The Works of John Ford: Introduction by Gifford. List of plays. Commendatory verses. The lover's melancholy. 'Tis pity she's a whore. The broken heartJ. Toovey, 1869 |
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Page xlviii
... fortune . " 20 Langbaine supposes Ford [ and Decker ] to be dead when The Sun's Darling21 was published , by Bird and Penneycuicke , in 1657 [ see vol . iii . p . 102 ] . He probably had no better authority than an expression in the ...
... fortune . " 20 Langbaine supposes Ford [ and Decker ] to be dead when The Sun's Darling21 was published , by Bird and Penneycuicke , in 1657 [ see vol . iii . p . 102 ] . He probably had no better authority than an expression in the ...
Page liii
... fortune had not far to seek for a worthy partner , and with such a one it is pleasing to hope that he spent the residue of his blameless and honourable life . None of his descendants , however , are specified , but Sir Henry Ford ...
... fortune had not far to seek for a worthy partner , and with such a one it is pleasing to hope that he spent the residue of his blameless and honourable life . None of his descendants , however , are specified , but Sir Henry Ford ...
Page lviii
... fortune on the gullibility of this great lubber , the town , prudently chose to take the Shakesperian papers ( " Sonnets and Poems and Plays " ) into his own hands , and bequeath them , in the name of the great poet , to an ancestor of ...
... fortune on the gullibility of this great lubber , the town , prudently chose to take the Shakesperian papers ( " Sonnets and Poems and Plays " ) into his own hands , and bequeath them , in the name of the great poet , to an ancestor of ...
Page lxxi
... fortune , he says , to be recommended to the public by " the celebrated Dr. Donne " ! That anyone who pretended to the slightest acquaintance with the writers of Ford's time should be so incomprehensibly ignorant of their style and ...
... fortune , he says , to be recommended to the public by " the celebrated Dr. Donne " ! That anyone who pretended to the slightest acquaintance with the writers of Ford's time should be so incomprehensibly ignorant of their style and ...
Page 13
... fortune Than any you have seen abroad . Men . Than any I have observ'd abroad : all countries else To a free eye and mind yield something rare ; And I , for my part , have brought home one jewel Of admirable value.4 Amet . Jewel ...
... fortune Than any you have seen abroad . Men . Than any I have observ'd abroad : all countries else To a free eye and mind yield something rare ; And I , for my part , have brought home one jewel Of admirable value.4 Amet . Jewel ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amet Amethus Amyc AMYCLAS Annabella ARETUS Armostes Bass Bassanes beauty Bergetto brother Calantha CHRISTALLA Cleo Cleophila Corax cousin Crot Crotolon d'ye dare Donado doth Enter Eroclea Euph Euphranea Exeunt Exit father favour fear FLORIO Friar Gifford printed Giovanni Grau Gril Gron GRONEAS hath heart heaven Here's honour hope Ilsington is't Ithocles John Ford Jonson Kala lady Lady's Trial lord Love's Sacrifice Lover's Melancholy marriage Meleander Menaphon mistress NEARCHUS never noble old copy Orgilus Parthenophil PELIAS Penthea Perkin Warbeck PHILEMA pity poet Poggio pray prince princess prithee Prophilus PUTANA Rhetias Rich SCENE sister Soranzo soul Sparta speak Sun's Darling sure sweet tell THAMASTA thee thine thou art thou hast thought truth twas uncle Vasques Witch of Edmonton word youth
Popular passages
Page 17 - Into a pretty anger, that a bird, Whom art had never taught cliffs, moods, or notes, Should vie with him for mastery, whose study Had busied many hours to perfect practice ; To end the controversy, in a rapture Upon his instrument he plays so swiftly So many voluntaries, and so quick That there was curiosity and cunning, Concord in discord, lines of differing method Meeting in one full centre of delight.
Page xlv - tis most certain, Iras. Saucy lictors Will catch at us, like strumpets ; and scald rhymers Ballad us out o' tune : the quick comedians Extemporally will stage us, and present Our Alexandrian revels : Antony Shall be brought drunken forth, and I shall see Some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness I
Page 118 - In tears, and (if't be possible) of blood : Beg heaven to cleanse the leprosy of lust That rots thy soul ; acknowledge what thou art, A wretch, a worm, a nothing : weep, sigh, pray Three times a day, and three times every night ; For seven days' space do this, then, if thou find'st No change in thy desires, return to me ; I'll think on remedy.
Page 166 - A lightless sulphur, chok'd with smoky fogs Of an infected darkness ; in this place Dwell many thousand thousand sundry sorts Of never-dying deaths ; there damned souls Roar without pity ; there are gluttons fed With toads and adders ; there is burning oil Pour'd down the drunkard's throat ; the usurer Is...
Page xlix - But view her in her glorious ornaments, Attired in the majesty of art, Set high in spirit with the precious taste Of sweet philosophy...
Page 262 - Pen. You had been happy ! Then had you never known that sin of life Which blots all following glories with a vengeance, For forfeiting the last will of the dead, From whom you had your being.
Page 16 - He could not run division with more art Upon his quaking instrument, than she The nightingale did with her various notes Reply to.
Page 116 - Shall a peevish sound, A customary form, from man to man, Of brother and of sister, be a bar 'Twixt my perpetual happiness and me ? Say that we had one father, say one womb (Curse to my joys !) gave both us life and birth ; Are we not, therefore, each to other bound So much the more by nature ? by the links Of blood, of reason ? nay, if you will have it, Even of religion, to be ever one, One soul, one flesh, one love, one heart, one all ? FRIAR : Have done, unhappy youth ! for thou art lost.
Page 202 - Early and late, the tribute which my heart Hath paid to Annabella's sacred love, Hath been these tears, which are her mourners now! Never till now did nature do her best, To...
Page 210 - And this is one thing that may make latter ages worse than were the former : for the vicious example of ages past, poison the curiosity of these present, affording a hint of sin unto seduceable spirits, and soliciting those unto the imitation of them, whose heads were never so perversely principled as to invent them. In things of this nature silence commendeth History ; 'tis the veniable part of things lost, wherein there must never rise a Pancirollus* nor remain any register but that of Hell."]...