Volpone: Or, The FoxYale University Press, 1919 - Počet stran: 254 This Revels Student Edition, with a carefully modernized text, presents new material about "Volpone" 's debt to the popular Reynard beast epic and Italian "commedia dell 'art" and discusses its mockery of greed in relation to two Renaissance perversions of the myth of a Golden Age. Referring to famous productions, it pays particular attention to decisions that must be made whenever the play is performed. |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 20
Strana 15
... VOLPONE'S House . Enter VOLPONE and Mosca . G 2 [ MOSCA withdraws the curtain , and discovers piles of gold , plate , jewels , etc. G B 5 Ram B 7 B om . first comma . 24 thee ] the B 4 Sunne Is made worth heauen ! Thou art vertue , fame II.
... VOLPONE'S House . Enter VOLPONE and Mosca . G 2 [ MOSCA withdraws the curtain , and discovers piles of gold , plate , jewels , etc. G B 5 Ram B 7 B om . first comma . 24 thee ] the B 4 Sunne Is made worth heauen ! Thou art vertue , fame II.
Strana 16
Or, The Fox Ben Jonson John Dougan Rea. Is made worth heauen ! Thou art vertue , fame , 25 Honour , and all things elfe ! Who can get thee , He shall be noble , valiant , honest , wise- Mos . And what he will , fir . Riches are in ...
Or, The Fox Ben Jonson John Dougan Rea. Is made worth heauen ! Thou art vertue , fame , 25 Honour , and all things elfe ! Who can get thee , He shall be noble , valiant , honest , wise- Mos . And what he will , fir . Riches are in ...
Strana 20
... heauen , of that profane nation ; And gently , report thy next transmigration . AND . To the fame that I am . NAN . A creature of delight ? 45 And ( what is more then a Foole ) an hermaphrodite ? 50 Now ' pray thee , fweet Soule , in ...
... heauen , of that profane nation ; And gently , report thy next transmigration . AND . To the fame that I am . NAN . A creature of delight ? 45 And ( what is more then a Foole ) an hermaphrodite ? 50 Now ' pray thee , fweet Soule , in ...
Strana 23
... VOLP . You are too munificent . would to heauen. introducing VOLTORE , with a piece 17 [ putting it into his hands . G of Plate . G 7 [ faintly . G 18 [ Aside . G Keepe the poore inuentorie of your iewels , Your plate or The Foxe 23.
... VOLP . You are too munificent . would to heauen. introducing VOLTORE , with a piece 17 [ putting it into his hands . G of Plate . G 7 [ faintly . G 18 [ Aside . G Keepe the poore inuentorie of your iewels , Your plate or The Foxe 23.
Strana 24
... heauen , VOLT . No , fir , I could as well giue health to you , as that plate . VOLP . You giue , fir , what you can . Your loue I thanke you . Hath taste in this , and shall not be vn - anfwer'd . I pray you fee me often . VOLT . Yes ...
... heauen , VOLT . No , fir , I could as well giue health to you , as that plate . VOLP . You giue , fir , what you can . Your loue I thanke you . Hath taste in this , and shall not be vn - anfwer'd . I pray you fee me often . VOLT . Yes ...
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Adagia Aduocate Alchemist Arch atque Avoc Ben Jonson beſt bloud BONARIO CASTRONE CELIA Chimæra comedy CORB CORBACCIO CORV CORVINO Cynthia's Revels doth edition Epist Erasmus etiam Euphorbus Exeunt Exit felfe fhall firſt fome fools fuch Gifford giue Glossary graue fathers hath haue heauen heire Holt Horace houſe I'le Italian Jonson Juvenal knaue Lady Latin leaue Libanius lines liue loue Lucian MOSCA moſt mountebank muſt NANO neuer Paracelsus passage PEREGRINE Ph.D Plautus play pleaſe Poet pray preſent Pythagoras quæ quam quod quoted satire ſay scene Scoto ſee Sejanus ſhall ſhould Signior Silent Woman Sir Pol Sir Politique ſome stage-direction ſtate ſtrange thee theſe thinke thoſe thou tion Upton Venice vnto VOLP Volpone VOLPONE'S VOLT VOLTORE vpon vſe Whalley Wotton Would-bee ΙΟ
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 214 - Her lips were red, and one was thin, Compared to that was next her chin. Some bee had stung it newly; But Dick, her eyes so guard her face, I durst no more upon them gaze Than on the sun in July.
Strana 252 - XV. Essays on the Study and Use of Poetry by Plutarch and Basil the Great, translated from the Greek, with an Introduction. FREDERICK M.
Strana 216 - Beneficia eo usque laeta sunt dum videntur exsolvi posse; ubi multum antevenere, pro gratia odium redditur.
Strana xxix - And howsoever some may squeamishly cry out, that all endeavour of learning and sharpness in these transitory devices, especially where it steps beyond their little, or (let me not wrong them,) no brain at all, is superfluous ; I am contented, these fastidious stomachs should leave my full tables, and enjoy at home their clean empty trenchers, fittest for such airy tastes ; where perhaps a few Italian herbs, picked up and made into a sallad, may find sweeter acceptance than all the most nourishing...
Strana 185 - FACE. O, sir, we are defeated ! all the works Are flown in fumo,' every glass is burst ; Furnace and all rent down, as if a bolt Of thunder had been driven through the house. Retorts, receivers, pelicans,' bolt-heads,* All struck in shivers ! (SUBTLE falls down as in a swoon.) Help, good sir ! alas, Coldness and death invades him.
Strana xxv - Upon their actions : and that this was one I make no scruple.— But the holy synod Have been in prayer and meditation for it; And 'tis reveal'd no less to them than me, That casting of money is most lawful.
Strana 7 - I take him, is no subject for pride and ignorance to exercise their railing rhetoric upon. But it will here be hastily answered, that the writers of these days are other things; that not only their manners, but their natures, are inverted, and nothing remaining...
Strana xlviii - I would have shown To all the world the art which thou alone Hast taught our tongue, the rules of time, of place. And other rites, delivered with the grace Of comic style, which only is far more Than any English stage hath known before.
Strana 199 - That he thought not Bartas a Poet, but a Verser, because he wrote not fiction. " He cursed Petrarch for redacting verses to Sonnets ; which he said were like that Tirrant's bed, wher some who where too short were racked, others too long cut short.
Strana 40 - While he lived, in action. He has received weekly intelligence, Upon my knowledge, out of the Low Countries, For all parts of the world, in cabbages...