Do we say love or despise

love 69385 occurrences

and I foold, A new love in hir armes, my doatings scornd at.

You are a good Lord, Indeed I love you for't and will pray for you.

No, I thanck ye, I know a trick worth ten o'that: ile love ye And bring ye to those men that love to see ye. Away, away; and keepe your pistolls spand still: We may be forced.

I love thee, too: thy physick Will quickly purge me from the worldes abuses.

May he protect with honour, fight with fortune, And dye with generall love, an old and good Prince.

'Tis true, Thomas: but I must change the lynings of the breeches, for I love to bee cleanly.

Azure is constant, and Peach is love; which signifies my constant Affection.

Such are the strange varieties in love, Such heates, such desperate coldes, Sis.

No more winter, and you love me, unlesse you can command the colepits; we have had a hard tyme on't already for want of fuell.

He that knowes Love knowes well that every hower Love's glad, Love's sad, Love's sweet Sis.

He that knowes Love knowes well that every hower Love's glad, Love's sad, Love's sweet Sis.

He that knowes Love knowes well that every hower Love's glad, Love's sad, Love's sweet Sis.

He that knowes Love knowes well that every hower Love's glad, Love's sad, Love's sweet Sis.

Ile cheerefully attend you, I love the sport; as earlie as you please,

Oh the Neats tongues and partargoes that I have eaten at Stillyard, but of all things in the world I do not love a black catt: next a brewers cart, there's nothing will stay a man so much in the night as a Constables.

No, no, saveing your presence, your Boyes have nothing, sarreverence, but Love songs, and I hate those monstruously, to make thinges appeare better then they are, and that is but deceptio Visus, which after some embraceings the parties see presently what it is.

Why then in prose, the worst that I can speake in, I doe not love you, Lady. Sis.

You saw himis he well?" "As hearty as you could wish, and full of love for you, and rejoiced beyond measure to know you are to marry a brave, honest gentleman."

" "Only that," says she, her countenance falling again, "we are to hide our love, pretend indifference, behave towards this dear father as if he were nought to me but a friend.

Yet her husband never looked more hearty and strong, and every look and word of his bespoke increasing love.

And if this part was hard to play in public, where we are all, I take it, actors of some sort and on the alert to sustain the character we would have our own, how much more difficult must it be in private when we drop our disguise and lay our hearts open to those we love!

This persevering, patient toil on his part did at first engender in my mind suspicion that some doubting thoughts urged him to assume his independence against any accident that might befall the estate; but now I believe 'twas nothing but a love of work and of his art, and that his mind was free from any taint of misgiving, as regards his wife's honesty.

'Tis likely enough, that spite her caution, many a word and sign escaped Moll, which an enemy would have quickly seized on to prove her culpable; but we do never see the faults of those we love (or, seeing them, have ready at a moment excuse to prove them no faults at all), and at this time Mr. Godwin's heart was so full of love, there was no place for other feeling.

"I would have you go, and yet I'd have you stay, love," says she.

"You two are always quarrelling," she said, archly, "just like a couple ofcouple of" "Love-birds," suggested Mr. Nugent.

despise 1404 occurrences

Cook says: "Therefore we resolved for the future never to despise dog flesh"; and in another place he says they put dog's flesh "next only to English lamb."

In the days of Charles I. men sometimes had their ears cut off for holding wrong opinions, which would have made them famous and popular in these enlightened days, but at that time it made all right-thinking people despise them, so the fashion of going without ears did not spread among us.

Other Brahmins despise them and wish to deny them the name, because they have soiled their priestly hands with agriculture.

"Pass on, daughter of Bohemia, and despise these men who jest at your poverty, these women who cast a look of scorn and hate.

They scorn and hate you, because they have not your splendid hair, nor the brightness of your eyes, nor your white teeth, nor your fresh smile, nor your suppleness, grace and vigour, nor your bewitching shape; despise them in your turn, but envy them not, them who despise and envy you.

They scorn and hate you, because they have not your splendid hair, nor the brightness of your eyes, nor your white teeth, nor your fresh smile, nor your suppleness, grace and vigour, nor your bewitching shape; despise them in your turn, but envy them not, them who despise and envy you.

Till then, I shall be loath to employ towards our allies a language, to which if they yielded, we should ourselves despise them.

For God, who lives above the skies, Would look with vengeance in his eyes, If I should ever dare despise My Mother.

The vulgar do not read them, the learned, who see all things through books, do not understand them, the great despise, the fashionable may ridicule them: but the author has created himself an interest in the heart of the retired and lonely student of nature, which can never die.

If this appears to you unimportant, which is in reality most significant, do you also despise the fact of which you have had experience,namely, that the life of Aulus Hirtius is so dear to the Roman people?

I see nothing either in my life, or in my influence in the city, or in my exploits, or even in the moderate abilities with which I am endowed, which Antonius can despise.

Despise me if you will after this frank avowal.

" "Despise you!" echoed Leonard.

The ethics of religion discusses the subjective and objective processes of redemption, namely, repentance and amendment on the part of the individual and the ecclesiastical cultus of the future, which is to despise symbols and art.

Yet, though so skilled, of such transcendent worth, This boarded scaffold doth he not despise; The fate that on its axis turns the earth From day to night, here shows he to our eyes, Raising, through many a work of glorious birth, Art and the artist's fame up toward the skies.

The poor despise labor when performed by slaves.

And they that have believing masters, let them not despise them because they are brethren; but rather do them service, because they are faithful and beloved, partakers of the benefit."

These servants were exhorted not to despise their masters.

Ridiculous to suppose, that a people, who have, by law, made men articles of trade equally with swine, should despise men-drovers and traders, more than hog-drovers and traders.

The pieces selected are such as will be likely to exert a beneficial influence upon the reader, to inspire him with heroic enthusiasm, and to lead him to despise danger.

"No," continued I, seeing the impression my words had produced upon him, "I despise thee, and defy thee, even as Hercules did Antaeus, as Sampson did Harapha, as Orlando did Ferragus.

"I would despise no man in the world so much as a hypocrite, a turn-coat!

"You have it;I defy you, hate you, despise you!

He never intruded; he never misunderstood; he never caused the slightest uneasiness lest he should go away to sneer or to despise.

You despise the good old British John Barleycorn.

Do we say   love   or  despise