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Polyobion; "The primrose path of dalliance," Hamlet, I, 3; 



"A primrose by the river," Wordsworth, Peter Bell; "The 



field hath eyen," Chaucer, Knight's Tale; "The hawthome 



bush," Goldsmith, Deserted Village; "Jack shall pipe," 



George Wither; "When the Merry Bells, "^.Milton, L' Allegro; 



"What's not devoured," Bramstone (1744) ; "The dayseye or 



elles, " Chaucer, Good Woman; "He who has not the spirit," 



Voltaire ; " So generally civil, " Boswell ; "Child of the Year," 



Wordsworth; "Heigh-ho, daisies," Jean Ingelow; "Nature 



cannot be surprised," Emerson; "To halt at the chattering 



brook," Masefield, Tewkesbury Road; "Nemo me impune 



lacessit" ("No one assails me with impunity"); "Tender 



handed," Aaron Hill (1685); "Seamrag or shamrock is the 



diminutive of the Gaelic 'seamar,' a trefoil, hence 'a little 



trefoil'"; "Omnia mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis,*" 



("All things change and we change with them,") Matthias 



Borbonis; "Stiff in his opinions," Dryden, Absolom and 



Achitophel; "Homer nods," Quandoque bonus dormitat 



Homerus, Horace, De Arte Poetica, 359; "No, the heart," 



Tom Moore; "What makes a plenteous," The Georgics, 



Book I; "Make the most of time," Goethe, Faust; "There 



is a certain spot," Talmud, Sucka 53; "Oh! to be there," 



Sir Henry Newbolt, Death of Admiral Blake. 



\ \ ^/ \\ \ 



ipRAME X. The Masquerader. 



"Ship me somewhere," Kipling; "A spirit haunts," 



\ Tennyson; "Things are not," Gilbert; "The Dyed Jackal/' 



from the Hitopadesta, translated by Sir Edwin Arnold. 



Frame XI. Flora's Sceptre. 



"To gild refined gold, " King John, IV, 2 ; "Which rose make 

 ours," Browning, Rabbi Ben Ezra; "Within the garden's," 

 Cowper, Lily and Rose; "Fragrant with the scent," King 



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