The dramatic works of John Ford, with an intr. and notes [by W. Harness?].1831 |
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Page xiii
... pleasures and gross * We have the authority of Singleton for the fact , who , in the lines prefixed to this very play , ( the Lover's Melancholy , ) says , " Nor seek I praise for thee , when thine own pen Hath forced a praise long ...
... pleasures and gross * We have the authority of Singleton for the fact , who , in the lines prefixed to this very play , ( the Lover's Melancholy , ) says , " Nor seek I praise for thee , when thine own pen Hath forced a praise long ...
Page xxvii
... pleasure . There is nothing in the Dedication , or in the Prologue and Epilogue , to this play , that indicates the slightest inclination of the poet to withdraw from the stage : on the contrary , his mind seems to have attained a ...
... pleasure . There is nothing in the Dedication , or in the Prologue and Epilogue , to this play , that indicates the slightest inclination of the poet to withdraw from the stage : on the contrary , his mind seems to have attained a ...
Page 3
... pleasure which the reader's own conjectures and anticipations might furnish , enable him more easily to encounter those difficulties which are not unfrequently to be met with in Ford's dialogue , some of them owing to the defective ...
... pleasure which the reader's own conjectures and anticipations might furnish , enable him more easily to encounter those difficulties which are not unfrequently to be met with in Ford's dialogue , some of them owing to the defective ...
Page 8
... pleasures Thy presence hath brought home . Soph . Here thou still find'st A friend as noble , Menaphon , as when Thou left'st at thy departure . Men . Yes , I know it , To him I owe more service- Amet . Pray give leave- He shall attend ...
... pleasures Thy presence hath brought home . Soph . Here thou still find'st A friend as noble , Menaphon , as when Thou left'st at thy departure . Men . Yes , I know it , To him I owe more service- Amet . Pray give leave- He shall attend ...
Page 17
... pleasure with me , sir . Pel . ( coming forward ) Noble , accomplished Cu- culus ! Rhe . Give me thy fist , innocent . Cuc . ' Would ' twere in thy belly ! there ' tis . Pel . That's well ; he's an honest blade , though he be blunt ...
... pleasure with me , sir . Pel . ( coming forward ) Noble , accomplished Cu- culus ! Rhe . Give me thy fist , innocent . Cuc . ' Would ' twere in thy belly ! there ' tis . Pel . That's well ; he's an honest blade , though he be blunt ...
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Common terms and phrases
A-WATER Amet AMETHUS Amyc Amyclas ARETUS Armostes Bass Bassanes beauty blood brother Calantha CHRISTALLA cittern Cleo Cleophila Clif Corax court cousin Crot CROTOLON Dalyell dare daughter Dawbeney dear doth Earl Enter Eroclea Euph Euphranea Exeunt Exit eyes fate father favour Ford fortunes Frion GIFFORD Grau griefs Gril Gron GRONEAS hath heart heaven honour hope Hunt Huntley Ithocles Kala Kath king lady Lady's Trial LAMBERT SIMNEL live lord Lover's Melancholy marriage Melancholy Meleander Menaphon NEARCHUS never noble Orgilus Palador Parthenophill passion peace PELIAS Penthea Perkin PERKIN WARBECK PHILEMA pity poet pray prince princess prithee Prophilus Rhetias SCENE Sir William Stanley sister Soph SOPHRONOS soul Sparta speak sweet Tecnicus THAMASTA thank thee thine thou art truth twas Urswick WARBECK wife Witch of Edmonton young youth
Popular passages
Page 12 - He could not run division with more art Upon his quaking instrument than she, The nightingale, did with her various notes Reply to...
Page 327 - The king sent in the greater diligence, not knowing whether she might be with child, whereby the business would not have ended in Perkin's person. When she was brought to the king, it was commonly said, that the king received her not only with compassion, but with affection ; pity giving more impression...
Page 111 - I danc'd forward ; But it struck home, and here, and in an instant. Be such mere women, who with shrieks and outcries Can vow a present end to all their sorrows : Yet live to vow new pleasures, and out-live them. They are the silent griefs which cut the heart-strings : Let me die smiling.
Page 175 - Glories Of human greatness are but pleasing dreams, And shadows soon decaying. On the stage Of my mortality, my youth hath acted Some scenes of vanity, drawn out at length By varied pleasures, sweeten'd in the mixture, But tragical in issue.
Page 221 - Sorrows mingled with contents, prepare Rest for care; Love only reigns in death; though art Can find no comfort for a broken heart.
Page 222 - I do not know where to find, in any play, a catastrophe so grand, so solemn, and so surprising as in this. This is, indeed, according to Milton, to describe high passions and high actions. The fortitude of the Spartan boy, who let a beast gnaw out his bowels till he died without expressing a groan, is a faint bodily image of this dilaceration of the spirit and exenteration of the inmost mind, which...
Page xix - Was whipp'd to exile by unblushing verse. This law we keep in our presentment now, Not to take freedom more than we allow ; What may be here thought FICTION, when time's youth Wanted some riper years, was known A TRUTH : In which, if words have cloth'd the subject right, You may partake a pity, with delight.
Page 99 - Twas safely carried ; I humbly thank thy fate. Ero, If earthly treasures Are pour'd in plenty down from heaven on mortals, They reign amongst those oracles that flow In schools of sacred knowledge, such is Athens ; Yet Athens was to me but a fair prison : The thoughts of you, my sister, country, fortunes, And something of the prince...