Yale Studies in English, Svazek 341908 |
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Strana xxiii
... loue lees and leaue , the lustye Wine : Enuye them not , theire Pallattes with the swine . Noe doubt A Mouldye Tale , Lyke Pericles , and stale As the Shriues Crustes ; & Nastye as his fish , Scrapps out of euery dishe ; Throwne forth ...
... loue lees and leaue , the lustye Wine : Enuye them not , theire Pallattes with the swine . Noe doubt A Mouldye Tale , Lyke Pericles , and stale As the Shriues Crustes ; & Nastye as his fish , Scrapps out of euery dishe ; Throwne forth ...
Strana xxxviii
... loue , or language , am I thus translated ! His tongue is tip'd with the Philosophers stone , And that hath touch'd me through euery vaine ! I feele that transmutation o ' my blood , As I were quite become another creature , And all he ...
... loue , or language , am I thus translated ! His tongue is tip'd with the Philosophers stone , And that hath touch'd me through euery vaine ! I feele that transmutation o ' my blood , As I were quite become another creature , And all he ...
Strana xlv
... loue , here , Mr Lovel . -3 . 2. 238 . Such scattered allusions carry with them an inti- mation that Plato's works will bear close study with reference to an appraisal of Jonson's debt to the Greek ; yet no investigation to this end has ...
... loue , here , Mr Lovel . -3 . 2. 238 . Such scattered allusions carry with them an inti- mation that Plato's works will bear close study with reference to an appraisal of Jonson's debt to the Greek ; yet no investigation to this end has ...
Strana xlvi
... Loue , but the most noble , pure affection Of what is truly beautifull , and faire ? Desire of vnion with the thing beloued ? 1 A definition which practically amounts to this is evolved by Socrates in his questioning of Agathon : Yes ...
... Loue , but the most noble , pure affection Of what is truly beautifull , and faire ? Desire of vnion with the thing beloued ? 1 A definition which practically amounts to this is evolved by Socrates in his questioning of Agathon : Yes ...
Strana xlvii
... Plato's work , as I shall further proceed to demonstrate . Lovel's principal points are embodied in the follow- ing lines : 1 Symposium 189-91 . Loue is a spirituall coupling of two soules , So The Debt to the Philosophers xlvii.
... Plato's work , as I shall further proceed to demonstrate . Lovel's principal points are embodied in the follow- ing lines : 1 Symposium 189-91 . Loue is a spirituall coupling of two soules , So The Debt to the Philosophers xlvii.
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Abbott allusion Amadis de Gaule Arch Ass Wks Bartholomew Fair Beaufort Ben Jonson beſt called comedy Court Court of Love Cuerpo Dekker doth edition epitasis euery Fair Wks felfe Ferret feruant fhall firſt Flie fome fuch Gifford giue hath haue Hoft horſe Host houſe Huffle i'the Inne Jonson kiffe King Lady Frampul Lady Wks Lætitia Latimer leaue light Heart London Lord loue Love's Love's Pilgrimage Lovel Magnetic Lady Masque of Augurs matter muſt neuer noble Non-dram o'the oyez phrase Pinnacia play poet Poetaster Prudence Prue Richard Brome says Scan scansion Scene Sejanus sense ſhall ſhe ſhould Soueraigne thee theſe thing thoſe thou Tipto Trundle valour Volpone vpon Whalley wife wild Company word yong
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Strana 285 - A jest's prosperity lies in the ear • Of him that hears it, never in the tongue Of him that makes it : then, if sickly ears, Deaf 'd with the clamours of their own dear groans.
Strana xlvii - And when he perceives this he will abate his violent love of the one, which he will despise and deem a small thing, and will become a lover of all beautiful forms; in the next stage he will consider that the beauty of the mind is more honourable than the beauty of the outward form.
Strana xxxvii - She never told her love, .But let concealment, like a worm i' the bud, Feed on her damask cheek: she pin'd in thought; And, with a green and yellow melancholy, She sat like Patience on a monument, Smiling at grief. Was not this love indeed? We men may say more, swear more: but, indeed, Our shows are more than will ; for still we prove Much in our VOWS , but little in our love. Duke. But died thy sister of her love , my boy? Via. I am all the daughters of my father's house , And all the brothers too...
Strana xxix - beginning his studies of this kind with Every Man in his " Humour and, after, Every Man out of his Humour, and since " continuing in all his plays, especially those of the comic " thread, whereof the New Inn was the last, some recent " humours still, or manners of men that went along with the
Strana xlv - After the division the two parts of man, each desiring his other half, came together, and throwing their arms about one another, entwined in mutual embraces, longing to grow into one...
Strana xlv - Androgynous" is only preserved as a term of reproach. In the second place, the primeval man was round, his back and sides forming a circle; and he had four hands and four feet, one head with two faces, looking opposite ways, set on a round neck and precisely alike; also four ears, two privy members, and the remainder to correspond.
Strana xx - Q,. Horatius Flaccus: His Art of Poetry. Englished By Ben: Jonson. With other Workes of the Author, never Printed before. London : Printed by J. Okes, for John Benson. 1640.
Strana 4 - ... clothes of credit; and possess the stage against the play: to dislike all, but mark nothing. And by their confidence of rising between the acts, in oblique lines, make affidavit to the whole house, of their not understanding one scene. Armed with this prejudice, as the stage furniture, or arrasclothes, they were there, as spectators, away: for the faces in the hangings, and they, beheld alike.
Strana 139 - King's servants ; and more squeamishly beheld and censured by others, the King's subjects, 1629. Now at last set at liberty to the readers, his Majesty's servants and subjects, to be judged, 1631.
Strana 260 - And this perhaps JUNIUS may think " the liberal resentment of a gentleman :" this skulking assassination he may call courage. In all things as in this I hope we differ : " I thought that fortitude had been a mean 'Twixt fear and rashness ; not a lust obscene Or appetite of offending ; but a skill And nice discernment between good and ill. Her ends are honesty and public good, And without these she is not understood.