| Craufurd Tait Ramage - 1875 - 646 páginas
...destroy him he seizes the opportunity. So Dryden, " Conquest of Granada," Ft. II. act I. EC. 2 :— •" Forgiveness to the injured does belong ; But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong." See (Lat.) Injuries. SECRET SYMPATHIES BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS THAT ARK INEXPLICABLE. Rodogune, i. 5. Il... | |
| John Bartlett - 1875 - 890 páginas
...servitude began, When wild in woods the noble savage ran. The Conquest of Granada. Part i. Act \. Sc. I. Forgiveness to the injured does belong ; But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong.5 Ibid. Part ii. Act L Sc. 2. What precious drops are those, Which silently each other's track... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1875 - 430 páginas
...our experience of life. They who are most injured arc often the readiest to forgive. " Forgiveness t3 the injured does belong ; / But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong." * This incident is, no doubt, intended as a censure on mothers who often indulge their children at... | |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay - 1875 - 876 páginas
...considered as a truism rather than a paradox. Every boy has written on the thesis Odisse quern laserit." Scarcely any lines in English poetry are better known than that vigorous couplet, 1 Forgiveness to the injured does belong; But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong." The historians... | |
| Francis Jacox - 1877 - 400 páginas
...considered as a truism rather than a paradox. " Every boy has written on the thesis Odisse quem Iceseris. Scarcely any lines in English poetry are better known...novelists, by whom it will very soon be worn to rags." At the risk of being ranked with lower even than bad novelists, it is proposed in the present section... | |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay - 1877 - 898 páginas
...considered as a truism rather than a paradox. Every boy has written on the thesis " Odisse quern laserii." Scarcely any lines in English poetry are better known...does belong ; But they ne'er pardon who have done tba wrong." The historians and philosophers have quite done with this maxim, and have abandoned it,... | |
| 1877 - 362 páginas
...—GRAY, Elegy. Forgave. — A coward never FORGAVE. It is not in his nature. — STERNE. Forgiveness. — FORGIVENESS to the injured does belong ; But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong. DRYDEN, Conquest of Granada. Fortune. — FORTUNE ! if thon'll but gie me still Hale breeks, a scone,... | |
| John Henry Pepper - 1877 - 764 páginas
...honorary member of & Royal Society of Edinburgh, thus falsifying the couplet of Dryden, whoa!"Forgiveness to the injured does belong; But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong.'* In 1 868 Wheatstone received the honour of knighthood at the hank" his gracious spvereign, and this... | |
| James Comper Gray - 1878 - 404 páginas
...beauty m:iny a tower, which, wheu it frown'd with all its battlements, was only terrible." — Mason. " Forgiveness to the injured does belong; but they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong."- lirydcn. dS.C. Wäla. Jeroboam's golden calves a Ju. ix. 49. ft "It Vf as like a lipy to the grrat... | |
| John Dryden - 1878 - 368 páginas
...us when old.' To one of Dryden's plays, the Second Part of ' The Conquest of Granada,' we owe— • Forgiveness to the injured does belong, But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong.' To another play, ' All for Love,' we owe— ' Men are but children of a larger growth: Our appetites... | |
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