| Alexander Pope - 1825 - 536 pagine
...190 Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience clear, Because he wants a thousand pounds a-year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honour lies. Fortune in men has some small difference made, One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade ; The cobbler apron'd,... | |
| British anthology - 1825 - 460 pagine
...human-kind, Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience clear, Because he wants a thousand pounds a year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honour lies. Fortune in men has some small difference made, One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade; The cobbler apron'd,... | |
| John Trotter Brockett - 1825 - 298 pagine
...pack on his back. digmtate, are lineally descended from parlnnen—tii rough no very remote genealogy. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part — there all the honour lies. — Pope. PADDICK, or PADDOCK, a frog. Sax. pad, pada. Never a toad. PatUockn, lodes, and water-snakes.... | |
| Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1825 - 508 pagine
...one, all would be mended — Who friendship with a knave haih made, Is judged a partner in the trade. Honour and shame from no condition rise : Act well your part ; there all the honour lies. The virtue of prosperity is temperance ; the virtue of adversity is fortitude Man's rich with little,... | |
| Jehoshaphat Aspin - 1825 - 330 pagine
...honour and real heroism. Our poet Pope, you know, very forcibly expresses this in few words : — ' Honour and shame from no condition rise, ' Act well your part, there all the honour lies.' " With respect to the emperor Claudius, he was the slave of his passions: a momentary impulse was communicated... | |
| John Trotter Brockett - 1825 - 296 pagine
...pack on his back. dignitate, are lineally descended from packmen — through no very remote genealogy. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part — there all the honour lies. — Pope. PADDICK, or PADDOCK, a frog. Sax. pad, pada. Never a toad. Paddockes, todes, and water-snakes.... | |
| 1826 - 370 pagine
...last finishing grace to the representation of the tragedy. He probably thought with our poet, that " Honour and shame from no condition rise. Act well your part, there all the honour lies." EURIPIDES. Euripides, the contemporary and rival of Sophocles, had originally devoted himself to the... | |
| Robert Southey - 1826 - 566 pagine
...dress and motto of Charles Brandon : and why they are so used the preceding lines show. Fortune in men has some small difference made ; One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade : The cobler apron' d, and the parson gown'd, The Friar hooded, and the Monarch crown'd. What differ more (you cry)... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1828 - 264 pagine
...190 Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience cleor, Because he wants a thousand pounds a-year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well...your part, there all the honour lies. , Fortune in men has some small difference made, One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade ; The cobbler apron'd,... | |
| 734 pagine
...thought, too bad. However, as there was no remedy, I comforted myself with a couplet from Pope — Honour and shame from no condition rise, Act well your part — there all the honour lies. My ambition was sot stifled, it was merely directed into another channel. It was now my object to see... | |
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