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Shakespeare.Winters Tale, Act II. Scene 1. (Leontes to his Lords.) Low-breathd talkers, minion lispers, Scott.Fortunes of Nigel, Chap. V. Approve by envy, and by silence praise! Sheridan.The School for Scandal.A Portrait addressed to Mrs. Crewe, with the Play. Bad are those men who speak evil of the good. Rileys Plautus.The Bacchides, Act I. Scene 3. Soft-buzzing slander; silly moths, that eat Thomson.Liberty, Part IV. Some are carrying elsewhere what is told them; the measure of the fiction is ever on the increase, and each fresh narrator adds something to what he has heard. Rileys Ovid, Met. Book XII. Page 416. For slander lives upon succession; Shakespeare.Comedy of Errors, Act III. Scene 1. (Balthasar to Antipholus of Ephesus.) Enemies carry about slander, not in the form in which it took its rise. The scandal of men is everlasting; even then does it survive when you would suppose it to be dead. Rileys Plautus.The Persa, Act III. Scene 1. SLANDER.The flying rumours gatherd as they rolld, Prior.Temple of Fame, Line 468; Somerville. The Night-Walker. Those men who carry about and who listen to accusations, should all be hanged, if so it could be at my decisionthe carriers by their tongues, the listeners by their ears. Rileys Plautus.The Pseudolus, Act I. Scene 5. For well I know what pains await Wheelwrights Pindar.Olym. Ode I. Line 81. The man that dares traduce, because he can Cowper.Expostulation, Line 432. A third interprets motion, looks, and eyes, Pope.Rape of the Lock, Canto III. Line 15. There goes she whose husband was hanged. |
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