The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

SLANDER.

  Against bad tongues goodness cannot defend her,
  Those be most free from faults they least will spare,
  But prate of them whom they have scantly known,
  Judging their humors to be like their own.

IBID.

* * * * *

POSTERITY.

  Daughter of Time, sincere Posterity
  Always new born, yet no man knows thy birth,
  The arbitress of pure Sincerity,
  Yet, changeable, (like Proteus on the earth)
  Sometime in plenty, sometime joined with dearth. 
    Always to come, yet always present here,
    Whom all run after, none come after near.

  Impartial judge of all save present state
  Truth’s Idioma of the things are past,
  But still pursuing present things with hate,
  And more injurious at the first than last,
  Preserving others while thine own do waste;
    True treasurer of all antiquity,
    Whom all desire, yet never one could see.

FITZ JEFFREY.

* * * * *

WAR.

  The poets old in their fond fables feign,
  That mighty Mars is god of war and strife,
  The Astronomers think that whereas Mars doth reign,
  That all debate and discord must be rife;
  Some think Bellona goddess of that life. 
  Among the rest that painter had some skill,
  Which thus in arms did once set out the same:—­
  A field of gules, and on a golden hill,
  A stately town consumed all with flame
  On chief of sable taken from the dame,
  A sucking babe, oh! born to bide mischance
  Begored with blood and pierced with a lance
  On high the Helm, I bear it well in mind,
  The wreath was silver, powdered all with shot,
  About the which, goutte du sang, did twine
  A roll of sable black, and foul be blot
  The crest two hands which may not be forgot,
  For in the right a trenchant blade did stand,
  And in the left a fiery, burning brand.

GASCOIGNE.

* * * * *

MANNERS & CUSTOMS OF ALL NATIONS.

* * * * *

CUSTOM OF BULL-BAITING AT GREAT GRIMSBY.

The amusement of bull-baiting is of such high antiquity in this country, that Fitz-Stephen, who lived in the reign of Henry II., tells us it was, at that early period, the common entertainment of the young Londoners during the winter season; and Claudian says of the English mastiffs—­

  “Magnaque taurorum fracturi colla Britanni.”

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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.