Dramatic Works of John Ford ...J. Murray, 1827 |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-5 av 98
Sida xvii
... speak from conjecture - but I am disposed to believe that it furnished our poets with little more than a title- page . It is apparently a story made up for the occasion , and though it is highly probable that a woman of this name was ...
... speak from conjecture - but I am disposed to believe that it furnished our poets with little more than a title- page . It is apparently a story made up for the occasion , and though it is highly probable that a woman of this name was ...
Sida xxiv
... speak too favourably of the poetry of this play in the more impassioned pas- sages ; it is in truth too seductive for the subject , and flings a soft and soothing light over what , in its natural state , would glare with salutary and ...
... speak too favourably of the poetry of this play in the more impassioned pas- sages ; it is in truth too seductive for the subject , and flings a soft and soothing light over what , in its natural state , would glare with salutary and ...
Sida lxi
... speak of Mr. Monck Mason as if he had never advanced a step beyond his Massinger ; and of every preceding editor of Beaumont and Fletcher with a contempt that , to say the least of it , strangely misbecomes him . Instances of this might ...
... speak of Mr. Monck Mason as if he had never advanced a step beyond his Massinger ; and of every preceding editor of Beaumont and Fletcher with a contempt that , to say the least of it , strangely misbecomes him . Instances of this might ...
Sida lxxxiv
... speak ingeniously . " Ingenious was anciently used for ingenuous . " Never was a more idle observation : the speaker means as she says , i . e . wittily . G. 31. W. 139. - Truth and honour . Read : Truth or honour . G. 32. IV . 140 . a ...
... speak ingeniously . " Ingenious was anciently used for ingenuous . " Never was a more idle observation : the speaker means as she says , i . e . wittily . G. 31. W. 139. - Truth and honour . Read : Truth or honour . G. 32. IV . 140 . a ...
Sida lxxxv
John Ford William Gifford. me to speak ; and in Jonson , it is an injunction to be silent ! But this is Mr. Weber's usual luck . G. 38. W. 146. - Confined to the castle , where he now lies . Read : Confined to the castle , where he yet ...
John Ford William Gifford. me to speak ; and in Jonson , it is an injunction to be silent ! But this is Mr. Weber's usual luck . G. 38. W. 146. - Confined to the castle , where he now lies . Read : Confined to the castle , where he yet ...
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
Amet AMETHUS Amyc AMYCLAS Annabella ARETUS Armostes Bass Bassanes beauty Bian Bianca blood brother Calantha Cleo Cleophila Colona court Crot D'Av D'Avolos dare death doth Duke Enter Eroclea Euphranea Exeunt Exit eyes father fear Fern Fernando Fior FIORMONDA fool Friar Giacopo Giov grace hath heart heaven Here's honour hope Ilsington is't Ithocles JOHN FORD Jonson Kala kiss lady Lady's Trial live lord Love's Love's Sacrifice Lover's Melancholy madam marriage Maur Mauruccio means Melancholy Menaphon mistress NEARCHUS never noble old copy reads Orgilus Parthenophill PELIAS Penthea Perkin Warbeck pity poet Poggio pray prince Prophilus PUTANA Rhetias Roseilli SCENE sense sister Soranzo soul Sparta speak Sun's Darling sweet tell thee thine thou art thou hast thought truth Vasques vows Weber Witch of Edmonton word youth
Populära avsnitt
Sida xl - tis most certain, Iras. Saucy lictors Will catch at us, like strumpets ; and scald rhymers Ballad us out o' tune : the quick comedians Extemporally will stage us, and present Our Alexandrian revels : Antony Shall be brought drunken forth, and I shall see Some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness I
Sida 124 - t be possible) of blood : Beg heaven to cleanse the leprosy of lust That rots thy soul ; acknowledge what thou art, A wretch, a worm, a nothing : weep, sigh, pray Three times a day, and three times every night ; For seven days...
Sida 300 - Pen. I must leave the world To revel in Elysium, and 'tis just To wish my brother some advantage here ; Yet, by my best hopes, Ithocles is ignorant Of this pursuit : but if you please to kill him, Lend him one angry look or one harsh word, And you shall soon conclude how strong a power Your absolute authority holds over His life and end.
Sida 179 - A lightless sulphur, chok'd with smoky fogs Of an infected darkness : in this place Dwell many thousand thousand sundry sorts Of never-dying deaths: there damned souls Roar without pity; there are gluttons fed...
Sida 275 - But know then, Orgilus, what honour is : Honour consists not in a bare opinion By doing any act that feeds content, Brave in appearance, 'cause we think it brave ; Such honour comes by accident, not nature, Proceeding from the vices of our passion, Which makes our reason drunk : but real honour Is the reward of virtue, and acquired By justice, or by valour which, for bases, Hath justice to uphold it.
Sida 153 - I'll find a time when he and she do meet, Of which I'll give you notice ; and, to be sure He shall not scape you, I'll provide a poison To dip your rapier's point in ; if he had As many heads as Hydra had, he dies.
Sida 122 - Twixt my perpetual happiness and me ? Say that we had one father; say one womb — Curse to my joys ! — gave both us life and birth ; Are we not therefore each to other bound So much the more by nature ? by the links Of blood, of reason ? nay, if you will have't, Even of religion, to be ever one, One soul, one flesh, one love, one heart, one all ? Friar.
Sida 71 - Corax,9 for the gift Of this invention ; but the plot deceives us : What means this empty space ? [Pointing to the paper. Cor. One kind of Melancholy Is only left untouch'd ; 'twas not in art To personate the shadow of that fancy ; Tis nam'd Love-Melancholy. As, for instance, Admit this stranger here, — young man, stand forth — [To PARTH.
Sida 88 - tis a spirit in his likeness ; answer I can get none from her : you shall see her. Pal. The young man in disguise, upon my life, To steal out of the land. Rhe. I'll send him to you.
Sida 259 - Zelmane protested that the fit prey for them was hearts of princes. She also had an angle in her hand, but the taker was so taken that she had forgotten taking. Basilius in the meantime would be the cook himself of what was so caught, and Gynecia.