The Dramatic Works of John Ford: The lover's melancholy. The broken heart. Perkin WarbeckJ. Murray, 1831 |
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Page xxxiii
... the trade of a jeweller , and lived in Aldermanbury , within the territory of Father Calamy ; the rest either lost or exposed their lives for the king . " Of his social habits there , little can be told INTRODUCTION . xxxiii.
... the trade of a jeweller , and lived in Aldermanbury , within the territory of Father Calamy ; the rest either lost or exposed their lives for the king . " Of his social habits there , little can be told INTRODUCTION . xxxiii.
Page 15
... live When life is irksome , if we will not hug Prosperity in others , and contemn Affliction in ourselves . This rule is certain : " He that pursues his safety from the school " Of state , must learn to be madman or fool . " Ambition ...
... live When life is irksome , if we will not hug Prosperity in others , and contemn Affliction in ourselves . This rule is certain : " He that pursues his safety from the school " Of state , must learn to be madman or fool . " Ambition ...
Page 23
... live most free , we're caught in our own toils . Diamonds cut diamonds ; they who will prove To thrive in cunning , must cure love with love . [ Exeunt . ACT II . SCENE I. - An Apartment in the SCENE III . THE LOVER'S MELANCHOLY . 23.
... live most free , we're caught in our own toils . Diamonds cut diamonds ; they who will prove To thrive in cunning , must cure love with love . [ Exeunt . ACT II . SCENE I. - An Apartment in the SCENE III . THE LOVER'S MELANCHOLY . 23.
Page 27
... live in Bedlam ; * you will force me to't ; I am almost mad already . Pal . I believe it . Soph . Letters are come from Crete , which do require A speedy restitution of such ships , As by your father were long since detain'd ; If not ...
... live in Bedlam ; * you will force me to't ; I am almost mad already . Pal . I believe it . Soph . Letters are come from Crete , which do require A speedy restitution of such ships , As by your father were long since detain'd ; If not ...
Page 28
... do contain within yourself The great elixir , soul and quintessence Of all divine perfections ; are the glory Of mankind , and the only strict example For earthly monarchs to square out their lives by : 28 ACT II . THE LOVER'S MELANCHOLY .
... do contain within yourself The great elixir , soul and quintessence Of all divine perfections ; are the glory Of mankind , and the only strict example For earthly monarchs to square out their lives by : 28 ACT II . THE LOVER'S MELANCHOLY .
Common terms and phrases
A-WATER Amet AMETHUS Amyc Amyclas ARETUS Armostes Bass Bassanes beauty blood brother Calantha CHRISTALLA cittern Cleo Cleophila 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 GRAUSIS griefs Gril Gron hast hath heart heaven honour hope Hunt Huntley Ithocles JOHN FORD Kala Kath king Lacedemon lady Lady's Trial LAMBERT SIMNEL live lord Lover's Melancholy madam 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 sister Soph SOPHRONOS soul Sparta speak sweet Tecnicus THAMASTA thank thee there's thine thou art truth twas Urswick WARBECK Witch of Edmonton young youth
Popular passages
Page 152 - Pen. Not yet, heaven, I do beseech thee ! first let some wild fires Scorch, not consume it ! may the heat be cherish'd With desires infinite, but hopes impossible.
Page 196 - twas my father's last bequest. [Places a ring on the finger of Ithocles. Thus I new-marry him, whose wife I am ; Death shall not separate us. Oh, my lords, I but deceived your eyes with antic gesture, When one news straight came huddling on another, Of death ! and death ! and death ! still I danced forward : But it struck home, and here, and in an instant. Be such mere...
Page 187 - O, no more, no more, too late Sighs are spent ; the burning tapers Of a life as chaste as fate, Pure as are unwritten papers, Are burnt out : no heat, no light Now remains ; 'tis ever night. Love is dead ; let lovers...
Page 316 - From the base beadle's whip, crown'd all thy hopes : But, sirrah, ran there in thy veins one drop Of such a royal blood as flows in mine, Thou wouldst not change condition, to be second In England's state, without the crown itself. Coarse creatures are incapable of excellence : But let the world, as all to whom I am This day a spectacle, to time deliver, And by tradition fix posterity Without another chronicle than truth, How constantly my resolution suffer'd A martyrdom of majesty.
Page 323 - Books that you may carry to the fire, and hold readily in your hand, are the most useful after all. A man will often look at them, and be tempted to go on, when he would have been frightened at books of a larger size, and of a more erudite appearance.
Page 167 - 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 182 - tis a fine deceit To pass away in a dream! indeed, I've slept With mine eyes open a great while. No falsehood Equals a broken faith ; there's not a hair Sticks on my head but, like a leaden plummet, It sinks me to the grave : I must creep thither ; The journey is not long.
Page 181 - Sure, if we were all sirens, we should sing pitifully, And 'twere a comely music, when in parts One sung another's knell; the turtle sighs When he hath lost his mate ; and yet some say He must be dead first...
Page 198 - 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 307 - I expect No less, than what severity calls justice, And politicians safety ; let such beg As feed on alms : but, if there can be mercy In a protested enemy, then may it Descend to these poor creatures, whose engagements, To th...