The Poetical Decameron, Or, Ten Conversations on English Poets and Poetry: Particularly of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I. |
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Page xxxix
... whole of this con- versation was written very long before the late reprint at the Lee Priory Press of Fitzgeffrey's poem on Sir F. Drake . P. 13 , 1. 25. Some extracts from Barnabe Barnes's " Parthe- nophil and Parthenophe , " may be ...
... whole of this con- versation was written very long before the late reprint at the Lee Priory Press of Fitzgeffrey's poem on Sir F. Drake . P. 13 , 1. 25. Some extracts from Barnabe Barnes's " Parthe- nophil and Parthenophe , " may be ...
Page 15
... whole , and has never been quoted either in Restituta or elsewhere . ELLIOT . Let us hear Percy's Madrigal , and then return to Fitzgeffrey . BOURNE . I wish it better deserved reading : it is worth preserving principally as a curiosity ...
... whole , and has never been quoted either in Restituta or elsewhere . ELLIOT . Let us hear Percy's Madrigal , and then return to Fitzgeffrey . BOURNE . I wish it better deserved reading : it is worth preserving principally as a curiosity ...
Page 26
... whole merits much of the praise bestowed upon it by the Rev. Mr. Todd , in the introductory matter to his new edition of Johnson's Dictionary , where he devotes the follow- ing sentence to the " Drunkard's Character , " - " an octavo of ...
... whole merits much of the praise bestowed upon it by the Rev. Mr. Todd , in the introductory matter to his new edition of Johnson's Dictionary , where he devotes the follow- ing sentence to the " Drunkard's Character , " - " an octavo of ...
Page 42
... whole flow of the lines is majestic : the compound epithets , though too often repeated , give a dignity and elevation to the language . ELLIOT . His principal fault is certainly a want of simplicity - an obtrusive effort to say ...
... whole flow of the lines is majestic : the compound epithets , though too often repeated , give a dignity and elevation to the language . ELLIOT . His principal fault is certainly a want of simplicity - an obtrusive effort to say ...
Page 44
... whole is told with such a solemn seriousness . ELLIOT . In its kind I have seldom seen any thing better . They had not only roast - meat , but hens and 1 chickens ; and he does not omit to let us 44 FIRST CONVERSATION .
... whole is told with such a solemn seriousness . ELLIOT . In its kind I have seldom seen any thing better . They had not only roast - meat , but hens and 1 chickens ; and he does not omit to let us 44 FIRST CONVERSATION .
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Common terms and phrases
Ben Jonson Bibliographer blank verse BOURNE called certainly Chapman copy curious dare say death DECAMERON Donne doth Drayton edition ELLIOT English satirist epigrams Epistle extract Fitzgeffrey Francis Meres George Chapman George Peele giue Hall hath haue hear heauen John John Marston John Webster Jonson kind Latin lines liue Lodge's Lord loue Marlow Marston mean mentioned Momus MORTON Muses Nash night noble observe Parasitaster passage Peele Peele's perhaps pieces Pigmalions play poem Poesie poet POETICAL DECAMERON poetry praise printed probably production prose published Queen quotation quoted rarity recollect remarkable reprint rhyme rime Ritson satires satirist Satyres seems seen Shakespeare Sidney Sir Francis Drake sonnet speaking specimen Spenser stanza suppose sweete thee thing Thomas thou tion tract translation vertue vnto vpon Webster Whetstone words worth writers written wrote
Popular passages
Page 270 - Oft expectation fails, and most oft there Where most it promises ; and oft it hits, Where hope is coldest, and despair most sits.
Page 22 - Shakespeare that from his works may be collected a system of civil and economical prudence ; yet his real power is not shown in the splendour of particular passages, but by the progress of his fable and the tenor of his dialogue ; and he that tries to recommend him by select quotations, will succeed like the pedant in Hierocles, who, when he offered his house to sale, carried a brick in his pocket as a specimen.
Page xix - ... genius through the shades of age, as the eye surveys the sun through artificial opacity. The great contention of criticism is to find the faults of the moderns and the beauties of the ancients.
Page 244 - Here we may reign secure: and in my choice. To reign is worth ambition, though in hell ; Better to reign in hell than serve in heaven.
Page 68 - ENTITLED To the noble and vertuous Gentleman, most worthy of all titles both of learning and chevalrie, MA1STER PHILIP SIDNEY.
Page xliii - Of a Jew, who would for his Debt have a Pound of the Flesh of a Christian.
Page xliv - Wonder not (for with thee will I first begin), thou famous gracer of tragedians, that Greene, who hath said with thee like the fool in his heart, "There is no God...
Page 160 - twixt each drop, he nigardly, As loth to enrich mee, so tells many a lie. More than ten Hollensheads, or Halls, or Stowes, Of triviall houshold trash he knowes ; He knowes When the Queene frown'd, or smil'd, and he knowes what A subtle States-man may gather of that...
Page 251 - I can willinglyer conceive then dare to prescribe; yet let me have the substance rough, not the shadow. I cannot, nay, I will not delude your sight with mists; yet I dare defend my plainenesse against the verjuice-face of the crabbedst Satyrist that ever stuttered.
Page 90 - tis true ; but now, if any Should for that cause despise it, we have many Reasons, both just and pregnant, to maintain Antiquity, and those, too, not all vain. We know (and not long since) there was a time, Strong lines were not look'd after ; but if rhyme, Oh ! then 'twas excellent...