The Pelican Book of English Prose: Seventeenth-century prose, 1620-1700, edited by P. UrePenguin Books, 1956 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 29–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 131
... tion had been often put to him , and he had always declined to answer it : But to him he plainly said , he wished that Kings and their Ministers would believe them lawful , and so govern as men that expect to be resisted ; but he wished ...
... tion had been often put to him , and he had always declined to answer it : But to him he plainly said , he wished that Kings and their Ministers would believe them lawful , and so govern as men that expect to be resisted ; but he wished ...
Էջ 167
... tion , so angry and displeased with it ? Is it because this daughter of the morning is fallen from her primitive glory ? from her original vigour , and perfection ? Far be it from me to extenu- ate that great and fatal overthrow , which ...
... tion , so angry and displeased with it ? Is it because this daughter of the morning is fallen from her primitive glory ? from her original vigour , and perfection ? Far be it from me to extenu- ate that great and fatal overthrow , which ...
Էջ 218
... tion above ; So he said , I shall , I shall . Then parted we asunder and I saw him no more . John Bunyan The Pilgrim's Progress ... The Second Part ( 1684 ) Text from the second edition of 1686 A PIKE AND LITTLE FISHES THE Roches ...
... tion above ; So he said , I shall , I shall . Then parted we asunder and I saw him no more . John Bunyan The Pilgrim's Progress ... The Second Part ( 1684 ) Text from the second edition of 1686 A PIKE AND LITTLE FISHES THE Roches ...
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Common terms and phrases
amongst believe better body Brownists called certainty Christ Christian Church Clodp common consent creatures dance death Discourse Divine Dorothy Osborne doth Earth edition enemies eyes Father fear Friend Gilbert Burnet give glory Government Grace hand hath heart Heaven holy honour JAMES NAYLER John John Donne John Dryden John Evelyn John Locke King Knowledge labour Lacedemon learned Liberty live look Lord mind motion naturall Nature never observed Ovid passion peace perfect person Philosophers Poetry Poets prayer preach Prince prose Pseudodoxia Epidemica Puritans reason religion Robert Hooke Royal Society Scripture selfe Sermon shee shew sleepe Socinians soul speak Spirit style tell Text thee thereof things thou thought tion Treatises of Government trouble true Truth unto Venetia Stanley vertue whole words wou'd