The School of Abuse: Containing a Pleasant Invective Against Poets, Pipers, Players, Jesters, Etc |
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Page 7
... schollers were woont , how plaine soever hee spake , to misconster him , how righte soever hee wrote , to wrest him ; and I looke for some like auditors in my Schoole , as of rancour will hit me , howso- ever I warde , or of stomake ...
... schollers were woont , how plaine soever hee spake , to misconster him , how righte soever hee wrote , to wrest him ; and I looke for some like auditors in my Schoole , as of rancour will hit me , howso- ever I warde , or of stomake ...
Page 36
... schollers , if they be not able to finde out a knotte in every rushe ; these no men , if for stirring of a strawe they prove not their valure uppon some bodies fleshe . Every Duns will bee a carper ; every Dicke Swashe a common cutter ...
... schollers , if they be not able to finde out a knotte in every rushe ; these no men , if for stirring of a strawe they prove not their valure uppon some bodies fleshe . Every Duns will bee a carper ; every Dicke Swashe a common cutter ...
Page 37
... schollers of this schoole to them that provide staves for their owne shoul- ders ; that foster snakes in their owne bosoms ; that trust wolves to garde their sheepe , and the men of Hyrcania that keepe mastiffes to woorrye themselves ...
... schollers of this schoole to them that provide staves for their owne shoul- ders ; that foster snakes in their owne bosoms ; that trust wolves to garde their sheepe , and the men of Hyrcania that keepe mastiffes to woorrye themselves ...
Page 41
... schollers there ; but comming to Chenas , a blind village in comparison of Athens , a Palcockes Inne , he found one Miso , well governing his house , looking to his grounde , instructing his children , teaching his family , making of ...
... schollers there ; but comming to Chenas , a blind village in comparison of Athens , a Palcockes Inne , he found one Miso , well governing his house , looking to his grounde , instructing his children , teaching his family , making of ...
Page 42
... nor every idle head to understand . The Thurines made a law that no common find fault should meddle with any abuse but adultery . Pythagoras bound all his schollers to five yeers silence , that assoone as ever 42 THE SCHOOLE OF ABUSE .
... nor every idle head to understand . The Thurines made a law that no common find fault should meddle with any abuse but adultery . Pythagoras bound all his schollers to five yeers silence , that assoone as ever 42 THE SCHOOLE OF ABUSE .
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles acted amongst ancient Apology for Actors Art thou Augustus avoyde behold body booke Caligula called Cartwright censure CHRISTOPHER BEESTON Cicero citty comedians comedies commend common wealth Cratinus daunce dauncers dayes Deft discourse divers doth Dulwich Dulwich College eares Edward Alleyn emperour English enimie Eupolis exercise famous farre father florish Gabriel Singer generall geve Hæc hand hart hath head Hercules Heywood's Apology Homer honourable husband Julius Cæsar king labour lives London Lord Marcus Marcus Aurelius Master Maximus Tyrius Melanippides Muse musicke Nero never noble Ovid person pipers Plautus play players playes Plutarch Poetry poets poyson practise princes printed publicke Roman Rome Romulus Roscius saith schollers School of Abuse selfe Shakespeare shew sinne souldiers speake stage Stephen Gosson sweet terque theaters Thespis THOMAS HEYWOOD tragedies tragicke unto uppe uppon vertue wanton William Cartwright writing yeeld καὶ
Popular passages
Page 25 - ... light in them ; such pillows to their backs, that they take no hurt ; such masking in their ears, I know not what : such giving them pippins to pass the time ; such playing at foote saunt without cards ; such ticking, such toying, such smiling, such winking, and such manning them home when the sports are ended...
Page 21 - ... so bewitching a thing is lively and well-spirited action, that it hath power to new-mold the harts of the spectators, and fashion them to the shape of any noble and notable attempt.
Page 62 - I know, much offended with M. Jaggard (that altogether unknowne to him) presumed to make so bold with his name.
Page 52 - Thirdly, plays have made the ignorant more apprehensive,* taught the unlearned the knowledge of many famous histories, instructed such as cannot read in the discovery* of all our English chronicles; and what man have you now of that weak capacity that cannot discourse of any notable thing recorded even from William the Conqueror, nay, from the landing of Brute, until this day...