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: An Address to Lord Teignmouth president of the British and Foreign Bible Society occasioned by his address to the clergy of the Church of England by Sikes Thomas - British and Foreign Bible Society; Teignmouth John Shore Baron 1751-1834
Notes.
DIVISION OF INTELLECTUAL LABOUR.
But, if the advantages resulting from such a division of intellectual labour would be as great as I fondly hope, I feel sure that the energy and enterprise which caused you to give a tangible reality to your scheme for "Notes and Queries" would also enable you to overcome all difficulties, and answer all trifling objections.
ON A PASSAGE IN LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST.
No one of the editors of Shakspeare appears to me to have given a satisfactory explanation of this passage. I therefore venture to offer the following.
Following these analogies, I suggest that the words "impatient to speak and not see" mean "impatient of speaking and not seeing," i.e., "dissatisfied with its function of speaking, preferring that of seeing."
This construction, at least, renders the passage intelligible.
TREATISE OF EQUIVOCATION.
Again I say, why not print the work?
PARALLEL PASSAGES.
"When that this body did contain a spirit, A kingdom for it was too small a bound; But now two paces of the vilest earth Is room enough!"
In Ovid we find the following parallel:--
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