FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54  
55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  
ieu Monton, religieux et celerier de l'eglise de ceans," with the following verses: "Qui ce livre cy emblera, Propter suam maliciam Au gibet pendu sera, Repugnando superbiam Au gibet sera sa maison, Sive suis parentibus, Car ce sera bien raison, Exemplum datum omnibus." An Ovid, printed in 1501, belonging to the Bibliotheque de Chinon, has the following verses: "Ce present livre est a Jehan Theblereau. "Qui le trouvera sy lui rende: Il lui poyra bien le vin Le jour et feste Sainct Martin, Et une mesenge a la Sainct Jean, Sy la peut prendre. "Tesmoin mon synet manuel, cy mis le x^e jour de avril mil v^c trente et cyns, apres Pasque." Here follows the paraphe. School-boys in France write the following lines in their books after their names, and generally accompany them with a drawing of a man hanging on a gibbet: "Aspice Pierrot pendu, Quod librum n'a pas rendu; Pierrot pendu non fuisset, Si librum reddidisset." English school-boys use these forms: "Hic liber est meus Testis est Deus. Si quis furetur A collo pendetur Ad hunc modum." This is always followed by a drawing of a gibbet. "John Smith, his book. God give him grace therein to look; Not only look but understand, For learning is better than house or land. When house and land are gone and spent, Then learning is most excellent." "John Smith is my name, England is my nation, London is my dwelling-place, And Christ is my salvation. When I am dead and in my grave, And all my bones are rotten, When this you see, remember me, When I am 'most forgotten." "Steal not this book, my honest friend, For fear the gallows should be your end, And when you're dead the Lord should say, Where is the book you stole away?" "Steal not this book for fear of shame, For under lies the owner's name: The first is JOHN, in letters bright, The second SMITH, to all men's sight; And if you dare to steal this book, The devil will take you with his hook." HONORE DE MAREVILLE. Guernsey. I forward you the following inscription, which I met with in an old copy of Caesar's _Commentaries_ (if I remember rightly) at Pontefract, Yorkshire: "Si quis hunc librum rapiat scelestus Atque scelestis manibus reservet Ibit ad nigras Acherontis undas Non rediturus." F. F. G. (Oxford). * * *
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54  
55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  



Top keywords:

librum

 

Pierrot

 

Sainct

 

drawing

 

gibbet

 

remember

 

learning

 

verses

 

forgotten

 

honest


friend
 

eglise

 

gallows

 
Repugnando
 

excellent

 

England

 

maison

 

superbiam

 
nation
 

London


Propter

 

emblera

 
salvation
 

dwelling

 

maliciam

 
Christ
 

rotten

 

Yorkshire

 

Pontefract

 

rapiat


scelestus
 

rightly

 
Caesar
 
Commentaries
 

scelestis

 

manibus

 

rediturus

 

Oxford

 

Acherontis

 

reservet


nigras
 

bright

 

letters

 

celerier

 
religieux
 

Monton

 

MAREVILLE

 

Guernsey

 

forward

 
inscription