The Poetical Decameron, Or, Ten Conversations on English Poets and Poetry: Particularly of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I. |
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Page xlii
... Is like an image pictured , a blowing from the south : Which to avoyd , then turne about and with a napkin hide That gaping foule deformity , when thou art so aside . " P. 71,1 5. For “ 1589 " read “ 1598. xlii NOTES AND CORRECTIONS .
... Is like an image pictured , a blowing from the south : Which to avoyd , then turne about and with a napkin hide That gaping foule deformity , when thou art so aside . " P. 71,1 5. For “ 1589 " read “ 1598. xlii NOTES AND CORRECTIONS .
Page xliii
... thou made To dote upon ! What would I give Old Michael Angelo revive , Make Titian , Vandyke or bold Ruben live ! " with several stanzas more , in which the thought is carried out . P. 177. 1. 28. In the list of R. Greene's NOTES AND ...
... thou made To dote upon ! What would I give Old Michael Angelo revive , Make Titian , Vandyke or bold Ruben live ! " with several stanzas more , in which the thought is carried out . P. 177. 1. 28. In the list of R. Greene's NOTES AND ...
Page xliv
... thou famous gracer of Tra- gedians , that Greene , who hath said with thee , like the fool in his heart , There is no GOD , ' should now giue glory vnto his greatnesse . It is pestilent Mucheavilian pollicie that thou hast studied ...
... thou famous gracer of Tra- gedians , that Greene , who hath said with thee , like the fool in his heart , There is no GOD , ' should now giue glory vnto his greatnesse . It is pestilent Mucheavilian pollicie that thou hast studied ...
Page 66
... from wante , as far from vaine expence , Tone doth enforce , the other doth entice . Allow good company , but driue fro thence All filthy mouths that glory in their vice.— This done , thou hast no more , but leaue 66 FIRST CONVERSATION .
... from wante , as far from vaine expence , Tone doth enforce , the other doth entice . Allow good company , but driue fro thence All filthy mouths that glory in their vice.— This done , thou hast no more , but leaue 66 FIRST CONVERSATION .
Page 67
... thou hast no more , but leaue the rest To nature , fortune , time , and woman's brest . " ELLIOT . The thoughts are not very new , to be sure , though prettily expressed . But do not let us forget Whetstone , and the passage where he ...
... thou hast no more , but leaue the rest To nature , fortune , time , and woman's brest . " ELLIOT . The thoughts are not very new , to be sure , though prettily expressed . But do not let us forget Whetstone , and the passage where he ...
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Ben Jonson Bibliographer blank verse BOURNE called certainly Chapman copy curious dare say death DECAMERON Diogenes Donne doth Drayton edition ELLIOT English satirist epigrams Epistle extract Fitzgeffrey Francis Meres George Chapman George Peele giue Goddard Hall hath haue hear heauen Heywood John John Marston John Webster Jonson kind Latin lines liue Lodge's Lord loue Marlow Marston mean mentioned Momus MORTON Muses Nash night noble observe Parasitaster passage Peele Peele's perhaps pieces Pigmalions play poem Poesie poet POETICAL DECAMERON poetry praise printed probably production prose Queen quotation quoted rarity recollect remarkable reprint rhyme rime Ritson satires satirist Satyres seems Shakespeare Sidney Sir Francis Drake sonnet speaking specimen Spenser stanza suppose sweete thee thing Thomas thou tion tract translation vertue vnto vpon Webster Whetstone words worth writers written wrote