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" Cabrieres which till then he neglected it is therefore Death alone that can suddenly make man to know himself he tells the proud and insolent that they are but abjects and humbles them at the instant makes them cry complain and repent yea even to hate... "
Poems - Page 102
by Samuel Rogers - 1834 - 295 pages
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The Copeland Reader: An Anthology of English Poetry and Prose, Volume 1

Charles Townsend Copeland - American literature - 1926 - 1744 pages
...Merindol and Cabrieres, which till then he neglected. It is therefore Death alone that can suddenly make a die makes them cry, complain, and repent, yea, even to hate their forepast happiness. He takes the account...
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Subject and Object in Renaissance Culture

Margreta de Grazia, Maureen Quilligan, Peter Stallybrass - History - 1996 - 422 pages
..."All is vanity and vexation of spirit" but who believes it till Death tells it us? ... It is therefore Death alone that can suddenly make man to know himself....the instant ... He takes the account of the rich, and proves him a beggar, a naked beggar, which hath interest in nothing but the gravel that fills his...
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The Living Spirit: Prayers and Readings for the Christian Year

Margaret Hebblethwaite - Religion - 2000 - 452 pages
...cross. Dorothea Soelle Celebrating Resistance: the way of the Cross in Latin America It is therefore Death alone that can suddenly make man to know himself....are but abjects, and humbles them at the instant, makes them cry, complain, and repent, yea, even to hate their forepast happiness. He takes the account...
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Early Modern English Lives: Autobiography and Self-representation, 1500-1660

Ronald Bedford, Lloyd Davis, Philippa Kelly - Literary Criticism - 2007 - 264 pages
...soldier, philosopher and explorer Sir Walter Raleigh in an archetypal gesture toward eternity. Death tells the proud and insolent that they are but abjects, and humbles them at the instant; makes them cry, complain, and repent, yea, even to hate their forepassed happiness. He takes the account...
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Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose

John Dover Wilson - England - 1913 - 334 pages
...dizard in the world to talk withal. NICHOLAS BRETON, The Good and the Badde, 1616 Death It is therefore Death alone that can suddenly make man to know himself....they are but abjects and humbles them at the instant; makes them cry, complain and repent, yea, even to hate their forepassed happiness. He takes the account...
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