Endymion; or, The man in the moonRodwell and Martin, 1816 |
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Página 5
... thing but that whosoever heareth , may say this : -Why , here is a tale of the man in the moon . * " Apply pastimes , " i . e . make application of such things as are written for purposes of amusement , to real events and cir ...
... thing but that whosoever heareth , may say this : -Why , here is a tale of the man in the moon . * " Apply pastimes , " i . e . make application of such things as are written for purposes of amusement , to real events and cir ...
Página 7
... things both va- riety to content , and satiety to glut , saving only my affections , which are so staid , and withal so ... thing above the moon , your thoughts are ridiculous , for that things immortal are not subject to affections ; if ...
... things both va- riety to content , and satiety to glut , saving only my affections , which are so staid , and withal so ... thing above the moon , your thoughts are ridiculous , for that things immortal are not subject to affections ; if ...
Página 9
... thing , folly will , making that a vice which is the greatest virtue . What thing ( my mistress excepted ) , being in the pride of her beauty and latter minute of her age , waxeth young again ? Tell me , Eumenides , what is he that ...
... thing , folly will , making that a vice which is the greatest virtue . What thing ( my mistress excepted ) , being in the pride of her beauty and latter minute of her age , waxeth young again ? Tell me , Eumenides , what is he that ...
Página 11
... thing more than mortal . Tel . No comparison , Floscula ? and why so ? Is not my beauty divine , whose body is ... things ? Your grapes would be * The attentive reader will not fail to remark , that in the de- scription which Endymion ...
... thing more than mortal . Tel . No comparison , Floscula ? and why so ? Is not my beauty divine , whose body is ... things ? Your grapes would be * The attentive reader will not fail to remark , that in the de- scription which Endymion ...
Página 12
... things , and by her authority commandéth all creatures : suffer then , Endymion , to follow his affections , though to obtain her be impossi- ble , and let him flatter himself in his own imagi- nations because they are immortal . • Tel ...
... things , and by her authority commandéth all creatures : suffer then , Endymion , to follow his affections , though to obtain her be impossi- ble , and let him flatter himself in his own imagi- nations because they are immortal . • Tel ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Albano Andrugio Antonio Antonio and Mellida Bagoa Balurdo Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson Bidet blood breath Celia Cornets Corsites court Cynt Cynthia Dares dear Dildo Dipsas Dondolo dost doth Duke Eastward Hoe Endymion Enter Eumenides Exeunt Exit eyes fair faith father Faunus favour Fawn fear Feliche Floscula fool fortune gallants give Granuffo hast hate hath heart heaven Herc Herod honour hope humour i'faith is't John Marston kiss lady Lampatho lord madam marry master Mellida mistress never night Pier PIERO pity play prince prithee Quad Quadratus Rossaline SCENE Semele ship of fools Signior Simplicius Sir Amorous Sir Tophas sleep soul speak speech sweet Tellus thee there's thing thou art thoughts Tiberio troth virtue wench wife wise Zoya
Pasajes populares
Página 285 - Let me have men about me that are fat ; Sleek-headed men, and such as sleep o' nights. Yond' Cassius has a lean and hungry look ; He thinks too much : such men are dangerous.
Página 148 - The well-shaped youth could touch, she sung her own ; He could not run division with more art Upon his quaking instrument, than she, The nightingale, did with her various notes Reply to...
Página 115 - HEART, wilt not break? and thou abhorred life, Wilt thou still breathe in my enraged blood ? Veins, sinews, arteries, why crack ye not ? Burst and divul'st with anguish of my grief. Can man by no means creep out of himself, And leave the slough of viperous grief behind...
Página 236 - t had free will Or no, hot philosophers Stood banding factions, all so strongly propt, I...
Página 27 - That is, Scintilla, as you list to take it. Sam. That, that. Scint. This it is to be matched with girls, who coming but yesterday from making of babies, would before to-morrow be accounted matrons.
Página 200 - Scoff's artillery. • Shall he be crest-fall'n, if some looser brain, In flux of wit uncivilly befilth His slight composures? Shall his bosom faint, If drunken Censure belch out sour breath From Hatred's surfeit on his labour's front?
Página 39 - in both ; for she shall find examples infinite in either what punishment long tongues have. Eumenides, if either the soothsayers in Egypt, or the enchanters in Thessaly, or the philosophers in Greece, or all the sages of the world, can find...
Página 224 - Phantasia incomplexa — is a function Even of the bright immortal part of man, It is the common pass, the sacred door, Unto the privy chamber of the soul ; That barr'd, nought passeth past the baser court Of outward sense ; by it th...
Página 145 - Wouldst have me go unarm'd among my foes? Being besieg'd by passion, entering lists, To combat with despair and mighty grief; My soul beleaguer'd with the crushing strength Of sharp impatience.
Página 97 - Cynth. Come, my lords, let us in. You, Gyptes and Pythagoras, if you cannot content yourselves in our court, to fall from vain follies of philosophers to such virtues as are here practised, you shall be entertained according to your deserts: for Cynthia is no stepmother to strangers. Pyth. I had rather in Cynthia's court spend ten years, than in Greece one hour.