Learn what thou ow'st thy country and thy friend; Foes to all living worth except your own, AERIAL. WHERE those immortal shapes Of bright aerial spirits live insphered, Dryden. Pope. Milton. The gifts of heaven my following song pursues, Dryden, from Virgil. From all that can with fins or feathers fly, Through the aerial or the watery sky. Here subterranean works and cities see, AFFABILITY. HEARING of her beauty and her wit, Prior. Pope. Her affability and bashful modesty, Her wondrous qualities and mild behaviour. Shakspere. Gentle to me, and affable hath been Milton. Thy condescension, and shall be honoured ever Be affable to all men, for it well H. G. A. WE pour out our affections with our blood, What war so cruel, or what siege so sore, Most wretched man, Spenser. That to affections does the bridle lend; Of all the tyrants that the world affords, Affections injured Spenser. Earl of Stirling. By tyranny, or rigour of compulsion, Like tempest-threatened trees, unfirmly rooted, Her sweet humour, John Ford. That was as easy as a calm, and peaceful; Fair as the flowers themselves as sweet and gentle. Alas! our young affections run to waste, Or water but the desert; whence arise But weeds of dark luxuriance, tares of haste, Rank at the core, though tempting to the eyes, Flowers whose wild odours breathe but agonies, And trees whose gums are poison: such the plants Which spring beneath her steps as passion flies O'er the world's wilderness, and vainly pants For some celestial fruit forbidden to our wants. Byron. Few are the fragments left of follies past; AFFECTION. Baseness is mutability's ally, 21 But the sublime affections never die.-Dr. Bowring. A mind that, in a calm angelic mood Beholds, of all from her high powers required, Affection, earth's great purifier, stirs There is in life no blessing like affection; Whose sole contentment is to watch and love; And wealth an empty glitter without love. Miss Landon. Oh! there is one affection which no stain Is but with hands entwined to lift our being higher. Affection is the Deity's best gift, Percival. The brightest star that glitters in his crown, Ann S. Stevens. Affection's power who can suppress, Brandon. THOUGH affliction, at the first, doth vex Most virtuous natures, from the sense that 'tis Unjustly laid; yet, when the amazement which That new pain brings is worn away, they then Embrace oppression straight, with such Obedient cheerfulness, as if it came From heaven, not man. Sir William Davenant. Perfumes, the more they're chafed, the more they render John Webster. Like a ball that bounds Heaven but tries our virtue by affliction; Affliction is the wholesome soil of virtue, Affliction is the good man's shining scene; Nabb. Browne. Mallet. -Young. As night to stars, woe lustre gives to man.— Prosperity, alas! Is often but another name for pride Sigourney. AFFRONT. AFTER. 23 AFFRONT. OFT have they violated The temple, oft the law with foul affronts, Milton. His holy rites and solemn feasts profaned, But harm precedes not sin; only our foe Milton. Milton. You've done enough, for you designed my chains, The grace is vanished, but the affront remains. Young men soon forgive, and forget affronts; When truth or virtue an affront endures, Dryden. Addison. The affront is mine, my friend, and should be yours. Pope. A moral, sensible, and well-bred man, Cowper. "TIs the divinity that stirs within us; 'Tis heaven itself that points out an hereafter, And intimates eternity to man. Addison. I still shall wait Some new hereafter, and a future state. Prior. |