Page:Omniana 2.djvu/141

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OMNIANA.
131

than William Penn! . . I smile at his arguments, . . but adhere to his opinion.

207. French-English.

It is curious to observe how the English Catholicks of the 17th century wrote English like men who habitually spoke French. Corps is sometimes used for the living body, . . and when they attempt to versify, their rhymes are only rhymes according to a French pronunciation.

This path most fair I walking winde
By shadow of my pilgrimage,
Wherein at every step I find
An heavenly draught and image
Of my fraile mortality,
Tending to eternity.
***The tree that bringeth nothing else
But leaves and breathing verdure
Is fit for fire, and not for fruit
And doth great wrong to Nature.
***