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Jonson, Ben, 1573-1637

"Discoveries Made Upon Men and Matter and Some Poems"



Footnotes:
{11} "So live with yourself that you do not know how ill yow mind
is furnished."
{12} [Greek text]
{14} "A Puritan is a Heretical Hypocrite, in whom the conceit of
his own perspicacity, by which he seems to himself to have observed
certain errors in a few Church dogmas, has disturbed the balance of
his mind, so that, excited vehemently by a sacred fury, he fights
frenzied against civil authority, in the belief that he so pays
obedience to God."
{17a} Night gives counsel.
{17b} Plutarch in Life of Alexander. "Let it not be, O King, that
you know these things better than I."
{19a} "They were not our lords, but our leaders."
{19b} "Much of it is left also for those who shall be hereafter."
{19c} "No art is discovered at once and absolutely."
{22} With a great belly. Comes de Schortenhien.
{23} "In all things I have a better wit and courage than good
fortune."
{24a} "The rich soil exhausts; but labour itself is an aid."
{24b} "And the gesticulation is vile."
{25a} "An end is to be looked for in every man, an animal most
prompt to change."
{25b} Arts are not shared among heirs.


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