Thomas Yalden (1670–1736) English poet
"Patroclus's Request to Achilles for his Arms; Imitated from the Beginning of the Sixteenth Iliad of Homer", in Tonson's The Annual Miscellany for the Year 1694.
NME (New Music Express), November 5, 2007 (days before heroin relapse)
Drugs
Thomas Yalden (1670–1736) English poet
"Patroclus's Request to Achilles for his Arms; Imitated from the Beginning of the Sixteenth Iliad of Homer", in Tonson's The Annual Miscellany for the Year 1694.
John Dowland (1563–1626) English Renaissance composer, lutenist, and singer
"Flow my tears", line 1, The Second Book of Songs (1600).
The Country Justice, Part i, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919). This allusion to the dead soldier and his widow on the field of battle was made the subject of a print by Bunbury, under which were engraved the pathos-laden lines of Langhorne. Sir Walter Scott mentioned that the only time he saw Burns this picture was in the room. Burns shed tears over it; and Scott, then a lad of fifteen, was the only person present who could tell him where the lines were to be found. In Lockhart, Life of Scott, vol. i. chap. iv.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809–1892) British poet laureate
St. III
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington (1852)
Maimónides (1138–1204) rabbi, physician, philosopher
Source: Hilkhot De'ot (Laws Concerning Character Traits), Chapter 2, Section 7, p. 33
Melina Marchetta (1965) Australian teen writer
Source: Saving Francesca