The Works of Ben IonsonBickers and son, 1875 |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 40
עמוד 24
... peace , and feasts , Freedom and triumphs ; making kings his guests . c Ovid Metam . lib . vi . near the end see , -horridus irâ , Quæ solita est illi , nimiumque domestica , vento , & c . 1 Thy wings o'er - hill'd with snow , ] i . e ...
... peace , and feasts , Freedom and triumphs ; making kings his guests . c Ovid Metam . lib . vi . near the end see , -horridus irâ , Quæ solita est illi , nimiumque domestica , vento , & c . 1 Thy wings o'er - hill'd with snow , ] i . e ...
עמוד 49
... peace : And that his empress , she , That sits so crowned with her own increase ! O you , whose better blisses Have proved the strict embrace Of Union , with chaste kisses , And seen it flow so in your happy race ; That know , how well ...
... peace : And that his empress , she , That sits so crowned with her own increase ! O you , whose better blisses Have proved the strict embrace Of Union , with chaste kisses , And seen it flow so in your happy race ; That know , how well ...
עמוד 54
... seventy children . See Fest . in voc . Cingul . b Plutarch . in Quæst . Rom . See Mart . Capel . lib . vi . de Nupt . Phil . et Mor . in numero Pentade . For which alone the peaceful gods In number always love 54 MASQUE OF HYMEN .
... seventy children . See Fest . in voc . Cingul . b Plutarch . in Quæst . Rom . See Mart . Capel . lib . vi . de Nupt . Phil . et Mor . in numero Pentade . For which alone the peaceful gods In number always love 54 MASQUE OF HYMEN .
עמוד 55
Ben Jonson, William Gifford Francis Cunningham. For which alone the peaceful gods In number always love the odds ; And even parts as much despise , Since out of them all discords rise . e Here the upper part of the scene , which was all ...
Ben Jonson, William Gifford Francis Cunningham. For which alone the peaceful gods In number always love the odds ; And even parts as much despise , Since out of them all discords rise . e Here the upper part of the scene , which was all ...
עמוד 61
... peace , and love , and faith , and bliss : What harmony like this ? The gall behind the altar quite is thrown ; This sacrifice hath none . Now no affections rage , nor humours swell ; But all composed dwell . O Juno , Hymen , Hymen ...
... peace , and love , and faith , and bliss : What harmony like this ? The gall behind the altar quite is thrown ; This sacrifice hath none . Now no affections rage , nor humours swell ; But all composed dwell . O Juno , Hymen , Hymen ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Æneid alludes Antimasque appears arms attired aull beauty behold Ben Jonson called Christmas Clod Cock colours Countess court crown Cupid Dame dance daughter delight doth earl earth eyes fame fate folio fortune Gifford gipsy give GOLDEN AGE RESTORED grace hand hath head heaven Hercules honour Hymen Inigo Jones James Jonson Jove Juno king lady light look lord Love majesty marriage married Masque MASQUE OF AUGURS Masque of Beauty Masque of Queens masquers master Meliadus moon never night nuptials Ovid peace poet Post and Pair present prince printed quæ quæst queen Remig rich rites s'all Satyrs scene shew shine Silen sing SONG speak Sphynx star thee things thou truth unto Venus virtue VISION OF DELIGHT Wales Welse WHAL wings witches word
קטעים בולטים
עמוד 401 - From a fiddle out of tune, As the cuckow is in June.] The dissonant note of the cuckow in this month, is thus alluded to by Shakspeare: " So when he had occasion to be seen, He was but as the cuckow is in June, Heard, not regarded.
עמוד 39 - a candidate to her for the borough of Appleby. " I have been bullied by an usurper; I have been neglected by a court; but I will not be dictated to by a subject: your man shan't stand. "ANNE Dorset, Pembroke and Montgomery.
עמוד 111 - 3 Charm. The owl is abroad, the bat, and the toad, And so is the cat-a-mountain, The ant and the mole sit both in a hole, And the frog peeps out o' the fountain ; The dogs they do bay, and the timbrels play, The spindle is now a
עמוד 365 - SONG. Pat To the old, long life and treasure ; To the young, all health and pleasure ; To the fair, their face With eternal grace ; And the soul to be loved at leisure. To the witty, all clear mirrors, To the foolish their dark errors ; To the loving sprite, A secure delight : To the jealous his
עמוד 268 - then, is a Christmas gambol, at which I have often played. A log of wood is brought into the midst of the room : this is Dun, (the cart-horse,) and a cry is raised, that he is stuck in the mire. Two of the company advance, either with or without ropes, to draw him out.
עמוד 436 - the preceding extracts may serve to show the poetical fancy and elegance of mind of the supposed rugged old bard. A thousand beautiful passages might be adduced from those numerous court masques and entertainments, which he was in the daily habit of furnishing, to prove the same thing. But they do not come within my plan.
עמוד 441 - See the Furies arise ! See the snakes that they rear, How they hiss in their hair, And the sparkles that flash from their eyes
עמוד 108 - His majesty, then, being set, and the whole company in full expectation, the part of the scene which first presented itself was an ugly Hell; which flaming beneath, smoked unto the top of the roof. And in respect all evils are morally said to come from hell; as also from that observation of Torrentius upon Horace's
עמוד 8 - On sides of the shell did swim six huge sea-monsters, varied in their shapes and dispositions, bearing on their backs the twelve torch-bearers, who were planted there in several graces; so as the backs of some were seen; some in purfle, or side; others in face; and all having their lights burning out of whelks, or murex-shells.
עמוד 444 - I care not for thee, Kate; this is no world To play with mammets, and to tilt with lips ; We must have bloody noses and cracked crowns.