| 1843 - 750 pages
...Brooke, in his " Treatise of Humane Learning :" — " The chief use then in man of that he knowca, Is his paines-taking for the good of all ; Not fleshly weeping for our own made woes, Not laughing from a melancholy gall, Not hating from a soul that overflowes With bitterness... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1836 - 390 pages
...and wise poet has written, after a wiser saint : — " The chief use then in man of that he knowes, Is his paines-taking for the good of all, Not fleshly weeping for our own made woes, Not laughing from a melancholy gall, Not hating from a soul that overflowes , With bitterness... | |
| 1843 - 744 pages
...Brooke, in his " Treatise of Humane Learning :"— " The chief uee then in man of that he knowes, Ii his paines-taking for the good of all ; Not fleshly weeping for our own made woes, Not laughing from a melancholy gall, Not hating from a aoul that overflowes With bitterness... | |
| Henry Wentworth Acland - 1856 - 194 pages
...kf-t>»'«:l Uift» f.1 J \l 1 The chiefe \ ..- then in man of that he knowes, Is his paines taking for the good of all, Not fleshly weeping for our owne made woes, Not laughing from a Melancholy gall, Not hating from a sonle that overflowex With bitternesse, breath'd out from inward... | |
| Henry Coppée - 1867 - 588 pages
...and wise poet has written, after a wiser saint: — " The chief use then in man of that he knowes, Is his paines-taking for the good of all, Not fleshly weeping for our own mndo woes. Not laughing from a melancholy gall, Not hating from a soul that overnnwes With bitterness... | |
| Josiah Rhinehart Sypher - 1870 - 396 pages
...and wise poet has written, after a wiser saint : — " The chief use then in man of that he knowes, Is his paines-taking for the good of all, Not fleshly weeping for our own made woes, Not laughing from a melancholy gall, Not hating from a soul that overflowes With bitterness... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1863 - 584 pages
...few verses from Lord Brooke's elaborate Essay : — ' The chief use, then, in man of that he knows Is his painestaking for the good of all, Not fleshly...weeping for our owne made woes ; Not laughing, from a melancholy gall ; Not hating, from a soul that overflows With bitterness breathed out from inward thrall... | |
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