| 1854 - 542 páginas
...superciliously through her glass. ' Well, Maurice,' said the doctor, ' returned from the wars, I see — " He who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day." Do you remember the old couplet of Pindar's V ' That is not Peter Pindar's, sir; you are quoting from... | |
| 1854 - 398 páginas
...himself. Somewhat sobered by these threats, Pctruchio bethought himself of the advice of Hudibras : "He who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day." So, heedless of the strangeness of his dress, he instantly slipt down the back stairs, and sought refuge... | |
| Where - 1855 - 86 páginas
...felt a wound. Romeoand Juliet, actii, scene 2. SHAKEN 1 Hide your diminished rays. Third Moral Es. He who fights and runs away May live to fight another day, But he who is in battle slain Will never live to fight again.1 Musarum Delicice, 1656. MENNIS AND SMITH. Herself... | |
| James Melville Gilliss - 1855 - 616 páginas
...taken prisoners; and the remainder, perhaps four hundred and fifty, adopting the belief of Falstaff, that " He who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day," "made tracks" for the city. This was quietly surrendered next day, after exchanging one or two notes,... | |
| George Willis - 1855 - 112 páginas
...Translation, 1795, 8vo. vol. iii. p. 320 ; he quotes as the translation the well known verse:— " He who fights and runs away. May live to fight another day." WILLIS'S CURRENT NOTES Dr. Nash, Vho quotes these authorities, in a -note on the lines, — "For those... | |
| 1856 - 876 páginas
...Hudibras is the only true philosophy. There is no Chinese soldier who has it not already asaprinciple— " That he who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day;" and who does not believe that, under existing circumstances, this is the only course open to a rational... | |
| Dr. Doran (John) - 1857 - 530 páginas
...that Sir John Minnes is not even the original author of the Hudibrastically sounding assertion — " He who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day." The lines in Hudibras are as the perfecting and comment on the above, remarking as they do — " For... | |
| John Russell (author of Alfred Barton.) - 1858 - 394 páginas
...Garcino did not attempt to retaliate. No, he acted under a better — to his taste — standing rule, " He who fights and runs away, May live to fight another day. But he who is in battle slain, Will never live to fight again." and had at length slipped the bolt, opened... | |
| Robert Bell - 1858 - 450 páginas
...security running over to the Continent — strengthening his argument by reference to the famous text — He who fights and runs away May live to fight another day. But, unfortunately, of all the reasons he could have selected at that moment for running away, the prospect... | |
| 1858 - 882 páginas
...live in expectation of the renewing of the attack. It was a profound philosopher who said : " • Ые who fights and runs away. May live to fight another day ; But he who Is in battle slain, Will never live to fight again.' " We have often kept up the lire, at intervals,... | |
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