Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n word_n world_n wrap_v 20 3 9.4613 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A43441 Hesperides, or, The works both humane & divine of Robert Herrick, Esq. Herrick, Robert, 1591-1674.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650. 1648 (1648) Wing H1596; ESTC R37415 144,005 405

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of a Million From whom we 'l reckon Wit came in but since The Calculation of thy Birth Brave Mince Vpon his gray haires FLy me not though I be gray Lady this I know you 'l say Better look the Roses red When with white commingled Black your haires are mine are white This begets the more delight When things meet most opposite As in Pictures we descry Venus standing Vulcan by Accusation IF Accusation onely can draw blood None shall be guiltlesse be he ne'r so good Pride allowable in Poets AS thou deserv'st be proud then gladly let The Muse give thee the Delphick Coronet A Vow to Minerva GOddesse I begin an Art Come thou in with thy best part For to make the Texture lye Each way smooth and civilly And a broad-fac't Owle shall be Offer'd up with Vows to Thee On Jone IOne wo'd go tel her haires and well she might Having but seven in all three black foure white Upon Letcher Epig. LEtcher was Carted first about the streets For false Position in his neighbours sheets Next hang'd for Theeving Now the people say His Carting was the Prologue to this Play Upon Dundrige DVndrige his Issue hath but is not styl'd For all his Issue Father of one Child To Electra T Is Ev'ning my Sweet And dark let us meet Long time w 'ave here been a toying And never as yet That season co'd get Wherein t' ave had an enjoying 2. For pitty or shame Then let not Love's flame Be ever and ever a spending Since now to the Port The path is but short And yet our way has no ending 3. Time flyes away fast Our houres doe waste The while we never remember How soone our life here Growes old with the yeere That dyes with the next December Discord not disadvantageous FOrtune no higher Project can devise Then to sow Discord 'mongst the Enemies Ill Government PReposterous is that Government and rude When Kings obey the wilder Multitude To Marygolds GIve way and be ye ravisht by the Sun And hang the head when as the Act is done Spread as He spreads wax lesse as He do's wane And as He shuts close up to Maids again To Dianeme GIve me one kisse And no more If so be this Makes you poore To enrich you I le restore For that one two Thousand score To Julia the Flaminica Dialis or Queen-Priest THou know'st my Julia that it is thy turne This Mornings Incense to prepare and burrie The Chaplet and Inarculum here be With the white Vestures all attending Thee This day the Queen-Priest thou art made t' appease Love for our very-many Trespasses One chiefe transgression is among the rest Because with Flowers her Temple was not drest The next because her Altars did not shine With daily Fyers The last neglect of Wine For which her wrath is gone forth to consume Us all unlesse preserv'd by thy Perfume Take then thy Censer Put in Fire and thus O Pious-Priestresse make a Peace for us For our neglect Love did our Death decree That we escape Redemption comes by Thee Anacreontike BOrn I was to be old And for to die here After that in the mould Long for to lye here But before that day comes Still I be Bousing For I know in the Tombs There 's no Carousing Meat without mirth EAten I have and though I had good cheere I did not sup because no friends were there Where Mirth and Friends are absent when we Dine Or Sup there wants the Incense and the Wine Large Bounds doe but bury us ALL things o'r-rul'd are here by Chance The greatest mans Inheritance Where ere the luckie Lot doth fall Serves but for place of Buriall Upon Ursley VRsley she thinks those Velvet Patches grace The Candid Temples of her comely face But he will say who e'r those Circlets seeth They be but signs of Ursleys hollow teeth An Ode to Sir Clipsebie Crew 1. HEre we securely live and eate The Creame of meat And keep eternal fires By which we sit and doe Divine As Wine And Rage inspires 2. If full we charme then call upon Anacreon To grace the frantick Thyrse And having drunk we raise a shout Throughout To praise his Verse 3. Then cause we Horace to be read Which sung or seyd A Goblet to the brim Of Lyrick Wine both swell'd and crown'd A Round We quaffe to him 4. Thus thus we live and spend the houres In Wine and Flowers And make the frollick yeere The Month the Week the instant Day To stay The longer here 5. Come then brave Knight and see the Cell Wherein I dwell And my Enchantments too Which Love and noble freedome is And this Shall fetter you 6. Take Horse and come or be so kind To send your mind Though but in Numbers few And I shall think I have the heart Or part Of Clipseby Crew To his worthy Kinsman Mr. Stephen Soame NOr is my Number full till I inscribe Thee sprightly Soame one of my righteous Tribe A Tribe of one Lip Leven and of One Civil Behaviour and Religion A Stock of Saints where ev'ry one doth weare A stole of white and Canonized here Among which Holies be Thou ever known Brave Kinsman markt out with the whiter stone Which seals Thy Glorie since I doe prefer Thee here in my eternall Calender To his Tomb-maker GO I must when I am gone Write but this upon my Stone Chaste I liv'd without a wife That 's the Story of my life Strewings need none every flower Is in this word Batchelour Great Spirits supervive OUr mortall parts may wrapt in Seare-cloths lye Great Spirits never with their bodies dye None free from fault OUt of the world he must who once comes in No man exempted is from Death or sinne Upon himselfe being buried LEt me sleep this night away Till the Dawning of the day Then at th'opening of mine eyes I and all the world shall rise Pitie to the prostrate T Is worse then barbarous cruelty to show No part of pitie on a conquer'd foe Way in a crowd ONce on a Lord-Mayors day in Cheapside when Skulls co'd not well passe through that scum of men For quick dispatch Sculls made no longer stay Then but to breath and every one gave way For as he breath'd the People swore from thence A Fart flew out or a Sir-reverence His content in the Country HEre here I live with what my Board Can with the smallest cost afford Though ne'r so mean the Viands be They well content my Prew and me Or Pea or Bean or Wort or Beet What ever comes content makes sweet Here we rejoyce because no Rent We pay for our poore Tenement Wherein we rest and never feare The Landlord or the Usurer The Quarter-day do's ne'r affright Our Peacefull slumbers in the night We eate our own and batten more Because we feed on no mans score But pitie those whose flanks grow great Swel'd with the Lard of others meat We blesse our Fortunes when we see Our own beloved privacie