Thomas Urquhart (Томас Эркарт)
Epigrams. The Second Booke. № 8. What sort of benefits one ought to bestow
VVOuld you oblige to you a friend, by giving, Most cheerfully your favours to acquite: Give that, which gives content in the receiving: And when it is received yeelds delight; For if it faile in either of those two, It will impaire his thankfulnesse to you.
Thomas Urquhart’s other poems:
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 36. Of Death, and Sin
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 23. Of foure things, in an epalleled way vanquished each by other
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 19. The Parallel of Nature, and For∣tune
- Epigrams. The Second Booke. № 13. What the subject of your conference ought to be with men of judgment, and account
- Epigrams. The Third Booke. № 3. We ought always to thinke upon what we are to say, before we utter any thing; the speeches and talk of solid wits, being still pre∣meditated, and never using to forerunne the mind
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