Dramatic Works of John Ford ...J. Murray, 1827 - Dramatists, English |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page viii
... common schoolfellow , the Dean of Westminster , a few additional notices respecting the poet's connections ; but the long and severe illness which afflicted him , and which terminated in death a few months since , took away the power of ...
... common schoolfellow , the Dean of Westminster , a few additional notices respecting the poet's connections ; but the long and severe illness which afflicted him , and which terminated in death a few months since , took away the power of ...
Page x
... common at that period , and indeed long after it ; but the authors steadfastly looked to the surviving heir , for pay or patronage , in return for their miserable dole of consolation ; and our youthful poet sets out with affirming ( and ...
... common at that period , and indeed long after it ; but the authors steadfastly looked to the surviving heir , for pay or patronage , in return for their miserable dole of consolation ; and our youthful poet sets out with affirming ( and ...
Page xlvi
... common with ordinary hostility . In truth , with the exception of an allusion to the " voluminous " and rancorous Prynne , nothing can be more general than his complaints . Yet Ford looked not much to the brighter side of life : he ...
... common with ordinary hostility . In truth , with the exception of an allusion to the " voluminous " and rancorous Prynne , nothing can be more general than his complaints . Yet Ford looked not much to the brighter side of life : he ...
Page lxxxiii
... common ancient signification of knowledge , for we cannot conceive the propriety of Rhetia's purposely intending , without knowledge of the circumstance , to become his own antick . " G. 19. IV . 128. - Ambition , wealth , ease ! I ...
... common ancient signification of knowledge , for we cannot conceive the propriety of Rhetia's purposely intending , without knowledge of the circumstance , to become his own antick . " G. 19. IV . 128. - Ambition , wealth , ease ! I ...
Page xcvi
... common a book as Johnson's Dictionary , he would have seen that it meant in Ford's time precisely what it means now . As applied to the arts , and particularly music , prac- tical skill ; as applied to the senses , subtilty , craft ...
... common a book as Johnson's Dictionary , he would have seen that it meant in Ford's time precisely what it means now . As applied to the arts , and particularly music , prac- tical skill ; as applied to the senses , subtilty , craft ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Amet AMETHUS Amyc AMYCLAS Annabella ARETUS Armostes Bass Bassanes beauty Bian Bianca blood brother Calantha Cleo Cleophila Colona court Crot D'Av D'Avolos dare doth Duke Enter Eroclea Euphranea Exeunt Exit eyes father fear Fern Fernando Fior FIORMONDA fool Friar Giacopo Giov grace Gril hath heart heaven Here's honour hope Ilsington is't Ithocles JOHN FORD Jonson Kala kiss lady Lady's Trial live lord Love's Love's Sacrifice Lover's Melancholy madam marriage Maur Mauruccio means Melancholy Menaphon mistress NEARCHUS never noble old copy reads Orgilus Parthenophill PELIAS Penthea Perkin Warbeck pity poet Poggio pray prince Prophilus Putana Rhetias Roseilli SCENE sense sister Soranzo soul Sparta speak Sun's Darling sweet tell thee thine thou art thou hast thought truth Vasques vows Weber Witch of Edmonton word youth
Popular passages
Page xxxviii - 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 187 - 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 forc'd to sup whole draughts of molten gold...
Page 367 - 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. O, 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.
Page 130 - 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...
Page 167 - And love the quintessence of that : this proves, My sister's beauty being rarely fair Is rarely virtuous ; chiefly in her love, , And chiefly in that love, her love to me : If hers to me, then so is mine to her ; Since in like causes are effects alike.
Page 279 - Apartment. Enter ITHOCLES. Ith. Ambition ! 'tis of vipers' breed : it gnaws A passage through the womb that gave it motion. Ambition, like a seeled ' dove, mounts upward, Higher and higher still, to perch on clouds, But tumbles headlong down with heavier ruin. So squibs and crackers fly into the air, Then, only breaking with a noise, they vanish In stench and smoke.
Page 168 - For colour, lips, for sweet perfumes, her breath; For jewels, eyes; for threads of purest gold, Hair; for delicious choice of flowers, cheeks; Wonder in every portion of that throne. Hear her but speak, and you will swear the spheres 55 Make music to the citizens in heaven; But father, what is else for pleasure framed, Lest I offend your ears, shall go unnamed.
Page 317 - Contemn not your condition for the proof Of bare opinion only : to what end Reach all these moral texts ? Pen. To place before ye A perfect mirror, wherein you may see How weary I am of a lingering life, Who count the best a misery.
Page 90 - Page, walk aside.—Sweet beauty, I am sent ambassador from the mistress of my thoughts, to you, the mistress of my desires. Cleo. So, sir! I pray be brief. Cue. That you may know I am not, as they say, an animal, which is, as they say, a kind of Cokes, which is, as the learned term it, an ass, a puppy, a widgeon, a dolt, a noddy, a Cleo.
Page 333 - 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.