Author: Abraham Cowley
Cites
- John Owen (1)
- IN: The four ages of England: or, The Iron Age. With other select poems. (1705) Poetry, British
EPIGRAPH: Qui legis ista, tuam reprehendo, si mea laudae Omnia, stultitiam; si nihil, invidiam.
FROM: Epigrammata, page 1, (1606), Poem, UK
Cited by
- Catharine Maria Sedwick (1)
- IN: Home (1835) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: My house a cottage more Than palace ; and should fitting be For all my use, no luxury.
FROM: Of Myself, (1664), Essay, UK
- Richard Graves (1)
- IN: Euphyrosyne, or, Amusements on the Road of Life (1776) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: "Hence, ye Profane! I hate ye all; "Both the Great vulgar and the small."
FROM: Cowley's Essays, (1893), Essay, UK
- Eliza Haywood (1)
- IN: The City Jilt, Or the Alderman turn'd Beau (1726) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: Virtue now, nor noble Blood,
Nor wit by Love is underflood,
Gold alone does Passion move:
Gold monopolizes love.
FROM: Gold, (1656), Poem, UK
- William Forbes (1)
- IN: A pil for pork-eaters: or, a Scots lancet for an English swelling. (1705) Poetry, British
EPIGRAPH: Curs'd be the man (what do i wish? as tho' The Wretch already were not so; But curs'd on let him be) who thinks it brave And great, his Countrey to enslave.
FROM: A Discourse by way of Vision concerning the Government of Oliver Cromwell, (1660), Essay, UK