This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A45431 | Sold by Henry Marsh...,[ London?] |
A86339 | William Spark went in first, seeing two sitting at the Table, hee pulld off his hat, and said, I kiss your hands, which is the Resident? |
A65394 | A perfect description of the people and countrey of Scotland Weldon, Anthony, Sir, d. 1649? |
A86615 | What this Edward with his land shanks? |
A86626 | What reformed forren Church wil acknowledg Him Defender of the Faith, when they hear of this? |
A86640 | But whither rov''st thou thus? |
A86641 | Quae me suspensum Insomnia terrent? |
A57896 | & c. I leave it to every mans judgement? |
A57896 | Others say, what good doth the meat when it is vomited up again, and that whosoever doe use it, have not the benefit of nature downwards? |
A44735 | But put case they were all Papists, must His Majesty therefore be held a Favourer of popery? |
A44735 | But what need I rove abroad so far? |
A44735 | Was it ever knowne but a Soveraigne Prince might use the bodies& strength of his own naturall- born Subjects, and Liege men for his owne defence? |
A44747 | And what greater immunity and happines can ther be to a people, than to be liable to no Laws but what they make themselves? |
A44747 | To be subject to no Contribution, Assessement, or any pecuniary levy whatsoever, but what they Vote, and voluntarily yeeld unto themselves? |
A44745 | And what greater immunity and happines can ther be to a peeple, then to be liable to no Laws but what they make themselves? |
A44745 | To be subject to no Contribution, Assessement, or any pecuniary levy whatsoever, but what they Vote, and voluntarily yeeld unto themselves? |
A44720 | But it is more wonderful how Christianity amidst such horrid and continual subversions of Things could ever get footing? |
A44720 | nay, dilate it self with the Progresse of these Infidels? |
A86613 | BUt who''s that comely sanguine Peer Which on her heart- side walks so neer? |
A86613 | But is great Sakvile dead? |
A86613 | Do we Him lack, And will not all the Elements wear black? |
A86613 | IS''t so? |
A86613 | VVHat Object''s that which I behold Dazzling my eyes with gemms and Gold? |
A44762 | And what greater immunity and happinesse can there be to a People, than to be liable to no Laws but what they make themselves? |
A44762 | Do''st thou ask me whither Religion was the c ● use? |
A44762 | O consider my case most blisfull Queene ▪ d ● scend, desc ● nd againe in thy Ivorie Chariot? |
A44762 | to be subject to no contribution, assessement, or any pecuniary levy whatsoever, but what they Vote, and voluntarily yeeld unto themselves? |
A44762 | was that flaming Vsher of Gods vengeance which appear''d six and twentie yeares since in the Heavens ▪ the Herald that fetch''d thee away? |
A44724 | BVt whether have I wantred? |
A44724 | But whither have I been thus transported? |
A44724 | For what is Imagination, Invention and Sense, without the faculty of Speech without expression? |
A44724 | Gallicè illud? |
A44724 | Quid? |
A44724 | Who knowes, Great Sir, but by just destiny, Your bunch of( Youthfull) Plumes may further fly? |
A03752 | And Religion must be the Maske, to cover this Hellish attempt: Tantum Religio potuit suadere malorum? |
A03752 | And why not? |
A03752 | But what a foule shame is it, that one base Nest of Picaroons should confront and dayly damnifie all the Westerne World? |
A03752 | But whither am I thus transported? |
A03752 | Non nôst longas Regibus esse manus? |
A03752 | Sacred Lady, must thou be the Mantle to cover this infandous Worke? |
A03752 | Thou which marchest alwayes with the Armour of Light, must thou be made accessarie to such a horrible Act of subterranean darkenesse? |
A03752 | Thou which usest to goe clad in the white Vest of Innocencie, must thou have a Deianira''s Shirt now cast upon thee, a Robe of Bloud? |
A03752 | have not the wisest of Earthly Monarques had their Favorits? |
A44763 | 2 If Thou observe How oft we swerve From thee, who can abide To stand before Thy judgement dore To be arraignd and tri''d? |
A44763 | 2 My soul doth also swell For griefs that me torment, But, Lord, how long, oh tell, Wilt thou thy self absent? |
A44763 | 3 For in the shades of night, No mortall can thee mind, And in the pit what wight To thank thee canst thou find? |
A44763 | Dear Soul, how comes it to pass that you are in so much anxietie? |
A44763 | Is all commerce''twixt earth and sky Cut off from Adam''s Progeny? |
A44763 | That thus the Lord of life& light, Shold so, so long keep out of sight? |
A44763 | What a dull thing were Generation, if there were no Concupiscence? |
A44763 | What comfort would there be in educating children, if there were not a natural love that affected us? |
A44763 | how comes it that you are so discomposed, and transported with passion, imputing the cause of your indispositions to me? |
A44763 | what cohaerence, what rejoinder, is ther ever like to bee between a leg lost in Turkey, and an arm lost in India? |
A44763 | where can all the atomes which a corrasive hath eaten from our limbs bee found? |
A74776 | Are you so far in love with the shaddow that to preserve it, you will hazzard the losse, nay ruin of the substance? |
A74776 | How comes it to passe I beseech you that there is such sidings among you? |
A74776 | Is this to be single hearted? |
A74776 | Is this to discharge that trust which you have in the presence of God sworn to perform? |
A74776 | What man would not lose one member to save all the rest? |
A74776 | What, have you found out new wayes to make your selves famous? |
A74776 | for the stopping the torrent of such a doluge of crimson confusions, as have already and do dayly again threaten to break in upon your kingdomes? |
A74776 | hath reason given place to rage, wisdom to folly, meekness to madness? |
A74776 | what a blemish will this be to all your former actions? |
A74776 | will you that have taxed the King and Parliament of partiality, be partiall too? |
A50476 | And last of all, if he will always yeild due honor to the supream Bishop? |
A50476 | And what a world of Achievements did he perform in these Expeditions? |
A50476 | But sayd Almansor, how are the Milaneses usd your Conterranean fellow Subjects? |
A50476 | Defend the Widows, the Fatherless, and the Poor? |
A50476 | Establish the kingdom, and minister justice to every one? |
A50476 | Naples sayed again, but O King Almansor if your Nation kept fast Spain so many yeers in that Chain, what way did they use to shake it off? |
A50476 | Nemo me Lacrimis decoret, nec funera fletu Faxit? |
A50476 | Opposite thereto without the Chappel, was an Epitaph of white Marble, with these modern Verses ingraven, Qui cineres tumulo haec vestigia? |
A50476 | Quod far comparandum Campano? |
A50476 | Quod oleum Venafrano? |
A50476 | Quod triticum Apulo? |
A50476 | Quod vino Farlerno? |
A50476 | Sanguis inest Christi: quo dura ex morte redemptus Es mortalis homo? |
A50476 | This done, the Archbishop of Naples demandeth with a loud voyce of all the Princes, if they will promise loyalty and service to his Majesty? |
A50476 | Ventidius, quid enim, quid Tullius? |
A50476 | Whereupon Varro in praising Italy, thus saith, Quid in Italia utensile non modo non nascitur, sed etiam non egregium non fit? |
A50476 | Who can be able to declare the ornament and furniture of the Vines, from whence are had such sweet and delicate Wines? |
A50476 | cur? |
A50476 | quid ergo? |
A62158 | Hee had not gone fa ● r but some of them crying, Art thou catched? |
A62158 | How often did the Cavaliers desire Valladolid to make a ● eace? |
A62158 | How uncharitable the Autor is to his brethren Friers? |
A62158 | That there were divers exorbitancies, outrages, and insolencies committed, What wonder is it amongst the respectless and libertine People? |
A62158 | Wadsworth, James, 1604- 1656? |
A62158 | What Agreement is this you will make, so ● prejudicial to the King and your Citie? |
A62158 | What have yee done? |
A62158 | Whereto Xeures very formally thus replied, what lightness is this of Toledo, what lightness I say? |
A62158 | Who are those Traytors? |
A62158 | Why do you suffer strangers to reap the fruits of your labors, in your own Countrie? |
A62158 | do you com to serv the King? |
A62158 | heare me, why doe you kill mee? |
A62158 | how many scornful answers did they return them? |
A62158 | how often did they slight their favors? |
A62158 | is the King no King? |
A62158 | what advantageous conditions they offered them? |
A62158 | why doth no body think of putting Kings in and out at their pleasure? |
A42791 | ( said they) he answered, Will you joyne with me? |
A42791 | And what ranvers''d and confounded the tranquillity of the Florentine Republic but the faction of the Bianchi and Neri? |
A42791 | Have not we more reason far, being more burden''d and oppress''d? |
A42791 | Princes of the illustrious bloud were slain, but the faction of the Houses of Lancaster and York? |
A42791 | Such a terror was struck into evry one, that if a boy said to a shop- keeper, For how much sell you the quart of wine? |
A42791 | This note being sowed''twixt the sole and the shoo of a poor converted Frier, he gave him a good reward to go with it to the Castle: But what? |
A42791 | What destroy''d Carthage? |
A42791 | What wilt ● hou have my fine Lord? |
A42791 | When he beheld him, he ● aid, Che vuoi monsignore mio bello? |
A42791 | and why not? |
A42791 | are we lesse then Palermo? |
A42791 | is not our peeple peradventure if they unite, more formidable and warlike? |
A42791 | the two Factions of Barchiniani and Hanoniani: What maintain''d war in France for 60. yeers, but the dissention of the House of Burgundy and Orleans? |
A42791 | what master of the Horse? |
A42791 | where is he? |
A42791 | why not? |
A44732 | And what greater mark of freedom can there be to a people, then to be lyable to no Lawes, but what they make themselves? |
A44732 | Go to the River, what a pleasure it is to go thereon, in the Summer time, in Boat or Barge? |
A44732 | Heus viator an effaetum est bon ● s Operibus Hoc Saeculum? |
A44732 | How stately is he attended, when he goes to take a view of the River, or a Swan- hopping? |
A44732 | If She deserved such a Character in those dayes, what would She merit now? |
A44732 | What a large noble Soul had Sir Baptist Hicks, Lord Vicount Campden? |
A44732 | What large Ware- house, and spacious fair Shops she hath of all mercantile Commodities? |
A44732 | Within the City, what variety of Bowling Allies there are, some open, some covered? |
A44732 | how often did this great design take heat and cold, what faintings and fears, what oppositions did it break through, before it was perfectly finished? |
A44732 | or to go a floundring among the Fishermen? |
A44732 | what a bountiful Benefactor was Mr. William Lambe, free of the Company of Clothworkers? |
A44732 | what a number of Officers, that look to the reparations thereof, are handsomly maintained thereby, and some of them persons of good quality? |
A44732 | what a number of worthy things did he in his life, and at his death, both for the advancement of Religion and Iustice? |
A44732 | what a plentiful sumptuous Dinner, consisting of so many huge Tables, is provided for him? |
A44732 | what a vast Magazine of Corn is there alwayes in the Bridge- house, against a dearth? |
A44732 | what a world of charitable deeds, did he do in Town and Countrey? |
A44732 | what an infinite universal benefit doth accrue thereby, to the whole City and Suburbs? |
A44731 | And what greater mark of freedom can there be to a people, then to be lyable to no Lawes, but what they make themselves? |
A44731 | Go to the River, what a pleasure it is to go thereon, in the Summer time, in Boat or Barge? |
A44731 | Heus viator an effaetum est bonis Operibus Hoc Seenlum? |
A44731 | How stately is he attended, when he goes to take a view of the River, or a Swan- hopping? |
A44731 | If She deserved such a Character in those dayes, what would She merit now? |
A44731 | What a large noble Soul had Sir Baptist Hicks, Lord Vicount Campden? |
A44731 | What large Ware- houses, and spacious fair Shops she hath of all mercantile Commodities? |
A44731 | Within the City, what variety of Bowling Allies there are, some open, some covered? |
A44731 | how often did this great design take heat and cold, what faintings and fears, what oppositions did it break through, before it was perfectly finished? |
A44731 | or to go a floundring among the Fishermen? |
A44731 | what a bountiful Benefactor was Mr. William Lambe, free of the Company of Clothworkers? |
A44731 | what a number of Officers, that look to the reparations thereof, are handsomly maintained thereby, and some of them persons of good quality? |
A44731 | what a number of worthy things did he in his life, and at his death, both for the advancement of Religion and Justice? |
A44731 | what a plentiful sumptuous Dinner, consisting of so many huge Tables, is provided for him? |
A44731 | what a vast Magazine of Corn is there alwayes in the Bridge- house, against a dearth? |
A44731 | what a world of charitable deeds, did he do in Town and Countrey? |
A44731 | what an infinite universal benefit doth accrue thereby, to the whole City and Suburbs? |
A44760 | And if there was an errour in his proceedings, how oft did he desire his Great Councell to direct him in a course how to go on in the Empeachment? |
A44760 | And would not this suffice? |
A44760 | But in lieu of these unparallell''d Acts of grace and trust to the Parliament, what did the Parliament for the King all this while? |
A44760 | Can your Parliament protect high Treason? |
A44760 | Hath the House of Commons power to commit any but their owne members without Conference with the Lords? |
A44760 | How many Proclamations of Pardon? |
A44760 | How many overtures for an accommodation did he make? |
A44760 | How often did He descend to acknowledge the manner of demanding the one and five Members in his publike Remonstrances? |
A44760 | In naturall motions we finde that the cause being taken away, the effect ceaseth, and will not this hold in civill Actions? |
A44760 | The Masse? |
A44760 | Touching grievances of any kinde( and what State was there ever so pure, but some corruption might creep into it?) |
A44760 | Truly Sir, I never remember to have heard or read of such notable Acts of grace and confidence from any King: but would not all this suffice? |
A44760 | Were there any troubled for delivering their Votes in the Houses? |
A44760 | What palpable and horrid lyes were daily printed? |
A44760 | Yet I believe there was a pernicious plot to introduce a new Religion, but what I pray? |
A44760 | shall I believe the weaknesse of our Religion to be such, as to be so easily shaken and overturn''d? |
A44760 | what was meant else by his traducing the King and cursing him, while he seemed to pray for him? |
A44733 | Adsta Viator, quò proper as? |
A44733 | But what hath bin the issue of all this but onely an abuse of his goodnesse? |
A44733 | Cive, quid, invito, proh sola, redarguit usta Haec Domus, illaesis aliis? |
A44733 | How often hast thou turn''d the sword into thine own bowels, and swomm in the blood of thine own children? |
A44733 | How often have thy Towns bin turn''d to Hospitals, thy fields to desarts under the gilded pretext of Reformation? |
A44733 | How often have thy discontented Grandees ground the faces of thy innocent peasants? |
A44733 | Poore France, how often hath privat interest of some aspiring spirits bin term''d in thee by the specious name of Public good? |
A44733 | Quàm tenue momentum est inter Omnia et nihil? |
A44733 | Stay Passenger, where hastne''st thou? |
A44733 | The King being above in a gallery and hearing a noise below, ask''d what the matter was? |
A44733 | What a small moment is there,''twixt something and nothing? |
A44733 | Why doth he meddle with our affairs? |
A44733 | Will you cease to love? |
A44733 | and that which his Majesty thought a soverain remedy for all their sores, hath it not brought almost the last blow to the ruine of the Churches? |
A44733 | what Parties hath he not sought unto? |
A44749 | Another time having discoursd of many things with the King in a privat audience in French, the King askd him whether he understood Latin or no? |
A44749 | But then how did that Masculine Queen, that notable Virago, bestir her self? |
A44749 | But what Exchanges and recompence did Spain make to America for all this? |
A44749 | Hear what the famous Poet Claudian sings of Her in this Rapture: Quod dignum memorare tuis Hispania Terris Vox Humana valet? |
A44749 | How many Ordinaries are ther in Paris of Pistol- price, and the Tables servd all in Plate? |
A44749 | How strongly did Spain tug with the Arrian Heresie till she was quite put upon her back, and at last converted? |
A44749 | If the Apothecaries of Florence are such, what shall we think of their Physitians? |
A44749 | Now, where doth this most useful Commodity grow more plentiful then in France? |
A44749 | Quas Gentes olim non contrivere? |
A44749 | Te Duce Germanis pietas se vera, Fidesque Insinuans coepit ritus abolere prophanos; Quid non Alcuino facunda Lutetia debet? |
A44749 | The Ambassador and Luynes having mingled some Speeches, the language of Luynes was very haughty, saying, What hath your Master to do with our Affairs? |
A44749 | The older still the likelier for to die; Wold you wish your own ruine? |
A44749 | Touching the French Wines, it may be said they need no Bush: what vast proportions are carried away by all the Northwest Nations? |
A44749 | What a coyle do the Historians keep about the Achievements of Alexander the Great? |
A44749 | What a hazardous peece of service was performed when we invaded Barbary at Tunis? |
A44749 | What glorious Expeditions have bin made since in the Holy Land by five several Kings of France in person? |
A44749 | What thick swarms of Bees, and delicat Hony is found in every Peasans Garden? |
A44749 | but especially that desperat Exploit Blague did at the Canaries? |
A44749 | how magnanimously did she view her Musters, and encouragd the soldiers, riding up and down with a Plume of Feathers in her Hat like another Boadicia? |
A44749 | how suddenly was there a great Fleet in a readiness, and an Army by Land? |
A44749 | why doth he meddle with our Actions? |
A64765 | And doe you not see his Channels often so obstructed with the Sands and Gravell of this Sea ▪ that the Water is denied his Naturall passage? |
A64765 | And is not the same in Bloud? |
A64765 | Aske them why? |
A64765 | Asking of her why she called those{ non- Roman}{ non- Roman}{ non- Roman}{ non- Roman}{ non- Roman}, Fanatick Spirits? |
A64765 | But from whom? |
A64765 | Doe they not with their motion, like the Sun, cause Spring and Fall in this little World Man? |
A64765 | Doe they not( sicut radius ille fulmineus, ● orio non laeso dissolvit in eo metallum) often melt the Heart, leaving the skin unschorch''d? |
A64765 | Doe they not, when in a bad Aspect, make their Catoblepick Rays instruments of Murder? |
A64765 | How then shall the Bloud escape from their infection? |
A64765 | I asked the Cooks what they did with the rest of their better meat? |
A64765 | I le maintain your quarrel What do you tremble at his sight? |
A64765 | I took her by the hand( which Fear had benum''d with a sleepy chilness) and asked her why she trembled so? |
A64765 | In Mirepsus his Mithridate is not calcin''d Lead cald in as one of the Jury? |
A64765 | In that Divine Panacea, that so admir''d Chaos of Druggs, Theriaca, is not Calcitis an Ingredient? |
A64765 | Is not this Sea- water, Salt and brakish? |
A64765 | Sweet Sir, if you''l renew Desire? |
A64765 | Then I asked this Fac ● ino whether he had ever washed his Wives tongue yet? |
A64765 | What Heart is not sensible of two blazing Stars, whose Influences present us hourely with multitudes of amazing varieties? |
A64765 | What better Prologue to Mirth, than a Feast? |
A64765 | Which Bladder Ocean hath it not his Flux and Reflux, observing his Tydes for high and low Water? |
A64765 | Who then so desperate of sence ▪ as to neglect the preservation of so Principal a Part? |
A64765 | Why then said I are not all your Women mad? |
A64765 | YOu pensive Souls why are you sad? |
A64765 | and doe they not likewise Imboak and evacuate their superabounding Humidities into the Ocean of the Bladder? |
A64765 | what Socrates? |
A90668 | And if this be, what fruit can thy passions pass''d produce? |
A90668 | And who is he that arrogats temporall Authority over anothers jurisdiction? |
A90668 | But now what is become of that happy time? |
A90668 | But to compasse this mundangrandeur, which is founded most commonly upon the basis of gold, what unlawfull path is not trodden? |
A90668 | But what do I say? |
A90668 | But what shall I say of that mayden chastity for the conservation wherof we are principally penn''d in here? |
A90668 | But what shall we say now? |
A90668 | But whither doth the violence of a just passion transport me thus to rave? |
A90668 | Can divine honor therfore cohabit with such an opprobrious Adultres without spotting it self? |
A90668 | In the time of Christ, secular Princes had their tribut; and shall they be now refus''d in Vrban the Eights time? |
A90668 | Is this the Paradis that Christ promiseth to them who observe his Law? |
A90668 | Now what would Christ have said? |
A90668 | Ought the Priests then disswade the people from that obedience which was ordain''d by the Divine Majesty it self towards their naturall Princes? |
A90668 | Tell me, O reverend Fryer, if the Pope can not erre, wherfore are ther Decrees and Ordinances of Councels instituted? |
A90668 | The Bishop of Rome may erre as he is a man; and being subject to errour, who dare maintaine but he may be reprehended? |
A90668 | The first consists in the perpetuity of Legacies: For what avails it to prohibit, that stable goods passe not under the possession of Ecclesiasticks? |
A90668 | Then what wonder is it? |
A90668 | Treat of an accommodation, propose hostages, and promise restitution, In the mean time the Dukes forces may waste, break thy word, what matters it? |
A90668 | Was it to see how his labours fructified? |
A90668 | What can be denyed to my only Son, specially when Iustice favoreth his reasons? |
A90668 | What conceits will people frame to themselves, to see thee so repenting? |
A90668 | behold thy temporall dominion is tumbling down, thy mundane greatnes is upon point of extinguishing, what dost thou pawse upon? |
A90668 | what iniquity is not praetis''d? |
A90668 | who told his Disciples, O you of little Faith, why have you doubted? |
A86630 | Ah, who is he ▪ Thus speaks to me? |
A86630 | Aime, who helps me? |
A86630 | At such a splendid glorious show, What heart but would turn fire and tow? |
A86630 | At such a splendid glorious show, What heart but would turn fire and tow? |
A86630 | But where is she? |
A86630 | Can such a beauteous Creature turn to be A beast of such immane ferocity? |
A86630 | Chiron, How shall I find content? |
A86630 | Chiron, Where is it I should find content? |
A86630 | Dear, What''s that you whisper? |
A86630 | Disloyal Jove, is it my hapless fate Thou should''st so oft thy Faith thus violate? |
A86630 | Go on then happily, for who doth know But that your constancy may tell you so? |
A86630 | Having immortall beauty in my face, Where roses bloom, and Lillies still have place, What reason is there I should jealous be? |
A86630 | How is it possible I should do so? |
A86630 | If you Olympus loose, where will you find Throughout the world a Kingdom of that kind? |
A86630 | Is''t possible I should do so? |
A86630 | Jupiter How can that be? |
A86630 | Mercury Which do you most desire, To serve or domineer? |
A86630 | Must I to stones and rocks make now my moan? |
A86630 | My Dear, What do you fear? |
A86630 | My sweetest friend, What do you now intend? |
A86630 | Now that you are a Champion o''re the Gods, Of whom for Faith and Love you have such odds; Why do you thus afflict your self with pain? |
A86630 | Oh me, Oh me, Poor heart what will become of thee? |
A86630 | Oh me, Oh me, Poor heart what will become of thee? |
A86630 | Peleus But when, and how? |
A86630 | Peleus, Why do you thus your self torment? |
A86630 | Prometheus, Peleus O dear, and solacing, sweet blissful Hope, How comforting art Thou to those who cope With rigid beauties? |
A86630 | Shall he still languish With tears, with doubtfulness and anguish, Who loves your eyes More then the Stars or Skies? |
A86630 | Thetis, suppose, an idle wench should prove: Have you not Goddesses enough above? |
A86630 | They equall the exploits of Paladins, Whose fame the Earth with Ecchos dims, What a poor thing it is to be A Demy- God by land or Sea? |
A86630 | To take me and entrap poor silly maid: What will become of thee my heart? |
A86630 | WHy do you thus your self torment? |
A86630 | What ails my soul? |
A86630 | What can blest heaven me avail, If still of my desire I fail? |
A86630 | What do I see? |
A86630 | What force can lance or sword Against me then afford? |
A86630 | What mortal Creature''s hee Can thee reprize from me? |
A86630 | When on my heart a beauty lies That is descended from the Skies; A beauty that''s all moving and immense, That hath o''re me such an omnipotence? |
A86630 | Who can make scruple of my art and skill, My reasons in due time have Energie enough; If I look fair in any part, I''st not a trick of Magique Art? |
A86630 | Will you with such a heart of flint and steel Convert those pleasing passions which I feel To pangs? |
A86630 | Yet I must try once more this Boy to mock, And turn my self into a senseless Rock: Peleus Have I again lost Thetis? |
A86630 | is she gone? |
A34709 | ''t is to shew it, That thy Coldness makes her do it; Is she silent? |
A34709 | And whether to suppress the disobedience of the Irish, he should pass thither in Person or no? |
A34709 | But whence shall the stream flowe that must feed this bounty? |
A34709 | By the Strict Executions touching Jesuits and Seminary Priests? |
A34709 | Do we not daily see, that it is easier to confront a private enemy, than a Society or Corporation? |
A34709 | Do''st thou ever think to enter Th''Elisian fields that dar ● st not venture In Charons Barge? |
A34709 | Doth she chide thee? |
A34709 | FAint Amorist: what, do''st thou think To taste Loves Honey, and not drink One dram of Gall? |
A34709 | For what have the inferiour Courts of the Countrey to do with the Acts of the Justices? |
A34709 | How can we draw others to our Church, if we can not agree, where, and how to lay our foundation? |
A34709 | In the 36. year he calleth a Parliament to consult whether war or peace by David King of Scots then offered, should be accepted? |
A34709 | It is observeable that the Statutes were to be put in execution according to the said Petition? |
A34709 | OR, To restrain them to Close Prisons, during life, if no Reformation follow? |
A34709 | Parva metus primo, mox sese attollit in altum? |
A34709 | S ● me also survive? |
A34709 | Silence fully grants thy Sute; Doth she pout, and leave the room? |
A34709 | Then she goes to bid thee come; Is she sick? |
A34709 | To what purpose serves it to muster the names of the Protestants, or to vaunt them to be ten for one of the Roman Faction? |
A34709 | Tush, she loves to hear the woo; Doth she call the faith of man In question? |
A34709 | VVhat Grants of Impositions before crossed, have lately been complained of in Parliaments? |
A34709 | Visne muliebre Consilium? |
A34709 | Whether the higher we raise the Coyn at home, we make not thereby our Commodities beyond- sea the cheaper? |
A34709 | is she mute? |
A34709 | or to devour A world of sweet, and taste no sour? |
A34709 | why then be sure, She invites thee to the cure; Doth she cross thy sute with No? |
A44716 | ANd is thy Glass run out, is that Oyl spent Which light to such strong Sinewy labours lent? |
A44716 | Ad mare cum venio quid agam? |
A44716 | But in so foul a Cell Can he abide to dwell? |
A44716 | But what will not gold do? |
A44716 | But whither rov''st thou thus —? |
A44716 | Con tanta selpa en la Capa Y tanta cadena de oro, El marido de la Vaca Que puede ser sino toro? |
A44716 | Dordrecti Synodus? |
A44716 | Faire France the Arrow, Dole gave them the Bow, Who shall the String which they deserve bestow? |
A44716 | If I were Thou and thou wert I, I would resign the Deity, Thou shouldst be God, I would be man, Is''t possible that love more can? |
A44716 | Lastly, who would have imagined that the Accise would have taken footing heer? |
A44716 | My dear Tom, VVHo would have thought poor England had been brought to this pass? |
A44716 | The Captain of your Guard; why? |
A44716 | Vistrea sunt nostrae comissa negotia curae, Hoc oculis speculum mittimus ergo luis: Quod speculum? |
A44716 | Weak crazy Mortall, why dost fear To leave this earthly Hemisphear? |
A44716 | aeger; Conventus? |
A44716 | is he a proper man for the Office of an Ambassador? |
A44716 | must the Gentle- cra ● … t of Shoo- makers fall therfore to the ground? |
A44716 | nodus; chorus integer? |
A44716 | then why do you inv ● … igh so bitterly against them? |
A44716 | tùm praepete penna Te ferat, est lator nam levis ignis, Amor, But when I com to Sea how shall I shift? |
A44716 | who would have held it possible that to fly from Babylon, we should fall into such a Babel? |
A44716 | who would not promise not onely mynes, but mountains of Gold, for Liberty? |
A44754 | And was it not high time think you to quell this Monster? |
A44754 | And was it not time then for the Army to think of dismissing their Memberships? |
A44754 | And would not this suffice? |
A44754 | As Strafford''s death, and sitting on Sunday,& c. How many Bills were resum''d, being twice ▪ ejected out of the House of Peers? |
A44754 | But did not the Kings of England reserve a power to except against any that came to Parliament? |
A44754 | But doth not the Supreme Power reside ● n the English Parlement, which is an Epi ● ome and Representative of the whole Nation? |
A44754 | But it is not the priviledge of Parliament to examine misdemeanours of Juridical Courts, and Officers of State according to Lex Repetundarum? |
A44754 | But was there no more care to observe Articles of War which is held a sacred thing among Pagans and Infidels? |
A44754 | But what did that Parlement do tending to the publick Reformation? |
A44754 | But who was the first Aggressor of that ugly War, the King or the Parliament? |
A44754 | Hereupon a Parliament was summoned in England, a Parliament do I call it? |
A44754 | How could this agree with the Protestation the House did make formerly to the King, to make him the best beloved that ever was? |
A44754 | How did the Scots expresse their thankfulnesse to their King and Country- man afterwards for such transcedant favours? |
A44754 | How did these Propositions relish? |
A44754 | How many hundred ways did they break their own Priviledges? |
A44754 | How oft did they sit without a Speaker, he being fled to the Army? |
A44754 | How then came the Commoners to sway so much of late years, and challenge such an interest, in the publique Government, and making of Laws? |
A44754 | I heard you speak of money''s borrow''d upon the publique Faith, I pray how were those reimboursed? |
A44754 | It is possible that the lenity of the King should be such as to yeeld to all this? |
A44754 | It was doubtlesse an advantage to both parties, but how did they carry themselves towards the King afterwards? |
A44754 | The Mass? |
A44754 | This Doctrine I believe they had learnt of the Scot; but what did the King reply? |
A44754 | This was home, and high, but what answer did the Parliament make to the former letter from Notingham? |
A44754 | What did they doe? |
A44754 | What things did they do which they voted shoùld not serve for Presidents hereafter? |
A44754 | Where was the King during all these popular Riots? |
A44754 | but having got the Great Seal, as well as the Sword into their hands, what signal Acts of Justice did they do? |
A44754 | how common a thing was it to make an order of theirs to control a ● d suspend the very fundamental Laws of the Land? |
A44754 | how many appeals were made from solemne tribunalls of Justice to inferior Committes? |
A44754 | or rather, to pull down this Idol? |
A44754 | what infamous Ballads were sung up and down? |
A44754 | which I heard them brag, was more weighty, as having more Gold in it then the English? |
A70281 | ANd is thy Glass run out? |
A70281 | And will not all the Elements wear Black? |
A70281 | But how can such large Matter be Couch''d in so streight a room by Me? |
A70281 | But how durst pale white- liverd Death seize o ● So dauntless and heroick a Champion? |
A70281 | But in so foul a Cell Can he abide to dwell? |
A70281 | But is Dan dead? |
A70281 | But is great Sackvil dead? |
A70281 | But who''s that comely Sanguin Peer Which on her heart- side walks so neer? |
A70281 | But wihther rov''st thou thus —? |
A70281 | Can Livia be so beuteous to th''Eyes, And lodg within such foul deformities? |
A70281 | Can in smooth gliding streams Carybdies dwell? |
A70281 | Do we him lack? |
A70281 | Ergo 〈 ◊ 〉 Majorum vana facessat, Nec sibi Primores cunctos vetus arroget aevum; Creta Panomphaeum quid progenuisse Tonantem Intumet? |
A70281 | Had now Grim Ben been breathing, with what 〈 ◊ 〉 And high- swoln fury had he lash''d this Age? |
A70281 | IF to Subdu Himself, if to obtain A Conquest ore the Passions, be to Raign, Here lies the Greatest King,( who can say more?) |
A70281 | IS Cleveland dead? |
A70281 | If I were Thou, and Thou wert I, I would resigne the Deity: Thou sholdst be God, I wold be Man; Is''t possible that love more can? |
A70281 | Is Cleveland gone? |
A70281 | Is all Commerce''Twixt Earth and Sky Cut off from Adams Progeny? |
A70281 | Is''t possible so fair a Bark shold hide So black a Trunk, or so much Ill shold bide In such Seraphik Beuties? |
A70281 | Is''t so? |
A70281 | Lector avet majora? |
A70281 | My dearest Sylvius, pray unfold Who''s that rare Creture I behold? |
A70281 | Now the Stage is down, dar''st tho ● pear, Bold Fletcher, on this tott''ring Hemisphear? |
A70281 | O God, who can those Passions tell Wherewith my heart to Thee doth swell? |
A70281 | Or in one place cohabit Heav''n and Hell? |
A70281 | Quid Mantua foelix Virgilio praecone tumes? |
A70281 | Quid culta superbit Scaligero Verona suo? |
A70281 | Shells of Gold, Can they within such rotten Kernels hold? |
A70281 | Si ulteriora petit? |
A70281 | Silence best can: how roars the shallow Source, While without noise great Rivers run their course? |
A70281 | That thus the Lord of Life and Light Should so, so long keep out of sight? |
A70281 | Then what is purblind Man, if one shold dare Unto a glorious Angel him compare? |
A70281 | WEak crazy Mortal, why dost fear To leave this Earthly Hemisphear? |
A70281 | WHat? |
A70281 | WHere shold Diana properly be born But in a Wood? |
A70281 | Was ever such a Love as this, That the Eternal Heir of Bliss Should stoop to such a low Abyss? |
A70281 | What? |
A70281 | Whom mean you, Dion, that you thus descry By such gross taintures of Hypocrisie? |
A70281 | Why then, fond Man, shold thy soul take dismay To sally out of these gross walls of Clay? |
A70281 | Why? |
A70281 | and will not the whole Quire Of Muses mourn, and put on black attire? |
A70281 | aut veteres sic altercantur, Homerus Qu ● fuerat de sede satus? |
A70281 | canst thou The Maker of these Glories know? |
A70281 | is mild Heaven turn''d to Brass, That neither sigh nor sob can pass? |
A70281 | is that Oyl spent Which light to such strong sinewy labours Well Ben, I now perceive that all the Nine, lent? |
A44752 | But to compasse this mundane grandeur, which is founded most commonly upon Bases of gold, what unlawfull path is not troden? |
A44752 | But what shall I say of that Maiden- chastity for the conservation whereof we are principally penn''d in here? |
A44752 | But whither doth violence of just passion transport me thus to rave? |
A44752 | If a tutelar Angell can suffer greater contempts, tell me, O thou Apostle of God? |
A44752 | In the time of Christ secular Princes had their tribut, and shall they now be refus''d in Vrban''s time? |
A44752 | Now, if Christ can not stay, no not the least moment in corrupted bread, how shall we think that he can abide to stay amongst a corrupt people? |
A44752 | Now, what can I deny to my only Son, specially when so much Justice favoureth his complaints? |
A44752 | Ther was a bold and cuning Candiot attempted the robbing of this Tresury, And — quid non mortalia pectora cogit Auri sacra fames? |
A44752 | Vósque Qui nunquàm vacui prodistis in aethera rami? |
A44752 | Which being so who can doubt but this Republic is a pure Aristocracy? |
A44752 | Who did ever affirm that the Legacies of privat men can be exempt from the public Jurisdiction of their Prince? |
A44752 | by what a strange effect doth the lust of others make you chast? |
A44752 | by what means will you effect it? |
A44752 | how shall we look our selves, nay heaven in the face, or lift up our eyes to it, not daring to lift up our hands against its enemies? |
A44752 | if we be too weak for him now, how shall we resist him then? |
A44752 | in living idly, or rowing up and down these lakes in your little boats? |
A44752 | or shall we stay only to look on our enemies, as if we could destroy them like Basilisks? |
A44752 | was it to see how his labours fructified? |
A44752 | what are both but the remainder of this years victory, wherof Cyprus was the late rich earnest? |
A44752 | what iniquity is not practis''d? |
A44752 | what is their Generall but a youth, fitter to lead a Mask then an Army? |
A44752 | what profit had they by their dislodging? |
A44752 | why had they so many Churches, Buildings, and so many public and private Houses? |
A70276 | And by them I protect you and your rights from violence, and what protection I pray can there be without strength? |
A70276 | And what Forren Nation will do either of these to the King of England if he be Armless, and without a Sword? |
A70276 | And what greater immunity and happinesse can there be to a Peeple, than to be liable to no Laws but what they make themselves? |
A70276 | And would not this suffice? |
A70276 | But Sir, I heard much of that Protestation, I pray what was the substance of it? |
A70276 | But put case they were all Papists, must His Majesty therfore be held a Favourer of Popery? |
A70276 | But what need I rove abroad so far? |
A70276 | But, Sir, what shold be the reson which mov''d them to make that insolent proposall? |
A70276 | Can your Parliament protect high Treason? |
A70276 | Cui dabit partes scelus expiant Iupiter? |
A70276 | How many Proclamations of pardon? |
A70276 | How many overtures for an accommodation did he make? |
A70276 | How often did he descend to acknowledg the manner of demanding the one and five Members in his publick Remonstrances? |
A70276 | How they multiplied in every corner in such plenty, that one might say t ● … er was a superfaetation of lies, which continue unto this day? |
A70276 | In naturall motions we find that the cause being taken away, the effect ceaseth, and will not this hold in civil Actions? |
A70276 | Let the persons suffer in the Name of God, and not the holy Order of Episcopacy But good Lord, how pittifully were those poor Prelats handled? |
A70276 | Peregrin ▪ Hath the house of Commons power to commit any but their own Members without conference with the Lords? |
A70276 | Publick Faith also, though she had but newly set up for her self, is suddenly become Bankrupt, and how could she choose? |
A70276 | The Masse? |
A70276 | Touching grievances of any kind( and what State was ther ever so pure, but some corruption might creep into it?) |
A70276 | Truly Sir, I never remember to have heard or read of such notable acts of grace and confidence from any King: but would not all this suffice? |
A70276 | Was it ever known but a Soveraign Prince might use the bodies and strength of his own naturall- born Subjects, and Liege men for his own defence? |
A70276 | Were ther any troubled for delivering their votes in the Houses? |
A70276 | What palpable and horrid lies were daily printed? |
A70276 | What reformed forein Church will acknowledg Him Defendor of the Faith, when they hear of this? |
A70276 | Yet I believe ther was a pernicious plot to introduce a new Religion, but what I pray? |
A70276 | and if ther was an errour in the proceedings, how oft did he desire his Great Councell to direct him in a course how to go on in the Empeachment? |
A70276 | how can he defend either himself, or others? |
A70276 | shall I believe the weakness ● … f our Religion to be such, as to be so easily ● … aken and overturn''d? |
A70276 | to be subject to no contribution, assessement, or any pecuniary erogations whatsoever, but what they Vote, and voluntarily yeeld unto themselves? |
A70276 | what did the Parliament for the King all this while? |
A70276 | who will give any respect o ● … precedence to his Ambassadors, and Ministers of State? |
A44738 | And bring I home a dish good chear to make, What''s this saith she? |
A44738 | And then what will follow, what will become of it? |
A44738 | Are you there with your Bears? |
A44738 | Astrologie is true, but where is the Astrologer? |
A44738 | Buon di Dante, di donde vieni, quanto erto el fango? |
A44738 | Caldo de tripas bien te repicas? |
A44738 | Can you not be content to feed well, but you must cry roast- meat? |
A44738 | Che giova dar di cozzi al Fato? |
A44738 | Che giova dar di cozzo al fato? |
A44738 | Cheer up man, God is still where he was.. Who can sing so merry a note, As he that can not change a grote? |
A44738 | Chi anda peggio calzato che la moglie del scarpaio? |
A44738 | Chi è più sordo che coluy chi non vuol ascoltare? |
A44738 | Como no rin̄e tu amo? |
A44738 | Cornudo soys marido, muger, y quien os lo dixo? |
A44738 | Di tre cose il Florentino fá una frulla, d''adio, mi raccomando, vuoi tu nulla? |
A44738 | English Merchant, wilt thou gain? |
A44738 | Et puis qu''en sera- il? |
A44738 | Fly, what dost thou? |
A44738 | Good morrow Dante, whence comest thou, how high is the dirt? |
A44738 | Have I need to Apologize for some few, that are homely, and may possibly nauseate the more delicate or grave Reader? |
A44738 | He a Man? |
A44738 | He who stumbleth in the plain way, what will he do on a Rock? |
A44738 | How can the Fole amble when the horse and Mare trot? |
A44738 | How do all your little ones? |
A44738 | How many miles to Cuntington Mayd? |
A44738 | I proud, and thou proud, who shall carry out the asnes? |
A44738 | I st not a merry thing to see One cross increase to two or three? |
A44738 | If the Sky fall we shall have Larks; But who will catch them? |
A44738 | Is every man born to be rich? |
A44738 | Is the Plague in the point that you fly so far from it? |
A44738 | La muger del ciego para quien se afeyta? |
A44738 | Moças Davera quien os dio tan ruynes dientes? |
A44738 | Must I tell you a tale, and find you ears? |
A44738 | Old trot, why wouldst break thy thigh? |
A44738 | Pa ham y bydd Cûl y Barcud? |
A44738 | QUe gibet, que diable veut dire cela? |
A44738 | Qual era Dios para Mercader? |
A44738 | Quan bovito seria Pedro si se lavasse? |
A44738 | Quand Adam beschoit,& Eve filbiot qui estoit noble alors? |
A44738 | Quando Adam açadoneuva, y Eva hilava, qui en era entonces hidalgo? |
A44738 | Quando Adamo vangava,& Eva filava chi ● era nobile alhora? |
A44738 | Que aprovecha candil sin mecha? |
A44738 | Que hazes mosquita? |
A44738 | Qui e plus mal chaussè que la femme du Cordonnier? |
A44738 | Qui est plus sourd que celuy qui ne veut ecouter? |
A44738 | Quien es tu enemigo? |
A44738 | Quien và peòr calçado que la muger del capatero? |
A44738 | Quieres buen bocado? |
A44738 | Quieres dezir al necio lo que es? |
A44738 | Size deux; Si Deus nobiscum, quis contra nos? |
A44738 | THe Peeples voice the Voice of God we call, nd what are Proverbs but the Peeples voice? |
A44738 | THe Peeples voice, the Voice of God we call, And what are Proverbs but the peeples voice? |
A44738 | The Florentine maketh nothing of three things, of Adieu, farewel, do you want any thing? |
A44738 | The King represents God, the Parlement the People, tell me who is highest? |
A44738 | Thou that hatest the Crosse( which was the first Christian Altar) dost thou hope to have benefitt of the Oblation? |
A44738 | Tripe porredge dost thou brag? |
A44738 | VVhat a rich Merchant would God be? |
A44738 | VVhat, shall we starve in a Cooks shopp, and a shoulder of mutton by? |
A44738 | VVho is thy greatest enemy? |
A44738 | VVho so deaf as he that will not hear? |
A44738 | VVhy is a man a Cuckold? |
A44738 | VVilt thou have a good bit? |
A44738 | VVilt thou see thy Husband dead? |
A44738 | VVit whither wilt thou? |
A44738 | VVitt whither wilt thou? |
A44738 | VVitt whither wilt thou? |
A44738 | VVould you eat your cake, and have your cake? |
A44738 | Vox Populi vox dicta Dei est, Proverbia quid sunt? |
A44738 | Vuo far vendetta del tuo nemico? |
A44738 | WHat a pox, what a devill means that? |
A44738 | What a pretty fellow would Peter be if he were washed? |
A44738 | What avails a candle without week? |
A44738 | What boots it to give kicks at fate? |
A44738 | What boots it to kick at the fates? |
A44738 | What do you roming so up and down? |
A44738 | What is a workman without his tools? |
A44738 | What is worse then ill luck? |
A44738 | What makes the Kite to pry? |
A44738 | What''s better then the Beer that''s made of Malt? |
A44738 | What''s sweeter then the C. hipphalt? |
A44738 | What''s that? |
A44738 | What, must I tel you a tale, and find you ears? |
A44738 | What, shall we starve in a Cooks- shop, and a shoulder of mutton by? |
A44738 | What? |
A44738 | When Adam delv''d and Eve span, Who was then a Gentleman? |
A44738 | When Adam delv''d and Eve span, who was then a Gentleman? |
A44738 | When all is gone and nothing left, VVhat avails the dagger with the dudgeon heft? |
A44738 | When all is gone and nothing left, What avails the dagger with the dudgeon heft? |
A44738 | When hath the Goose most feathers on her back? |
A44738 | When you read this, I know you will be apt to say, that a Fools Bolt is soon shott, or crie out, Witt whither wilt thou? |
A44738 | Where fell the Parson? |
A44738 | Where in the churn mill lies the buttermilk? |
A44738 | Where nought at all, who can be liberal? |
A44738 | Who goes worse shod then the shooemakers wife, And worse cladd, then the Taylors wife? |
A44738 | Who goes worse shod then the shooemakers wife? |
A44738 | Who goeth more tatterd then the Taylors child? |
A44738 | Who goeth worse shodd then the shooe- makers wife? |
A44738 | Who is an enemy to the Bride, how can he speak well of the Bridegroom? |
A44738 | Who is more deaf then he that will not hear? |
A44738 | Who is more deaf then he that will not hear? |
A44738 | Who shall tie the bell about the cats neck? |
A44738 | Why doth not thy master chide? |
A44738 | Why doth the dog lick the pan? |
A44738 | Will you have better bread then is made of Wheat? |
A44738 | Wilt thou be revenged of thy enemy? |
A44738 | Wilt thou tell the fool what he is? |
A44738 | Would you both eat your cake, and have your cake? |
A44738 | Ye Maids of Davera who gave you bad teeth? |
A44738 | You are a Cuckold husband: who told you so wife? |
A44738 | disse, que''havea mangiato un Tedesco,& cottolo su i carboni,& dimandato, donde havesti il fuoco? |
A44738 | he sayed an old Courtier Sir; What Courtier? |
A44738 | must I tell you a tale, and find you ears too? |
A44738 | qu''en deviendra il? |
A44738 | why doth the blind mans wife paint her self? |
A44736 | & c. wheras we shold say, Were you ever in France? |
A44736 | And are all kind of persons used th ● ●, whether Forren, or Natives? |
A44736 | And doth not the Kingdom of Navarr appertain to the King of France? |
A44736 | And with your favor, Whither did you direct your way from the City of Burgos? |
A44736 | Ay tambien nota de Interrogacion, que se figura assi? |
A44736 | But do you call Valladolid a Village, being so great a place, and where the Catholick Court kept so long? |
A44736 | But el is often o ● itted, being included in the Verb, which is of the third person, as hà comido, have you din''d? |
A44736 | Como es esto, que siendo el Rey de España tan gran Monarca, no tiene una Corte correspondiente a su grandeza? |
A44736 | DIOS le dè muy buenos dias Señor Don Felipe, años hà que no le he visto; digame si fuere, servido, donde hà estado tanto tiempo? |
A44736 | De España? |
A44736 | De Sarogoça por doude adereçava vm sus passos? |
A44736 | Did it fortune you to see the House of Celestina? |
A44736 | El Reyno de los Algarves no pertenece a la corona de Portugàl? |
A44736 | En aquellos lugares fronteros no se hallan Guardas que miran a los Passageros? |
A44736 | Es possible esso? |
A44736 | Estar is much us''d in salutation, and in reference to health, as como esta mi padre, how doth my father? |
A44736 | From Saragossa whither did you direct your journey? |
A44736 | From Spain? |
A44736 | From thence whither did you bend your cours? |
A44736 | GOD give you very good dayes Sir Philip, It is a great while since I saw you; tell me, if you be pleas''d, Where have you bin so long? |
A44736 | God bless me, and what was the cause( under favor) that made you to undergo such a journey? |
A44736 | Haga me merced de informarme que quiere dezir Venta? |
A44736 | How can that be, the Spanish King being so great a Monarch; and hath he not a Court correspondent to his greatnes? |
A44736 | I have read that Philip the second asking Andrea Doria a great Seaman Which was the best Port in all Spain? |
A44736 | I pray, do me the favor as tell me what Venta is? |
A44736 | If to subdu ones Self, if to obtain A Conquest o''re the Passions, bee to Raign, Here lies the Gretest King( who can say more?) |
A44736 | In French she is of that weight that she makes somtimes a whole word of her self, as Voulez vous y aller, Will you go thither? |
A44736 | In lieu of qual what, and como how, these two words que tal are us''d, which is a pure Spanicism, as que tal est à mi hermano, how doth my brother? |
A44736 | In those frontire places, are ther not Gards to look what Travellers passe? |
A44736 | Is it possible that you did not find such in your travels, Spain being so good a Countrey, and abounding in all things? |
A44736 | Is it possible? |
A44736 | Los terceros Possessivos son Her hers, con sus Plurales their theirs; como her distaf su rueca, her maidenhead su virginidad; whose ring is this? |
A44736 | Para que why, to what end? |
A44736 | Pues al partir de san Sebastian adonde se encaminava? |
A44736 | Pues llama vm, Valladolid Villa siendo un Lugàr tan grande, y adonde la Corte Catolica residio tanto tempo? |
A44736 | Pues que me dize? |
A44736 | Que hath no Plural, as quien and qual have, as quien es aquel hidalgo, who is that Gentleman? |
A44736 | Que son los otros dominios que tiene la Corona de Portugal? |
A44736 | Somtimes to avail, as de que sirve todo esso, what purpose serves all this? |
A44736 | The Kingdom of the Algarves, doth it not appertain to the Crown of Portugal? |
A44736 | The Spaniards have a peculiar Idiom, to use que tanto for quanto in Inter ● ogations, as que tanto es del mes? |
A44736 | The third Possessif is Her hers, with their Plurals their theirs; as Her Distaf su rueca, her Maiden head su Virginidàd; whose ring is this? |
A44736 | Ther is also a Note of Interrogation, and is figur''d thus? |
A44736 | Ther is an observable phrase in Spanish, Que serà de mi? |
A44736 | Thine also stands for a Possessif of it self to a question, as Whose land is that? |
A44736 | Thine tambien es possessivo de si mesmo a una pregunta, como whose land is that? |
A44736 | Thine; cuya a tierra es aquella? |
A44736 | Well, when you parted from San Sebastian, whither did you direct your cours? |
A44736 | What do you tell me? |
A44736 | What other Dominions are there, over which the Crown of Portugal doth Lord it? |
A44736 | What will become of mee? |
A44736 | When you read this; I know you wil bee apt to say, That a Fools bolt is soon shot, or cry out, Witt whither willt thou? |
A44736 | Y con su licencia, de Burgos para donde se encamino sù merced? |
A44736 | Y no es el Reyno de Navarra del Rey de Francia? |
A44736 | Y se haze esto a todo genero de personas Estrangeros y Naturales? |
A44736 | Yr is taken in divers senses, as como le va, how goes it with you? |
A44736 | a Londres, do you go to London? |
A44736 | a que proposito to what purpose? |
A44736 | alli la Torre Encantada, y el artificio con que se sube el agua del Rio hasta lo alto de la Cindad que es tan curioso y renombrado? |
A44736 | alli por ventura la casa de Celestina? |
A44736 | and whence com you now? |
A44736 | but quien in the singular is counted more elegant, as quien son ellos mercaderes? |
A44736 | cuyo cavallo es aquel, whose horse is that? |
A44736 | dias hà,''t is a pretty while since: que tanto hà que estays aqui, how long have you bin here? |
A44736 | en aquel negocio, how went it with you in that busines? |
A44736 | es possible que no las aya en su viage, siendo España tan buena tierra, y abundante de todo? |
A44736 | have you bin in France, Sir? |
A44736 | hee sayed, And old Courtier Sir; What Courtier sayed Sir Thomas? |
A44736 | how far is it from London to Lancaster? |
A44736 | hà buelto del palacio, how long is it that you have returned from Court? |
A44736 | less: tienes de comer? |
A44736 | menos, hast thou clothes? |
A44736 | mine; cuya espada es esta? |
A44736 | mine; whose Glove is that? |
A44736 | no, hast thou any mony? |
A44736 | no: tienes vestidos? |
A44736 | or according to the words, That sellest thy self unto mee for such a wise man? |
A44736 | porque, porque razon for what reson, why? |
A44736 | que is what or that, que es esto, what is this? |
A44736 | que se le da a el, what doth hee care for it? |
A44736 | que serà de ti? |
A44736 | que tal se halla mi madre, how doth my mother? |
A44736 | que tanto ay de Londres a Lancastra? |
A44736 | que va a mi en esto, what doth it concern mee? |
A44736 | quien es son aquellos mercaderes, who are those merchants? |
A44736 | quien, que, qual, as quien canta, who sings? |
A44736 | tampoco, hast thou meat? |
A44736 | tengo tan buenos parientes como vos, I have as good kindred as you: o quan dulcemente canta, how sweetly do you sing? |
A44736 | then answer is made, esta bueno loado sea Dios, he is well praised be God: como esta V M. how do you do Sir? |
A44736 | valgame Dios, y qual fue la causa( eon licencia) que le hizo emprender aquel viaje? |
A44736 | what day of the months is it? |
A44736 | what will become of thee? |
A44736 | will you sup with mee? |
A44736 | y de donde viene agora? |
A44736 | you have not bin in France, Sir? |
A44756 | The first tomeNo more published? |
A44756 | 77 No Government so wise that can fit all Countries, and why? |
A44756 | A Boar being dead hath many vertues, and why? |
A44756 | And will you have us to put on that nature again? |
A44756 | But what are the dictats of sense, compar''d with the intellectuall powers of the human soul? |
A44756 | But whereas you spoke of Angels, how do the separated Souls of good men, when they are exalted to Heven, differ from the Angels? |
A44756 | But, Madam, how can that be? |
A44756 | By the earnestnes of your looks and gazing, I believe you would speak with me, therefore I pray what''s your pleasure? |
A44756 | HOw came you off from that cunning Merchant you dealt withall last? |
A44756 | HOw did you bear up with that Boar? |
A44756 | How could that be in so rich and plentifull a country as Artonia is known to be? |
A44756 | How is this? |
A44756 | How many thousand Carboncians were bought and sold for slaves to be hurried over to furnish forrain Plantations? |
A44756 | How much are they to be commended for their neatness? |
A44756 | How oft did I eat Bisket, so mouldy, that danc''d up and down with ugly Maggots? |
A44756 | How oft did I stop my nostrils while I drunk stinking Beverage? |
A44756 | How oft did the stench of the Pump strike me into a swoon? |
A44756 | I Saw you in hot discourse a good while with that bearded Beast, how did you feel his pulse beat? |
A44756 | I Saw you somwhat earnest in banding arguments with that Asse, but how have you sped? |
A44756 | I Took notice that you courted and complemented that female creture more then ordinary, but how have you prevail''d? |
A44756 | I am afraid that Morphandra hath a purpose to re- transform me, and make me put on human shape again: Well, Sir, What''s your will with me? |
A44756 | I find you are extreamly incens''d against your own Country, and your Conterraneans, I pray what''s the reson of this strange and violent aversion? |
A44756 | I pray were not all these not onely Instinctive but Discoursive Resons? |
A44756 | Is she willing to go back to that Syrenian City, that great Mart of all female plesures, Marcopolis, where she slept in the bosom of her first causes? |
A44756 | Let it not give any offence, if I desire to know What Countreyman you were, when you were a Rational Creture? |
A44756 | Now, Sir, that you speak of Angels, what degrees are ther of them in the Celestiall Hierarchy? |
A44756 | Oh, how is it possible then that the eyes of their understanding shold not be opend, to discern their own error? |
A44756 | Poor stupid Animal, how camest thou to be thus so pitifully disguis''d and transform''d from thy first species, and so honourable a profession? |
A44756 | Poor stupid creture, how camest thou to be so unhappily transform''d, or deform''d rather, by assumption of this shape? |
A44756 | Weeping also the counter- passion hath many of these ill- favor''d motions, what an odd kind of face doth an infant make assoon as he is born? |
A44756 | Well, well, will you shake off that ugly shape, and put on Man again, and go along with me towards your own Country? |
A44756 | What are you, Sir, that dare approach this Hive, this precious Cell, and Confectionary of Nature? |
A44756 | What do you mean by Reson? |
A44756 | What huge varieties of labors must go before, ere Wheat come to be made Bread, and Barly Drink? |
A44756 | What nomberles diseases is his frail body, which is the socket of his soul, subject unto? |
A44756 | What nombers of them were starv''d, and som tumbled into their graves alive? |
A44756 | What think you of Caligula''s Horse who was made Consul? |
A44756 | Why shold he, I say, com short of this perfection and priviledge? |
A44756 | Yes, said the Governour, and I remember I writ of two or three; Hereupon he was also knock''d down, and us''d in the same manner? |
A44756 | could you not get him into the toyl, and make him turn Man again? |
A44756 | doth he desire to be disasinated, and becom Man again, as I promised he should be, provided his will concurred therunto? |
A44756 | for I am but newly com into the world; I but, quoth the Wolf, you eat up my grasse; The Lamb replyed, How can that be, Sir? |
A44756 | had not he Reson in him? |
A44756 | hath he accepted of the Bill of Exchange you presented unto him? |
A44756 | have you made her inclinable to a resumption of her former nature? |
A44756 | how comes it that they shold be so vilipended and revil''d? |
A44756 | how excellent is our marrow against the Gowt and Consumptions? |
A44756 | how fullsom wold such a fool be? |
A44756 | how medicinall is that kind of bone which is found in the left ventricle of a Hart''s heart against the Hemerroids? |
A44756 | how punctually do they keep their haunts? |
A44756 | how short are his plesures, and what black sudds commonly they leave behind them? |
A44756 | how som of ripe age will screech, cry and howle in so many disordered notes, and singultient accents? |
A44756 | is this the wild Boar you writ to him of? |
A44756 | nay what was Minerva the goddesse of Wisdom, born out of the brain of Iove himself? |
A44756 | were they not all women? |
A44756 | what are the three spirituall Vertues? |
A44756 | what exquisit vertues hath the Hart''s horn, with other parts of the body, as the Naturalists observe? |
A44756 | what were the three Graces? |
A44756 | what were the twelve Sybills? |
A44756 | will he return to live among those Mountains where he first breath''d air, and put on his primitive nature again? |
A45496 | Again, Behold,( saith he) the Kingdom of God is within you: Who will not so interpret it? |
A45496 | Again, who will deny God to be a body, though he be a Spirit? |
A45496 | And indeed who among them all can say, that he is not beholding to him? |
A45496 | Are any willing to have evil and corrupt manners corrected and amended? |
A45496 | Are there who reverence the Verses of the old Poets, and certain divine answers of the Oracles? |
A45496 | Are there, who would fain know and acquaint themselves with the ancient Rites and Ceremonies observed in or about the sacrifices of the Gods? |
A45496 | At verò cui libido domina est, in quo coeno dedecoris volutatur? |
A45496 | Aut quae doctrinae Religio est, non docenda desiderare, sed ● esideratis coac ● rvare doctrinam? |
A45496 | Besides, who can express how great admiration, glory, and favour, he had amongst all men? |
A45496 | But doth he know no other Sacrifices? |
A45496 | But perhaps he was not happy in his Scholars? |
A45496 | But perhaps, his assertions were woven only with knotty arguments? |
A45496 | But silence being made Athanasius demanded, whether any one there present had known Arsenius? |
A45496 | But what can be imagined that the impostor should have in his eye, in adding this particle to Polycarp''s Epistle? |
A45496 | Cur parvuli in Christo, 〈 ◊ 〉 lactentis errorem sequimini? |
A45496 | Do they speak any thing to the purpose? |
A45496 | Do we not see with how great a burden of Gold, Silver and Rayment, the Most sweet Doctor and blessed Matyr, Cyprian departed out of Egypt? |
A45496 | Five Books against Marcion; of whom Eusebius reports, that meeting Polycarp, and asking him; Dost thou know us? |
A45496 | Have any a mind to understand what were the Doctrines of those Hereticks, who in its infancy and first rise disquieted the Church of God? |
A45496 | He hath a most elegant resemblance of mans body unto the earth out of which it was taken: what is the blood, saith he, but a red humor? |
A45496 | He is( saith he) accounted the chief among the Latins, for who more learned then this Man? |
A45496 | He replyeth, whence is this Tradition? |
A45496 | He that forsakes the Chair of Peter, on which the Church was founded, doth he hope himself to be in the Church? |
A45496 | He willed him to read and search the Prophets, and to joyn prayer thereunto: Asking him again what Master he should make use of? |
A45496 | How dost thou desire to be heard of God, when thou hearest not thy self? |
A45496 | Ierom mentions these books contra gentes, as distinct from his Apology: quid, inquit, Tertulliano eruditius? |
A45496 | If he were the forger but of some only,''t is demanded of which? |
A45496 | Lastly, writing to Polycarp, he thus speaks, Attend unto your Bishop, that God may to you: what had he forgot, that he wrote to a Bishop? |
A45496 | Moreover, as we have said, the dead also have been raised and continued with us many years: And what shall I say? |
A45496 | Non multum aberat a quinquaginta annis,& ideò dicebaut ei, quinquagi ● ta annorum nondum es,& Abraham vidisti? |
A45496 | Now if the Oeconomy of his Passion be shewn to have obtained, and to obtain so great power, how great will it be at his glorious appearing? |
A45496 | Now the question may be what use of it Eusebius means? |
A45496 | Of Hereticks, thus; Quis Doctrinae profectus est, placida magis quàm docenda conquirere? |
A45496 | Oh; my dear brethren, what shall we answer ● nto these things? |
A45496 | Quanta ergò perturbatio eorum est, quanta calamitas, qui suprà memoratis malis serviunt? |
A45496 | Quid ergò mirum, si& ego sapientiam saecularem propter eloquii venustatem& membrorum pulchritudinem, de aneillâ& captivâ Israelitidem facere cupio? |
A45496 | Quid verò infaelicius ebrietatis dominatu? |
A45496 | Speaking of the mystery of the two natures in Christ; What need is there( saith he) of dispute and strife about words? |
A45496 | That the Plants and Trees spring downward, that the snow and rain and hail fall upward upon the earth? |
A45496 | This is indeed said by Mr. Dallee, but how doth it appear that he is the man? |
A45496 | Ventri ultra capacitatem infundere, sensuirationem a dimere, non loqui, non meminisse, non stare,& mortem quandam naturae incolumi imperare? |
A45496 | Vt liquor Ambrosius cor mitigat, imbuit palatum, Sedem animae penetrat, mentem fovet,& pererrat artus? |
A45496 | What a match is that of two Believers, of one hope, one vow, one discipline, the same service? |
A45496 | What greater pleasure than the loathing of pleasure it self? |
A45496 | What shall we think, saith he, of them who give out that there are Antipodes walking opposite unto us? |
A45496 | What should I speak of the Administration of the Word? |
A45496 | What so hard to be done, that he made not to seem easie? |
A45496 | What therefore is pure, what worthy of God? |
A45496 | What was there so difficult to be perswaded, that by the force of disputation he cleared not up? |
A45496 | Whence should we so learn mercy or patience? |
A45496 | Whether Fortunatianus( sometime a Bishop) who had sacrificed unto Idols, might challenge or take unto himself his office again? |
A45496 | Whether Novatian the Schismatick could or might baptize or no? |
A45496 | Whether a Stage- Player, persevering in the exercise of that unseemly Art, ought to communicate? |
A45496 | Whether those who had been baptized by Hereticks, upon their return unto the Catholick Church, ought again to be baptized? |
A45496 | Who among Christians did not reverence him as almost a Prophet; among Philosophers, as a Master? |
A45496 | Who any way religious did not fly unto him from the utmost parts of the World? |
A45496 | Who should comfort Christians tenderly affected with their losses, or rather those of little faith, with the hope of future things? |
A45496 | Who should raise up so many Martyrs with divine exhortations? |
A45496 | Who( saith he) doth not wish to suffer that he may purchase the whole favour of God, and all pardon from him by the compensation of his Blood? |
A45496 | Would any know the decrees or opinions of the old Philosophers? |
A45496 | and coming, desires not to suffer? |
A45496 | consider the several qualities; the muscles as clods; the bones as rocks or stones; also about the Paps, certain pebbles? |
A45496 | how constantly maintain the purity of our faith? |
A45496 | of Cicero, concerning Plato) that he had rather err with Origen, than be of a right judgement with others? |
A45496 | quid acutius? |
A45496 | quàm dedecorosus autem est furentium motus, temeritatis impetus, odiorum stimulus, livoris anxietas? |
A45496 | responsum,( inquit) breviter habeto: Quis nesciat& in Moyse& in Prophetarum voluminibus quaedam assumpta de gentilium libris? |
A45496 | so that this book alone is abundantly sufficient to convince the pertinacy of the Gentiles? |
A45496 | than the contempt of the whole World? |
A45496 | than true Liberty, than a sound or good Conscience, than a sufficient Life, then no fear of death? |
A45496 | the most Learned of all the Ancients: in whose books, saith he, what is there to be found unlearned? |
A45496 | what Authors doth he not read? |
A45496 | what is the flesh; but earth turned into its figures? |
A45496 | which of their disciplines doth he not touch? |
A45496 | who ever more happy? |
A45496 | who having inquired, comes not unto us? |
A45496 | who more exercised in things both divine and humane? |
A45496 | wilt thou have the Lord to be mindful of thee when thou prayest seeing thou art not mindful of thy self? |
A45496 | within you i. e. in your own hand and power; if you hear, and do the command of God? |
A45496 | yea, what not extracted out of the very bowels of Philosophy? |
A45496 | — Hath any one of the Philosophers either performed these things, or can he, if he will? |
A44721 | & c. how wary in conferring of honors? |
A44721 | ? |
A44721 | Among others, how did Henricus Auceps, and Otto the great trounce them? |
A44721 | And I pray how many Emperors have omitted the Papal Coronation, and neglected those superfluous formalities and ceremonies? |
A44721 | And I pray, how doth Italy use to encourage and reward learned men? |
A44721 | And in Virgil, whom we cry up so highly, what was he but a meere Ape to Homer, Theocritus, and other Greek Poets? |
A44721 | And now most judicious and noble gallant Princes, what think you of Germany? |
A44721 | And now, I pray, what Nation is more vindicative than the Italian? |
A44721 | And what a powerfull stroak did the Ciceronian Eloquence carry with it against Catiline? |
A44721 | And where shall I begin this task? |
A44721 | And why should we seek for any abroad, when there are so many Imperiall Families at home? |
A44721 | Antequam nupsisti, cum Cardinale coisti? |
A44721 | But I will make a step hence to high Germany; how many famous Mercantile Cities have you there, besides the sixty and odd Hans Townes? |
A44721 | But Spain gave all these Princes to other Nations; how many hath she affoorded her self? |
A44721 | But how hath the Indian discovery prosper''d? |
A44721 | But how mightily have we profitted, what huge advantages have we now of our Fore- fathers? |
A44721 | But indeed the Italian Nobles are rather Marchants then Nobles, nay many of their Princes are no better: what I pray is the Gran Duke of Florence? |
A44721 | But is Spain so hungry as you say, that she must eat grasse? |
A44721 | But shall we passe with a dry foot the waters of Spain? |
A44721 | But this prodigious Fleet being come to the British seas, how did the little English vessels pelt those huge Gigantick Galeons of Spain? |
A44721 | But to look upon the high Classis of Nobility, how many Imperiall and Regall Families are there? |
A44721 | But what a world of dangers and difficulties did they overcom? |
A44721 | But what did he doe by this tedious and venturous march? |
A44721 | But what exchanges did Spain make to Amenia for this tresure? |
A44721 | But what shall we wander so far in the Indies? |
A44721 | But why do I fly to Pagan instances, when ther are so many Christian Examples at hand? |
A44721 | Can the witt of man run upon a more nefandous thing? |
A44721 | Can ther be greater Townes then Ghent, Prage, Erford, Lovain, and Colen? |
A44721 | Can ther be more pleasant Townes then Auspurg, Leipsic, Bern, Noremberg, Lunsburg, Saltzburg, Basil, Leiden, and Bruges? |
A44721 | Can there be a greater example then that of Charles the fifth? |
A44721 | Dum laudas Asinos Patriae, Bodine, quid Erras? |
A44721 | For Physitions, what part of the Univers hath produc''d more famous men then Spain? |
A44721 | For Somersetshire, what huge tracts of wast grounds are found there up and down without Inhabitants, which makes it so subject to theeves and Robbers? |
A44721 | For all other commodities either for pleasure, profit or necessity, what doth Germany want? |
A44721 | For how often have the French Kings with their Nobles been routed, defeated and discomfited by the English Gray- goose- wing? |
A44721 | For numerous heards of Cattle where can we find the like? |
A44721 | For what an Indignity is it to Captivate the mind of man, which Heaven can scarce hold, to one territory or clod of Earth? |
A44721 | For where can be found a greater Lux in Apparrell, then in Germany? |
A44721 | Generall Councells have bin kept, and no Citty can say so much: what a Heavenly Temple is there? |
A44721 | Good Lord, what Victorious Kings hath Poland had? |
A44721 | He that was Son to Huniades, who was so great an Artist in policy, and a well temperd Government? |
A44721 | Heic medijs habitamus aquis, quis credere posset? |
A44721 | Heic nulla, aut certé seges est rarissima lini, Linifici tamen est copia major ubi? |
A44721 | How did they infest the Indies, and what a masse of Treasure did Drake( that English Dragon) bring home thence? |
A44721 | How far further could I enlarge my self on this subject? |
A44721 | How few do rerurn true Germans? |
A44721 | How gallantly did the English take Cales, the Key of Spain, and brought home such rich plunder? |
A44721 | How manfully did the ancient Britains tugg with the Romans, who receav''d fowler defeats there then in any other Region? |
A44721 | How many have been murther''d for casting but a few glances upon another mans wife out of a window? |
A44721 | How many have gone o''re the Alpes with plain and open hearts, but return''d full of cunning and mentall reservation? |
A44721 | How many have gone to England,''and come home with Tobacco- pipes in their mouths? |
A44721 | How many have gone to France with some Religion, and come back without any? |
A44721 | How many have gone to Holland gentile men, but come back meer Boors? |
A44721 | How many have gone to Spain with cheerfull, and well- dispos''d humours, but come back with a kinde of dull Melancholy? |
A44721 | How many hundred of years did England pay Tribute, though it went under the name of Peter- pence, to Rome, think you? |
A44721 | How many most signall, and glorious men hath Germany produc ● … d? |
A44721 | How many places in Italy are there, whither strangers when they goe thither, are warned not to goe unto, in regard of the ill air? |
A44721 | How many thousand heads of fat cattell doe the Graziers fetch thence for the supply of all the neighbouring Provinces? |
A44721 | How many yeers did she appeer as a Monster without a head after the death of Frederic the second? |
A44721 | How passengers are tormented with Chinches, ● … stinking little vermin, in their lodgings at night? |
A44721 | I com now from their diet to their clothing; good Lord, was ther ever any Nation so mimical, so fantastique, and variable in their vestments? |
A44721 | I come now to the Salt which savours all things, how much are all Countreys obliged to France for this wholsome commodity? |
A44721 | I confesse Italy abounds with nobles, but what kind of one''s are they? |
A44721 | I know this itch of Travelling, and to wander abroad, is no where greater then among us: How many thousands of us are found in Paris at this time? |
A44721 | I pray where hath nature endeavoured with more industry to enrich a Country? |
A44721 | I say, who could have thought it? |
A44721 | Ignotumne tibi 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 erat? |
A44721 | In our Germany, how many Interregnums have we had by this way of Election? |
A44721 | Is she so abandond to Vice, that she hath quite shaken off all Vertu, and a good Conscience? |
A44721 | Is she so weak that she needs Crutches? |
A44721 | Is this that incomparable fertility of France you speak of, Cosen? |
A44721 | It makes me think upon Glareanus a great learned man but much in debt, who being asked by a friend of his how he liv''d? |
A44721 | Ministri altaris pauci admodum erant, sed enim quid opus pluribus, ubi ipsa paucitas inter Laicos propemodum otiosa vacaret? |
A44721 | Nec minus arsisti postquam in patriam rediisti, Nonne tuo mystae Davidi succubuisti? |
A44721 | Niforet Austriacis Germania fulta columnis? |
A44721 | Now for Philosophers, Rhetoritians and Poets, Spain hath produc''d many masculine births also that way, what a Man of Men was Seneca the Philosopher? |
A44721 | Now for salt pits, what numbers are there in Luneburg, in Saxony, in Suabland, Austria, and other places? |
A44721 | Now to go from the Sword to the Crosier, What brave Prelats, and Champions against haeresie hath France bred? |
A44721 | Now where doth this so useful Vegetal grow more copiously then in France? |
A44721 | Now whom shal we give credit unto, the eternall word of God, or the Policy of these men? |
A44721 | O Lord why didst thou not shed some teares in our Country? |
A44721 | O immortall Gods, how did she expand her self afterwards, how violently did she thrive and augment her Dominions? |
A44721 | O precious Italy, and among other territories of thine, O luxurious Campania? |
A44721 | Of the Anhaltin Family, nere allied to the Saxonian, how many Heros have bin? |
A44721 | Of the Longobards, who denominated Lombardy in Italie, and occupied it two hundred yeers? |
A44721 | Prince Lewis for his probity? |
A44721 | Pyramids? |
A44721 | Quid faceret Athleta Domini? |
A44721 | Quid per se prodesse Peregrinatio cuiquam potuit? |
A44721 | Quid precor egisti tu in Francia quando fuisti? |
A44721 | Quis nomen Winfride tuum, quis munera nes ● … cit? |
A44721 | Quod dignum memorare tuis, Hispania, Terris Vox humana valet? |
A44721 | Shipps are laden with Wools every yeer, and transported to other Regions? |
A44721 | Surely no; Touching the first, she may be call''d the Exchequer of all Christendom for Money, and I pray what can he want who hath Money? |
A44721 | The Pisan, Aquileian, and Roman fields themselves how many patches of rough barren ground have they? |
A44721 | The bowells of Spain abound also with excellent mettalls, what Iron, what Steel goes beyond that of Biscay? |
A44721 | The other presently wished, that he had a Field as large as the Firmament; the other replying, what he would doe with it? |
A44721 | This noble Continent of Germany was once Townlesse, and without Citties, but now I pray what part of the habitable Earth hath more? |
A44721 | Touching Intemperance, especially the vice of ebriety and excesse of drinking ▪ where hath it such a vogue as in Germany? |
A44721 | Touching the Vertues of the Pole, I will begin first with Religion, and where is she hous''d so poorly as in Poland? |
A44721 | Unde igitur habet Imperium, nisi a nobis? |
A44721 | Was it needfull then that the Jesuits shold be convinced by my mouth? |
A44721 | What Diminutions hath she receavd? |
A44721 | What Flax so good as that of Murcia? |
A44721 | What Quicksilver comparable to that of Medina? |
A44721 | What Silke better then that of Granada and Valentia? |
A44721 | What a Rendevous for Devotion is Compostella, where ther is such a frequency of Pilgrims to visit the body of Saint Iames the Apostle? |
A44721 | What a base plot had Charles the fourth, as also Vuenceslaus who would have prostituted the Empire for money? |
A44721 | What a bloody tyrant of Christians was that Decius you extoll so highly? |
A44721 | What a bold Britain was Brennus( who liv''d long before the English took footing there) what notable feates did he perform in Italy, Greece, and Asia? |
A44721 | What a famous Master in this art was Sigismondo Locatello of Ferrara? |
A44721 | What a horrid and destructive conjuration was that subterranean plot of the Gunpowder Treason? |
A44721 | What a man of men was Sigismund the first? |
A44721 | What a man was Maldonatus? |
A44721 | What a rare man and of heavenly speculations was Io: de sacro bosco, the Author of the sphaere, which remaines yet engraven upon his tomb in Paris? |
A44721 | What a rich Archbishoprick hath she, worth 300. thousand Crownes in annuall rent? |
A44721 | What a scandall to the German Nation was Iohn of Leyden, that frantique Rascall? |
A44721 | What a stately antient Palace where the Gothic Kings resided? |
A44721 | What a stately thing is Barcelona, situated so commodiously upon the Mediterranean, and to be an Arsenall for the Kings gallies? |
A44721 | What a stupendous circumvallation was that of Breda? |
A44721 | What a thing was Antwerp before the revolt of the Low Countries? |
A44721 | What a toyl it was to exscribe Authors before, and preserve them from the injury of time? |
A44721 | What a world of confusion, and exorbitances, of fraud, and depraedations did she fall into? |
A44721 | What brave atchievments are these to conquer and subdu Souls, which is more then to subjugat the body? |
A44721 | What do I speak of Noble men? |
A44721 | What gold purer then that which is found in Tagus? |
A44721 | What gracious concessions did he make them, according to their own confessions? |
A44721 | What hath Peregrination of it selfe profited any man? |
A44721 | What honors, offices, and dignities did they conferr upon them? |
A44721 | What huge proportions of good ground lieth untill''d in regard of the sloth of her Inhabitants? |
A44721 | What is all Germany but a Pandora''s Box? |
A44721 | What millions of bushels of Salt are expended, and exported out of France ev''ry yeer? |
A44721 | What mountainēs of favours did the two last Kings of England tumble upon them? |
A44721 | What notable exploits did he do in high and low Germany? |
A44721 | What of the Goths, who did lead a dance through all Europe? |
A44721 | What shall I say more my noble Auditors? |
A44721 | What shall I say of Boleslaus the third, who fought 50. battailes, and was Victor in all? |
A44721 | What shall I say of Sanazarius, that in three books he writ of Jesus Christ, he hath not the Name of Iesus or Christ through the whole work? |
A44721 | What shall I say of the Exploites of the Vandales, who gave name to Andalusia? |
A44721 | What shall I say of the kings of Denmark? |
A44721 | What shall I say of the state of Genoa? |
A44721 | What shall I say of those kinds of lice, which are the ofspring of the Hungarian air, which much infest all people? |
A44721 | What shall I speak of the Austrian Saffron? |
A44721 | What tough wrestling, and terrible Wars continued''twixt her and Venice for two or three Ages together? |
A44721 | What variety of Baths and Medicinall waters have wee? |
A44721 | What vast pensions had they from the English Exchequer? |
A44721 | What wool primer then that of Segovia? |
A44721 | What''s become now of their hundred and ten Kings which they us''d to raunt of so much? |
A44721 | What''s become of their Crown which they bragg''d to be more weighty, and have more gold in it then any Crown in Christendome? |
A44721 | What''s more delicat then that of the Rhine? |
A44721 | When Cyneas the Ambassador of Pyrrhus came to Rome and was brought about to view the City, he was asked what he thought of her? |
A44721 | Whence therefore hath he the Empire but from us? |
A44721 | Where is she more mix''d with prophannesse? |
A44721 | Where is there greater excesse in Dyet, in Queckshoses, Made- dishes, and Sawces? |
A44721 | Where is there more crisping of haire, more boring of Eares to hang in Rings? |
A44721 | Where was it at Goleta nere Tunis which was so shamefully lost? |
A44721 | Where was the Spanish manhood in Afrique, when Sebastian was slain, and the Moor got so signall a victory? |
A44721 | Who doth not admire Americo Vespucio the Florentine, who hath christn''d the New World, which is held to be as big as the Old, with his name? |
A44721 | Who hath not heard of Farinata Uberti, celebrated by Dante? |
A44721 | Who hath not heard of the Greek Wine that growes hard by Naples, on that part of ground were the fierie Mountain Vesuvius is superincumbent? |
A44721 | Will an inestimable treasure of all Wealth delight you? |
A44721 | Yet notwithstanding this solemn Sanction, how hath the Papal power encreas''d upon the Imperial of late times? |
A44721 | You pleas''d to say, Noble Cosen Ernest, that the Kings of France never die; shall they be eternal, and their faith so mortal? |
A44721 | are not divers Provinces in Spain and Portingal descended from Them? |
A44721 | but how few such Lacedemonian Patriots are found now a dayes, specially in France? |
A44721 | how VIRIATUS for ten yeers together did shake them? |
A44721 | how circumspect in distribution of Offices? |
A44721 | how did the last King enervat his own prerogative, to strengthen their priviledges? |
A44721 | how doth salt fill the Kings Coffers with treasure? |
A44721 | how judicious in rewarding of Men? |
A44721 | how many potent and flourishing States have fallen away from her? |
A44721 | how often hath it pierc''d the very center of the Kingdom? |
A44721 | how they would vapour and raunt( an humor that is more the Scotchmans own than any) nay what a malitious and ingratefull monster was one of them? |
A44721 | is this that land of promise? |
A44721 | may not she expect the highest roome among the Kingdomes of Europe? |
A44721 | or what profit hath it brought to Europe? |
A44721 | what Age ever produc''d the like? |
A44721 | what Infatuation, or Frenzy rather transports this people so far from the dictates of reason? |
A44721 | what a Paradise is Naples at this time? |
A44721 | what a distraction did they bring on mens braines? |
A44721 | what a fierce Persecutor was Dioclesian? |
A44721 | what a foolish humor was that in Persius to study obscurity so much? |
A44721 | what a virtue it had to preserve Rome? |
A44721 | what are the Clarissimi of Venice? |
A44721 | what are the Senators of Genoa but all Marchants? |
A44721 | what hast thou done? |
A44721 | what ill air''d fens in many places? |
A44721 | what new waies of fortification doth she daily invent? |
A44721 | what notable rich returnes have the English made from France? |
A44721 | what passions did struggle in the Father, when he was to sign the Sentence? |
A44721 | what proud rascals were they in their own conceit? |
A44721 | what stories they have of adulterious loves, of unbridled lusts, what stratagems do they relate of such things? |
A44721 | what''s stronger then that of Franconia? |
A44721 | what''s sweeter then that of Austria? |
A44721 | when had Envy more matter to work upon? |
A44721 | where a greater vanity in cloathing dead Walls? |
A44721 | where is there more dead mens haire worn upon the heads of the living? |
A46295 | 21. that Christ should have restored unto them: We thought, said he, that This would have proved the man, that should have redeemed, From what? |
A46295 | Alas, alas, Jerusalem, the city of the great King, How shall I now call thee at this day? |
A46295 | Alas, how shall ye put away this your rebuke, and ignominy? |
A46295 | And after this he saith unto them if ye will jeopard your lives for the holy Lord, why dye we like women? |
A46295 | And how dare you ● … ed the blood of the uncircumcised therein, whom ye abhor, and yet mix their blood with yours? |
A46295 | And how say ye( you Princes) that stick unto your God? |
A46295 | And how should I receive any consolation, when I see my son dead, and I can not bury him? |
A46295 | And if a man come into the presence of the King uncalled, Will not the King check him, and say unto him, What dost thou here before I call thee? |
A46295 | And now, how darest thou be s ● … bold to kill those that are escaped unto it? |
A46295 | And to what purpose serveth thy life after they be 〈 ◊ 〉 one? |
A46295 | And which of you can say, he hath intelligence of the secret of the Lord, or hath received any such watch- word as God gave at that time unto David? |
A46295 | And why should this new wall so dismay you? |
A46295 | Antipater being in the prison, heard the noise, and asked, What business is this? |
A46295 | Are ye not they that constrained me to make you this Feast, notwithstanding the greater hunger that I have? |
A46295 | Are ye not they that spoiled my house, and left me no kind of food, for me and my Son? |
A46295 | Art not thou he which hast killed the Souldiers of God in the midst of the City of Jerusalem? |
A46295 | Behold, I have prepared a fair Table for you, most valiant men, why eat ye not? |
A46295 | But now when thou hast yielded thy self unto them, and they order thee despitefully, What wilt thou say unto them? |
A46295 | But put the case they put thee to death; Were it not better for thee to die on thine own sword, than on theirs? |
A46295 | But thou, O Lord, how long? |
A46295 | But to Salumith he said, doest thou not consider how the sons of Marimi know that their mother was put to death by thy counsell? |
A46295 | But what do I delay, or linger any longer, seeing the enemies deny me this, to kisse them vvhiles vve are yet alive? |
A46295 | But what needest thou, murderer, to put my sons to death before my face? |
A46295 | But what shall I do, when God hath delivered me into the hands of a most wicked man? |
A46295 | But what speak I of once? |
A46295 | But who can cure the infirmities which God sends? |
A46295 | But you( dear brethren and friends) why are ye led with no remorse of your selves, that your enemies may once remove from you these Engins of war? |
A46295 | But you, what have you to trust unto, when as ye are unfaithful? |
A46295 | By and by he taunted the Prophet again, saying, Who made thee of the King''s Counsel? |
A46295 | By what means was he overthrown? |
A46295 | By what reason can ye then say, that ye shall be accepted for sacrifices, and offerings before God? |
A46295 | Could I ever have looked that I should have overlived my son, and that I should not be suffered to see him, and to bury him? |
A46295 | Could not Saul have saved his life, and his sons both, if he had been so disposed? |
A46295 | David also, King of Israel, of famous memory, from the time of his youth, till his last end, his valiantnesse never failed him; and why? |
A46295 | Did he not overthrow the pride of Pharaoh and his Charmers, only with the Rod of the Lord which he had with him? |
A46295 | Did not Asa King of Juda, accompanied with a small number of men, make an Expedition against the Ethiopians? |
A46295 | Did not Captain Nicanor in my fathers name and Caesars, with all the Roman host, make a Covenant with him? |
A46295 | Did not we tell thee ere while, like as we tell thee now, that we are determined to die by one means or other? |
A46295 | Did not you once enter this Town, in the time of Nero Caesar, and defend the honor of his name? |
A46295 | Did our fathers overcome him ● … y fo ● … ce of Arms? |
A46295 | Did ye ever know me refuse to fight? |
A46295 | Did you it not your selves? |
A46295 | Do ye not all know, how the life is a thing that he hath left us to keep, and that we are his servants? |
A46295 | Do ye not consider it is come to their turn to rule over all, that God hath committed Dominion unto them, and ayded them with his assistance? |
A46295 | Do ye not know that Vespasian draweth nigh to come to this holy City? |
A46295 | Do ye not know, that they went not unto God before they were called; and when they were called, they came? |
A46295 | Do ye not see( most foolish men) how our fore- fathers had the victory ever by prayer? |
A46295 | Do you not see that the Romans reign over your enemies, and bear rule over them that sometimes were your Masters, and hate us? |
A46295 | Doest thou not know I honoured him and his son in Jewry, how I would not suffer any of my Army to annoy any of his Cities? |
A46295 | Dost thou not know, that he that breaketh a wicked oath, doth nothing wickedly himself therein? |
A46295 | Doth he not do it to save the Ship, and his life from death? |
A46295 | Doth not the meanest amongst all the Princes of the Romans bear rule over them? |
A46295 | Eleazar answered him, What takest thou upon thee the name of a King? |
A46295 | For if we had ever intended it, Could we not have done it long ago when as nothing is betwixt us and you, but the Mountains of Ararat? |
A46295 | For the blood of all Israel, What is it but thy blood? |
A46295 | For who brought the Romans first against the City of Jerusalem, but Hircanus and Aristobulus? |
A46295 | For who knew that Hezekiahs biles could be healed with a plaister of figs? |
A46295 | For, what should I do now, seeing God hath given me into the hands of a most cruel Tyrant, who spareth neither mine age, nor your youth? |
A46295 | Had you not ever the victory from the time you came out of Egypt, until the reign of Saul the son of Cis? |
A46295 | Hath not the earth swallowed up them that despised thee, and the winds scattered them a- sunder that made insurrections against thee? |
A46295 | Have I not ever done thee true and faithfull service? |
A46295 | Have not the floods of the seas persecuted them, that persecuted thee? |
A46295 | Have not you been slain and put to flig ● … t by us? |
A46295 | Have ye not then imployed your labour in vain? |
A46295 | How are the hearts of the people turned so aukwardly, that they will bear no admonition of just men? |
A46295 | How are they slain in thee( O Jerusalem thou holy City, renowned throughout the whole earth) all just men, all holy men? |
A46295 | How art thou become a burying place of carcases? |
A46295 | How art thou fallen from the height of thy pride, and how art thou set afire and burnt even unto thy foundations, and art left desolate and solitary? |
A46295 | How art thou now full of slain men, and carc ● … ses which have perished, some by the sword, some by famine? |
A46295 | How can we make amends for this sin? |
A46295 | How can we put away this opprobry? |
A46295 | How can you stay upon his help, when as he hath withdrawn his loving countenance from you, and your sins have made a divorce between you and him? |
A46295 | How can your sins be purged which you have committed in the Temple of the Lord, by shedding of innocent blood, without all mercy? |
A46295 | How cometh it to passe therefore that thou art brought thus low? |
A46295 | How far and wide hath he enlarged the Empire of the Romans? |
A46295 | How hath the ashes of the fire covered thee, that the Sun can not come at thee? |
A46295 | How is it come to pass that so mighty a man is taken in his own Country, and amongst his own people? |
A46295 | How is it that now ye see not the Sanctuary turned into a vile sink of blood? |
A46295 | How is the City that was heretofore in such highness and dignity, now brought under the foot, through the sons of the Citizens thereof? |
A46295 | How long Lord? |
A46295 | How long O Lord, holy and true? |
A46295 | How long wilt thou continue to bring us into the Bryars, Thou enemy and hater of the Lord? |
A46295 | How shall we batter the walls hereafter? |
A46295 | How shall we loose that he would have knit fast within us? |
A46295 | How then are ye so foolish to say that ye are an acceptable and well pleasing sacrifice to God, when as ye resist the will of God so proudly? |
A46295 | How then dare we be so bold to swear, to break the Law of God, and become man- killers? |
A46295 | How then may we be enemies one against another, and kill one another? |
A46295 | Husbandmen also, if they till their ground, and then sow it with seed, shall they not lose their pains, unless they will also mow it? |
A46295 | I grant: But wot ye what? |
A46295 | I, put the case they cast in thy teeth, and say, thy words be lyes: How shalt thou avoid the reproach? |
A46295 | If I had purposed to flee unto the Romans, could I not have done it before I brought in thee? |
A46295 | If prayer had not helped him, I pray you, what had three hundred men been able to do against so great a multitude? |
A46295 | If so be ye would determine to leave off the siege, had it not been better for you to have done it at the beginning, whiles your Army was yet whole? |
A46295 | If they should at their pleasure cast them away before the King call for them, Shall they not move him to anger? |
A46295 | If this chanceth unto such a man, to be taken in his own Land, in the midst of his families and friends; How shall we escape in a strange Land? |
A46295 | If thou wilt say, How shall we do by reason of the oath that we have sworn? |
A46295 | If we had been minded to win your Land, had we not been able utterly to have overcome you, and to have gotten the dominion over you? |
A46295 | In that we be armed as ye object unto us? |
A46295 | In which who so travel, if they faint in the end, do they not labour in vain? |
A46295 | Ioseph notwithstanding came to one gate of the City, and cryed that the people might hear, saying; What meaneth this conspiracy of yours against me? |
A46295 | Is it not a good feast that I have drest for you? |
A46295 | Is not this your solemn Festival Day? |
A46295 | It had been my part rather to have been moved with pity of my Son, then yours: and how chanceth it therefore that you are more mercifull than I? |
A46295 | Jonathan said to the Romans, How much is the manhood of the Romans to be regarded in our eyes? |
A46295 | Joseph answered, Indeed I know, my brethren, that your words are just and true; For who is so mad to desire to live in this hurly burly? |
A46295 | Josephus the Priest demanded of him whose son he was? |
A46295 | Likewise builders, if they finish not their work, but leave off afore they make an end, is not all their labour lost and spent in vain? |
A46295 | Mark you no ● …, how your Maker revengeth your deat ● …, and requireth your blood at his hand in the time of his destruction? |
A46295 | Might he not either have hanged himself, or have run upon a knife, or, at the least, have followed his wife''s counsel, to curse God and die? |
A46295 | Moreover, who can tell whether it may so happen, that some of us be taken by the Jews, like as Joseph is prisoner herc with us? |
A46295 | Notwithstanding he would not be perswaded, and why? |
A46295 | Now therefore my son, if I should die for hunger, to whom should I leave thee being yet a child? |
A46295 | Now therefore why rebel ye against the Empire and Dominion of the Romans? |
A46295 | Now therefore, my brethren, tell me, What shame were it to you, if ye were subject unto the Romans? |
A46295 | Now, when as you are few, and your most valiant Souldiers slain, why do you not rather choose to dye then to live? |
A46295 | O Lord God of Israel, have not Angels in time past come down from heaven to earth to fight thy battels? |
A46295 | O thou worship of Israel, the mi ● … h of our hearts, whither is thy glory come? |
A46295 | Or what are you to be compared to other Nations that be under their Dominion? |
A46295 | Or, why make ye not peace with his son to be under him, according as other Nations be, that ye might live, and not perish? |
A46295 | Ought ye to be more moved therewith then a Woman? |
A46295 | Remember you not how God in times past aided the Egyptians, insomuch that they obtained the dominion over all the whole world? |
A46295 | Sampson also, that most valiant Giant, until such time as he had sinned, did not God evermore hear his prayer, and ever he gat the victory thereby? |
A46295 | Schimeon commanded a sort of murderers to place Amittai upon the walls in the sight of the Romans, and said unto him; Seest thou, Amittai? |
A46295 | Search the Histories and Chronicles from the time of your Ancestours; When was there any time wherein you were free from the yoak of the Gentiles? |
A46295 | See now how Alexander, which went about to subdue the whole earth, and to declare his power, closed us up within our land, Why? |
A46295 | Shall I that have been in such estate, now be cast out of my dignity, and be constrained to wander here and there as a banished man? |
A46295 | Shall not this thy dishonour redound also to the people of God? |
A46295 | Shall so few of them put us to flight, not able to stand in their hands? |
A46295 | Should he not displease thee, that should take away and violate a Table or such like thing, prepared to the honour of thee? |
A46295 | Should ye not be ashamed to say this? |
A46295 | Should''st thou not rather desire death than life? |
A46295 | So when they had made an end of talk, each man drew out his sword, and came to him in the midst of the Cave, saying: Hearest thou, Joseph our Prince? |
A46295 | Spare your people: why will you oppress them vexed with hunger, thirst, pestilence, and besieging? |
A46295 | Take heed what you say: Is it reason to break the Caesarean fidelity? |
A46295 | Tell me( ye mad men) know ye not what Amaziah King of Juda did? |
A46295 | Tell me, Art thou not a mortal man, subject unto the griefs and vexations of this life, and worms meat as we be? |
A46295 | Tell me, I pray you, what hope have you, seeing God hath made them a terrour unto all Nations upon the earth, who serveth them? |
A46295 | The Priest stood still by the Altar, crying, which of you will come to me man for man? |
A46295 | The young man answered, How can I otherwise do? |
A46295 | Then Titus being wroth with his souldiers, that they had fled from the Jews, said unto them: Shall I not be revenged of these Jews? |
A46295 | They c ● … yed therefore unto the Lord, saying, wilt thou for the offence of one man, deal so cruelly with the whole congregation? |
A46295 | Thou art a Prince, a King, and a Priest, Wilt thou be bound in chains? |
A46295 | Thou dost what thou wilt, and none dare say to thee, Why dost thou so? |
A46295 | Titus hearing this, was much incensed and said, remains the pride of your hearts, and the hardness of your neck still with you, though ye be Captives? |
A46295 | Titus seeing his father wounded, being sore abashed, ran to him to help him, to whom his father said: How is it my son, that thou art thus astonied? |
A46295 | Titus standing without, cryed unto Jehochanan, and said unto him: Hearest thou, Jehochanan, I ● … not thy 〈 ◊ 〉 yet great enough? |
A46295 | To whom hast thou left the Land of Juda? |
A46295 | Was it not because he would turn away the plague from Israel? |
A46295 | We have destroyed our selves, one another, with civill Wars, so that we are but few left; but what are you? |
A46295 | Were it not reason that you should love them, which have brought down your enemies, and revenged you of them? |
A46295 | Whar ignominy is it, so many to be repulsed of so few? |
A46295 | What avail tears? |
A46295 | What did ye ever see in me, that you should judge me fearful? |
A46295 | What do you think us to be dogs, and that we are afraid of your stones? |
A46295 | What eye is so hard that can behold thee? |
A46295 | What hath this Temple offended thee( thou seditious Jehochanan?) |
A46295 | What have I offended thee? |
A46295 | What have they offended? |
A46295 | What have you now left to trust unto, when as two of your walls are already battered down, and one only remaineth? |
A46295 | What heart so stony that can endure to see thee? |
A46295 | What hope then have you to escape, when ye know the Philistines were ever stronger than you, and you were oftentimes overcome of them? |
A46295 | What is he that will open that he hath shut? |
A46295 | What is there left for you to put hope in? |
A46295 | What mean ye you wretches? |
A46295 | What means this therefore? |
A46295 | What needeth pitty? |
A46295 | What puissant Kings hath he subdued under the Roman Empire? |
A46295 | What seest thou that thou wouldest desire to live? |
A46295 | What shall I tell of divers other just and godly women, which by their prayers obtained many things? |
A46295 | What should I say of Joseph, so beautifull, so wise, and witty a man? |
A46295 | What should I speak of the people of the Philistines, which heretofore alwayes have vexed and annoyed you? |
A46295 | What time as he held up his hands towards heaven; had not Israel the upper- hand of the Amalekites by his prayer? |
A46295 | What were you then if bands and companies of the Gentiles came not every day to aid you? |
A46295 | Where are her Sages and Elders, her young and most valiant men, which were jocund and merry in her streets upon her Sabbaths and Festival dayes? |
A46295 | Where art thou Elizeus? |
A46295 | Where art thou Moses the son of Amram? |
A46295 | Where be her Kings and Princes? |
A46295 | Where be the King ● … that were accustomed to come to enquire of her welfare in her gates? |
A46295 | Where be the hill ● … of the daughter of Sion? |
A46295 | Where be thy valiant souldiers? |
A46295 | Where is King Saul, and his son Jonathan that foughtfor the people of God, and died in the field? |
A46295 | Where is her famous Sanctuary, the Dwelling of the Almighty God? |
A46295 | Where is that most beautiful City of Sion, and that holy City which rejoyceth the whole Earth? |
A46295 | Where is the holy Law smothered and stifled in thy heart? |
A46295 | Where is the honour of thy God? |
A46295 | Where is the multitude of their mercies, wherewith they were wo nt honorably to bury their dead? |
A46295 | Where is thy magnificence, O Jerusalem? |
A46295 | Where remaineth now the rod of God, that holy rod that budded and blossomed in the daies of gladness? |
A46295 | Wherefore then rebel ye now against Vespasian Caesar, a most mercifull man, and one which never hurt you? |
A46295 | Wherefore ye mortal men, learn by me: Did not one God make all things, and He himself hath Dominion over them all? |
A46295 | Whereupon the King demanded of the Sages, what law shall that man have that in despight of the King speaketh things to his reproach? |
A46295 | Who also called Nero Caesar to reign over us? |
A46295 | Who can controll him that is stronger then he? |
A46295 | Who is he that hath strengthened the power of the Romans? |
A46295 | Who is so hardy of the best of you all, to come and declare his strength, and to fight with me? |
A46295 | Who shall pray and make intercession for us? |
A46295 | Who shall see all these things in thee, and shall desire to live, rather than to die? |
A46295 | Who, knowing the magnificence thou hadst of la ● … e, and now shall see thine ignominy and dishonour of the same, will not chuse to die? |
A46295 | Why condemn ye not these rich Cobs, that have made a conspiracy with the Romans, and determine to betray this holy City i to their hands? |
A46295 | Why do not the Romans deliver and rescue thee out of my hands? |
A46295 | Why do ye not rather favour and spare your own lives, your wives and children? |
A46295 | Why do ye not rather go before me, and I will follow as I may? |
A46295 | Why doest thou destroy and waste the Vineyard of the Lord GOD of Hosts? |
A46295 | Why doest thou not spare mine age? |
A46295 | Why drawest thou not out thy sword to declare thy manhood upon them? |
A46295 | Why hast thou brought upon it this great evil and mischief? |
A46295 | Why sleepest thou, King David? |
A46295 | Why spare you not your own lives, your City, and Sanctuary? |
A46295 | Why then eat ye not thereof, when as ye were the Authors and causers that I did this deed? |
A46295 | Why then hast thou taken away the sacrifices of thy God out of his Temple, and hast stuffed it with innumerable dead bodies? |
A46295 | Why then will ye fight in the place where ye should offer your sacrifice? |
A46295 | Why then( my dear Brethren and Friends) do you advise us to kill one another, and to expell and banish our souls from us, they being not call''d for? |
A46295 | Why weepye? |
A46295 | Why wil you defile your Sanctuarie, and hinder the worshipping of your God? |
A46295 | Why will not you obey them, that you may live and not perish? |
A46295 | Why will ye all fall together on the sword? |
A46295 | Will you be taken in the midst of the City, like as Oxen and Goats are taken in their folds? |
A46295 | Wilt th ● … u never make an end of mischief? |
A46295 | Wote ye what? |
A46295 | Ye brag that ye keep the Vigils and Feasts of your God: Why then follow ye not the example of Jechoniah your King? |
A46295 | Ye enemies of the Lord have murdered him with other just men; Why kill ye not me also? |
A46295 | Ye say, Ye come to seek the Lord: how is it then that ye are thus in Arms, after the manner of war? |
A46295 | Yea, why do you not prepare your selves to beat down this new Wall, which yet is slenderer then the other three that ye have cast down? |
A46295 | and how are thy sons that dwelt in thee, and the strangers also that resorted to thee, to honour thy Feasts, brought to ruine now in thee? |
A46295 | and how are thy streets made void and destitute of living creatures? |
A46295 | and how cometh it to pass, that thou hidest thy face from us? |
A46295 | and the Gentiles have the rule over thee now, and besiege thee, rasing thee, and casting thee down? |
A46295 | and they which heretofore were replenished with living, are now stuffed with dead? |
A46295 | and will ye flee or retreat, seeing me abide by it? |
A46295 | and wouldst thou take it in good part, and hold him excused that should so do unto thee? |
A46295 | but the four slew them, like as it had been tops of Coucumbers smitten off with most sharp swords? |
A46295 | from sin and Satan, or the curse and bondage of the Law? |
A46295 | hath not thunder from heaven destroyed thine enemies, and stars fought against thy foes? |
A46295 | how are the Priests of the Lord, and his Prophets slain, amongst those holy men? |
A46295 | if thou be a King, why commandest thou not us to be punished? |
A46295 | or Naman the Syrian''s leprosie, with the w ● … ter of Jordan? |
A46295 | or able to remove battels that be stirred up for many mens iniquities? |
A46295 | or the bitter water with wormwood? |
A46295 | or what amends canst thou have at their hands? |
A46295 | or what name shall I give thee? |
A46295 | or who knows his intents? |
A46295 | thee I say, which wouldest have fled away unto them? |
A46295 | to whom hast thou delivered the sheep of thy pasture? |
A46295 | to you I speak, Tell me, who shall make intercession unto God for us, if we should commit this sin, and each kill one another? |
A46295 | what have ye to leane unto, that ye are so stubborn, when neverthelesse the Lord is gone from you? |
A46295 | whom the Seditious have overcome, those helhounds, and blood- suckers, that have brought all these evils upon thee? |
A46295 | why come ye not now nearer? |
A46295 | will ye shoot at us that desire to be at peace with you, which ye granted your selves, and now will break your promise that ye made unto us? |
A46295 | wilt thou be angrie for ever? |