Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

The only

Friendship

rose without thorus is friendship.

MLLE. DE SCUDERI.

[blocks in formation]

HALLECK, On death of Jos. R. Drake.

[blocks in formation]

YOUNG, Night Thoughts. N. ii, 1. 582.

True friends are great riches.

ANON.

The vanquished have no friends.

SOUTHEY, Joan of Arc. Bk. III, 1. 465.

Friendship is a sheltering tree.

COLERIDGE, Youth and Age.

My friends were poor but honest.

All's Well that Ends Well. i, 3.

Love is the marrow of friendship.

HOWELL, Familiar Letters. Bk. I, Sec. i, Let. 17.

One is judged by his friendships.

ANON.

Mislike me not for my complexion.

Merchant of Venice. ii, 1.

Better new friend than an old foe.

SPENSER, Faerie Queene. Bk. I, canto ii, st. 27.

A true friend is forever a friend.

MACDONALD, Marquis of Lossie. Ch. lxxi.

Out upon this half-fac'd fellowship!

King Henry IV. Pt. I, i, 3, 1. 208.

To friendship every burden 's light.

GAY, The Hare with Many Friends.

Friends are as dangerous as enemies.

DE QUINCEY, Essay on Schlosser's Lit'y History.

[blocks in formation]

Love and friendship exclude each other.

BYRON, L'Amitié est l'Amour sans Ailes. St. 1.

DE LA BRUYÈRE, Manners of the
Present Age. Ch. v.

Keep good company and you 'll be of them.

From the Chinese.

Friends are not so easily made as kept.

MARQUIS OF HALIFAX, Maxims of State. xii.

And out of mind as soon as out of sight.

LORD BROOKE, Mustapha.

Friend more divine than all divinities.

ELIOT, Spanish Gypsy. Bk. IV.

MORRIS, Flag of our Union.

FORD, The Lover's Melancholy. i, 1.

The union of hearts, the union of hands.

Flattery is monstrous in a true friend.

He who reckons ten friends has not one.

MALESHERBES.

His heart and hand both open and both free.

Troilus and Cressida. iv, 5.

He that doth lend doth lose his friend.

I thought you and he were hand-in-glove.

ANON.

SWIFT, Polite Conversation. Dia. ii.

A friend is worth all hazards we can run.

YOUNG, Night Thoughts. N. ii, 1. 571. From wine what sudden friendship springs.

GAY, Squire and His Cur.

The only way to have a friend is to be one.

EMERSON, Essays. Of Experience.

Friendship stops where borrowing begins.

Friends in distress make troubles less.

ANON.

From the French.

He makes no friend who never made a foe.
TENNYSON, Idylls of the King.
Launcelot and Elaine. 1. 1109.

A brother is a friend given by nature.

I do desire we may be better strangers.

G. LEGOUVÉ.

As You Like It. iii, 2.

« AnteriorContinuar »