| C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917. | | | | Shirley |
| | | | All buildings are but monuments of death, |
| All clothes but winding-sheets for our last knell, |
| All dainty fattings for the worms beneath, |
| All curious music but our passing bell: |
| Thus death is nobly waited on, for why? |
| All that we have is but deaths livery. |
| 1 |
| | Divinity hath oftentimes descended |
| Upon our slumbers, and the blessed troupes |
| Have, in the calm and quiet of the soule, |
| Conversed with us. |
| 2 |
| | He is an adorer of chaste truth, |
| And speaks religiously of evry man: |
| He will not trust obscure traditions. |
| Or faith implicit, but concludes of things |
| Within his own clear knowledge: what he says |
| You may believe, and pawn your soul upon t. |
| 3 |
| | Heavn, that knows |
| The weakness of our natures, will forgive, |
| Nay, must applaud loves debt, when decent paid: |
| Nor can the bravest mortal blame the tear |
| Which glitters on the bier of fallen worth. |
| 4 |
| | Heaven, the perfection of all that can |
| Be said, of thought, riches, delight or harmony, |
| Health, beauty; and all those not subject to |
| The waste of time, but in their height eternal. |
| 5 |
| | Her eye did seem to labour with a tear, |
| Which suddenly took birth, but overweighd |
| With its own weight, swelling, droppd upon her bosom, |
| Which, by reflection of her light, appeard |
| As nature meant her sorrow for an ornament. |
| 6 |
| | Only the actions of the just |
| Smell sweet, and blossom in their dust. |
| 7 |
| | Take heed what you say, sir. |
| An hundred honest men! why, if there were |
| So many i th city, twere enough to forfeit |
| Their charter. |
| 8 |
| | The glories of our blood and state |
| Are shadows, not substantial things; |
| There is no armour against fate; |
| Death lays his icy hand on kings. |
| 9 |
| | This fellow must have a rare understanding; |
| For nature recompenseth the defects |
| Of one part with redundance in another; |
| Blind men have excellent memories, and the tongue |
| Thus indisposed, theres treasure in the intellect. |
| 10 |
| Death lays his icy hand on kings. | 11 |
| How wise are we in thought! how weak in practice! our very virtue, like our will, is nothing. | 12 |
| Knaves will thrive when honest plainness knows not how to live. | 13 |
| The honor is overpaid when he that did the act is commentator. | 14 |
| The sin of excessive length. | 15 | | |
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