Englands Parnassus: or the choysest flowers of our moderne poets, with their poeticall comparisons Descriptions of bewties, personages, castles, pallaces, mountaines, groues, seas, springs, riuers, &c. Whereunto are annexed other various discourses, both pleasaunt and profitable.

About this Item

Title
Englands Parnassus: or the choysest flowers of our moderne poets, with their poeticall comparisons Descriptions of bewties, personages, castles, pallaces, mountaines, groues, seas, springs, riuers, &c. Whereunto are annexed other various discourses, both pleasaunt and profitable.
Author
Albott, Robert, fl. 1600.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: For N. L[ing,] C. B[urby] and T. H[ayes],
1600.
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Subject terms
English poetry -- Early modern, 1500-1700.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16884.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Englands Parnassus: or the choysest flowers of our moderne poets, with their poeticall comparisons Descriptions of bewties, personages, castles, pallaces, mountaines, groues, seas, springs, riuers, &c. Whereunto are annexed other various discourses, both pleasaunt and profitable." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16884.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Iniustice.

Iniustice neuer yet tooke lasting roote. Nor held that long, Impietie did winne. S. Daniell.
So foule a thing, ô thou Iniustice art, That torment'st both the dooer and distrest: For when a man hath done a wicked part, O how he striues to excuse, to make the best: To shift the fault t'vnburden his chargde hart. And glad to find the least surmise of rest.

Page 152

And if he could make his, seeme others sin, O what repose, what ease he findes therein. Idem.
Iniustice neuer scapes vnpunisht still, Though men reuenge not, yet the heauens will. Idem.
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