \
be carried on?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.17047 Tm
(Stanhope \221Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington\222 18 M\
ay 1839)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 696.25456 Tm
( There is no mistake; there has been no mistake; and there shall be n\
o mistake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221Wellingtoniana\222 \(1852\) p. 78)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 659.50456 Tm
( If you believe that you will believe anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 643.67047 Tm
(Attributed reply to a gentleman who accosted him in the street saying, \221\
Mr. Jones, I believe?\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 611.4624 Tm
( 11.47 H. G. Wells 1866-1946)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The thing his [Henry James\222s] novel is about is always there. It \
is like a church lit but without )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a congregation to distract you, with every light and line focussed on th\
e high altar. And on the )Tj
T*
(altar, very reverently placed, intensely there, is a dead kitten, an egg\
-shell, a bit of string.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.92047 Tm
(\221Boon\222 \(1915\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.00456 Tm
( It is leviathan retrieving pebbles. It is a magnificent but painful \
hippopotamus resolved at any )Tj
T*
(cost, even at the cost of its dignity, upon picking up a pea which has g\
ot into a corner of its den. )Tj
T*
(Most things, it insists, are beyond it, but it can, at any rate modestly\
, and with an artistic )Tj
T*
(singleness of mind, pick up that pea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.17047 Tm
(\221Boon\222 \(1915\) ch. 4 \(on Henry James\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.25456 Tm
( In the Country of the Blind the One-Eyed Man is King.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.42047 Tm
(\221The Country of the Blind\222 \(1904; revised 1939\) p. 52.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.50456 Tm
( \221Sesquippledan,\222 he would say. \221Sesquippledan verboojuice.\222\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.67047 Tm
(\221The History of Mr Polly\222 \(1909\) ch. 1, pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.75456 Tm
( \221I\222m a Norfan, both sides,\222 he would explain, with the air \
of one who had seen trouble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.92047 Tm
(\221Kipps\222 \(1905\) bk. 1, ch. 6, pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.00456 Tm
( \221I expect,\222 he said, \221I was thinking jest what a Rum Go eve\
rything is. I expect it was something )Tj
T*
(like that.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.17047 Tm
(\221Kipps\222 \(1905\) bk. 3, ch. 3, pt. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.25456 Tm
( He [James Holroyd] was a practical electrician but fond of whisky, a\
heavy, red-haired brute )Tj
T*
(with irregular teeth. He doubted the existence of the Deity but accepted\
Carnot\222s cycle, and he )Tj
T*
(had read Shakespeare and found him weak in chemistry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.42047 Tm
(\221Lord of the Dynamos\222 in \221Complete Short Stories\222 \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.50456 Tm
( The Social Contract is nothing more or less than a vast conspiracy o\
f human beings to lie to )Tj
T*
(and humbug themselves and one another for the general Good. Lies are the\
mortar that bind the )Tj
T*
(savage individual man into the social masonry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.67047 Tm
(\221Love and Mr Lewisham\222 \(1900\) ch. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.75456 Tm
( Human history becomes more and more a race between education and cat\
astrophe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 99.92047 Tm
(\221The Outline of History\222 \(1920\) vol. 2, ch. 41, pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 79.00456 Tm
( The shape of things to come.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1933\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.25456 Tm
( The war that will end war.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(Title of book \(1914\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Wife of Sir Isaac Harman\222 \(1914\) ch. 9, sect. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( In England we have come to rely upon a comfortable time-lag of fifty\
years or a century )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(intervening between the perception that something ought to be done and a\
serious attempt to do it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind\222 \(1931\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( If Max [Beaverbrook] gets to Heaven he won\222t last long. He will b\
e chucked out for trying to )Tj
T*
(pull off a merger between Heaven and Hell...after having secured a contr\
olling interest in key )Tj
T*
(subsidiary companies in both places, of course.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(In A. J. P. Taylor \221Beaverbrook\222 \(1972\) ch. 8)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 11.48 Arnold Wesker 1932\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And then I saw the menu, stained with tea and beautifully written by\
a foreign hand, and on top )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(it said\227God I hated that old man\227it said \221Chips with everything\
\222. Chips with every damn thing. )Tj
T*
(You breed babies and you eat chips with everything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221Chips with Everything\222 \(1962\) act 1, sc. 2)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.9624 Tm
( 11.49 Charles Wesley 1707-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gentle Jesus, meek and mild,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Look upon a little child;)Tj
T*
( Pity my simplicity,)Tj
T*
( Suffer me to come to thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 361.42047 Tm
(\221Gentle Jesus, Meek and Mild\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 329.2124 Tm
( 11.50 John Wesley 1703-91)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I look upon all the world as my parish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 291.67047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 11 June 1739)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 270.75456 Tm
( I heard a good man say long since,\227\222Once in seven years I burn\
all my sermons; for it is a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(shame if I cannot write better sermons now than I did seven years ago.\222\
\227Whatever others can )Tj
T*
(do, I really cannot)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.92047 Tm
(\221Journal\222 1 September 1778)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.00456 Tm
( Though I am always in haste, I am never in a hurry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 182.17047 Tm
(Letter to a member of the Society. 10 December 1777, in \221Select Lette\
rs\222 \(1837\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 161.25456 Tm
( Do all the good you can,)Tj
T*
( By all the means you can,)Tj
T*
( In all the ways you can,)Tj
T*
( In all the places you can,)Tj
T*
( At all the times you can,)Tj
T*
( To all the people you can,)Tj
T*
( As long as ever you can.)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Rule of Conduct\222 in \221Letters\222 \(1915\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Let it be observed, that slovenliness is no part of religion; that n\
either this, nor any text of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Scripture, condemns neatness of apparel. Certainly this is a duty, not a\
sin. \221Cleanliness is, )Tj
T*
(indeed, next to godliness.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Sermons\222 no. 93 \221On Dress\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Beware you be not swallowed up in books! An ounce of love is worth a\
pound of knowledge.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(In R. Southey \221Life of Wesley\222 \(1820\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( We should constantly use the most common, little, easy words \(so th\
ey are pure and proper\) )Tj
T*
(which our language affords.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(Of preaching to \221plain people\222, in R. Southey \221Life of Wesley\222\
\(1820\) ch. 16)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 558.7124 Tm
( 11.51 Revd Samuel Wesley 1662-1735)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Style is the dress of thought; a modest dress,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Neat, but not gaudy, will true critics please.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.17047 Tm
(\221An Epistle to a Friend concerning Poetry\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 470.9624 Tm
( 11.52 Mae West 1892-1980)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s better to be looked over than overlooked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(\221Belle of the Nineties\222 \(1934 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 412.50456 Tm
( A man in the house is worth two in the street.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 396.67047 Tm
(\221Belle of the Nineties\222 \(1934 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 375.75456 Tm
( I always say, keep a diary and some day it\222ll keep you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 359.92047 Tm
(\221Every Day\222s a Holiday\222 \(1937 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 339.00456 Tm
( Beulah, peel me a grape.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 323.17047 Tm
(\221I\222m No Angel\222 \(1933 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 302.25456 Tm
( I\222ve been things and seen places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221I\222m No Angel\222 \(1933 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( When I\222m good, I\222m very, very good, but when I\222m bad, I\222\
m better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 249.67047 Tm
(\221I\222m No Angel\222 \(1933 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.75456 Tm
( It\222s not the men in my life that counts\227it\222s the life in my\
men.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221I\222m No Angel\222 \(1933 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( Give a man a free hand and he\222ll try to put it all over you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Klondike Annie\222 \(1936 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 139.42047 Tm
(\221Klondike Annie\222 \(1936 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 118.50456 Tm
( I\222ve been in Who\222s Who, and I know what\222s what, but it\222l\
l be the first time I ever made the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(dictionary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 84.67047 Tm
(Letter to the RAF, early 1940s, on having an inflatable life jacket name\
d after her, in Fergus Cashin \221Mae )Tj
T*
(West\222 \(1981\) ch. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 48.75456 Tm
( \221Goodness, what beautiful diamonds!\222 \221Goodness had nothing \
to do with it, dearie.\222)Tj
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 12.5 0 0 12.5 46 755.17047 Tm
(\221Night After Night\222 \(1932 film\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( Is that a gun in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(In Joseph Weintraub \221Peel Me a Grape\222 \(1975\) p. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.50456 Tm
( I used to be Snow White...but I drifted.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(In Joseph Weintraub \221Peel Me a Grape\222 \(1975\) p. 47)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 660.75456 Tm
( Why don\222t you come up sometime, and see me? I\222m home every eve\
ning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 644.92047 Tm
(\221She Done Him Wrong\222 \(1933 film; often misquoted as \221Come up a\
nd see me sometime\222, which became Mae )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(West\222s catch-phrase\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 597.7124 Tm
( 11.53 Dame Rebecca West \(Cicily Isabel Fairfield\) 1892-1983)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( God forbid that any book should be banned. The practice is as indefe\
nsible as infanticide.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 560.17047 Tm
(\221The Strange Necessity\222 \(1928\) \221The Tosh Horse\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.25456 Tm
( Journalism\227an ability to meet the challenge of filling the space.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 523.42047 Tm
(\221New York Herald Tribune\222 22 April 1956 sect. 6, p. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 502.50456 Tm
( Just how difficult it is to write biography can be reckoned by anybo\
dy who sits down and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(considers just how many people know the truth about his or her love affa\
irs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 468.67047 Tm
(\221Vogue\222 1 November 1952)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 447.75456 Tm
( He [Michael Arlen] is every other inch a gentleman.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 431.92047 Tm
(In Victoria Glendinning \221Rebecca West\222 \(1987\) pt. 3, ch. 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 399.7124 Tm
( 11.54 Richard Bethell, Lord Westbury 1800-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Then, sir, you will turn it over once more in what you are pleased t\
o call your mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 362.17047 Tm
(Related by Jowett and denied, not very convincingly, by Westbury. T. A. \
Nash \221Life of Lord )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Westbury\222 \(1888\) bk. 2, ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 314.9624 Tm
( 11.55 Edward Noyes Westcott 1846-98)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( They say a reasonable amount o\222 fleas is good fer a dog\227keeps \
him from broodin\222 over bein\222 )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(a dog, mebbe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(\221David Harum\222 ch. 32)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 227.2124 Tm
( 11.56 John Fane, Lord Westmorland 1759-1841)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Merit, indeed!...We are come to a pretty pass if they talk of merit \
for a bishopric.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(Noted in Lady Salisbury\222s diary, 9 December 1835, in C. Oman \221The \
Gascoyne Heiress\222 \(1968\) 5)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 157.4624 Tm
( 11.57 Sir Charles Wetherell 1770-1846)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Then there is my noble and biographical friend who has added a new t\
error to death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(Referring to Lord Campbell, in Lord St Leonards \221Misrepresentations i\
n Campbell\222s Lives of Lyndhurst and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Brougham\222 \(1869\) p. 3.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 72.7124 Tm
( 11.58 Robert Wever fl.1550)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( In a harbour grene aslepe whereas I lay,)Tj
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( The byrdes sang swete in the middes of the day,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I dream\351d fast of mirth and play:)Tj
T*
( In youth is pleasure, in youth is pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Lusty Juventus\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 668.9624 Tm
( 11.59 Edith Wharton 1862-1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( She sang, of course, \221M\222ama!\222 and not \221he loves me\222, \
since an unalterable and unquestioned )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(law of the musical world required that the German text of French operas \
sung by Swedish artists )Tj
T*
(should be translated into Italian for the clearer understanding of Engli\
sh-speaking audiences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221The Age of Innocence\222 \(1920\) bk. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 574.50456 Tm
( She keeps on being Queenly in her own room with the door shut.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 558.67047 Tm
(\221The House of Mirth\222 \(1905\) bk. 2, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 537.75456 Tm
( Another unsettling element in modern art is that common symptom of i\
mmaturity, the dread of )Tj
T*
(doing what has been done before.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 503.92047 Tm
(\221The Writing of Fiction\222 \(1925\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 483.00456 Tm
( Mrs Ballinger is one of the ladies who pursue Culture in bands, as t\
hough it were dangerous to )Tj
T*
(meet it alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.17047 Tm
(\221Xingu\222 in \221Xingu and Other Stories\222 \(1916\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 416.9624 Tm
( 11.60 Thomas, 1st Marquis Of Wharton 1648-1715)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ho, Brother Teague, dost hear de Decree?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Lilli Burlero Bullena-la.)Tj
T*
( Dat we shall have a new Debity,)Tj
T*
( Lilli Burlero Bullena-la.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.42047 Tm
(\221A New Song\222 written 1687; published on a single sheet 1688; first\
collected, in the above form, as \221Song\222 in )Tj
T*
(\221Poems on Affairs of State\222 \(1704\) vol. 3, p. 231 \(debity deput\
y\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 278.2124 Tm
( 11.61 Richard Whately, Archbishop Of Dublin 1787-1863)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Preach not because you have to say something, but because you have s\
omething to say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.67047 Tm
(\221Apophthegms\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.75456 Tm
( Happiness is no laughing matter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.92047 Tm
(\221Apophthegms\222 p. 218)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 183.00456 Tm
( It is a folly to expect men to do all that they may reasonably be ex\
pected to do.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(\221Apophthegms\222 p. 219)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 146.25456 Tm
( Honesty is the best policy; but he who is governed by that maxim is \
not an honest man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(\221Apophthegms\222 p. 219)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 109.50456 Tm
( \221Never forget, gentlemen,\222 he said, to his astonished hearers,\
as he held up a copy of the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221Authorized Version\222 of the Bible, \221never forget that this is n\
ot the Bible,\222 then, after a moment\222s )Tj
T*
(pause, he continued, \221This, gentlemen, is only a translation of the B\
ible.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.67047 Tm
(To a meeting of his diocesan clergy, in H. Solly \221These Eighty Years\222\
\(1893\) vol. 2. ch. 2, p. 81)Tj
ET
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( 11.62 William Whewell 1794-1866)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Hence no force however great can stretch a cord however fine into an\
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0 -1.2 TD
(accurately straight: there will always be a bending downwards.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(\221Elementary Treatise on Mechanics\222 \(1819\) ch. 4, problem 2. Ofte\
n cited as an example of accidental metre )Tj
T*
(and rhyme, and changed in later editions.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 650.2124 Tm
( 11.63 James Mcneill Whistler 1834-1903)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I am not arguing with you\227I am telling you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221The Gentle Art of Making Enemies\222 \(1890\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 591.75456 Tm
( Art is upon the Town!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 575.92047 Tm
(\221Ten O\222Clock\222 \(1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.00456 Tm
( Listen! There never was an artistic period. There never was an Art-l\
oving nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(\221Ten O\222Clock\222 \(1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 518.25456 Tm
( Nature is usually wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 502.42047 Tm
(\221Ten O\222Clock\222 \(1885\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.50456 Tm
( \221I only know of two painters in the world,\222 said a newly intro\
duced feminine enthusiast to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Whistler, \221yourself and Velasquez.\222 \221Why,\222 answered Whistler\
in dulcet tones, \221why drag in )Tj
T*
(Velasquez?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 429.67047 Tm
(In D. C. Seitz \221Whistler Stories\222 \(1913\) p. 27)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 408.75456 Tm
( [In answer to a lady who said that a landscape reminded her of his w\
ork] Yes madam, Nature )Tj
T*
(is creeping up.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(In D. C. Seitz \221Whistler Stories\222 \(1913\) p. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( [In answer to the question \221For two days\222 labour, you ask two \
hundred guineas?\222] No, I ask it )Tj
T*
(for the knowledge of a lifetime.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(In D. C. Seitz \221Whistler Stories\222 \(1913\) p. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( You shouldn\222t say it is not good. You should say you do not like \
it; and then, you know, you\222re )Tj
T*
(perfectly safe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(In D. C. Seitz \221Whistler Stories\222 \(1913\) p. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( [Answering Oscar Wilde\222s \221I wish I had said that\222] You will\
, Oscar, you will.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 228.67047 Tm
(L. C. Ingleby \221Oscar Wilde\222 p. 67)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 196.4624 Tm
( 11.64 E. B. White 1899-1985)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Commuter\227one who spends his life)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In riding to and from his wife;)Tj
T*
( A man who shaves and takes a train,)Tj
T*
( And then rides back to shave again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 104.92047 Tm
(\221The Commuter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 84.00456 Tm
( Mother: It\222s broccoli, dear.)Tj
T*
( Child: I say it\222s spinach, and I say the hell with it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 50.17047 Tm
(\221New Yorker\222 8 December 1928 \(cartoon caption\))Tj
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( Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of the peop\
le are right more than half )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221New Yorker\222 3 July 1944)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 11.65 T. H. White 1906-64)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The Victorians had not been anxious to go away for the weekend. The \
Edwardians, on the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(contrary, were nomadic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 631.42047 Tm
(\221Farewell Victoria\222 \(1933\) pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 610.50456 Tm
( The once and future king.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 594.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1958\), translating Sir Thomas Malory Le Morte d\222Art\
hur bk. 21, ch. 7 \221Hic iacet Arthurus, rex )Tj
T*
(quondam rexque futurus\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 547.4624 Tm
( 11.66 Alfred North Whitehead 1861-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Life is an offensive, directed against the repetitious mechanism of \
the Universe.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 509.92047 Tm
(\221Adventures of Ideas\222 \(1933\) pt. 1, ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 489.00456 Tm
( It is more important that a proposition be interesting than that it \
be true. This statement is )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(almost a tautology. For the energy of operation of a proposition in an o\
ccasion of experience is its )Tj
T*
(interest, and is its importance. But of course a true proposition is mor\
e apt to be interesting than a )Tj
T*
(false one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.17047 Tm
(\221Adventures of Ideas\222 \(1933\) pt. 4, ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 398.25456 Tm
( There are no whole truths; all truths are half-truths. It is trying \
to treat them as whole truths )Tj
T*
(that plays the devil.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 364.42047 Tm
(\221Dialogues\222 \(1954\) prologue)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 343.50456 Tm
( Intelligence is quickness to apprehend as distinct from ability, whi\
ch is capacity to act wisely )Tj
T*
(on the thing apprehended.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221Dialogues\222 \(1954\) 15 December 1939)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( What is morality in any given time or place? It is what the majority\
then and there happen to )Tj
T*
(like, and immorality is what they dislike.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 254.92047 Tm
(\221Dialogues\222 \(1954\) 30 August 1941)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 234.00456 Tm
( Art is the imposing of a pattern on experience, and our aesthetic en\
joyment is recognition of )Tj
T*
(the pattern.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 200.17047 Tm
(\221Dialogues\222 \(1954\) 10 June 1943)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 179.25456 Tm
( Civilization advances by extending the number of important operation\
s which we can perform )Tj
T*
(without thinking about them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 145.42047 Tm
(\221Introduction to Mathematics\222 \(1911\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( The safest general characterization of the European philosophical tr\
adition is that it consists of )Tj
T*
(a series of footnotes to Plato.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 90.67047 Tm
(\221Process and Reality\222 \(1929\) pt. 2, ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 58.4624 Tm
( 11.67 Bertrand Whitehead)Tj
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( Drinka Pinta Milka Day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Slogan for the British Milk Marketing Board, 1958)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 11.68 Katharine Whitehorn 1926\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I wouldn\222t say when you\222ve seen one Western you\222ve seen the\
lot; but when you\222ve seen the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lot you get the feeling you\222ve seen one.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Decoding the West\222 in \221Sunday Best\222 \(1976\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 628.50456 Tm
( Hats divide generally into three classes: offensive hats, defensive \
hats, and shrapnel.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 612.67047 Tm
(\221Hats\222 in \221Shouts and Murmurs\222 \(1963\) No nice men are good\
at getting taxis.)Tj
T*
(In \221Observer\222 1977)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 565.4624 Tm
( 11.69 George Whiting)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My blue heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 527.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1927\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 507.00456 Tm
( When you\222re all dressed up and have no place to go.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 491.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1912\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 458.9624 Tm
( 11.70 William Whiting 1825-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( O hear us when we cry to Thee)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For those in peril on the sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 403.42047 Tm
(\221Eternal Father Strong to Save\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 371.2124 Tm
( 11.71 Gough Whitlam 1916\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Well may he say \221God Save the Queen\222. But after this nothing w\
ill save the Governor-)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(General....Maintain your rage and your enthusiasm through the campaign f\
or the election now to )Tj
T*
(be held and until polling day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 297.67047 Tm
(Speech in Canberra, 11 November 1975, in \221The Times\222 12 November 1\
975)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 265.4624 Tm
( 11.72 Walt Whitman 1819-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Silent and amazed even when a little boy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I remember I heard the preacher every Sunday put God in his statemen\
ts,)Tj
T*
( As contending against some being or influence.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.92047 Tm
(\221A Child\222s Amaze\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.00456 Tm
( Full of life now, compact, visible,)Tj
T*
( I, forty year old the eighty-third year of the States,)Tj
T*
( To one a century hence or any number of centuries hence,)Tj
T*
( To you yet unborn these, seeking you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 101.17047 Tm
(\221Full of life now\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 80.25456 Tm
( Give me the splendid silent sun with all his beams full-dazzling!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.42047 Tm
(\221Give me the splendid silent sun\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.50456 Tm
( I dreamed in a dream I saw a city invincible to the attacks of the w\
hole of the rest of the earth,)Tj
ET
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0 Tc 0 Tw 0 Ts 100 Tz 0 Tr 15 0 0 15 10 753.00456 Tm
( I dreamed that was the new city of Friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221I dreamed in a dream\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The institution of the dear love of comrades.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221I hear it was charged against me\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Me imperturbe, standing at ease in Nature.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Me imperturbe\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won,)Tj
T*
( The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221O Captain! My Captain!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The ship is anchored safe and sound, its voyage closed and done.)Tj
T*
( From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;)Tj
T*
( Exult O shores, and ring O bells! But I with mournful tread)Tj
T*
( Walk the deck my Captain lies, Fallen cold and dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.17047 Tm
(\221O Captain! My Captain!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 479.25456 Tm
( Out of the cradle endlessly rocking,)Tj
T*
( Out of the mocking-bird\222s throat, the musical shuttle...)Tj
T*
( A reminiscence sing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 427.42047 Tm
(\221Out of the cradle endlessly rocking\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 406.50456 Tm
( Come my tan-faced children,)Tj
T*
( Follow well in order, get your weapons ready,)Tj
T*
( Have you your pistols? have you your sharp-edged axes?)Tj
T*
( Pioneers! O pioneers!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.67047 Tm
(\221Pioneers! O Pioneers!\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 315.75456 Tm
( Beautiful that war and all its deeds of carnage must in time be utte\
rly lost,)Tj
T*
( That the hands of the sisters Death and Night incessantly softly was\
h again, and ever again, )Tj
T*
(this soiled world;)Tj
T*
( For my enemy is dead, a man as divine as myself is dead,)Tj
T*
( I look where he lies white-faced and still in the coffin\227I draw n\
ear,)Tj
T*
( Bend down and touch lightly with my lips the white face in the coffi\
n.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.92047 Tm
(\221Reconciliation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 189.00456 Tm
( What do you see Walt Whitman?)Tj
T*
( Who are they you salute, and that one after another salute you?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221Salut au monde\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( Camerado, this is no book,)Tj
T*
( Who touches this touches a man,)Tj
T*
( \(Is it night? Are we here together alone?\))Tj
T*
( It is I you hold and who holds you.)Tj
T*
( I spring from the pages into your arms\227decease calls me forth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 46.42047 Tm
(\221So Long!\222)Tj
ET
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( I celebrate myself, and sing myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Urge and urge and urge,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Always the procreant urge of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( A child said What is the grass? fetching it to one with full hands)Tj
T*
( How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than\
he.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of the hopeful gr\
een stuff woven.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropt,)Tj
T*
( Bearing the owner\222s name someway in the corners, that we may see \
and remark, and say )Tj
T*
(Whose?...)Tj
T*
( And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 512.17047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 491.25456 Tm
( Has any one supposed it lucky to be born?)Tj
T*
( I hasten to inform him or her, it is just as lucky to die and I know\
it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 457.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 436.50456 Tm
( I also say it is good to fall, battles are lost in the same spirit i\
n which they are won.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 420.67047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 399.75456 Tm
( I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the st\
ars,)Tj
T*
( And the pismire is equally perfect, and a grain of sand, and the egg\
of the wren,)Tj
T*
( And the tree toad is a chef-d\222oeuvre for the highest,)Tj
T*
( And the running blackberry would adorn the parlors of heaven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 329.92047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.00456 Tm
( I think I could turn and live with animals, they are so placid and s\
elf-contained,)Tj
T*
( I stand and look at them long and long.)Tj
T*
( They do not sweat and whine about their condition,)Tj
T*
( They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,)Tj
T*
( They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,)Tj
T*
( Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of ownin\
g things,)Tj
T*
( Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of y\
ears ago,)Tj
T*
( Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.17047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 32)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 146.25456 Tm
( Behold, I do not give lectures or a little charity,)Tj
T*
( When I give I give myself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 112.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 39)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 91.50456 Tm
( My rendezvous is appointed, it is certain,)Tj
T*
( The Lord will be there and wait till I come on perfect terms,)Tj
T*
( The great Camerado, the lover true for whom I pine will be there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 39.67047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 45)Tj
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( I have said that the soul is not more than the body,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And I have said that the body is not more than the soul,)Tj
T*
( And nothing, not God, is greater to one than one\222s self is.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 696.92047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 676.00456 Tm
( In the faces of men and women I see God, and in my own face in the g\
lass,)Tj
T*
( I find letters from God dropt in the street, and every one is signed\
by God\222s name,)Tj
T*
( And I leave them where they are, for I know that wheresoe\222er I go\
,)Tj
T*
( Others will punctually come for ever and ever.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 606.17047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 48)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 585.25456 Tm
( Do I contradict myself?)Tj
T*
( Very well then I contradict myself,)Tj
T*
( \(I am large, I contain multitudes.\))Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 533.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 51)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 512.50456 Tm
( I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 496.67047 Tm
(\221Song of Myself\222 \(1855\) st. 52)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 475.75456 Tm
( Where the populace rise at once against the never-ending audacity of\
elected persons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 459.92047 Tm
(\221Song of the Broad Axe\222 5, l. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 439.00456 Tm
( Where women walk in public processions in the streets the same as th\
e men,)Tj
T*
( Where they enter the public assembly and take places the same as the\
men;)Tj
T*
( Where the city of the faithfullest friends stands,)Tj
T*
( Where the city of the cleanliness of the sexes stands,)Tj
T*
( Where the city of the healthiest fathers stands,)Tj
T*
( Where the city of the best-bodied mothers stands,)Tj
T*
( There the great city stands.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 315.17047 Tm
(\221Song of the Broad Axe\222 5, l. 20)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 294.25456 Tm
( Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road,)Tj
T*
( Healthy, free, the world before me,)Tj
T*
( The long brown path before me leading wherever I choose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 242.42047 Tm
(\221Song of the Open Road\222 1, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 221.50456 Tm
( The earth, that is sufficient,)Tj
T*
( I do not want the constellations any nearer,)Tj
T*
( I know they are very well where they are,)Tj
T*
( I know they suffice for those who belong to them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 151.67047 Tm
(\221Song of the Open Road\222 1, l. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( I will put in my poems that with you is heroism upon land and sea,)Tj
T*
( And I will report all heroism from an American point of view.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 96.92047 Tm
(\221Starting from Paumanok\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.00456 Tm
( This dust was once the man,)Tj
T*
( Gentle, plain, just and resolute, under whose cautious hand,)Tj
T*
( Against the foulest crime in history known in any land or age,)Tj
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( Was saved the Union of these States.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 736.17047 Tm
(\221This dust was once the man\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 715.25456 Tm
( The earth does not argue,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is not pathetic, has no arrangements,)Tj
T*
( Does not scream, haste, persuade, threaten, promise,)Tj
T*
( Makes no discriminations, has no conceivable failures,)Tj
T*
( Closes nothing, refuses nothing, shuts none out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.42047 Tm
(\221To the sayers of words\222 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.50456 Tm
( When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed,)Tj
T*
( And the great star early drooped in the western sky in the night,)Tj
T*
( I mourned, and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.67047 Tm
(\221When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed\222 st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.75456 Tm
( Come lovely and soothing death,)Tj
T*
( Undulate round the world, serenely arriving, arriving,)Tj
T*
( In the day, in the night, to all, to each,)Tj
T*
( Sooner or later, delicate death.)Tj
T*
( Praised be the fathomless universe,)Tj
T*
( For life and joy, and for objects and knowledge curious,)Tj
T*
( And for love, sweet love\227but praise! praise! praise!)Tj
T*
( For the sure-enwinding arms of cool-enfolding death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 391.92047 Tm
(\221When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed\222 st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.00456 Tm
( These United States.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.17047 Tm
(\221A Backward Glance O\222er Travell\222d Roads\222 \(1888\) \(\221Thes\
e States\222 is passim in Whitman\222s verse\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 322.9624 Tm
( 11.73 John Greenleaf Whittier 1807-92)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Up from the meadows rich with corn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Clear in the cool September morn,)Tj
T*
( The clustered spires of Frederick stand)Tj
T*
( Green-walled by the hills of Maryland.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 231.42047 Tm
(\221Barbara Frietchie\222 l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 210.50456 Tm
( Up the street came the rebel tread,)Tj
T*
( Stonewall Jackson riding ahead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.67047 Tm
(\221Barbara Frietchie\222 l. 23)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.75456 Tm
( \221Shoot, if you must, this old gray head,)Tj
T*
( But spare your country\222s flag,\222 she said.)Tj
T*
( A shade of sadness, a blush of shame,)Tj
T*
( Over the face of the leader came.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.92047 Tm
(\221Barbara Frietchie\222 l. 35)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 65.00456 Tm
( \221Who touches a hair of yon gray head)Tj
T*
( Dies like a dog! March on!\222 he said.)Tj
ET
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(\221Barbara Frietchie\222 l. 41)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( For all sad words of tongue or pen,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The saddest are these: \221It might have been!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221Maud Muller\222 l. 105.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( The Indian Summer of the heart!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.67047 Tm
(\221Memories\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.75456 Tm
( O brother man! fold to thy heart thy brother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221Worship\222 l. 49)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 594.7124 Tm
( 11.74 Robert Whittington fl.1520)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( As time requireth, a man of marvellous mirth and pastimes, and somet\
ime of as sad gravity, as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(who say: a man for all seasons.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.17047 Tm
(Referring to Sir Thomas More, in \221Vulgaria\222 \(1521\) pt. 2 \221De \
constructione nominum\222. Erasmus famously )Tj
T*
(applied the idea to More, writing in his prefatory letter to In Praise o\
f Folly \(1509\), in Latin, that he played )Tj
T*
(\221omnium horarum hominem.\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 476.9624 Tm
( 11.75 Charlotte Whitton 1896-1975)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Whatever women do they must do twice as well as men to be thought ha\
lf as good. Luckily, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(this is not difficult.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 421.42047 Tm
(In \221Canada Month\222 June 1963)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 389.2124 Tm
( 11.76 Benjamin Whorf 1897-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native language...Lan\
guage is not simply a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(reporting device for experience but a defining framework for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 333.67047 Tm
(\221Thinking in Primitive Communities\222 in Hoyer \(ed.\) \221New Dire\
ctions in the Study of Language\222 1964)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 301.4624 Tm
( 11.77 Cornelius Whur c.1837)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( While lasting joys the man attend)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Who has a faithful female friend.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Female Friend\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 213.7124 Tm
( 11.78 William H. Whyte 1917\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( This book is about the organization man....I can think of no other w\
ay to describe the people I )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(am talking about. They are not the workers, nor are they the white-colla\
r people in the usual, )Tj
T*
(clerk sense of the word. These people only work for the Organization. Th\
e ones I am talking )Tj
T*
(about belong to it as well.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.17047 Tm
(\221The Organization Man\222 \(1956\) ch. 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 89.9624 Tm
( 11.79 George John Whyte-Melville 1821-78)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Then drink, puppy, drink, and let ev\222ry puppy drink,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That is old enough to lap and to swallow;)Tj
ET
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( For he\222ll grow into a hound, so we\222ll pass the bottle round,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And merrily we\222ll whoop and we\222ll holloa.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Drink, Puppy, Drink\222 chorus)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 11.80 Anna Wickham \(Edith Alice Mary Harper\) 1884-1947)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It is well within the order of things)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That man should listen when his mate sings;)Tj
T*
( But the true male never yet walked)Tj
T*
( Who liked to listen when his mate talked.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 595.42047 Tm
(\221The Affinity\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 563.2124 Tm
( 11.81 Bishop Samuel Wilberforce 1805-73)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If I were a cassowary)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( On the plains of Timbuctoo,)Tj
T*
( I would eat a missionary,)Tj
T*
( Cassock, band, and hymn-book too.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.67047 Tm
(Impromptu verse, ascribed also to W.M. Thackeray)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 439.4624 Tm
( 11.82 Richard Wilbur 1921\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We milk the cow of the world, and as we do)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We whisper in her ear, \221You are not true.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 383.92047 Tm
(\221Epistemology\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 351.7124 Tm
( 11.83 Ella Wheeler Wilcox 1855-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Laugh and the world laughs with you;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Weep, and you weep alone;)Tj
T*
( For the sad old earth must borrow its mirth,)Tj
T*
( But has trouble enough of its own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 260.17047 Tm
(\221Solitude\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 239.25456 Tm
( So many gods, so many creeds,)Tj
T*
( So many paths that wind and wind,)Tj
T*
( While just the art of being kind)Tj
T*
( Is all the sad world needs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221The World\222s Need\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 137.2124 Tm
( 11.84 Oscar Wilde 1854-1900)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( He did not wear his scarlet coat,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For blood and wine are red,)Tj
T*
( And blood and wine were on his hands)Tj
T*
( When they found him with the dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.67047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 1, st. 1)Tj
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( I never saw a man who looked)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( With such a wistful eye)Tj
T*
( Upon that little tent of blue)Tj
T*
( Which prisoners call the sky.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 1, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( When a voice behind me whispered low,)Tj
T*
( \221That fellow\222s got to swing.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 1, st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Yet each man kills the thing he loves,)Tj
T*
( By each let this be heard,)Tj
T*
( Some do it with a bitter look,)Tj
T*
( Some with a flattering word.)Tj
T*
( The coward does it with a kiss,)Tj
T*
( The brave man with a sword!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 1, st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Like two doomed ships that pass in storm)Tj
T*
( We had crossed each other\222s way:)Tj
T*
( But we made no sign, we said no word,)Tj
T*
( We had no word to say.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 2, st. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( The Governor was strong upon)Tj
T*
( The Regulations Act:)Tj
T*
( The Doctor said that Death was but)Tj
T*
( A scientific fact:)Tj
T*
( And twice a day the Chaplain called,)Tj
T*
( And left a little tract.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.17047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 3, st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 263.25456 Tm
( Something was dead in each of us,)Tj
T*
( And what was dead was Hope.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 229.42047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 3, st. 31)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 208.50456 Tm
( And the wild regrets, and the bloody sweats,)Tj
T*
( None knew so well as I:)Tj
T*
( For he who lives more lives than one)Tj
T*
( More deaths than one must die.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.67047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 3, st. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.75456 Tm
( I know not whether Laws be right,)Tj
T*
( Or whether Laws be wrong;)Tj
T*
( All that we know who lie in gaol)Tj
T*
( Is that the wall is strong;)Tj
T*
( And that each day is like a year,)Tj
ET
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( A year whose days are long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 5, st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( How else but through a broken heart)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( May Lord Christ enter in?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Ballad of Reading Gaol\222 \(1898\) pt. 5, st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( All her bright golden hair)Tj
T*
( Tarnished with rust,)Tj
T*
( She that was young and fair)Tj
T*
( Fallen to dust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221Requiescat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( And yet, and yet,)Tj
T*
( These Christs that die upon the barricades,)Tj
T*
( God knows it I am with them, in some things.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnet to Liberty\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( O Singer of Persephone!)Tj
T*
( In the dim meadows desolate)Tj
T*
( Dost thou remember Sicily?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Theocritus\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is a\
bsolutely fatal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221The Critic as Artist\222 pt. 2 in \221Intentions\222 \(1891\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Ah! don\222t say that you agree with me. When people agree with me I\
always feel that I must be )Tj
T*
(wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221The Critic as Artist\222 pt. 2 in \221Intentions\222 \(1891\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 333.75456 Tm
( As long as war is regarded as wicked, it will always have its fascin\
ation.)Tj
T*
( When it is looked upon as vulgar, it will cease to be popular.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221The Critic as Artist\222 pt. 2 in \221Intentions\222 \(1891\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( There is no sin except stupidity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Critic as Artist\222 pt. 2 in \221Intentions\222 \(1891\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Art never expresses anything but itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221The Decay of Lying\222 in \221Intentions\222 \(1891\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( Really, if the lower orders don\222t set us a good example, what on \
earth is the use of them?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 189.67047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.75456 Tm
( It is very vulgar to talk like a dentist when one isn\222t a dentist\
. It produces a false impression.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.92047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.00456 Tm
( The truth is rarely pure, and never simple.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( I have invented an invaluable permanent invalid called Bunbury, in o\
rder that I may be able to )Tj
T*
(go down into the country whenever I choose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( In married life three is company and two none.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 733.75456 Tm
( To lose one parent, Mr Worthing, may be regarded as a misfortune; to\
lose both looks like )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(carelessness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.92047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.00456 Tm
( All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man d\
oes.)Tj
T*
( That\222s his.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.17047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 1 \(Wilde had used \
the same words as dialogue in \221A Woman of )Tj
T*
(No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 2\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 609.25456 Tm
( The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what Fiction \
means.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 593.42047 Tm
(Miss Prism on her novel, in \221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(18\
95\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 572.50456 Tm
( The chapter on the Fall of the Rupee you may omit. It is somewhat to\
o sensational.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.67047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.75456 Tm
( I hope you have not been leading a double life, pretending to be wic\
ked and being really good )Tj
T*
(all the time. That would be hypocrisy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.92047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 481.00456 Tm
( Charity, dear Miss Prism, charity! None of us are perfect. I myself \
am peculiarly susceptible to )Tj
T*
(draughts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.17047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.25456 Tm
( On an occasion of this kind it becomes more than a moral duty to spe\
ak one\222s mind. It )Tj
T*
(becomes a pleasure.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.42047 Tm
(\221The Importance of Being Earnest\222 \(1895\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.50456 Tm
( I couldn\222t help it. I can resist everything except temptation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.67047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.75456 Tm
( Many a woman has a past, but I am told that she has a least a dozen,\
and that they all fit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.92047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 298.00456 Tm
( Do you know, Mr Hopper, dear Agatha and I are so much interested in \
Australia. It must be so )Tj
T*
(pretty with all the dear little kangaroos flying about.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 264.17047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 243.25456 Tm
( We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.42047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.50456 Tm
( There is nothing in the whole world so unbecoming to a woman as a No\
nconformist )Tj
T*
(conscience.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 172.67047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 151.75456 Tm
( Cecil Graham: What is a cynic?)Tj
T*
( Lord Darlington: A man who knows the price of everything and the va\
lue of nothing.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 117.92047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.00456 Tm
( Dumby: Experience is the name every one gives to their mistakes. ce\
cil graham: One )Tj
T*
(shouldn\222t commit any.)Tj
T*
( Dumby: Life would be very dull without them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 45.17047 Tm
(\221Lady Windermere\222s Fan\222 \(1892\) act 3)Tj
ET
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( There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well\
written, or badly written.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The nineteenth century dislike of Realism is the rage of Caliban see\
ing his own face in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(glass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The moral life of man forms part of the subject matter of the artist\
, but the morality of art )Tj
T*
(consists in the perfect use of an imperfect medium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, \
and that is not being talked )Tj
T*
(about.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.92047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.00456 Tm
( A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.17047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 515.25456 Tm
( A cigarette is the perfect type of a perfect pleasure. It is exquisi\
te, and it leaves one unsatisfied. )Tj
T*
(What more can one want?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.42047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) ch. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.50456 Tm
( It is better to be beautiful than to be good. But...it is better to \
be good than to be ugly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( Anybody can be good in the country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 407.92047 Tm
(\221The Picture of Dorian Gray\222 \(1891\) ch. 19)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.00456 Tm
( As for the virtuous poor, one can pity them, of course, but one cann\
ot possibly admire them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221The Soul of Man under Socialism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people by the people f\
or the people.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221The Soul of Man under Socialism\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Mrs Allonby: They say, Lady Hunstanton, that when good Americans di\
e they go to Paris.)Tj
T*
( Lady Hunstanton: Indeed? And when bad Americans die, where do they \
go to? )Tj
T*
( Lord Illingworth: Oh, they go to America.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 1.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( The youth of America is their oldest tradition. It has been going on\
now for three hundred )Tj
T*
(years.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.92047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 186.00456 Tm
( The English country gentleman galloping after a fox\227the unspeakab\
le in full pursuit of the )Tj
T*
(uneatable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 152.17047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 131.25456 Tm
( One should never trust a woman who tells one her real age. A woman w\
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T*
(would tell one anything.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 97.42047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 76.50456 Tm
( Lord Illingworth: The Book of Life begins with a man and a woman in\
a garden.)Tj
T*
( Mrs Allonby: It ends with Revelations.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 1)Tj
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( Children begin by loving their parents; after a time they judge them\
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0 -1.2 TD
(forgive them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 697.00456 Tm
( Gerald: I suppose society is wonderfully delightful!)Tj
T*
( Lord Illingworth: To be in it is merely a bore. But to be out of it\
simply a tragedy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( You should study the Peerage, Gerald...It is the best thing in ficti\
on the English have ever done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.42047 Tm
(\221A Woman of No Importance\222 \(1893\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 605.50456 Tm
( No publisher should ever express an opinion of the value of what he \
publishes. That is a matter )Tj
T*
(entirely for the literary critic to decide...A publisher is simply a use\
ful middle-man. It is not for )Tj
T*
(him to anticipate the verdict of criticism.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 553.67047 Tm
(Letter in \221St James\222s Gazette\222 28 June 1890)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 532.75456 Tm
( A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies for it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 516.92047 Tm
(\221Sebastian Melmoth\222 \(1905\) p. 12. Oscariana \(1910\) p. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.00456 Tm
( Voulez-vous savoir le grand drame de ma vie? C\222est que j\222ai mi\
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T*
(n\222ai mis que mon talent dans mes oeuvres.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( Do you want to know the great drama of my life? It\222s that I have \
put my genius into my life; all )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(I\222ve put into my works is my talent.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 422.42047 Tm
(Spoken to Andr\350 Gide, in Gide \221Oscar Wilde: In Memoriam\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 401.50456 Tm
( I have nothing to declare except my genius.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 385.67047 Tm
(Said at the New York Custom House, in F. Harris \221Oscar Wilde\222 \(19\
18\) p. 75)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 364.75456 Tm
( \221Will you very kindly tell me, Mr Wilde, in your own words, your \
viewpoint of George )Tj
T*
(Meredith?\222 )Tj
T*
( \221George Meredith is a prose Browning, and so is Browning.\222 )Tj
T*
( \221Thank you. His style?\222 )Tj
T*
( \221Chaos, illumined by flashes of lightning.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 276.92047 Tm
(In Ada Leverson \221Letters to the Sphinx\222 \(1930\) \221Reminiscences\
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15 0 0 15 10 256.00456 Tm
( There seems to be some curious connection between piety and poor rhy\
mes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.17047 Tm
(In E. V. Lucas \(ed.\), \221A Critic in Pall Mall\222 \(1919\) \221Sente\
ntiae\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 219.25456 Tm
( Work is the curse of the drinking classes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 203.42047 Tm
(In H. Pearson \221Life of Oscar Wilde\222 \(1946\) ch. 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 182.50456 Tm
( He has fought a good fight and has had to face every difficulty exce\
pt popularity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 166.67047 Tm
(Unpublished character sketch of W. E. Henley written for Rothenstein\222\
s English Portraits. W. Rothenstein )Tj
T*
(\221Men and Memories\222 vol. 1, ch. 25)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 130.75456 Tm
( He [Bernard Shaw] hasn\222t an enemy in the world, and none of his f\
riends like him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.92047 Tm
(Shaw \221Sixteen Self Sketches\222 ch. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 94.00456 Tm
( Ah, well, then, I suppose that I shall have to die beyond my means.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 78.17047 Tm
(Said when a huge fee for an operation was mentioned, in R. H. Sherard \221\
Life of Oscar Wilde\222 \(1906\) p. 421)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 45.9624 Tm
( 11.85 Billy Wilder \(Samuel Wilder\) 1906\227)Tj
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( Hindsight is always twenty-twenty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(In J. R. Columbo \221Wit and Wisdom of the Moviemakers\222 \(1979\) ch. \
7)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 704.9624 Tm
( 11.86 Billy Wilder 1906\227and I. A. L. Diamond)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Gerry: We can\222t get married at all....I\222m a man.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Osgood: Well, nobody\222s perfect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(\221Some Like It Hot\222 \(1959 film; closing words\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 11.87 Thornton Wilder 1897-1975)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Marriage is a bribe to make a housekeeper think she\222s a household\
er.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 579.67047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Yonkers\222 \(1939\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 558.75456 Tm
( The fights are the best part of married life. The rest is merely so-\
so.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 542.92047 Tm
(\221The Merchant of Yonkers\222 \(1939\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 522.00456 Tm
( Literature is the orchestration of platitudes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 506.17047 Tm
(In \221Time\222 12 January 1953)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 473.9624 Tm
( 11.88 Kaiser Wilhelm II 1859-1941)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( We have...fought for our place in the sun and have won it. It will b\
e my business to see that we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(retain this place in the sun unchallenged, so that the rays of that sun \
may exert a fructifying )Tj
T*
(influence upon our foreign trade and traffic.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 400.42047 Tm
(Speech in Hamburg, 18 June 1901, in \221The Times\222 20 June 1901)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 368.2124 Tm
( 11.89 John Wilkes 1727-97)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The chapter of accidents is the longest chapter in the book.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.67047 Tm
(Attributed by Southey in \221The Doctor\222 \(1837\) vol. 4, p. 166)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 309.75456 Tm
( \221Wilkes,\222 said Lord Sandwich, \221you will die either on the g\
allows, or of the pox.\222)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221That,\222 replied Wilkes blandly, \221must depend on whether I e\
mbrace your lordship\222s principles )Tj
T*
(or your mistress.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 257.92047 Tm
(In Charles Chenevix-Trench \221Portrait of a Patriot\222 \(1962\) ch. 3.\
But H. Brougham \221Statesmen of George III\222 )Tj
T*
(third series \(1843\) p. 189. Also attributed to Samuel Foote)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 210.7124 Tm
( 11.90 Geoffrey Willans 1911-58 and Ronald Searle 1920\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The only good things about skool are the boys wizz who are noble bra\
ve fearless etc. although )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(you hav various swots, bulies, cissies, milksops, greedy guts and oiks w\
ith whom i am forced to )Tj
T*
(mingle hem-hem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.17047 Tm
(\221Down With Skool!\222 \(1953\) p. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.25456 Tm
( This is wot it is like when we go back on the skool trane. There are\
lots of new bugs and all )Tj
T*
(there maters blub they hav every reason if they knew what they were goin\
g to. For us old lags )Tj
T*
(however it is just another stretch same as any other and no remision for\
good conduc. We kno )Tj
T*
(what it will be like at the other end Headmaster beaming skool bus ratle\
off leaving trail of tuck )Tj
T*
(boxes peason smugling in a box of flat 50 cigs fotherington-tomas left i\
n the lugage rack and new )Tj
ET
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(bugs stand as if amazed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221How To Be Topp\222 \(1954\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( There is no better xsample of a goody-goody than fotherington-tomas \
in the world in space. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(You kno he is the one who sa Hullo Clouds Hullo Sky and skip about like \
a girly.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221How To Be Topp\222 \(1954\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Still xmas is a good time with all those presents and good food and \
i hope it will never die out )Tj
T*
(or at any rate not until i am grown up and hav to pay for it all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221How To Be Topp\222 \(1954\) ch. 11)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 11.91 Emma Hart Willard 1787-1870)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rocked in the cradle of the deep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 557.92047 Tm
(Song)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 525.7124 Tm
( 11.92 King William III 1650-1702)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( \221Do you not see your country is lost?\222 asked the Duke of Bucki\
ngham.)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \221There is one way never to see it lost\222 replied William, \221a\
nd that is to die in the last ditch.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 470.17047 Tm
(In Burnet \221History of his own Times\222 \(1715\) 1, 457)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 449.25456 Tm
( Every bullet has its billet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 433.42047 Tm
(In John Wesley \221Journal\222 6 June 1765)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 401.2124 Tm
( 11.93 Harry Williams 1874-1924)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I\222m afraid to come home in the dark.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 363.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1907\).)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 331.4624 Tm
( 11.94 Kenneth Williams 1926-88)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( The nice thing about quotes is that they give us a nodding acquainta\
nce with the originator )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(which is often socially impressive.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 275.92047 Tm
(\221Acid Drops\222 \(1980\) preface)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 243.7124 Tm
( 11.95 Tennessee Williams \(Thomas Lanier Williams\) 1911-83)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have to distrust each other. It\222s our only defence against bet\
rayal.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 206.17047 Tm
(\221Camino Real\222 \(1953\) block 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 185.25456 Tm
( We\222re all of us guinea pigs in the laboratory of God. Humanity is\
just a work in progress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 169.42047 Tm
(\221Camino Real\222 \(1953\) block 12)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 148.50456 Tm
( What is the victory of a cat on a hot tin roof?\227I wish I knew....\
Just staying on it, I guess, as )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(long as she can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 114.67047 Tm
(\221Cat on a Hot Tin Roof\222 \(1955\) act 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 93.75456 Tm
( Brick: Well, they say nature hates a vacuum, Big Daddy. )Tj
T*
( Big Daddy: That\222s what they say, but sometimes I think that a va\
cuum is a hell of a lot better )Tj
T*
(than some of the stuff that nature replaces it with.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 41.92047 Tm
(\221Cat on a Hot Tin Roof\222 \(1955\) act 2.)Tj
ET
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( Mendacity is a system that we live in. Liquor is one way out an\222 \
death\222s the other.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.17047 Tm
(\221Cat on a Hot Tin Roof\222 \(1955\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 714.25456 Tm
( I didn\222t go to the moon, I went much further\227for time is the l\
ongest distance between two )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(places.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 680.42047 Tm
(\221The Glass Menagerie\222 \(1945\) p. 123)Tj
T*
(We\222re all of us sentenced to solitary confinement inside our own skin\
s, for life! \221Orpheus Descending\222 \(1958\) )Tj
T*
(act 2, sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 629.50456 Tm
( Turn that off! I won\222t be looked at in this merciless glare!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.67047 Tm
(\221A Streetcar Named Desire\222 \(1947\) sc. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.75456 Tm
( I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.92047 Tm
(\221A Streetcar Named Desire\222 \(1947\) sc. 11 \(Blanche\222s final wo\
rds\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 544.7124 Tm
( 11.96 William Carlos Williams 1883-1963)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Minds like beds always made up,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( \(more stony than a shore\))Tj
T*
( unwilling or unable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 471.17047 Tm
(\221Paterson\222 \(1946\) bk. 1, preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 450.25456 Tm
( so much depends)Tj
T*
( upon)Tj
T*
( a red wheel)Tj
T*
( barrow)Tj
T*
( glazed with rain)Tj
T*
( water)Tj
T*
( beside the white)Tj
T*
( chickens.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 308.42047 Tm
(\221The Red Wheelbarrow\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 287.50456 Tm
( Is it any better in Heaven, my friend Ford,)Tj
T*
( Than you found it in Provence?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.67047 Tm
(\221To Ford Madox Ford in Heaven\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 232.75456 Tm
( I will teach you my townspeople)Tj
T*
( how to perform a funeral)Tj
T*
( for you have it over a troop)Tj
T*
( of artists\227)Tj
T*
( unless one should scour the world\227)Tj
T*
( you have the ground sense necessary.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 126.92047 Tm
(\221Tract\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 94.7124 Tm
( 11.97 Ted Willis \(Edward Henry Willis, Baron Willis of Chislehurst\) 1\
918\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Evening, all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 57.17047 Tm
(Opening words spoken by Jack Warner as Sergeant Dixon in \221Dixon of Do\
ck Green\222 \(BBC television series, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(1956-76\))Tj
ET
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( 11.98 Nathaniel Parker Willis 1806-67)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( At present there is no distinction among the upper ten thousand of t\
he city.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 702.42047 Tm
(\221Necessity for a Promenade Drive\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 670.2124 Tm
( 11.99 Wendell Willkie 1892-1944)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The constitution does not provide for first and second class citizen\
s.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 632.67047 Tm
(\221An American Programme\222 \(1944\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 611.75456 Tm
( Freedom is an indivisible word. If we want to enjoy it, and fight fo\
r it, we must be prepared to )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(extend it to everyone, whether they are rich or poor, whether they agree\
with us or not, no matter )Tj
T*
(what their race or the colour of their skin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.92047 Tm
(\221One World\222 \(1943\) ch. 13)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 527.7124 Tm
( 11.100 Angus Wilson 1913-91)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \221God knows how you Protestants can be expected to have any sense \
of direction,\222 she said. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221It\222s different with us, I haven\222t been to mass for years, I\222\
ve got every mortal sin on my )Tj
T*
(conscience, but I know when I\222m doing wrong. I\222m still a Catholic,\
it\222s there, nothing can take it )Tj
T*
(away from me.\222 \221Of course, duckie,\222 said Jeremy...\222once a Ca\
tholic always a Catholic.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 436.17047 Tm
(\221The Wrong Set\222 \(1949\) p. 168)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 403.9624 Tm
( 11.101 Charles E. Wilson 1890-1961)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For years I thought what was good for our country was good for Gener\
al Motors and vice )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(versa. The difference did not exist. Our company is too big. It goes wit\
h the welfare of the )Tj
T*
(country. Our contribution to the nation is quite considerable.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 330.42047 Tm
(Testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee on his proposed nominat\
ion to be Secretary of Defence, )Tj
T*
(15 January 1953, in \221New York Times\222 24 February 1953, p. 8)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 283.2124 Tm
( 11.102 Edmund Wilson 1895-1972)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Of all the great Victorian writers, he [Dickens] was probably the mo\
st antagonistic to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Victorian age itself.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.67047 Tm
(\221The Wound and the Bow\222 \(1941\) \221Dickens: the Two Scrooges\222\
)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 195.4624 Tm
( 11.103 Harold Wilson \(Baron Wilson of Rievaulx\) 1916\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Traders and financiers all over the world had been listening to the \
Chancellor. For months he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(had said that if he could not stop the wage claims, the country was \221\
facing disaster\222....Rightly or )Tj
T*
(wrongly these people believed him. For them, 5th September\227the day th\
at the Trades Union )Tj
T*
(Congress unanimously rejected the policy of wage restraint\227marked the\
end of an era. And all )Tj
T*
(these financiers, all the little gnomes in Zurich and the other financia\
l centres about whom we )Tj
T*
(keep on hearing, started to make their dispositions in regard to sterlin\
g.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 67.92047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 12 November 1956, col. 578)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 47.00456 Tm
( This party [the Labour Party] is a moral crusade or it is nothing.)Tj
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(Speech at Labour Party Conference 1 October 1962, in \221The Times\222 2\
October 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( The Smethwick Conservatives can have the satisfaction of having topp\
ed the poll, and of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(having sent here as their Member one who, until a further General Electi\
on restores him to )Tj
T*
(oblivion, will serve his term here as a Parliamentary leper.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 3 November 1964, col. 71)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( From now the pound abroad is worth 14 per cent or so less in terms o\
f other currencies. It does )Tj
T*
(not mean, of course, that the pound here in Britain, in your pocket or p\
urse or in your bank, has )Tj
T*
(been devalued.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(Ministerial broadcast, 19 November 1967, in \221The Times\222 20 Novembe\
r 1967)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Everyone wanted more wage increases, he [Mr Wilson] said, believing \
that prices would )Tj
T*
(remain stable; but one man\222s wage increase was another man\222s price\
increase.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(Speech at Blackburn, 8 January 1970, in \221The Times\222 9 January 1970\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( My hon. Friends know that if one buys land on which there is a slag \
heap 120 ft. high and it )Tj
T*
(costs \243100,000 to remove that slag, that is not land speculation in t\
he sense that we condemn it. It )Tj
T*
(is land reclamation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.17047 Tm
(\221Hansard\222 4 April 1974, col. 1441)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 461.25456 Tm
( If I had the choice between smoked salmon and tinned salmon, I\222d \
have it tinned. With vinegar.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.42047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 11 November 1962)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.50456 Tm
( The Monarchy is a labour-intensive industry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 408.67047 Tm
(In \221Observer\222 13 February 1977)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 387.75456 Tm
( Harold Wilson...was unable to remember when he first uttered his dic\
tum to the effect that: A )Tj
T*
(week is a long time in politics....Inquiries among political journalists\
led to the conclusion that in )Tj
T*
(its present form the phrase was probably first uttered at a meeting betw\
een Wilson and the )Tj
T*
(Parliamentary lobby in the wake of the Sterling crisis shortly after he \
first took office as Prime )Tj
T*
(Minister in 1964. However, Robert Carvel...recalled Wilson at a Labour P\
arty conference in 1960 )Tj
T*
(saying \221Forty-eight hours is a long time in politics.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.92047 Tm
(In Nigel Rees \221Sayings of the Century\222 \(1984\) p. 149)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 261.00456 Tm
( The Prime Ministers [at the Lagos Conference, 9-12 January 1966] not\
ed the statement by the )Tj
T*
(British Prime Minister that on the expert advice available to him the cu\
mulative effects of the )Tj
T*
(economic and financial sanctions might well bring the rebellion to an en\
d within a matter of )Tj
T*
(weeks rather than months.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Times\222 13 January 1966)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 158.9624 Tm
( 11.104 Harriette Wilson 1789-1846)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I shall not say why and how I became, at the age of fifteen, the mis\
tress of the Earl of Craven.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Memoirs\222 first sentence)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 89.2124 Tm
( 11.105 John Wilson)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( See Christopher North \(2.34\))Tj
ET
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( 11.106 McLandburgh Wilson 1892\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( \222Twixt the optimist and pessimist)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The difference is droll:)Tj
T*
( The optimist sees the doughnut)Tj
T*
( But the pessimist sees the hole.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 661.42047 Tm
(\221Optimist and Pessimist\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 629.2124 Tm
( 11.107 Sandy Wilson 1924\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( It\222s never too late to have a fling,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For Autumn is just as nice as Spring,)Tj
T*
( And it\222s never too late to fall in love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221It\222s Never too Late to Fall in Love\222 \(1953 song\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 523.4624 Tm
( 11.108 Woodrow Wilson 1856-1924)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Liberty has never come from the government. Liberty has always come \
from the subjects of )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(government. The history of liberty is the history of resistance. The his\
tory of liberty is a history )Tj
T*
(of the limitation of governmental power, not the increase of it.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 449.92047 Tm
(Speech to New York Press Club in New York, 9 September 1912, in \221Pape\
rs of Woodrow Wilson\222 \(1978\) vol. )Tj
T*
(25, p. 124)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 414.00456 Tm
( No nation is fit to sit in judgement upon any other nation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 398.17047 Tm
(Speech in New York, 20 April 1915, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(1918\)\
p. 79)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 377.25456 Tm
( There is such a thing as a man being too proud to fight; there is su\
ch a thing as a nation being )Tj
T*
(so right that it does not need to convince others by force that it is ri\
ght.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 343.42047 Tm
(Speech in Philadelphia, 10 May 1915, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(191\
8\) p. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 322.50456 Tm
( We have stood apart, studiously neutral.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 306.67047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 7 December 1915, in \221New York Times\222 8 Decembe\
r 1915, p. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 285.75456 Tm
( America can not be an ostrich with its head in the sand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 269.92047 Tm
(Speech at Des Moines, 1 February 1916, in \221New York Times\222 2 Febru\
ary 1916, p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 249.00456 Tm
( It must be a peace without victory....Only a peace between equals ca\
n last. Only a peace the )Tj
T*
(very principle of which is equality and a common participation in a comm\
on benefit.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 215.17047 Tm
(Speech to US Senate, 22 January 1917, in \221Messages and Papers\222 \(1\
924\) vol. 1, p. 352)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 194.25456 Tm
( A little group of wilful men representing no opinion but their own, \
have rendered the Great )Tj
T*
(Government of the United States helpless and contemptible.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 160.42047 Tm
(Statement, 4 March 1917, after a successful filibuster against Wilson\222\
s bill to arm American merchant ships, )Tj
T*
(in \221New York Times\222 5 March 1917, p. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 124.50456 Tm
( Armed neutrality is ineffectual enough at best.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 108.67047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 2 April 1917, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(1918\)\
p. 190)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 87.75456 Tm
( The world must be made safe for democracy. Its peace must be planted\
upon the tested )Tj
T*
(foundations of political liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 53.92047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 2 April 1917, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(1918\)\
p. 195)Tj
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( The right is more precious than peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 2 April 1917, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(1918\)\
p. 197)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( The programme of the world\222s peace...is this:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( 1. Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after which there sha\
ll be no private )Tj
T*
(international understandings of any kind but diplomacy shall proceed alw\
ays frankly and in the )Tj
T*
(public view.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(Speech to Congress, 8 January 1918, in \221Selected Addresses\222 \(1918\
\) p. 247)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that is the way I know I\
am an American. )Tj
T*
(America, my fellow citizens\227I do not say it in disaparagement of any \
other great people\227)Tj
T*
(America is the only idealistic Nation in the world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(Speech at Sioux Falls, South Dakota, 8 September 1919, in \221Messages a\
nd Papers\222 \(1924\) vol. 2, p. 822)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( Once lead this people into war and they will forget there ever was s\
uch a thing as tolerance.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(In John Dos Passos \221Mr Wilson\222s War\222 \(1917\) pt. 3, ch. 12)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 504.7124 Tm
( 11.109 Robb Wilton 1881-1957)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The day war broke out.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 467.17047 Tm
(Catch-phrase, from c.1940)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 434.9624 Tm
( 11.110 Arthur Wimperis 1874-1953)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( I\222ve gotter motter)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Always merry and bright!)Tj
T*
( Look around and you will find)Tj
T*
( Every cloud is silver-lined;)Tj
T*
( The sun will shine)Tj
T*
( Altho\222 the sky\222s a grey one;)Tj
T*
( I\222ve often said to meself, I\222ve said,)Tj
T*
( \221Cheer up, curly you\222ll soon be dead!)Tj
T*
( A short life and a gay one!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 253.42047 Tm
(\221My Motter\222 \(1909 song\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 221.2124 Tm
( 11.111 Anne Finch, Lady Winchilsea 1661-1720)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For see! where on the bier before ye lies)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The pale, the fall\222n, th\222 untimely sacrifice)Tj
T*
( To your mistaken shrine, to your false idol Honour.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 147.67047 Tm
(\221All is Vanity\222 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 126.75456 Tm
( Nor will in fading silks compose)Tj
T*
( Faintly the inimitable rose.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.92047 Tm
(\221The Spleen\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 72.00456 Tm
( Now the Jonquille o\222ercomes the feeble brain;)Tj
T*
( We faint beneath the aromatic pain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 38.17047 Tm
(\221The Spleen\222.)Tj
ET
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( 11.112 William Windham 1750-1810)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Those entrusted with arms...should be persons of some substance and \
stake in the country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 698.42047 Tm
(House of Commons, 22 July 1807)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 666.2124 Tm
( 11.113 Catherine Winkworth 1827-78)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Peccavi\227I have Sindh.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.67047 Tm
(Of Sir Charles Napier\222s conquest of Sind \(1843\). Pun sent to Punch,\
13 May 1844, and printed as \221the most )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(laconic despatch ever issued\222, supposedly sent by Napier to Lord Elle\
nborough, in \221Punch\222 vol. 6, p.209, 18 )Tj
T*
(May 1844. N. M. Billimoria \221Proceedings of the Sind Historical Societ\
y\222 2 \(1938\) and \221Notes & )Tj
T*
(Queries\222 \(1954\) p. 219.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 551.4624 Tm
( 11.114 Robert Charles Winthrop 1809-94)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A Star for every State, and a State for every Star.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 513.92047 Tm
(Speech on Boston Common, 27 August 1862)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 481.7124 Tm
( 11.115 Cardinal Wiseman 1802-65)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( Dr Wiseman was particularly pleased by the conversion of a Mr Morris\
, who, as he said, was )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(\221the author of the essay...on the best method of proving Christianity\
to the Hindoos.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.17047 Tm
(In Lytton Strachey \221Eminent Victorians\222 \(1918\) \221Cardinal Mann\
ing\222 pt. 3)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 393.9624 Tm
( 11.116 Owen Wister 1860-1938)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Therefore Trampas spoke. \221You bet, you son-of-a\227\222 The Virgi\
nian\222s pistol came out, and...he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(issued his orders to the man Trampas:\227\222When you call me that, smil\
e!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.42047 Tm
(\221The Virginian\222 \(1902\) ch. 2)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 306.2124 Tm
( 11.117 George Wither 1588-1667)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( I loved a lass, a fair one,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As fair as e\222er was seen;)Tj
T*
( She was indeed a rare one,)Tj
T*
( Another Sheba queen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 214.67047 Tm
(\221I loved a lass, a fair one\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 193.75456 Tm
( Shall I, wasting in despair,)Tj
T*
( Die because a woman\222s fair?)Tj
T*
( Or make pale my cheeks with care,)Tj
T*
( \222Cause another\222s rosy are?)Tj
T*
( Be she fairer than the day,)Tj
T*
( Or the flow\222ry meads in May;)Tj
T*
( If she think not well of me,)Tj
T*
( What care I how fair she be?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.92047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222)Tj
ET
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( 11.118 Ludwig Wittgenstein 1889-1951)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( G\344be es ein Verbum mit der Bedeutung \221f\344lschlich glauben\222\
, so h\344tte das keine sinnvolle erste )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Person im Indikatir des Pr\344sens.)Tj
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/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( If there were a verb meaning \221to behave falsely\222, it would not\
have any significant first person, )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(present indicative.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 654.42047 Tm
(\221Philosophical Investigations\222 \(1953\) pt. 2, sect. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 633.50456 Tm
( Was sich \374berhaupt sagen l\344sst, l\344sst sich klar sagen; und \
wovon man nicht reden kann, )Tj
T*
(dar\374ber muss man schweigen.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( What can be said at all can be said clearly; and whereof one cannot \
speak thereof one must be )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(silent.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 559.92047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus\222 \(1922\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 539.00456 Tm
( Die Welt ist alles, was der Fall ist.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( The world is everything that is the case.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.42047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus\222 \(1922\) p. 30)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.50456 Tm
( Die Logik muss f\374r sich selber sorgen.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( Logic must take care of itself.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 442.92047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus\222 \(1922\) p. 126)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 422.00456 Tm
( Die Grenzen meiner Sprache bedeuten die Grenzen meiner Welt.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 384.42047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus\222 \(1922\) p. 148)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 363.50456 Tm
( Die Welt des Gl\374cklichen ist eine andere als die des Ungl\374ckli\
chen.)Tj
0.50197 0 0.50197 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
T*
( The world of the happy is quite different from that of the unhappy.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT1 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 325.92047 Tm
(\221Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus\222 \(1922\) p. 184)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 293.7124 Tm
( 11.119 P. G. Wodehouse 1881-1975)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Chumps always make the best husbands. When you marry, Sally, grab a \
chump. Tap his )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(forehead first, and if it rings solid, don\222t hesitate. All the unhapp\
y marriages come from the )Tj
T*
(husbands having brains. What good are brains to a man? They only unsettl\
e him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 220.17047 Tm
(\221The Adventures of Sally\222 \(1920\) ch. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 199.25456 Tm
( It is never difficult to distinguish between a Scotsman with a griev\
ance and a ray of sunshine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 183.42047 Tm
(\221Blandings Castle and Elsewhere\222 \(1935\) \221The Custody of the P\
umpkin\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 162.50456 Tm
( At this point in the proceedings there was another ring at the front\
door. Jeeves shimmered out )Tj
T*
(and came back with a telegram.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 128.67047 Tm
(\221Carry On, Jeeves!\222 \(1925\) \221Jeeves Takes Charge\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 107.75456 Tm
( He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see tha\
t, if not actually disgruntled, )Tj
T*
(he was far from being gruntled, so I tactfully changed the subject.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 73.92047 Tm
(\221The Code of the Woosters\222 \(1938\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 53.00456 Tm
( Slice him where you like, a hellhound is always a hellhound.)Tj
ET
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(\221The Code of the Woosters\222 \(1938\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( It is no use telling me that there are bad aunts and good aunts. At \
the core, they are all alike. )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Sooner or later, out pops the cloven hoof.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(\221The Code of the Woosters\222 \(1938\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.50456 Tm
( Roderick Spode? Big chap with a small moustache and the sort of eye \
that can open an oyster )Tj
T*
(at sixty paces?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 645.67047 Tm
(\221The Code of the Woosters\222 \(1938\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 624.75456 Tm
( To my daughter Leonora without whose never-failing sympathy and enco\
uragement this book )Tj
T*
(would have been finished in half the time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.92047 Tm
(\221The Heart of a Goof\222 \(1926\) dedication)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.00456 Tm
( The lunches of fifty-seven years had caused his chest to slip down i\
nto the mezzanine floor.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.17047 Tm
(\221The Heart of a Goof\222 \(1926\) \221Chester Forgets Himself\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.25456 Tm
( I turned to Aunt Agatha, whose demeanour was now rather like that of\
one who, picking )Tj
T*
(daisies on the railway, has just caught the down express in the small of\
the back.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 499.42047 Tm
(\221The Inimitable Jeeves\222 \(1923\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 478.50456 Tm
( Sir Roderick Glossop, Honoria\222s father, is always called a nerve \
specialist, because it sounds )Tj
T*
(better, but everybody knows that he\222s really a sort of janitor to the\
looney-bin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.67047 Tm
(\221The Inimitable Jeeves\222 \(1923\) ch. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 423.75456 Tm
( As a rule, you see, I\222m not lugged into Family Rows. On the occas\
ions when Aunt is calling to )Tj
T*
(Aunt like mastodons bellowing across primeval swamps and Uncle James\222\
s letter about Cousin )Tj
T*
(Mabel\222s peculiar behaviour is being shot round the family circle \(\221\
Please read this carefully and )Tj
T*
(send it on to Jane\222\), the clan has a tendency to ignore me. It\222s \
one of the advantages I get from )Tj
T*
(being a bachelor\227and, according to my nearest and dearest, practicall\
y a half-witted bachelor at )Tj
T*
(that.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221The Inimitable Jeeves\222 \(1923\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( It was my Uncle George who discovered that alcohol was a food well i\
n advance of medical )Tj
T*
(thought.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221The Inimitable Jeeves\222 \(1923\) ch. 16)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( It is a good rule in life never to apologize. The right sort of peop\
le do not want apologies, and )Tj
T*
(the wrong sort take a mean advantage of them.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 208.42047 Tm
(\221The Man Upstairs\222 \(1914\) title story)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 187.50456 Tm
( She fitted into my biggest armchair as if it had been built round he\
r by someone who knew )Tj
T*
(they were wearing armchairs tight about the hips that season.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 153.67047 Tm
(\221My Man Jeeves\222 \(1919\) \221Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 132.75456 Tm
( What with excellent browsing and sluicing and cheery conversation an\
d what-not, the )Tj
T*
(afternoon passed quite happily.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 98.92047 Tm
(\221My Man Jeeves\222 \(1919\) \221Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 78.00456 Tm
( \221What ho!\222 I said. \221What ho!\222 said Motty. \221What ho! W\
hat ho!\222 \221What ho! What ho! What ho!\222 )Tj
T*
(After that it seemed rather difficult to go on with the conversation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.17047 Tm
(\221My Man Jeeves\222 \(1919\) \221Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest\222)Tj
ET
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( I spent the afternoon musing on Life. If you come to think of it, wh\
at a queer thing Life is! So )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(unlike anything else, don\222t you know, if you see what I mean.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221My Man Jeeves\222 \(1919\) \221Rallying Round Old George\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( Ice formed on the butler\222s upper slopes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Pigs Have Wings\222 \(1952\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( The Right Hon. was a tubby little chap who looked as if he had been \
poured into his clothes )Tj
T*
(and had forgotten to say \221When!\222.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221Very Good, Jeeves\222 \(1930\) \221Jeeves and the Impending Doom\222\
)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 595.4624 Tm
( 11.120 Charles Wolfe 1791-1823)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( As his corse to the rampart we hurried.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(\221The Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( We buried him darkly at dead of night,)Tj
T*
( The sods with our bayonets turning.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(\221The Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 464.25456 Tm
( But he lay like a warrior taking his rest,)Tj
T*
( With his martial cloak around him.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 430.42047 Tm
(\221The Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 409.50456 Tm
( We carved not a line, and we raised not a stone\227)Tj
T*
( But we left him alone with his glory.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 375.67047 Tm
(\221The Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 343.4624 Tm
( 11.121 Humbert Wolfe 1886-1940)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( You cannot hope)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( to bribe or twist,)Tj
T*
( thank God! the)Tj
T*
( British journalist.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( But, seeing what)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( the man will do)Tj
T*
( unbribed, there\222s)Tj
T*
( no occasion to.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Over the Fire\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 143.9624 Tm
( 11.122 James Wolfe 1727-59)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The General...repeated nearly the whole of Gray\222s Elegy...adding,\
as he concluded, that he )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(would prefer being the author of that poem to the glory of beating the F\
rench to-morrow.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 88.42047 Tm
(In J. Playfair \221Biogr. Acc. of J. Robinson\222 in \221Transactions R.\
Soc. Edinb.\222 \(1814\) 7, 499)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 67.50456 Tm
( Now God be praised, I will die in peace.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 51.67047 Tm
(Dying words, in J. Knox \221Historical Journal of Campaigns, 1757-60\222\
\(1769\) \(vol. 2, p. 114 1914 ed.\))Tj
ET
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( 11.123 Thomas Wolfe 1900-38)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Most of the time we think we\222re sick, it\222s all in the mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 711.92047 Tm
(\221Look Homeward, Angel\222 \(1929\) pt. 1, ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 691.00456 Tm
( \221Where they got you stationed now, Luke?\222 said Harry Tugman pe\
ering up snoutily from a )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(mug of coffee. \221At the p-p-p-present time in Norfolk at the Navy base\
,\222 Luke answered, \221m-m-)Tj
T*
(making the world safe for hypocrisy.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 639.17047 Tm
(\221Look Homeward, Angel\222 \(1929\) pt. 3, ch. 36.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 618.25456 Tm
( You can\222t go home again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 602.42047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1940\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 570.2124 Tm
( 11.124 Tom Wolfe 1931\227)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The bonfire of the vanities.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 532.67047 Tm
(Title of novel \(1987\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 500.4624 Tm
( 11.125 Mary Wollstonecraft 1759-97)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( The divine right of husbands, like the divine right of kings, may, i\
t is hoped, in this enlightened )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(age, be contested without danger.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 444.92047 Tm
(\221A Vindication of the Rights of Woman\222 \(1792\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.00456 Tm
( A king is always a king\227and a woman always a woman: his authority\
and her sex ever stand )Tj
T*
(between them and rational converse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.17047 Tm
(\221A Vindication of the Rights of Woman\222 \(1792\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.25456 Tm
( I do not wish them [women] to have power over men; but over themselv\
es.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 353.42047 Tm
(\221A Vindication of the Rights of Woman\222 \(1792\) ch. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 332.50456 Tm
( When a man seduces a woman, it should, I think, be termed a left-han\
ded marriage.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(\221A Vindication of the Rights of Woman\222 \(1792\) ch. 4)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 284.4624 Tm
( 11.126 Cardinal Wolsey c.1475-1530)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Father Abbot, I am come to lay my bones amongst you.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.92047 Tm
(Cavendish \221Negotiations of Thomas Woolsey\222 \(1641\) p. 108)Tj
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( Had I but served God as diligently as I have served the King, he wou\
ld not have given me over )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(in my gray hairs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.17047 Tm
(Cavendish \221Negotiations of Thomas Woolsey\222 \(1641\) p. 113)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 159.9624 Tm
( 11.127 Mrs Henry Wood 1814-87)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Dead! and...never called me mother.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 122.42047 Tm
(\221East Lynne\222 \(dramatized version by T. A. Palmer, 1874\). These w\
ords do not occur in the novel)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 90.2124 Tm
( 11.128 Woodbine Willie)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
T*
( See G. A. Studdert Kennedy \(7.180\))Tj
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( 11.129 Lt.-Commander Thomas Woodroofe 1899-1978)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( At the present moment, the whole Fleet\222s lit up. When I say \221l\
it up\222, I mean lit up by fairy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(lamps.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 697.42047 Tm
(Radio broadcast, 20 May 1937)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 665.2124 Tm
( 11.130 Harry Woods)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Oh we ain\222t got a barrel of money,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Maybe we\222re ragged and funny,)Tj
T*
( But we\222ll travel along)Tj
T*
( Singin\222 a song,)Tj
T*
( Side by side.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 555.67047 Tm
(\221Side by Side\222 \(1927 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.75456 Tm
( When the red, red, robin comes bob, bob, bobbin\222 along.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(Title of song \(1926\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 486.7124 Tm
( 11.131 Virginia Woolf 1882-1941)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Righteous indignation...is misplaced if we agree with the lady\222s \
maid that high birth is a form )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(of congenital insanity, that the sufferer merely inherits diseases of hi\
s ancestors, and endures )Tj
T*
(them, for the most part very stoically, in one of those comfortably padd\
ed lunatic asylums which )Tj
T*
(are known, euphemistically, as the stately homes of England.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 395.17047 Tm
(\221Lady Dorothy Nevill\222 in \221The Common Reader\222 \(1925\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 374.25456 Tm
( We are nauseated by the sight of trivial personalities decomposing i\
n the eternity of print.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 358.42047 Tm
(\221The Modern Essay\222 in \221The Common Reader\222 \(1925\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 337.50456 Tm
( Each had his past shut in him like the leaves of a book known to him\
by heart; and his friends )Tj
T*
(could only read the title.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 303.67047 Tm
(\221Jacob\222s Room\222 \(1922\) ch. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 282.75456 Tm
( A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fic\
tion.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 266.92047 Tm
(\221A Room of One\222s Own\222 \(1929\) ch. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 246.00456 Tm
( Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing \
the magic and delicious )Tj
T*
(power of reflecting the figure of a man at twice its natural size.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221A Room of One\222s Own\222 \(1929\) ch. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( Literature is strewn with the wreckage of men who have minded beyond\
reason the opinions of )Tj
T*
(others.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221A Room of One\222s Own\222 \(1929\) ch. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( So that is marriage, Lily thought, a man and a woman looking at a gi\
rl throwing a ball.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.67047 Tm
(\221To the Lighthouse\222 \(1927\) pt. 1, ch. 13)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.75456 Tm
( Things have dropped from me. I have outlived certain desires; I have\
lost friends, some by )Tj
T*
(death\227Percival\227others through sheer inability to cross the street.\
)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.92047 Tm
(\221The Waves\222 \(1931\) p. 202)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.00456 Tm
( Never did I read such tosh [as James Joyce\222s Ulysses]. As for the\
first two chapters we will let )Tj
ET
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(them pass, but the 3rd 4th 5th 6th\227merely the scratching of pimples o\
n the body of the bootboy )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(at Claridges.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(Letter to Lytton Strachey, 24 April 1922, in \221Letters\222 \(1976\) vo\
l. 2, p. 551)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 11.132 Alexander Woollcott 1887-1943)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( She [Dorothy Parker] is so odd a blend of Little Nell and Lady Macbe\
th. It is not so much the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(familiar phenomenon of a hand of steel in a velvet glove as a lacy sleev\
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T*
(concealed in its folds.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 613.42047 Tm
(\221While Rome Burns\222 \(1934\) \221Our Mrs Parker\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 592.50456 Tm
( All the things I really like to do are either illegal, immoral, or f\
attening.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 576.67047 Tm
(In R. E. Drennan \221Wit\222s End\222 \(1973\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( A broker is a man who takes your fortune and runs it into a shoestri\
ng.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(In Samuel Hopkins Adams \221Alexander Woollcott\222 \(1945\) ch. 15)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 519.00456 Tm
( I have no need of your God-damned sympathy. I only wish to be entert\
ained by some of your )Tj
T*
(grosser reminiscences.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 485.17047 Tm
(Letter to Rex O\222Malley, 1942, in Samuel Hopkins Adams \221Alexander W\
oollcott\222 \(1945\) ch. 34)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 452.9624 Tm
( 11.133 Dorothy Wordsworth 1771-1855)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( When we were in the woods beyond Gowbarrow park we saw a few daffodi\
ls close to the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(waterside...But as we went along there were more and yet more and at las\
t under the boughs of )Tj
T*
(the trees, we saw that there was a long belt of them along the shore, ab\
out the breadth of a )Tj
T*
(country turnpike road. I never saw daffodils so beautiful they grew amon\
g the mossy stones about )Tj
T*
(and about them, some rested their heads upon these stones as on pillow f\
or weariness and the rest )Tj
T*
(tossed and reeled and danced and seemed as if they verily laughed with t\
he wind that blew upon )Tj
T*
(them over the lake.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 307.42047 Tm
(\221The Grasmere Journals\222 15 April 1802.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 275.2124 Tm
( 11.134 Elizabeth Wordsworth 1840-1932)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( If all the good people were clever,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And all clever people were good,)Tj
T*
( The world would be nicer than ever)Tj
T*
( We thought that it possibly could.)Tj
T*
( But somehow, \222tis seldom or never)Tj
T*
( The two hit it off as they should;)Tj
T*
( The good are so harsh to the clever,)Tj
T*
( The clever so rude to the good!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 111.67047 Tm
(\221Good and Clever\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 79.4624 Tm
( 11.135 William Wordsworth 1770-1850)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( My apprehensions come in crowds;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I dread the rustling of the grass;)Tj
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( The very shadows of the clouds)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Have power to shake me as they pass.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 717.92047 Tm
(\221The Affliction of Margaret\227\222 \(1807\))Tj
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( And three times to the child I said,)Tj
T*
( \221Why, Edward, tell me why?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 663.17047 Tm
(\221Anecdote for Fathers\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 642.25456 Tm
( Another year!\227another deadly blow!)Tj
T*
( Another mighty Empire overthrown!)Tj
T*
( And we are left, or shall be left, alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 590.42047 Tm
(\221Another year!\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 569.50456 Tm
( Action is transitory,\227a step, a blow,)Tj
T*
( The motion of a muscle, this way or that\227)Tj
T*
( \222Tis done, and in the after-vacancy)Tj
T*
( We wonder at ourselves like men betrayed:)Tj
T*
( Suffering is permanent, obscure and dark,)Tj
T*
( And shares the nature of infinity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 463.67047 Tm
(\221The Borderers\222 \(1842\) act 3, l. 1539)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 442.75456 Tm
( Who is the happy Warrior? Who is he)Tj
T*
( That every man in arms should wish to be?)Tj
T*
( It is the generous spirit, who, when brought)Tj
T*
( Among the tasks of real life, hath wrought)Tj
T*
( Upon the plan that pleased his childish thought:)Tj
T*
( Whose high endeavours are an inward light)Tj
T*
( That makes the path before him always bright:)Tj
T*
( Who, with a natural instinct to discern)Tj
T*
( What knowledge can perform, is diligent to learn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 282.92047 Tm
(\221Character of the Happy Warrior\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.00456 Tm
( Earth has not anything to show more fair;)Tj
T*
( Dull would he be of soul who could pass by)Tj
T*
( A sight so touching in its majesty:)Tj
T*
( This City now doth, like a garment, wear)Tj
T*
( The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,)Tj
T*
( Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie)Tj
T*
( Open unto the fields, and to the sky;)Tj
T*
( All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.17047 Tm
(\221Composed upon Westminster Bridge\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.25456 Tm
( Dear God! the very houses seem asleep;)Tj
T*
( And all that mighty heart is lying still!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.42047 Tm
(\221Composed upon Westminster Bridge\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.50456 Tm
( Ah! then, if mine had been the Painter\222s hand,)Tj
ET
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( To express what then I saw; and add the gleam,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The light that never was, on sea or land,)Tj
T*
( The consecration, and the Poet\222s dream.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Elegiac Stanzas\222 \(on a picture of Peele Castle in a storm, 1807\)\
)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Not in the lucid intervals of life)Tj
T*
( That come but as a curse to party strife...)Tj
T*
( Is Nature felt, or can be.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Evening Voluntaries\222 \(1835\) 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( By grace divine,)Tj
T*
( Not otherwise, O Nature, we are thine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221Evening Voluntaries\222 \(1835\) 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 552.75456 Tm
( On Man, on Nature, and on Human Life,)Tj
T*
( Musing in solitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) preface, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( The Mind of Man\227)Tj
T*
( My haunt, and the main region of my song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) preface, l. 40)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Oh! many are the Poets that are sown)Tj
T*
( By Nature; men endowed with highest gifts,)Tj
T*
( The vision and the faculty divine;)Tj
T*
( Yet wanting the accomplishment of verse.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 1, l. 77)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( What soul was his, when from the naked top)Tj
T*
( Of some bold headland, he beheld the sun)Tj
T*
( Rise up, and bathe the world in light!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 1, l. 198)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( The good die first,)Tj
T*
( And they whose hearts are dry as summer dust)Tj
T*
( Burn to the socket.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.92047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 1, l. 500)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 207.00456 Tm
( This dull product of a scoffer\222s pen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 2, l. 484 \(referring to Voltaire\222\
s Candide\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( The intellectual power, through words and things,)Tj
T*
( Went sounding on, a dim and perilous way!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 3, l. 700)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Society became my glittering bride,)Tj
T*
( And airy hopes my children.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.67047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 3, l. 735)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 60.75456 Tm
( \222Tis a thing impossible, to frame)Tj
T*
( Conceptions equal to the soul\222s desires;)Tj
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( And the most difficult of tasks to keep)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Heights which the soul is competent to gain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 4, l. 136)Tj
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( I have seen)Tj
T*
( A curious child, who dwelt upon a tract)Tj
T*
( Of inland ground applying to his ear)Tj
T*
( The convolutions of a smooth-lipped shell;)Tj
T*
( To which, in silence hushed, his very soul)Tj
T*
( Listened intensely; and his countenance soon)Tj
T*
( Brightened with joy; for from within were heard)Tj
T*
( Murmurings, whereby the monitor expressed)Tj
T*
( Mysterious union with its native sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 4, l. 1132)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( \221To every Form of being is assigned\222,)Tj
T*
( Thus calmly spoke the venerable Sage,)Tj
T*
( \221An active Principle.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 465.67047 Tm
(\221The Excursion\222 \(1814\) bk. 9, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.75456 Tm
( The rapt one, of the godlike forehead,)Tj
T*
( The heaven-eyed creature sleeps in earth:)Tj
T*
( And Lamb, the frolic and the gentle,)Tj
T*
( Has vanished from his lonely hearth.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg\222 \(1835\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( How fast has brother followed brother,)Tj
T*
( From sunshine to the sunless land!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg\222 \(1835\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( The wiser mind)Tj
T*
( Mourns less for what age takes away)Tj
T*
( Than what it leaves behind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Fountain\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,)Tj
T*
( But to be young was very heaven!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221French Revolution, as it Appeared to Enthusiasts\222 \(1809\) and \221\
The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 9, l. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( A genial hearth, a hospitable board,)Tj
T*
( And a refined rusticity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.92047 Tm
(\221A genial hearth\222 \(1822\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.00456 Tm
( Not choice)Tj
T*
( But habit rules the unreflecting herd.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221Grant that by this\222 \(1822\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( The moving accident is not my trade;)Tj
T*
( To freeze the blood I have no ready arts:)Tj
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( \222Tis my delight, alone in summer shade,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To pipe a simple song for thinking hearts.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Hart-leap Well\222 \(1800\) pt. 2, l.1)Tj
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( \222Tis he whom you so long have lost,)Tj
T*
( He whom you love, your Idiot Boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221The Idiot Boy\222 \(1798\) l. 370)Tj
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( As her mind grew worse and worse,)Tj
T*
( Her body\227it grew better.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221The Idiot Boy\222 \(1798\) l. 415)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( All shod with steel)Tj
T*
( We hissed along the polished ice, in games)Tj
T*
( Confederate.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.92047 Tm
(\221Influence of Natural Objects\222 \(1809\) and \221The Prelude\222 \(\
1850\) bk. 1, l. 414)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.00456 Tm
( Leaving the tumultuous throng)Tj
T*
( To cut across the reflex of a star;)Tj
T*
( Image, that flying still before me, gleamed)Tj
T*
( Upon the glassy plain.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221Influence of Natural Objects\222 \(1809\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Yet still the solitary cliffs)Tj
T*
( Wheeled by me\227even as if the earth had rolled)Tj
T*
( With visible motion her diurnal round!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221Influence of Natural Objects\222 \(1809\) and \221The Prelude\222 \(\
1850\) bk. 1, l. 458)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( It is a beauteous evening, calm and free,)Tj
T*
( The holy time is quiet as a nun,)Tj
T*
( Breathless with adoration.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.67047 Tm
(\221It is a beauteous evening\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.75456 Tm
( Dear Child! dear Girl! that walkest with me here)Tj
T*
( If thou appear untouched by solemn thought,)Tj
T*
( Thy nature is not therefore less divine.)Tj
T*
( Thou liest in Abraham\222s bosom all the year;)Tj
T*
( And worshipp\222st at the temple\222s inner shrine,)Tj
T*
( God being with thee when we know it not.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221It is a beauteous evening\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( It is not to be thought of that the Flood)Tj
T*
( Of British freedom, which, to the open sea)Tj
T*
( Of the world\222s praise, from dark antiquity)Tj
T*
( Hath flowed, \221with pomp of waters, unwithstood\222...)Tj
T*
( Should perish.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221It is not to be thought of\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( In our halls is hung)Tj
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( Armoury of the invincible Knights of old:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( We must be free or die, who speak the tongue)Tj
T*
( That Shakespeare spake; the faith and morals hold)Tj
T*
( Which Milton held.\227In everything we are sprung)Tj
T*
( Of Earth\222s first blood, have titles manifold.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221It is not to be thought of\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( I travelled among unknown men)Tj
T*
( In lands beyond the sea;)Tj
T*
( Nor, England! did I know till then)Tj
T*
( What love I bore to thee.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221I travelled among unknown men\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( I wandered lonely as a cloud)Tj
T*
( That floats on high o\222er vales and hills,)Tj
T*
( When all at once I saw a crowd,)Tj
T*
( A host, of golden daffodils;)Tj
T*
( Beside the lake, beneath the trees,)Tj
T*
( Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221I wandered lonely as a cloud\222 \(1807\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( A poet could not but be gay,)Tj
T*
( In such a jocund company:)Tj
T*
( I gazed\227and gazed\227but little thought)Tj
T*
( What wealth to me the show had brought:)Tj
T*
( For oft, when on my couch I lie)Tj
T*
( In vacant or in pensive mood,)Tj
T*
( They flash upon that inward eye)Tj
T*
( Which is the bliss of solitude;)Tj
T*
( And then my heart with pleasure fills,)Tj
T*
( And dances with the daffodils.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.92047 Tm
(\221I wandered lonely as a cloud\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 228.00456 Tm
( Jones! as from Calais southward you and I)Tj
T*
( Went pacing side by side, this public Way)Tj
T*
( Streamed with the pomp of a too-credulous day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 176.17047 Tm
(\221Jones! as from Calais\222 \(1807\) \(referring to 14 July 1790\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 155.25456 Tm
( The gods approve)Tj
T*
( The depth, and not the tumult, of the soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 121.42047 Tm
(\221Laodamia\222 \(1815\) l. 74)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.50456 Tm
( Of all that is most beauteous\227imaged there)Tj
T*
( In happier beauty; more pellucid streams,)Tj
T*
( An ampler ether, a diviner air,)Tj
T*
( And fields invested with purpureal gleams.)Tj
ET
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(\221Laodamia\222 \(1815\) l. 103)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( I have owed to them,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( In hours of weariness, sensations sweet,)Tj
T*
( Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart;)Tj
T*
( And passing even into my purer mind,)Tj
T*
( With tranquil restoration:\227feelings too)Tj
T*
( Of unremembered pleasure: such, perhaps,)Tj
T*
( As have no slight or trivial influence)Tj
T*
( On that best portion of a good man\222s life,)Tj
T*
( His little, nameless, unremembered, acts)Tj
T*
( Of kindness and of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey\222 \(1798\) l. 26)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( That blessed mood,)Tj
T*
( In which the burthen of the mystery,)Tj
T*
( In which the heavy and the weary weight)Tj
T*
( Of all this unintelligible world,)Tj
T*
( Is lightened.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey\222 \(1798\) l. 37)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( For nature then)Tj
T*
( \(The coarser pleasures of my boyish days,)Tj
T*
( And their glad animal movements all gone by\))Tj
T*
( To me was all in all.\227I cannot paint)Tj
T*
( What then I was. The sounding cataract)Tj
T*
( Haunted me like a passion: the tall rock,)Tj
T*
( The mountain, and the deep and gloomy wood,)Tj
T*
( Their colours and their forms, were then to me)Tj
T*
( An appetite; a feeling and a love,)Tj
T*
( That had no need of a remoter charm,)Tj
T*
( By thought supplied, nor any interest)Tj
T*
( Unborrowed from the eye.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.92047 Tm
(\221Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey\222 \(1798\) l. 72)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 192.00456 Tm
( I have learned)Tj
T*
( To look on nature, not as in the hour)Tj
T*
( Of thoughtless youth; but hearing often-times)Tj
T*
( The still, sad music of humanity,)Tj
T*
( Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power)Tj
T*
( To chasten and subdue. And I have felt)Tj
T*
( A presence that disturbs me with the joy)Tj
T*
( Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime)Tj
T*
( Of something far more deeply interfused,)Tj
ET
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( Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And the round ocean and the living air,)Tj
T*
( And the blue sky, and in the mind of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey\222 \(1798\) l. 88)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( A power is passing from the earth)Tj
T*
( To breathless Nature\222s dark abyss;)Tj
T*
( But when the great and good depart,)Tj
T*
( What is it more than this\227)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( That Man who is from God sent forth,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Doth yet again to God return?\227)Tj
T*
( Such ebb and flow must ever be,)Tj
T*
( Then wherefore should we mourn?)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.67047 Tm
(\221Lines on the Expected Dissolution of Mr Fox\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.75456 Tm
( And much it grieved my heart to think)Tj
T*
( What man has made of man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Lines Written in Early Spring\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( I chanced to see at break of day)Tj
T*
( The solitary child.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 425.17047 Tm
(\221Lucy Gray\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 404.25456 Tm
( The good old rule)Tj
T*
( Sufficeth them, the simple plan,)Tj
T*
( That they should take, who have the power,)Tj
T*
( And they should keep who can.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 334.42047 Tm
(\221Rob Roy\222s Grave\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 180\
3\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( Behold her, single in the field,)Tj
T*
( Yon solitary Highland lass!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 279.67047 Tm
(\221The Solitary Reaper\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 18\
03\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 258.75456 Tm
( Will no one tell me what she sings?\227)Tj
T*
( Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow)Tj
T*
( For old, unhappy, far-off things,)Tj
T*
( And battles long ago.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 188.92047 Tm
(\221The Solitary Reaper\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 18\
03\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 168.00456 Tm
( Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain)Tj
T*
( That has been, and may be again.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 134.17047 Tm
(\221The Solitary Reaper\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 18\
03\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 113.25456 Tm
( The music in my heart I bore,)Tj
T*
( Long after it was heard no more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 79.42047 Tm
(\221The Solitary Reaper\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 18\
03\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 58.50456 Tm
( Degenerate Douglas! Oh, the unworthy lord!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 42.67047 Tm
(\221Sonnet\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1803\222)Tj
ET
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( What, you are stepping westward?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 735.92047 Tm
(\221Stepping Westward\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1803\
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15 0 0 15 10 715.00456 Tm
( Sweet Highland Girl, a very shower)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of beauty is thy earthly dower.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.17047 Tm
(\221To a Highland Girl\222 from \221Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 180\
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( Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour:)Tj
T*
( England hath need of thee; she is a fen)Tj
T*
( Of stagnant waters: altar, sword, and pen,)Tj
T*
( Fireside, the heroic wealth of hall and bower,)Tj
T*
( Have forfeited their ancient English dower)Tj
T*
( Of inward happiness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.42047 Tm
(\221Milton! thou shouldst\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 533.50456 Tm
( Some happy tone)Tj
T*
( Of meditation, slipping in between)Tj
T*
( The beauty coming and the beauty gone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 481.67047 Tm
(\221Most sweet it is\222 \(1835\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 460.75456 Tm
( My heart leaps up when I behold)Tj
T*
( A rainbow in the sky:)Tj
T*
( So was it when my life began;)Tj
T*
( So is it now I am a man;)Tj
T*
( So be it when I shall grow old,)Tj
T*
( Or let me die!)Tj
T*
( The Child is fatehr of the Man;)Tj
T*
( And I could wish my days to be)Tj
T*
( Bound each to each by natural piety.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.92047 Tm
(\221My heart leaps up\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.00456 Tm
( Nuns fret not at their convent\222s narrow room;)Tj
T*
( And hermits are contented with their cells.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.17047 Tm
(\221Nuns fret not\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.25456 Tm
( In sundry moods, \222twas pastime to be bound)Tj
T*
( Within the Sonnet\222s scanty plot of ground;)Tj
T*
( Pleased if some souls \(for such there needs must be\))Tj
T*
( Who have felt the weight of too much liberty,)Tj
T*
( Should find some solace there, as I have found.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 137.42047 Tm
(\221Nuns fret not\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 116.50456 Tm
( Move along these shades)Tj
T*
( In gentleness of heart; with gentle hand)Tj
T*
( Touch\227for there is a spirit in the woods.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 64.67047 Tm
(\221Nutting\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 43.75456 Tm
( But Thy most dreaded instrument)Tj
ET
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( In working out a pure intent,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Is man,\227arrayed for mutual slaughter,)Tj
T*
( Yea, Carnage is Thy daughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Ode, 1815\222 \(Imagination\227ne\222er before content, 1816\))Tj
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( There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,)Tj
T*
( The earth, and every common sight,)Tj
T*
( To me did seem)Tj
T*
( Apparelled in celestial light,)Tj
T*
( The glory and the freshness of a dream.)Tj
T*
( It is not now as it hath been of yore;\227)Tj
T*
( Turn wheresoe\222er I may,)Tj
T*
( By night or day,)Tj
T*
( The things which I have seen I now can see no more.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
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( The rainbow comes and goes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And lovely is the rose,)Tj
T*
( The moon doth with delight)Tj
T*
( Look round her when the heavens are bare,)Tj
T*
( Waters on a starry night)Tj
T*
( Are beautiful and fair;)Tj
T*
( The sunshine is a glorious birth:)Tj
T*
( But yet I know, where\222er I go,)Tj
T*
( That there hath passed away a glory from the earth.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 354.67047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 1)Tj
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( A timely utterance gave that thought relief,)Tj
T*
( And I again am strong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 299.92047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 279.00456 Tm
( The winds come to me from the fields of sleep.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 263.17047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 242.25456 Tm
( Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy Shepherd-boy.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 226.42047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.50456 Tm
( The sun shines warm,)Tj
T*
( And the Babe leaps up on his Mother\222s arm.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.67047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.75456 Tm
( \227But there\222s a tree of many, one,)Tj
T*
( A single field which I have looked upon,)Tj
T*
( Both of them speak of something that is gone:)Tj
T*
( The pansy at my feet)Tj
T*
( Doth the same tale repeat:)Tj
T*
( Whither is fled the visionary gleam?)Tj
T*
( Where is it now, the glory and the dream?)Tj
ET
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( Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting:)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The Soul that rises with us, our life\222s Star,)Tj
T*
( Hath had elsewhere its setting,)Tj
T*
( And cometh from afar;)Tj
T*
( Not in entire forgetfulness,)Tj
T*
( And not in utter nakedness,)Tj
T*
( But trailing clouds of glory do we come)Tj
T*
( From God, who is our home:)Tj
T*
( Heaven lies about us in our infancy!)Tj
T*
( Shades of the prison-house begin to close)Tj
T*
( Upon the growing boy,)Tj
T*
( But he beholds the light, and whence it flows,)Tj
T*
( He sees it in his joy;)Tj
T*
( The youth, who daily farther from the east)Tj
T*
( Must travel, still is Nature\222s priest,)Tj
T*
( And by the vision splendid)Tj
T*
( Is on his way attended;)Tj
T*
( At length the man perceives it die away,)Tj
T*
( And fade into the light of common day.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 411.17047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.25456 Tm
( As if his whole vocation)Tj
T*
( Were endless imitation.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.42047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 335.50456 Tm
( Thou Eye among the blind,)Tj
T*
( That, deaf and silent, read\222st the eternal deep)Tj
T*
( Haunted for ever by the eternal mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 283.67047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 262.75456 Tm
( Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke)Tj
T*
( The years to bring the inevitable yoke,)Tj
T*
( Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife?)Tj
T*
( Full soon thy Soul shall have her earthly freight,)Tj
T*
( And custom lie upon thee with a weight,)Tj
T*
( Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.92047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 8)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.00456 Tm
( O joy! that in our embers)Tj
T*
( Is something that doth live,)Tj
T*
( That nature yet remembers)Tj
T*
( What was so fugitive!)Tj
T*
( The thought of our past years in me doth breed)Tj
T*
( Perpetual benediction.)Tj
ET
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( Not for these I raise)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The song of thanks and praise;)Tj
T*
( But for those obstinate questionings)Tj
T*
( Of sense and outward things,)Tj
T*
( Fallings from us, vanishings;)Tj
T*
( Blank misgivings of a creature)Tj
T*
( Moving about in worlds not realised,)Tj
T*
( High instincts before which our mortal nature)Tj
T*
( Did tremble like a guilty thing suprised.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 574.42047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 553.50456 Tm
( Our noisy years seem moments in the being)Tj
T*
( Of the eternal Silence: truths that wake,)Tj
T*
( To perish never.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( Hence in a season of calm weather)Tj
T*
( Though inland far we be,)Tj
T*
( Our souls have sight of that immortal sea)Tj
T*
( Which brought us hither,)Tj
T*
( Can in a moment travel thither,)Tj
T*
( And see the children sport upon the shore,)Tj
T*
( And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 356.92047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.00456 Tm
( Though nothing can bring back the hour)Tj
T*
( Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;)Tj
T*
( We will grieve not, rather find)Tj
T*
( Strength in what remains behind...)Tj
T*
( In the faith that looks through death,)Tj
T*
( In years that bring the philosophic mind.)Tj
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( And O, ye fountains, meadows, hills and groves,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Forbode not any severing of our loves!)Tj
T*
( Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might;)Tj
T*
( I only have relinquished one delight)Tj
T*
( To live beneath your more habitual sway.)Tj
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 10)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Another race hath been, and other palms are won.)Tj
T*
( Thanks to the human heart by which we live,)Tj
T*
( Thanks to its tenderness, its joys and fears,)Tj
T*
( To me the meanest flower that blows can give)Tj
T*
( Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.)Tj
ET
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(\221Ode. Intimations of Immortality\222 \(1807\) st. 11)Tj
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( Stern daughter of the voice of God!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( O Duty! if that name thou love)Tj
T*
( Who art a light to guide, a rod)Tj
T*
( To check the erring and reprove.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Ode to Duty\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong;)Tj
T*
( And the most ancient heavens, through Thee, are fresh and strong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 609.67047 Tm
(\221Ode to Duty\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 588.75456 Tm
( Plain living and high thinking are no more:)Tj
T*
( The homely beauty of the good old cause)Tj
T*
( Is gone; our peace, our fearful innocence,)Tj
T*
( And pure religion breathing household laws.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 518.92047 Tm
(\221O friend! I know not\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 498.00456 Tm
( Once did she hold the gorgeous East in fee,)Tj
T*
( And was the safeguard of the West.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221Once did she hold\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Venice, the eldest Child of Liberty.)Tj
T*
( She was a maiden City, bright and free.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221Once did she hold\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 388.50456 Tm
( Isis and Cam, to patient Science dear!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221Open your gates\222 \(1822\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 351.75456 Tm
( Sweetest melodies)Tj
T*
( Are those by distance made more sweet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221Personal Talk\222 \(1807\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( There\222s something in a flying horse,)Tj
T*
( There\222s something in a huge balloon;)Tj
T*
( But through the clouds I\222ll never float)Tj
T*
( Until I have a little Boat,)Tj
T*
( Shaped like the crescent moon.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell\222 \(1819\) prologue, l. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( A primrose by a river\222s brim)Tj
T*
( A yellow primrose was to him,)Tj
T*
( And it was nothing more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell\222 \(1819\) pt. 1, l. 249)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( He gave a groan, and then another,)Tj
T*
( Of that which went before the brother,)Tj
T*
( And then he gave a third.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell\222 \(1819\) pt. 1, l. 443)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( Is it a party in a parlour?)Tj
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( Crammed just as they on earth were crammed\227)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Some sipping punch, some sipping tea,)Tj
T*
( But, as you by their faces see,)Tj
T*
( All silent and all damned!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Peter Bell\222 pt. 1, st. 66 in MS of 1819, later omitted)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( A Poet!\227He hath put his heart to school,)Tj
T*
( Nor dares to move unpropped upon the staff)Tj
T*
( Which Art hath lodged within his hand\227must laugh)Tj
T*
( By precept only, and shed tears by rule.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221A Poet! He hath put his heart\222 \(1842\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Physician art thou?\227one, all eyes,)Tj
T*
( Philosopher!\227a fingering slave,)Tj
T*
( One that would peep and botanize)Tj
T*
( Upon his mother\222s grave?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221A Poet\222s Epitaph\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( A reasoning, self-sufficing thing,)Tj
T*
( An intellectual All-in-all!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.92047 Tm
(\221A Poet\222s Epitaph\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.00456 Tm
( In common things that round us lie)Tj
T*
( Some random truths he can impart,\227)Tj
T*
( The harvest of a quiet eye,)Tj
T*
( That broods and sleeps on his own heart.)Tj
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( But he is weak; both Man and Boy,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hath been an idler in the land;)Tj
T*
( Contented if he might enjoy)Tj
T*
( The things which others understand.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \227Come hither in thy hour of strength;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Come, weak as is a breaking wave.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 240.67047 Tm
(\221A Poet\222s Epitaph\222 \(1800\))Tj
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( I recoil and droop, and seek repose)Tj
T*
( In listlessness from vain perplexity,)Tj
T*
( Unprofitably travelling toward the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 167.92047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 265)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 147.00456 Tm
( Made one long bathing of a summer\222s day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 131.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 290)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 110.25456 Tm
( Fair seed-time had my soul, and I grew up)Tj
T*
( Fostered alike by beauty and by fear.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 76.42047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 301)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 55.50456 Tm
( When the deed was done)Tj
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( I heard among the solitary hills)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Low breathings coming after me, and sounds)Tj
T*
( Of undistinguishable motion, steps)Tj
T*
( Almost as silent as the turf they trod.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 321)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Though mean)Tj
T*
( Our object and inglorious, yet the end)Tj
T*
( Was not ignoble.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 328)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Dust as we are, the immortal spirit grows)Tj
T*
( Like harmony in music; there is a dark)Tj
T*
( Inscrutable workmanship that reconciles)Tj
T*
( Discordant elements, makes them cling together)Tj
T*
( In one society.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 340)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( The grim shape)Tj
T*
( Towered up between me and the stars, and still,)Tj
T*
( For so it seemed, with purpose of its own)Tj
T*
( And measured motion like a living thing,)Tj
T*
( Strode after me.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.92047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 382)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 372.00456 Tm
( For many days, my brain)Tj
T*
( Worked with a dim and undetermined sense)Tj
T*
( Of unknown modes of being.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 391)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( Huge and mighty forms that do not live)Tj
T*
( Like living men, moved slowly through the mind)Tj
T*
( By day, and were a trouble to my dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 247.42047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 1, l. 398)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.50456 Tm
( I was taught to feel, perhaps too much,)Tj
T*
( The self-sufficing power of Solitude.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 192.67047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 2, l. 76)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 171.75456 Tm
( To thee)Tj
T*
( Science appears but, what in truth she is,)Tj
T*
( Not as our glory and our absolute boast,)Tj
T*
( But as a succedaneum, and a prop)Tj
T*
( To our infirmity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.92047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 2, l. 211)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 63.00456 Tm
( Where the statue stood)Tj
T*
( Of Newton, with his prism and silent face,)Tj
ET
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( The marble index of a mind for ever)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Voyaging through strange seas of Thought, alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 3, l. 61)Tj
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( Spirits overwrought)Tj
T*
( Were making night do penance for a day)Tj
T*
( Spent in a round of strenuous idleness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 4, l. 376)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Even forms and substances are circumfused)Tj
T*
( By that transparent veil with light divine,)Tj
T*
( And, through the turnings intricate of verse,)Tj
T*
( Present themselves as objects recognised,)Tj
T*
( In flashes, and with glory not their own.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 5, l. 601)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( We were brothers all)Tj
T*
( In honour, as in one community,)Tj
T*
( Scholars and gentlemen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.92047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 9, l. 227)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 444.00456 Tm
( All things have second birth;)Tj
T*
( The earthquake is not satisfied at once.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 10, l. 83)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 389.25456 Tm
( In the People was my trust,)Tj
T*
( And in the virtues which mine eyes had seen.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 355.42047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 11, l. 11)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 334.50456 Tm
( Not in Utopia\227subterranean fields,\227)Tj
T*
( Or some secreted island, Heaven knows where!)Tj
T*
( But in the very world, which is the world)Tj
T*
( Of all of us,\227the place where, in the end)Tj
T*
( We find our happiness, or not at all!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.67047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 11, l. 140)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.75456 Tm
( There is)Tj
T*
( One great society alone on earth:)Tj
T*
( The noble Living and the noble Dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 173.92047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 11, l. 393)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 153.00456 Tm
( I shook the habit off)Tj
T*
( Entirely and for ever, and again)Tj
T*
( In Nature\222s presence stood, as now I stand,)Tj
T*
( A sensitive being, a creative soul.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 83.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 12, l. 204)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 62.25456 Tm
( Imagination, which, in truth,)Tj
T*
( Is but another name for absolute power)Tj
ET
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( And clearest insight, amplitude of mind,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And Reason in her most exalted mood.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Prelude\222 \(1850\) bk. 14, l. 190)Tj
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( There was a roaring in the wind all night;)Tj
T*
( The rain came heavily and fell in floods;)Tj
T*
( But now the sun is rising, calm and bright.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Resolution and Independence\222 \(1807\) st. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( I thought of Chatterton, the marvellous boy,)Tj
T*
( The sleepless soul, that perished in his pride;)Tj
T*
( Of him who walked in glory and in joy,)Tj
T*
( Following his plough, along the mountain side:)Tj
T*
( By our own spirits are we deified:)Tj
T*
( We poets in our youth begin in gladness;)Tj
T*
( But thereof comes in the end despondency and madness.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 501.67047 Tm
(\221Resolution and Independence\222 \(1807\) st. 7)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.75456 Tm
( His words came feebly, from a feeble chest,)Tj
T*
( But each in solemn order followed each,)Tj
T*
( With something of a lofty utterance drest\227)Tj
T*
( Choice words, and measured phrase, above the reach)Tj
T*
( Of ordinary men; a stately speech;)Tj
T*
( Such as grave Livers do in Scotland use.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221Resolution and Independence\222 \(1807\) st. 14)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( The fear that kills;)Tj
T*
( And hope that is unwilling to be fed;)Tj
T*
( Cold, pain, and labour, and all fleshly ills;)Tj
T*
( And mighty Poets in their misery dead.)Tj
T*
( \227Perplexed, and longing to be comforted,)Tj
T*
( My question eagerly I did renew.)Tj
T*
( \221How is it that you live, and what is it you do?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 230.17047 Tm
(\221Resolution and Independence\222 \(1807\) st. 17)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 209.25456 Tm
( At the corner of Wood Street, when daylight appears,)Tj
T*
( Hangs a thrush that sings loud, it has sung for three years:)Tj
T*
( Poor Susan has passed by the spot, and has heard)Tj
T*
( In the silence of morning the song of the bird.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( \222Tis a note of enchantment; what ails her? She sees)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A mountain ascending, a vision of trees;)Tj
T*
( Bright volumes of vapour through Lothbury glide,)Tj
T*
( And a river flows on through the vale of Cheapside.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 63.67047 Tm
(\221The Reverie of Poor Susan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 42.75456 Tm
( I thought of Thee, my partner and my guide,)Tj
ET
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( As being past away\227Vain sympathies!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( For, backward, Duddon! as I cast my eyes,)Tj
T*
( I see what was, and is, and will abide;)Tj
T*
( Still glides the Stream, and shall for ever glide;)Tj
T*
( The Form remains, the Function never dies.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221The River Duddon\222 \(1820\) st. 34 \221After-Thought\222)Tj
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( Enough, if something from our hands have power)Tj
T*
( To live, and act, and serve the future hour;)Tj
T*
( And if, as toward the silent tomb we go,)Tj
T*
( Through love, through hope, and faith\222s transcendent dower,)Tj
T*
( We feel that we are greater than we know.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221The River Duddon\222 \(1820\) st. 34 \221After-Thought\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frowned,)Tj
T*
( Mindless of its just honours; with this key)Tj
T*
( Shakespeare unlocked his heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Scorn not the Sonnet\222 \(1827\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.75456 Tm
( She dwelt among the untrodden ways)Tj
T*
( Beside the springs of Dove,)Tj
T*
( A maid whom there were none to praise)Tj
T*
( And very few to love:)Tj
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( A violet by a mossy stone)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Half hidden from the eye!)Tj
T*
( Fair as a star, when only one)Tj
T*
( Is shining in the sky.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( She lived unknown, and few could know)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( When Lucy ceased to be;)Tj
T*
( But she is in her grave, and, oh,)Tj
T*
( The difference to me!)Tj
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(\221She dwelt among the untrodden ways\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 220.50456 Tm
( She was a phantom of delight)Tj
T*
( When first she gleamed upon my sight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221She was a phantom of delight\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.75456 Tm
( I saw her upon nearer view,)Tj
T*
( A spirit, yet a woman too!)Tj
T*
( Her household motions light and free,)Tj
T*
( And steps of virgin liberty;)Tj
T*
( A countenance in which did meet)Tj
T*
( Sweet records, promises as sweet;)Tj
T*
( A creature not too bright or good)Tj
T*
( For human nature\222s daily food;)Tj
ET
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( For transient sorrows, simple wiles,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Praise, blame, love, kisses, tears, and smiles.)Tj
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( And now I see with eye serene,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( A being breathing thoughtful breath,)Tj
T*
( A traveller betwixt life and death;)Tj
T*
( The reason firm, the temperate will,)Tj
T*
( Endurance, foresight, strength, and skill;)Tj
T*
( A perfect woman, nobly planned,)Tj
T*
( To warn, to comfort, and command;)Tj
T*
( And yet a spirit still, and bright)Tj
T*
( With something of angelic light.)Tj
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(\221She was a phantom of delight\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( For still, the more he works, the more)Tj
T*
( Do his weak ankles swell.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.42047 Tm
(\221Simon Lee\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 458.50456 Tm
( A slumber did my spirit seal;)Tj
T*
( I had no human fears:)Tj
T*
( She seemed a thing that could not feel)Tj
T*
( The touch of earthly years.)Tj
T*
( No motion has she now, no force;)Tj
T*
( She neither hears nor sees;)Tj
T*
( Rolled round in earth\222s diurnal course,)Tj
T*
( With rocks, and stones, and trees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.67047 Tm
(\221A slumber did my spirit seal\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.75456 Tm
( Love had he found in huts where poor men lie;)Tj
T*
( His daily teachers had been woods and rills,)Tj
T*
( The silence that is in the starry sky,)Tj
T*
( The sleep that is among the lonely hills.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 225.92047 Tm
(\221Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 205.00456 Tm
( O Man, that from thy fair and shining youth)Tj
T*
( Age might but take the things Youth needed not!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 171.17047 Tm
(\221The Small Celandine\222 \(There is a flower, 1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.25456 Tm
( What fond and wayward thoughts will slide)Tj
T*
( Into a Lover\222s head!)Tj
T*
( \221O mercy!\222 to myself I cried,)Tj
T*
( \221If Lucy should be dead!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 80.42047 Tm
(\221Strange Fits of Passion\222 \(1800\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 59.50456 Tm
( Surprised by joy\227impatient as the Wind)Tj
T*
( I turned to share the transport\227Oh! with whom)Tj
ET
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( But Thee, deep buried in the silent tomb.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221Surprised by joy\222 \(1815\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( Up! up! my friend, and quit your books;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Or surely you\222ll grow double.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221The Tables Turned\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 661.50456 Tm
( Our meddling intellect)Tj
T*
( Misshapes the beauteous forms of things:\227)Tj
T*
( We murder to dissect.)Tj
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( Enough of science and of art;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Close up these barren leaves.)Tj
T*
( Come forth, and bring with you a heart)Tj
T*
( That watches and receives.)Tj
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(\221The Tables Turned\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.00456 Tm
( Tax not the royal Saint with vain expense,)Tj
T*
( With ill-matched aims the Architect who planned\227)Tj
T*
( Albeit labouring for a scanty band)Tj
T*
( Of white-robed Scholars only\227this immense)Tj
T*
( And glorious work of fine intelligence!)Tj
T*
( Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore)Tj
T*
( Of nicely-calculated less or more.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.17047 Tm
(\221Tax not the royal Saint\222 \(1822\) \(referring to King\222s Colleg\
e Chapel, Cambridge\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 368.25456 Tm
( I\222ve measured it from side to side:)Tj
T*
( \222Tis three feet long and two feet wide.)Tj
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(\221The Thorn\222 \(1798\) st. 3 \(early reading\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 313.50456 Tm
( O blithe new-comer! I have heard,)Tj
T*
( I hear thee and rejoice.)Tj
T*
( O Cuckoo! Shall I call thee bird,)Tj
T*
( Or but a wandering voice?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221To the Cuckoo\222 \(O blithe new-comer!, 1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 222.75456 Tm
( Oft on the dappled turf at ease)Tj
T*
( I sit, and play with similes,)Tj
T*
( Loose types of things through all degrees.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221To the Same Flower [Daisy]\222 \(With little here to do, 1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( Type of the wise who soar, but never roam;)Tj
T*
( True to the kindred points of heaven and home!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221To a Skylark\222 \(Ethereal minstrel!, 1827\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( There\222s a flower that shall be mine,)Tj
T*
( \222Tis the little celandine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 61.42047 Tm
(\221To the Small Celandine\222 \(Pansies, lilies, 1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 40.50456 Tm
( Spade! with which Wilkinson hath tilled his lands,)Tj
ET
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( And shaped these pleasant walks by Emont\222s side,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Thou art a tool of honour in my hands;)Tj
T*
( I press thee, through the yielding soil, with pride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.67047 Tm
(\221To the Spade of a Friend\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 679.75456 Tm
( But an old age, serene and bright,)Tj
T*
( And lovely as a Lapland night,)Tj
T*
( Shall lead thee to thy grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.92047 Tm
(\221To a Young Lady\222 \(1802\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.00456 Tm
( Though fallen thyself, never to rise again,)Tj
T*
( Live, and take comfort. Thou hast left behind)Tj
T*
( Powers that will work for thee; air, earth, and skies;)Tj
T*
( There\222s not a breathing of the common wind)Tj
T*
( That will forget thee; thou hast great allies;)Tj
T*
( Thy friends are exultations, agonies,)Tj
T*
( And love, and man\222s unconquerable mind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.17047 Tm
(\221Toussaint, the most unhappy man\222 \(1803\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.25456 Tm
( Two Voices are there; one is of the sea,)Tj
T*
( One of the mountains; each a mighty Voice,)Tj
T*
( In both from age to age thou didst rejoice,)Tj
T*
( They were thy chosen music, Liberty!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 392.42047 Tm
(\221Two Voices are there\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 371.50456 Tm
( A simple child, dear brother Jim)Tj
T*
( That lightly draws its breath,)Tj
T*
( And feels its life in every limb,)Tj
T*
( What should it know of death?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 301.67047 Tm
(\221We are Seven\222 \(1798\) \(the words \221dear brother Jim\222 were \
omitted in the 1815 edition of his poems\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 280.75456 Tm
( I take my little porringer)Tj
T*
( And eat my supper there.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 246.92047 Tm
(\221We are Seven\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 226.00456 Tm
( \221But they are dead; those two are dead!)Tj
T*
( Their spirits are in Heaven!\222)Tj
T*
( \222Twas throwing words away; for still)Tj
T*
( The little Maid would have her will,)Tj
T*
( And said, \221Nay, we are seven!\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 138.17047 Tm
(\221We are Seven\222 \(1798\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 117.25456 Tm
( The world is too much with us; late and soon,)Tj
T*
( Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers:)Tj
T*
( Little we see in Nature that is ours.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.42047 Tm
(\221The world is too much with us\222 \(1807\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.50456 Tm
( Great God! I\222d rather be)Tj
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( A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn,)Tj
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( So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,)Tj
T*
( Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;)Tj
T*
( Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea,)Tj
T*
( Or hear old Triton blow his wreath\351d horn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 665.17047 Tm
(\221The world is too much with us\222 \(1807\).)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 644.25456 Tm
( The Poet writes under one restriction only, namely, that of the nece\
ssity of giving pleasure to a )Tj
T*
(human Being possessed of that information which may be expected from him\
, not as a lawyer, a )Tj
T*
(physician, a mariner, an astronomer or a natural philosopher, but as a M\
an.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221Lyrical Ballads\222 \(2nd ed., 1802\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 571.50456 Tm
( Poetry is the breath and finer spirit of all knowledge; it is the im\
passioned expression which is )Tj
T*
(in the countenance of all science.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 537.67047 Tm
(\221Lyrical Ballads\222 \(2nd ed., 1802\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 516.75456 Tm
( Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes it\
s origin from emotion )Tj
T*
(recollected in tranquillity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 482.92047 Tm
(\221Lyrical Ballads\222 \(2nd ed., 1802\) preface)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 462.00456 Tm
( Never forget what I believe was observed to you by Coleridge, that e\
very great and original )Tj
T*
(writer, in proportion as he is great and original, must himself create t\
he taste by which he is to be )Tj
T*
(relished.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.17047 Tm
(Letter to Lady Beaumont, 21 May 1807)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 377.9624 Tm
( 11.136 Sir Henry Wotton 1568-1639)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( How happy is he born and taught)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That serveth not another\222s will;)Tj
T*
( Whose armour is his honest thought,)Tj
T*
( And simple truth his utmost skill!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 286.42047 Tm
(\221The Character of a Happy Life\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 265.50456 Tm
( Who God doth late and early pray)Tj
T*
( More of his grace than gifts to lend;)Tj
T*
( And entertains the harmless day)Tj
T*
( With a religious book, or friend.)Tj
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0 -1.44254 TD
( This man is freed from servile bands,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of hope to rise, or fear to fall:\227)Tj
T*
( Lord of himself, though not of lands,)Tj
T*
( And having nothing, yet hath all.)Tj
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(\221The Character of a Happy Life\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 99.00456 Tm
( He first deceased; she for a little tried)Tj
T*
( To live without him: liked it not, and died.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 65.17047 Tm
(\221Death of Sir Albertus Moreton\222s Wife\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 44.25456 Tm
( You meaner beauties of the night,)Tj
ET
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( That poorly satisfy our eyes,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( More by your number, than your light;)Tj
T*
( You common people of the skies,)Tj
T*
( What are you when the moon shall rise?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221On His Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( In architecture as in all other operative arts, the end must direct \
the operation. The end is to )Tj
T*
(build well. Well building hath three conditions. Commodity, Firmness, an\
d Delight.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 628.42047 Tm
(\221Elements of Architecture\222 \(1624\) pt. 1)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 607.50456 Tm
( Take heed of thinking, The farther you go from the church of Rome, t\
he nearer you are to God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(In Izaak Walton \221Sir Henry Wotton\222, in Christopher Wordsworth \221\
Ecclesiastical Biography\222 \(1810\) vol. 5, p. )Tj
T*
(44; first published in Walton\222s first edition of \221Reliquiae Wotton\
ianae\222 \(1651\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 555.75456 Tm
( An ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for the good of hi\
s country.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 539.92047 Tm
(Written in the album of Christopher Fleckmore in 1604. Izaak Walton \221\
Life\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 507.7124 Tm
( 11.137 Frank Lloyd Wright 1867-1959)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The necessities were going by default to save the luxuries until I h\
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0 -1.2 TD
(necessities and which luxuries.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.17047 Tm
(\221Autobiography\222 \(1945\) bk. 2, p. 108)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 431.25456 Tm
( The physician can bury his mistakes, but the architect can only advi\
se his client to plant vines)Tj
T*
(\227so they should go as far as possible from home to build their first \
buildings.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 397.42047 Tm
(\221New York Times\222 4 Oct. 1953, sec. 6, p. 47)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 365.2124 Tm
( 11.138 Sir Thomas Wyatt c.1503-42)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And wilt thou leave me thus?)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Say nay, say nay, for shame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 309.67047 Tm
(\221An Appeal\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 288.75456 Tm
( What should I say,)Tj
T*
( Since faith is dead,)Tj
T*
( And Truth away)Tj
T*
( From you is fled?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.92047 Tm
(\221Farewell\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 198.00456 Tm
( They flee from me, that sometime did me seek)Tj
T*
( With naked foot, stalking in my chamber.)Tj
T*
( I have seen them gentle, tame, and meek,)Tj
T*
( That now are wild, and do not remember)Tj
T*
( That sometime they put themselves in danger)Tj
T*
( To take bread at my hand.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 92.17047 Tm
(\221Remembrance\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 71.25456 Tm
( When her loose gown from her shoulders did fall,)Tj
T*
( And she me caught in her arms long and small,)Tj
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( Therewith all sweetly did me kiss)Tj
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( And softly said, \221Dear heart how like you this?\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Remembrance\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 698.25456 Tm
( My lute, awake! perform the last)Tj
T*
( Labour that thou and I shall waste,)Tj
T*
( An end that I have now begun;)Tj
T*
( For when this song is sung and past,)Tj
T*
( My lute, be still, for I have done.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221To his Lute\222)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 578.2124 Tm
( 11.139 Woodrow Wyatt \(Baron Wyatt\) 1919\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A man falls in love through his eyes, a woman through her ears.)Tj
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(\221To the Point\222 \(1981\) p. 107)Tj
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T*
( A mistress should be like a little country retreat near the town, no\
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0 -1.2 TD
(only for a night and away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 452.92047 Tm
(\221The Country Wife\222 \(1672-3\) act 1, sc. 1)Tj
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( Go to your business, I say, pleasure, whilst I go to my pleasure, bu\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 416.17047 Tm
(\221The Country Wife\222 \(1672-3\) act 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 395.25456 Tm
( Nay, you had both felt his desperate deadly daunting dagger:\227ther\
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 379.42047 Tm
(\221The Gentleman Dancing-Master\222 \(1671-2\) act 5)Tj
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( Fy! madam, do you think me so ill bred as to love a husband?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 342.67047 Tm
(\221Love in a Wood\222 \(1671\) act 3, sc. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 321.75456 Tm
( You [drama critics] who scribble, yet hate all who write...)Tj
T*
( And with faint praises one another damn.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 287.92047 Tm
(\221The Plain Dealer\222 \(1677\) prologue)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 255.7124 Tm
( 11.141 Laurie Wyman)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Left hand down a bit!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 218.17047 Tm
(\221The Navy Lark\222 \(BBC radio series, 1959-77\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 185.9624 Tm
( 11.142 George Wyndham 1863-1913)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Over the construction of Dreadnoughts....What the people said was, \221\
We want eight, and we )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(won\222t wait.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 130.42047 Tm
(Speech in Wigan, 27 March 1909, in \221The Times\222 29 March 1909)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 98.2124 Tm
( 11.143 Tammy Wynette \(Wynette Pugh\) 1942\227and Billy Sherrill)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Stand by your man.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 60.67047 Tm
(Title of song \(1968\))Tj
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( 11.144 Andrew Of Wyntoun c.1350-c.1420)Tj
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( Quhen Alysander oure kyng wes dede,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( That Scotland led in luve and le,)Tj
T*
( Away wes sons of ale and brede,)Tj
T*
( Of wyne and wax, of gamyn and gle;)Tj
T*
( Oure gold wes changyd into lede,)Tj
T*
( Cryst, borne into virgynyte,)Tj
T*
( Succour Scotland, and remede,)Tj
T*
( That stad is in perplexyte.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 589.42047 Tm
(\221The Orygynale Cronykil\222 \(1795 ed.\) vol. 1, p. 401)Tj
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( 12.0 X)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 521.2124 Tm
( 12.1 Xenophon c.428/7-c.354 B.C.)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( The sea! the sea!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 483.67047 Tm
(\221Anabasis\222 4, 7, 24)Tj
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( 12.2 Augustin, Marquis De Xim\350n\351z 1726-1817)Tj
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( Attaquons dans ses eaux)Tj
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( La perfide Albion!)Tj
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(\221L\222\364re des Fran\347ais\222 \(October 1793\) in \221Po\350sies R\
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0 -1.2 TD
(p. 160.)Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 324.78038 Tm
( 13.0 Y)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 290.9624 Tm
( 13.1 Thomas Russell Ybarra b. 1880)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( A Christian is a man who feels)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Repentance on a Sunday)Tj
T*
( For what he did on Saturday)Tj
T*
( And is going to do on Monday.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 199.42047 Tm
(\221The Christian\222)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 167.2124 Tm
( 13.2 W. F. Yeames R. A. 1835-1918)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( And when did you last see your father?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 129.67047 Tm
(Title of painting \(1878\) now in the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool)Tj
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( 13.3 R. J. Yeatman 1898-1968)Tj
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T*
( See W. C. Sellar and R. J. Yeatman \(7.55\))Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 13.4 W. B. Yeats 1865-1939)Tj
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( I said \221a line will take us hours maybe,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Our stitching and unstitching has been naught.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 699.17047 Tm
(\221Adam\222s Curse\222)Tj
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( Had I the heavens\222 embroidered cloths,)Tj
T*
( Enwrought with golden and silver light,)Tj
T*
( The blue and the dim and the dark cloths)Tj
T*
( Of night and light and the half light,)Tj
T*
( I would spread the cloths under your feet:)Tj
T*
( But I, being poor, have only my dreams;)Tj
T*
( I have spread my dreams under your feet;)Tj
T*
( Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 536.42047 Tm
(\221Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven\222)Tj
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( When I was young,)Tj
T*
( I had not given a penny for a song)Tj
T*
( Did not the poet sing it with such airs,)Tj
T*
( That one believed he had a sword upstairs.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 445.67047 Tm
(\221All Things can Tempt Me\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 424.75456 Tm
( O body swayed to music, O brightening glance)Tj
T*
( How can we know the dancer from the dance?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 390.92047 Tm
(\221Among School Children\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 370.00456 Tm
( Only God, my dear,)Tj
T*
( Could love you for yourself alone)Tj
T*
( And not your yellow hair.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 318.17047 Tm
(\221Anne Gregory\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.25456 Tm
( A starlit or a moonlit dome distains)Tj
T*
( All that man is;)Tj
T*
( All mere complexities,)Tj
T*
( The fury and the mire of human veins.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 227.42047 Tm
(\221Byzantium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 206.50456 Tm
( Those images that yet)Tj
T*
( Fresh images beget,)Tj
T*
( That dolphin-torn, that gong-tormented sea.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 154.67047 Tm
(\221Byzantium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 133.75456 Tm
( Now that my ladder\222s gone)Tj
T*
( I must lie down where all ladders start)Tj
T*
( In the foul rag and bone shop of the heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 81.92047 Tm
(\221The Circus Animals\222 Desertion\222 pt. 3)Tj
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( I made my song a coat)Tj
T*
( Covered with embroideries)Tj
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( Out of old mythologies)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( From heel to throat;)Tj
T*
( But the fools caught it,)Tj
T*
( Wore it in the world\222s eye)Tj
T*
( As though they\222d wrought it.)Tj
T*
( Song, let them take it)Tj
T*
( For there\222s more enterprise)Tj
T*
( In walking naked.)Tj
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(\221A Coat\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 590.25456 Tm
( We were the last romantics\227chose for theme)Tj
T*
( Traditional sanctity and loveliness;)Tj
T*
( Whatever\222s written in what poets name)Tj
T*
( The book of the people; whatever most can bless)Tj
T*
( The mind of man or elevate a rhyme;)Tj
T*
( But all is changed, that high horse riderless,)Tj
T*
( Though mounted in that saddle Homer rode)Tj
T*
( Where the swan drifts upon a darkening flood.)Tj
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(\221Coole and Ballylee, 1931\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 427.50456 Tm
( The intellect of man is forced to choose)Tj
T*
( Perfection of the life, or of the work,)Tj
T*
( And if it take the second must refuse)Tj
T*
( A heavenly mansion, raging in the dark.)Tj
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(\221Coole Park and Ballylee, 1932\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 336.75456 Tm
( The Light of Lights)Tj
T*
( Looks always on the motive, not the deed,)Tj
T*
( The Shadow of Shadows on the deed alone.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 284.92047 Tm
(\221The Countess Cathleen\222 \(1895\) act 3)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 264.00456 Tm
( The years like great black oxen tread the world,)Tj
T*
( And God the herdsman goads them on behind,)Tj
T*
( And I am broken by their passing feet.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.17047 Tm
(\221The Countess Cathleen\222 \(1895\) act 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.25456 Tm
( A woman can be proud and stiff)Tj
T*
( When on love intent;)Tj
T*
( But Love has pitched his mansion in)Tj
T*
( The place of excrement;)Tj
T*
( For nothing can be sole or whole)Tj
T*
( That has not been rent.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 85.42047 Tm
(\221Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 64.50456 Tm
( Nor dread nor hope attend)Tj
T*
( A dying animal;)Tj
ET
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( A man awaits his end)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dreading and hoping all.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Death\222)Tj
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( He knows death to the bone\227)Tj
T*
( Man has created death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 664.42047 Tm
(\221Death\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 643.50456 Tm
( Down by the salley gardens my love and I did meet;)Tj
T*
( She passed the salley gardens with little snow-white feet.)Tj
T*
( She bid me take love easy, as the leaves grow on the tree;)Tj
T*
( But I, being young and foolish, with her would not agree.)Tj
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( In a field by the river my love and I did stand,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And on my leaning shoulder she laid her snow-white hand.)Tj
T*
( She bid me take life easy, as the grass grows on the weirs;)Tj
T*
( But I was young and foolish, and now am full of tears.)Tj
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(\221Down by the Salley Gardens\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 477.00456 Tm
( I have met them at close of day)Tj
T*
( Coming with vivid faces)Tj
T*
( From counter or desk among grey)Tj
T*
( Eighteenth-century houses.)Tj
T*
( I have passed with a nod of the head)Tj
T*
( Or polite meaningless words,)Tj
T*
( Or have lingered awhile and said)Tj
T*
( Polite meaningless words,)Tj
T*
( And thought before I had done)Tj
T*
( Of a mocking tale or a gibe)Tj
T*
( To please a companion)Tj
T*
( Around the fire at the club,)Tj
T*
( Being certain that they and I)Tj
T*
( But lived where motley is worn:)Tj
T*
( All changed, changed utterly:)Tj
T*
( A terrible beauty is born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 191.17047 Tm
(\221Easter, 1916\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 170.25456 Tm
( Too long a sacrifice)Tj
T*
( Can make a stone of the heart.)Tj
T*
( O when may it suffice?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221Easter, 1916\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( I write it out in a verse\227)Tj
T*
( MacDonagh and MacBride)Tj
T*
( And Connolly and Pearse)Tj
T*
( Now and in time to be,)Tj
ET
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( Wherever green is worn,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Are changed, changed utterly:)Tj
T*
( A terrible beauty is born.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Easter, 1916\222)Tj
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( I see a schoolboy when I think of him)Tj
T*
( With face and nose pressed to a sweet-shop window,)Tj
T*
( For certainly he sank into his grave)Tj
T*
( His senses and his heart unsatisfied,)Tj
T*
( And made\227being poor, ailing and ignorant,)Tj
T*
( Shut out from all the luxury of the world,)Tj
T*
( The ill-bred son of a livery stable-keeper\227)Tj
T*
( Luxuriant song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 538.42047 Tm
(\221Ego Dominus Tuus\222 \(referring to Keats\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 517.50456 Tm
( The fascination of what\222s difficult)Tj
T*
( Has dried the sap out of my veins, and rent)Tj
T*
( Spontaneous joy and natural content)Tj
T*
( Out of my heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221The Fascination of What\222s Difficult\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Never to have lived is best, ancient writers say;)Tj
T*
( Never to have drawn the breath of life, never to have looked into th\
e eye of day;)Tj
T*
( The second best\222s a gay goodnight and quickly turn away.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 374.92047 Tm
(\221From Oedipus at Colonus\222.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 354.00456 Tm
( The ghost of Roger Casement)Tj
T*
( Is beating on the door.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 320.17047 Tm
(\221The Ghost of Roger Casement\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 299.25456 Tm
( I mourn for that most lonely thing; and yet God\222s will be done,)Tj
T*
( I knew a phoenix in my youth so let them have their day.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 265.42047 Tm
(\221His Phoenix\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 244.50456 Tm
( The light of evening, Lissadell,)Tj
T*
( Great windows open to the south,)Tj
T*
( Two girls in silk kimonos, both)Tj
T*
( Beautiful, one a gazelle.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 174.67047 Tm
(\221In Memory of Eva Gore Booth and Con Markiewicz\222)Tj
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( The innocent and the beautiful)Tj
T*
( Have no enemy but time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(\221In Memory of Eva Gore Booth and Con Markiewicz\222)Tj
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( Out-worn heart, in a time out-worn,)Tj
T*
( Come clear of the nets of wrong and right;)Tj
T*
( Laugh, heart, again in the gray twilight;)Tj
T*
( Sigh, heart, again in the dew of morn.)Tj
ET
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(\221Into the Twilight\222)Tj
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( Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Nor public man, nor angry crowds,)Tj
T*
( A lonely impulse of delight)Tj
T*
( Drove to this tumult in the clouds;)Tj
T*
( I balanced all, brought all to mind,)Tj
T*
( The years to come seemed waste of breath,)Tj
T*
( A waste of breath the years behind)Tj
T*
( In balance with this life, this death.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 592.42047 Tm
(\221An Irish Airman Foresees his Death\222)Tj
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( I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,)Tj
T*
( And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;)Tj
T*
( Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,)Tj
T*
( And live alone in the bee-loud glade.)Tj
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( And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;)Tj
T*
( There midnight\222s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,)Tj
T*
( And evening full of the linnet\222s wings.)Tj
0 -1.45 TD
( I will arise and go now, for always night and day)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;)Tj
T*
( While I stand on the roadway or on the pavements gray,)Tj
T*
( I hear it in the deep heart\222s core.)Tj
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(\221The Lake Isle of Innisfree\222)Tj
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( The land of faery,)Tj
T*
( Where nobody gets old and godly and grave,)Tj
T*
( Where nobody gets old and crafty and wise,)Tj
T*
( Where nobody gets old and bitter of tongue.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 259.42047 Tm
(\221The Land of Heart\222s Desire\222 \(1894\) p. 12)Tj
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( Land of Heart\222s Desire,)Tj
T*
( Where beauty has no ebb, decay no flood,)Tj
T*
( But joy is wisdom, Time an endless song.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 186.67047 Tm
(\221The Land of Heart\222s Desire\222 \(1894\) p. 36)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 165.75456 Tm
( A sudden blow: the great wings beating still)Tj
T*
( Above the staggering girl, her thighs caressed)Tj
T*
( By the dark webs, her nape caught in his bill,)Tj
T*
( He holds her helpless breast upon his breast.)Tj
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( How can those terrified vague fingers push)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The feathered glory from her loosening thighs?)Tj
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(\221Leda and the Swan\222)Tj
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( A shudder in the loins engenders there)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The broken wall, the burning roof and tower)Tj
T*
( And Agamemnon dead.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Leda and the Swan\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( Our master Caesar is in the tent)Tj
T*
( Where the maps are spread,)Tj
T*
( His eyes fixed upon nothing,)Tj
T*
( A hand under his head.)Tj
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( Like a long-legged fly upon the stream)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( His mind moves upon silence.)Tj
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(\221Long-Legged Fly\222)Tj
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( What were all the world\222s alarms)Tj
T*
( To mighty Paris when he found)Tj
T*
( Sleep upon a golden bed)Tj
T*
( That first night in Helen\222s arms?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 479.92047 Tm
(\221Lullaby\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 459.00456 Tm
( We had fed the heart on fantasies,)Tj
T*
( The heart\222s grown brutal from the fare,)Tj
T*
( More substance in our enmities)Tj
T*
( Than in our love; Oh, honey-bees)Tj
T*
( Come build in the empty house of the stare.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 371.17047 Tm
(\221Meditations in Time of Civil War 6: The Stare\222s Nest by my Window\
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15 0 0 15 10 350.25456 Tm
( Think where man\222s glory most begins and ends)Tj
T*
( And say my glory was I had such friends.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 316.42047 Tm
(\221The Municipal Gallery Re-visited\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 295.50456 Tm
( Why, what could she have done being what she is?)Tj
T*
( Was there another Troy for her to burn?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 261.67047 Tm
(\221No Second Troy\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 240.75456 Tm
( Where, where but here have Pride and Truth,)Tj
T*
( That long to give themselves for wage,)Tj
T*
( To shake their wicked sides at youth)Tj
T*
( Restraining reckless middle age?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 170.92047 Tm
(\221On hearing that the Students of our New University have joined the A\
gitation against Immoral Literature\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 150.00456 Tm
( A pity beyond all telling,)Tj
T*
( Is hid in the heart of love.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 116.17047 Tm
(\221The Pity of Love\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 95.25456 Tm
( An intellectual hatred is the worst,)Tj
T*
( So let her think opinions are accursed.)Tj
T*
( Have I not seen the loveliest woman born)Tj
T*
( Out of the mouth of Plenty\222s horn,)Tj
ET
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( Because of her opinionated mind)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Barter that horn and every good)Tj
T*
( By quiet natures understood)Tj
T*
( For an old bellows full of angry wind?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221A Prayer for My Daughter\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( I think it better that at times like these)Tj
T*
( We poets keep our mouths shut, for in truth)Tj
T*
( We have no gift to set a statesman right;)Tj
T*
( He\222s had enough of meddling who can please)Tj
T*
( A young girl in the indolence of her youth)Tj
T*
( Or an old man upon a winter\222s night.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 556.42047 Tm
(\221A Reason for Keeping Silent\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 535.50456 Tm
( Out of Ireland have we come.)Tj
T*
( Great hatred, little room,)Tj
T*
( Maimed us at the start.)Tj
T*
( I carry from my mother\222s womb)Tj
T*
( A fanatic heart.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 447.67047 Tm
(\221Remorse for Intemperate Speech\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 426.75456 Tm
( Rose of all Roses, Rose of all the World!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 410.92047 Tm
(\221The Rose of Battle\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 390.00456 Tm
( That is no country for old men. The young)Tj
T*
( In one another\222s arms, birds in the trees\227)Tj
T*
( Those dying generations\227at their song,)Tj
T*
( The salmon-falls, the mackerel-crowded seas,)Tj
T*
( Fish flesh or fowl, commend all summer long)Tj
T*
( Whatever is begotten born and dies.)Tj
T*
( Caught in that sensual music all neglect)Tj
T*
( Monuments of unageing intellect.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 248.17047 Tm
(\221Sailing to Byzantium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 227.25456 Tm
( An aged man is but a paltry thing,)Tj
T*
( A tattered coat upon a stick, unless)Tj
T*
( Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing)Tj
T*
( For every tatter in its mortal dress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 157.42047 Tm
(\221Sailing to Byzantium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 136.50456 Tm
( And therefore I have sailed the seas and come)Tj
T*
( To the holy city of Byzantium.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 102.67047 Tm
(\221Sailing to Byzantium\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 81.75456 Tm
( Bald heads forgetful of their sins,)Tj
T*
( Old, learned, respectable bald heads)Tj
T*
( Edit and annotate the lines)Tj
ET
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( That young men, tossing on their beds,)Tj
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( Rhymed out in love\222s despair)Tj
T*
( To flatter beauty\222s ignorant ear.)Tj
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( All shuffle there; all cough in ink;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( All wear the carpet with their shoes;)Tj
T*
( All think what other people think;)Tj
T*
( All know the man their neighbour knows.)Tj
T*
( Lord, what would they say)Tj
T*
( Did their Catullus walk that way?)Tj
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(\221The Scholars\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 568.50456 Tm
( Turning and turning in the widening gyre)Tj
T*
( The falcon cannot hear the falconer;)Tj
T*
( Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;)Tj
T*
( Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,)Tj
T*
( The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere)Tj
T*
( The ceremony of innocence is drowned;)Tj
T*
( The best lack all conviction, while the worst)Tj
T*
( Are full of passionate intensity.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 426.67047 Tm
(\221The Second Coming\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 405.75456 Tm
( The darkness drops again but now I know)Tj
T*
( That twenty centuries of stony sleep)Tj
T*
( Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,)Tj
T*
( And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,)Tj
T*
( Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 317.92047 Tm
(\221The Second Coming\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 297.00456 Tm
( Was it for this the wild geese spread)Tj
T*
( The grey wing upon every tide;)Tj
T*
( For this that all that blood was shed,)Tj
T*
( For this Edward Fitzgerald died,)Tj
T*
( And Robert Emmet and Wolfe Tone,)Tj
T*
( All that delirium of the brave;)Tj
T*
( Romantic Ireland\222s dead and gone,)Tj
T*
( It\222s with O\222Leary in the grave.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 155.17047 Tm
(\221September, 1913\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 134.25456 Tm
( I thought no more was needed)Tj
T*
( Youth to prolong)Tj
T*
( Than dumb-bell and foil)Tj
T*
( To keep the body young.)Tj
T*
( Oh, who could have foretold)Tj
T*
( That the heart grows old?)Tj
ET
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(\221A Song\222)Tj
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( And pluck till time and times are done,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The silver apples of the moon,)Tj
T*
( The golden apples of the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221Song of Wandering Aengus\222)Tj
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( You think it horrible that lust and rage)Tj
T*
( Should dance attendance upon my old age;)Tj
T*
( They were not such a plague when I was young;)Tj
T*
( What else have I to spur me into song?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 591.67047 Tm
(\221The Spur\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 570.75456 Tm
( Pythagoras planned it. Why did the people stare?)Tj
T*
( His numbers, though they moved or seemed to move)Tj
T*
( In marble or in bronze, lacked character.)Tj
T*
( But boys and girls, pale from the imagined love)Tj
T*
( Of solitary beds, knew what they were,)Tj
T*
( That passion could bring character enough,)Tj
T*
( And pressed at midnight in some public place)Tj
T*
( Live lips upon a plummet-measured face.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Calculations that look but casual flesh, put down)Tj
T*
( All Asiatic vague immensities,)Tj
T*
( And not the banks of oars that swam upon)Tj
T*
( The many-headed foam at Salamis.)Tj
T*
( Europe put off that foam when Phidias)Tj
T*
( Gave women dreams and dreams their looking glass.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
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(\221The Statues\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( When Pearse summoned Cuchulain to his side)Tj
T*
( What stalked through the Post Office? What intellect,)Tj
T*
( What calculation, number, measurement, replied?)Tj
T*
( We Irish, born into that ancient sect)Tj
T*
( But thrown upon this filthy modern tide)Tj
T*
( And by its formless spawning, fury wrecked,)Tj
T*
( Climb to our proper dark, that we may trace)Tj
T*
( The lineaments of a plummet-measured face.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 118.42047 Tm
(\221The Statues\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 97.50456 Tm
( Swift has sailed into his rest;)Tj
T*
( Savage indignation there)Tj
T*
( Cannot lacerate his breast.)Tj
T*
( Imitate him if you dare,)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
( Served human liberty.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221Swift\222s Epitaph\222.)Tj
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( But where\222s the wild dog that has praised his fleas?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 682.42047 Tm
(\221To a Poet, Who would have Me Praise certain bad Poets, Imitators of \
His and of Mine\222)Tj
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( Red Rose, proud Rose, sad Rose of all my days!)Tj
T*
( Come near me, while I sing the ancient ways.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 627.67047 Tm
(\221To the Rose upon the Rood of Time\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 606.75456 Tm
( A woman of so shining loveliness)Tj
T*
( That men threshed corn at midnight by a tress,)Tj
T*
( A little stolen tress.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 554.92047 Tm
(\221To the Secret Rose\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 534.00456 Tm
( When shall the stars be blown about the sky,)Tj
T*
( Like the sparks blown out of a smithy, and die?)Tj
T*
( Surely thine hour has come, thy great wind blows,)Tj
T*
( Far off, most secret, and inviolate Rose?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 464.17047 Tm
(\221To the Secret Rose\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 443.25456 Tm
( Does the imagination dwell the most)Tj
T*
( Upon a woman won or woman lost?)Tj
T*
( If on the lost, admit you turned aside)Tj
T*
( From a great labyrinth out of pride.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 373.42047 Tm
(\221The Tower\222 pt. 2)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 352.50456 Tm
( Measurement began our might:)Tj
T*
( Forms a stark Egyptian thought,)Tj
T*
( Forms that gentler Phidias wrought.)Tj
T*
( Michaelangelo left a proof)Tj
T*
( On the Sistine Chapel roof,)Tj
T*
( Where but half-awakened Adam)Tj
T*
( Can disturb globe-trotting Madam)Tj
T*
( Till her bowels are in heat,)Tj
T*
( Proof that there\222s a purpose set)Tj
T*
( Before the secret working mind:)Tj
T*
( Profane perfection of mankind.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 156.67047 Tm
(\221Under Ben Bulben\222 pt. 4)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 135.75456 Tm
( Irish poets, learn your trade,)Tj
T*
( Sing whatever is well made,)Tj
T*
( Scorn the sort now growing up)Tj
T*
( All out of shape from toe to top,)Tj
T*
( Their unremembering hearts and heads)Tj
T*
( Base-born products of base beds.)Tj
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( Sing the peasantry, and then)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Hard-riding country gentlemen,)Tj
T*
( The holiness of monks, and after)Tj
T*
( Porter-drinkers\222 randy laughter.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 683.17047 Tm
(\221Under Ben Bulben\222 pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 662.25456 Tm
( Cast your mind on other days)Tj
T*
( That we in coming days may be)Tj
T*
( Still the indomitable Irishry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 610.42047 Tm
(\221Under Ben Bulben\222 pt. 5)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 589.50456 Tm
( Under bare Ben Bulben\222s head)Tj
T*
( In Drumcliffe churchyard Yeats is laid.)Tj
T*
( An ancestor was rector there)Tj
T*
( Long years ago, a church stands near,)Tj
T*
( By the road an ancient cross.)Tj
T*
( No marble, no conventional phrase;)Tj
T*
( On limestone quarried near the spot)Tj
T*
( By his command these words are cut:)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
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T*
( Horseman pass by!)Tj
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/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 389.92047 Tm
(\221Under Ben Bulben\222 pt. 6)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 369.00456 Tm
( While on the shop and street I gazed)Tj
T*
( My body of a sudden blazed;)Tj
T*
( And twenty minutes more or less)Tj
T*
( It seemed, so great my happiness,)Tj
T*
( That I was bless\351d and could bless.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 281.17047 Tm
(\221Vacillation\222)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 260.25456 Tm
( When you are old and grey and full of sleep,)Tj
T*
( And nodding by the fire, take down this book)Tj
T*
( And slowly read and dream of the soft look)Tj
T*
( Your eyes had once, and of their shadows deep.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( How many loved your moments of glad grace,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( And loved your beauty with love false or true,)Tj
T*
( But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you,)Tj
T*
( And loved the sorrows of your changing face.)Tj
T*
( And bending down beside the glowing bars)Tj
T*
( Murmur, a little sad, \221From us fled Love.)Tj
T*
( He paced upon the mountains far above,)Tj
T*
( And hid his face amid a crowd of stars.\222)Tj
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(\221When You Are Old\222)Tj
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( What lively lad most pleasured me)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Of all that with me lay?)Tj
T*
( I answer that I gave my soul)Tj
T*
( And loved in misery,)Tj
T*
( But had great pleasure with a lad)Tj
T*
( That I loved bodily.)Tj
0.2 0.60001 0.39999 rg
/T1_0 1 Tf
0 -1.44254 TD
( Flinging from his arms I laughed)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To think his passion such)Tj
T*
( He fancied that I gave a soul)Tj
T*
( Did but our bodies touch,)Tj
T*
( And laughed upon his breast to think)Tj
T*
( Beast gave beast as much.)Tj
0 0 0 rg
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 534.17047 Tm
(\221A Woman Young and Old\222 pt. 9)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 513.25456 Tm
( We make out of the quarrel with others, rhetoric, but of the quarrel\
with ourselves, poetry.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 497.42047 Tm
(\221Anima Hominis\222 sect. 5 in \221Essays\222 \(1924\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 476.50456 Tm
( In dreams begins responsibility.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 460.67047 Tm
(\221Responsibilities\222 \(1914\) epigraph)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 428.4624 Tm
( 13.5 Jack Yellen 1892-1991)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Happy days are here again!)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( The skies above are clear again.)Tj
T*
( Let us sing a song of cheer again,)Tj
T*
( Happy days are here again!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 336.92047 Tm
(\221Happy Days Are Here Again\222 \(1929 song\))Tj
15 0 0 15 10 316.00456 Tm
( I\222m the last of the red-hot mamas.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 300.17047 Tm
(Title of song \(1928; popularized by Sophie Tucker\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 267.9624 Tm
( 13.6 Edward Young 1683-1765)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Be wise with speed;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( A fool at forty is a fool indeed.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 212.42047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 2, l. 281)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 191.50456 Tm
( For who does nothing with a better grace?)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 175.67047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 4, l. 86)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 154.75456 Tm
( With skill she vibrates her eternal tongue,)Tj
T*
( For ever most divinely in the wrong.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 120.92047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 6, l. 106)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 100.00456 Tm
( For her own breakfast she\222ll project a scheme,)Tj
T*
( Nor take her tea without a stratagem.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 66.17047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 6, l. 187)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 45.25456 Tm
( One to destroy, is murder by the law;)Tj
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( And gibbets keep the lifted hand in awe;)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( To murder thousands, takes a specious name,)Tj
T*
( War\222s glorious art, and gives immortal fame.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 701.17047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 7, l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 680.25456 Tm
( How commentators each dark passage shun,)Tj
T*
( And hold their farthing candle to the sun.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 646.42047 Tm
(\221Love of Fame: The Universal Passion\222 \(1725-8\) Satire 7, l. 97.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 625.50456 Tm
( Tired Nature\222s sweet restorer, balmy sleep!)Tj
T*
( He, like the world, his ready visit pays)Tj
T*
( Where fortune smiles; the wretched he forsakes.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 573.67047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 1)Tj
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( Night, sable goddess! from her ebon throne)Tj
T*
( In rayless majesty, now stretches forth)Tj
T*
( Her leaden sceptre o\222er a slumb\222ring world.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 500.92047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 18)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 480.00456 Tm
( We take no note of Time)Tj
T*
( But from its Loss.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 446.17047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 55)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 425.25456 Tm
( Be wise to-day; \222tis madness to defer.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 409.42047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 390)Tj
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( Procrastination is the thief of time.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 372.67047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 393)Tj
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( At thirty a man suspects himself a fool;)Tj
T*
( Knows it at forty, and reforms his plan;)Tj
T*
( At fifty chides his infamous delay,)Tj
T*
( Pushes his prudent purpose to resolve;)Tj
T*
( In all the magnanimity of thought)Tj
T*
( Resolves; and re-resolves; then dies the same.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 245.92047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 417)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 225.00456 Tm
( All men think all men mortal, but themselves.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 209.17047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 1\222 l. 424)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 188.25456 Tm
( Beautiful as sweet!)Tj
T*
( And young as beautiful! and soft as young!)Tj
T*
( And gay as soft! and innocent as gay.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 136.42047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 3\222 l. 81)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( Shall our pale, withered hands be still stretched out,)Tj
T*
( Trembling, at once, with eagerness and age?)Tj
T*
( With avarice, and convulsions grasping hand?)Tj
T*
( Grasping at air! for what has earth beside?)Tj
T*
( Man wants but little; nor that little, long.)Tj
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(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 4\222 l. 118.\
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15 0 0 15 10 734.25456 Tm
( A God all mercy is a God unjust.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 718.42047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 4\222 l. 233)Tj
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( By night an atheist half believes a God.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 681.67047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 5\222 l. 176)Tj
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( To know the world, not love her, is thy point,)Tj
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( She gives but little, nor that little, long.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 626.92047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 8\222 l. 1276\
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15 0 0 15 10 606.00456 Tm
( Devotion! daughter of astronomy!)Tj
T*
( An undevout astronomer is mad.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 572.17047 Tm
(\221The Complaint: Night Thoughts\222 \(1742-5\) \221Night 9\222 l. 769)Tj
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( Life is the desert, life the solitude;)Tj
T*
( Death joins us to the great majority.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 517.42047 Tm
(\221The Revenge\222 \(1721\) act 4.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 496.50456 Tm
( You are so witty, profligate, and thin,)Tj
T*
( At once we think thee Milton, Death, and Sin.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 462.67047 Tm
( Epigram on Voltaire)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 13.7 George W. Young 1846-1919)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Your lips, on my own, when they printed \221Farewell\222,)Tj
0 -1.2 TD
( Had never been soiled by the \221beverage of hell\222;)Tj
T*
( But they come to me now with the bacchanal sign,)Tj
T*
( And the lips that touch liquor must never touch mine.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 338.92047 Tm
(\221The Lips That Touch Liquor Must Never Touch Mine\222; also attribute\
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T*
(Glazebrook)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 13.8 Michael Young 1915\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 272.17047 Tm
(The rise of the meritocracy 1870-2033.)Tj
T*
(Title of book \(1958\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 13.9 Waldemar Young et al.)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( We have ways of making men talk.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 187.42047 Tm
(\221Lives of a Bengal Lancer\222 \(1935 film; the words became a catch-p\
hrase as \221We have ways of making you )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(talk\222\))Tj
/TT2 1 Tf
17.5 0 0 17.5 10 138.03038 Tm
( 14.0 Z)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 115.50456 Tm
( )Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
0 -2.2028 TD
( 14.1 Israel Zangwill 1864-1926)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Scratch the Christian and you find the pagan\227spoiled.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 44.92047 Tm
(\221Children of the Ghetto\222 \(1892\) bk. 2, ch. 6)Tj
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( America is God\222s Crucible, the great Melting-Pot where all the ra\
ces of Europe are melting and )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(re-forming!)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 719.17047 Tm
(\221The Melting Pot\222 \(1908\) act 1)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 686.9624 Tm
( 14.2 Darryl F. Zanuck 1902-79)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( For God\222s sake don\222t say yes until I\222ve finished talking.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 649.42047 Tm
(In Philip French \221The Movie Moguls\222 \(1969\) ch. 5)Tj
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15 0 0 15 10 617.2124 Tm
( 14.3 Emiliano Zapata 1879-1919)Tj
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T*
( Muchos de ellos, por complacer a tiranos, por un pu\361ado de moneda\
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0 -1.2 TD
(soborno, est n derramando la sangre de sus hermanos.)Tj
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0 -1.2 TD
(corruption, are shedding the blood of their brothers.)Tj
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(\221Plan de Ayala\222 28 November 1911, para. 10 \(referring to the made\
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T*
(the revolutionary cause\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 474.7124 Tm
( 14.4 Frank Zappa 1940\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Rock journalism is people who can\222t write interviewing people who\
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0 -1.2 TD
(can\222t read.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 419.17047 Tm
(In Linda Botts \221Loose Talk\222 \(1980\) p. 177)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 386.9624 Tm
( 14.5 Robert Zemeckis 1952\227and Bob Gale 1952\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Back to the future.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 349.42047 Tm
(Title of film \(1985\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 317.2124 Tm
( 14.6 Ronald L. Ziegler 1939\227)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
T*
( Reminded of the President\222s previous statements that the White Ho\
use was not involved [in the )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(Watergate affair], Ziegler said that Mr Nixon\222s latest statement \221\
is the Operative White House )Tj
T*
(Position...and all previous statements are inoperative.\222)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 243.67047 Tm
(\221Boston Globe\222 18 April 1973)Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
15 0 0 15 10 211.4624 Tm
( 14.7 Grigori Zinoviev 1883-1936)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Armed warfare must be preceded by a struggle against the inclination\
s to compromise which )Tj
0 -1.2 TD
(are embedded among the majority of British workmen, against the ideas of\
evolution and )Tj
T*
(peaceful extermination of capitalism. Only then will it be possible to c\
ount upon complete )Tj
T*
(success of an armed insurrection.)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 119.92047 Tm
(Letter to the British Communist Party, 15 September 1924, in \221The Tim\
es\222 25 October 1924 \(the \221Zinoviev )Tj
T*
(Letter\222, said by some to be a forgery: see \221Listener\222 17 Septe\
mber 1987\))Tj
/TT1 1 Tf
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( 14.8 \310mile Zola 1840-1902)Tj
/TT0 1 Tf
0 -1.44719 TD
( Ne me regardez plus comme \347a, parce que vous allez vous user les \
yeux.)Tj
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( Don\222t go on looking at me like that, because you\222ll wear your \
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12.5 0 0 12.5 46 737.17047 Tm
(\221La B\352te Humaine\222 \(1889-90\) ch. 5 J\222accuse.)Tj
15 0 0 15 10 716.25456 Tm
( I accuse)Tj
12.5 0 0 12.5 46 700.42047 Tm
(Title of an open letter to the President of the French Republic, in conn\
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0 -1.2 TD
(in L\222Aurore 13 January 1898)Tj
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The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
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