Pleasures whose means are easy in the end
- DMI number:
- 17191
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- First Line:
- Pleasures whose means are easy in the end
- Last Line:
- Should you win her delights without some pains | They would not relish
- Poem Genre / Form:
- Blank verse, Extract / snippet from longer work, and Verse-drama
- Themes:
- Advice / moral precepts
- Author:
- Thomas Nabbes [Nabbs]
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Nabbes (1637): D2r (from 'Microcosmus').
- Title:
- [vol. 3] The British muse, or, a collection of thoughts moral, natural, and sublime, of our English poets: who flourished in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries [vol III] [ECCO] [T131617]
- Page No(s):
- pp.26-27
- Poem Title:
- [no title]
- Attribution:
- Nabbs's Microcosmus
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Nabbes [Nabbs]
Poem Aliases
Nabbes. Microcosmus.
Related People
Content/Publication