I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth . . . and with a whip of steel Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. Poetaster - Página 439por Ben Jonson - 1913 - 456 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| George Meredith - 1918 - 348 páginas
...into such oily colors, To flatter vice, and daub iniquity; But, with an armed and resolved hand, I '11 strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their...of steel Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. I fear no mood stamped in a private brow, When I am pleased t' unmask a public vice. 134 22. Fielding's... | |
| George Meredith - 1918 - 348 páginas
...into such oily colors, To flatter vice, and daub iniquity; But, with an armed and resolved hand, I '11 strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their...and with a whip of steel Print wounding lashes in then- iron ribs. I fear no mood stamped in a private brow, When I am pleased t' unmask a public vice.... | |
| Morse Shepard Allen - 1920 - 204 páginas
...of Britannia." It seems to be an attack upon Jonson's words in the Induction to Every Man Out: "I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their...— and with a whip of steel Print wounding lashes on their iron ribs." The second Marstonian passage is an interpolation for the sake of attacking Monday,... | |
| Frank James Mathew - 1922 - 462 páginas
...into such oily colours, To flatter vice and daub iniquity, But (with an armed and resolved hand) I'll strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, as at their birth, and Cordatus breaks in, Be not too bold ! You trouble me. Cordatus, the judicious or prudent, and Mitis,... | |
| Hugh Walker - 1925 - 344 páginas
...to Every Man out of his Hutnour he repeats the promise: — " With an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their...steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs." He is as good as his word, for each of the dramatis persona, with the exception of Asper, represents... | |
| Hugh Walker - 1925 - 348 páginas
...— " With an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at the1r birth, . . . . . . and with a whip of steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs." He is as good as his word, for each of the dramatis persona, with the exception of Asper, represents... | |
| William Vaughn Moody, Robert Morss Lovett - 1926 - 410 páginas
...is ridiculous or vicious, a cynic descended from Diogenes. Like Persius or Juvenal he cries : I'll strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, as at their birth, and More than one of the grotesques in his play is probably the caricature of an actual person who was... | |
| Emile Legouis, Louis François Cazamian - 1926 - 416 páginas
...is ridiculous or vicious, a cynic descended from Diogenes. Like Persius or Juvenal he cries : I'll strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, as at their birth. and More than one of the grotesques in his play is probably the caricature of an actual person who was... | |
| Nicolaas Zwager - 1926 - 276 páginas
...reformer of his age. He expresses his satiric purpose himself: with an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth. l) That he should do this quietly, without exaggeration, is not in keeping with his character. A man... | |
| Percy Hazen Houston - 1926 - 548 páginas
...into such oily colours, To flatter vice, and daub iniquity; But, with an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked -as at...of steel Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. I fear no mood stamped in a private brow, When I am pleased t 'unmask a public vice. His announced... | |
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