‘Non est magnus animus quem incurvat injuria[.] Aut potentior te aut imbecillior laesit[;] si imbecillior, parce illi, si potentior Tibi.’ (Seneca, De ira.) Dated at Berlin.
Engraved by Thomas Cecil.
Engraving published 17 Sept. 1814. Cf. f. 83r.
Only the directions are present.
Two inscriptions on one slip, (i) on the recto, (ii) on the verso. (i) ‘Mundus Cadaver est, et qui eum amant, canes sunt.’ Dated at Leipzig. (ii) ‘Facere docet Philosophia, non dicere; et hoc exigit, ut ad legem suam quisque vivat.’ (Seneca, Letters, xx. 2.) Dated at Jena. Numbered 344.
Engraved by Paul Fourdrinier.
Designed and etched by R[ichard] Newton. Published at London on 5 Oct. 1793 by William Holland, 50 Oxford Street. There are a few pencil annotations.
‘Cum timore et tremore Salutem operamini.’ (Philippians, ii. 12.) Dated at Helmstedt.
Twelve lines, beginning ‘Reizt mich nur ihr muntern Wälder’. ‘Symbol. Denke doch an jene Müller, die der [..] setzen lies.’ (The short word or letter after ‘der’ is indistinct.) Dated at Jena.
Engraved by Butterworth, Livesey, & Co. The title is ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress, By John Bunyan, with Original Notes by W. Mason, Esqr. In three parts.’ The illustration is captioned ‘Christian rising to glory by faith in the Cross’.
Two inscriptions, (i) on the recto, (ii) on the verso. (i) ‘Ὄλα δοκιμάζετε καὶ κρατεῖτε τὸ καλὸν. (1 Thess. v. 21.) Dated at Leiden. Numbered 233. (ii) ‘Infirmi corpore, valente Domino.’ Dated at Franeker.
Probably sent with the extract on the same page.
‘Fac ea quae moriens facta fuisse velis.’ Dated at Strasbourg. The last digit of the year is indistinct.
Probably sent with the letter on the same page.
Engraved by David Loggan.
‘Extra Deum nulla felicitas, | Deo adheareat, qui felix esse cupit.’ Dated at Jena.
Engraving published 2 July 1815. On the half-title the volume is called ‘Vol. X. Part IV.’
In verse. First line: ‘Conceal’d from Care beneath this Marble lyes’.
Printed in John Hackett’s Select and Remarkable Epitaphs (1757), ii. 50.