| John Dryden, Walter Scott - 1808 - 432 pągines
...field ? Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as fortune shifts the scene. Some, raised aloft, come tumbling down amain ; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Tolumnius, who foretells... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1810 - 790 pągines
...resign the field ? Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as Fortune shifts the scene : j Some rais'd aloft, come tumbling down amain ; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Tolumnius, who foretels... | |
| John Dunton - 1818 - 824 pągines
...blind) would get a good estate in a few years. " Good unexpected, Evil unforeseen, Appear by turn's, as Fortune shifts the scene : Some, rais'd aloft,...make a Book vanish into the World as quick as Spirits ont of it ; and bring it abroad as easily as Ltcson* draws a tooth, or as nimbly as a flash of lightning.... | |
| John Dryden, Walter Scott - 1821 - 442 pągines
...field? Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as fortune shifts the scene. Some, raised aloft, come tumbling down amain ; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Tolumnius, who foretells... | |
| British poets - 1822 - 284 pągines
...field? Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as Fortune shifts the scene: Some, raised aloft, come tumbling down amain; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, The great Messapus yet remains our friend: Tolumnius, who foretells... | |
| Virgil - 1830 - 370 pągines
...? 655 Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as Fortune shifts the scene. Some raised aloft, come tumbling down amain : Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, 660 The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Tolumnius, who foretells... | |
| Virgil - 1834 - 348 pągines
...field! 655 Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as Fortune shifts the scene. Some raised aloft, come tumbling down amain : Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede refuse his aid to lend, 660 The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Tolumnius, who foretells... | |
| John Dryden, John Mitford - 1836 - 488 pągines
...sounds, resign the field ; Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as fortune •hifts the scene : Some, rais'd aloft, come tumbling down...amain ; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again. If Diomede rtfuse his aid to lend, The great Messapus yet remains our friend : Toluranius, who foretells... | |
| Michel Eyquem de Montaigne - 1842 - 792 pągines
...locavit.9 " Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear in turns as fortune shift« the scene. Some, raised aloft, come tumbling down amain, Then fall so hard they bound and rise again." Pliny says there are only three sorts of diseases to escape any of which а %УЪа, C1U1M man has... | |
| Michel de Montaigne, William Hazlitt - 1845 - 786 pągines
...Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear in lums as fortune shift* the scene. Some, raised aloff, come tumbling down amain, Then fall so hard they bound and rise again." Pliny says there are only three sorts of diseases to escape any of which a wliat Сац1„ man has... | |
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