
As cited in: Robert Kemp Philp (1859, p. 74)
The Jewell House of Art and Nature, 1594
Third Century, sect. 3.
Centuries of Meditations
As cited in: Robert Kemp Philp (1859, p. 74)
The Jewell House of Art and Nature, 1594
Source: Poems (1898), Rhymes And Rhythms, XVI
“5967. You must not hope to reap Wheat, where you sow'd none.”
Introductio ad prudentiam: Part II (1727), Gnomologia (1732)
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 612.
1860s, A Short Autobiography (1860)
Context: March 1, 1830, Abraham having just completed his twenty-first year, his father and family, with the families of the two daughters and sons-in-law of his stepmother, left the old homestead in Indiana and came to Illinois.... Here they built a log cabin, into which they removed, and made sufficient of rails to fence ten acres of ground, fenced and broke the ground, and raised a crop of sown corn upon it the same year. These are, or are supposed to be, the rails about which so much is being said just now, though these are far from being the first or only rails ever made by Abraham.<!--pp. 11-12
“Until a man might travel twelve stout miles,
Or reap an acre of his neighbor's corn.”
The Brothers.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“Now are fields of corn where Troy once stood.”
Iam seges est ubi Troia fuit.
I, 53
Heroides (The Heroines)