All for Love and The Spanish Fryar |
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Page xx
... Lives . Thus in Plutarch it is after the successful sally against the Romans that Antony challenges Cæsar to single combat . In Dryden , as in Shakespeare , it is before . In Plutarch , Cæsar replies , Antony has many ways to die . " In ...
... Lives . Thus in Plutarch it is after the successful sally against the Romans that Antony challenges Cæsar to single combat . In Dryden , as in Shakespeare , it is before . In Plutarch , Cæsar replies , Antony has many ways to die . " In ...
Page xxxvi
... . 2 References : Spectator , No. 267 ; Lives , ed . G. Birkbeck Hill , 1 , 356 ; Dryden , Works , ed . Scott - Saintsbury , vi , 395 ; Essays and Studies , p . 42 . remarkable feat . Is the junction of the two plots xxxvi Introduction.
... . 2 References : Spectator , No. 267 ; Lives , ed . G. Birkbeck Hill , 1 , 356 ; Dryden , Works , ed . Scott - Saintsbury , vi , 395 ; Essays and Studies , p . 42 . remarkable feat . Is the junction of the two plots xxxvi Introduction.
Page xl
... acted in 1762 ( Misc . Works , 1 , 154 , cited by G. Birkbeck Hill , Johnson's Lives , 1 , 357 , n . 2 ) . 2 Seilhamer , 1 , 6 , 94 , 242 ; 11 , 97 , 206 . in the dramatic literature of his age . The greatest xl Introduction.
... acted in 1762 ( Misc . Works , 1 , 154 , cited by G. Birkbeck Hill , Johnson's Lives , 1 , 357 , n . 2 ) . 2 Seilhamer , 1 , 6 , 94 , 242 ; 11 , 97 , 206 . in the dramatic literature of his age . The greatest xl Introduction.
Page xliii
... Lives ( The Tudor Translations , edited by W. E. Henley ) , vol . vi ( 1896 ) . In the preparation of the first two lists I have been under great obligations to Miss Josephine Britton , a graduate student in Cornell University ...
... Lives ( The Tudor Translations , edited by W. E. Henley ) , vol . vi ( 1896 ) . In the preparation of the first two lists I have been under great obligations to Miss Josephine Britton , a graduate student in Cornell University ...
Page 11
... live with the reputation of a plain - spoken honest man , than to die with the infamy of an incestuous villain . In the mean time we may take notice , that where the poet ought to have preserv'd the character as it was deliver'd to us ...
... live with the reputation of a plain - spoken honest man , than to die with the infamy of an incestuous villain . In the mean time we may take notice , that where the poet ought to have preserv'd the character as it was deliver'd to us ...
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Common terms and phrases
Ægypt Alex Alexas Alph Alphonso Antony and Cleopatra arms bear Bert Bertran bloud Cæsar Char Charmion Cleop colonel confess cou'd crown dare death Dio Cassius Dolla Dollabella Dominic Doña Barbara dramatic Elvira Enter ev'n Exeunt Exit eyes false farewel fate father fear forgive fortune give Gomez hast hear heart heaven honour Iras JOHN DRYDEN king lady leave Leonora live look lord Lorenzo lost lov'd madam mistress Molière murther never o'er Octav Octavia on't Pedro pity play pleas'd Plutarch poet pow'r priest prince queen Roman ruin ruin'd scene Serap Shakespeare shou'd soldier soul Spanish Curate Spanish Fryar speak sure tell Teresa Theatre thee there's thought Tonson Torrismond tragedy Troilus and Cressida Twas Tyrannick Love us'd Ventidius vertue wife word wou'd
Popular passages
Page 9 - Ulysses amongst the crowd of suitors, and, withal, to take my own measures, in aiming at the mark. I doubt not but the same motive has prevailed with all of us in this attempt; I mean the excellency of the moral : For the chief persons represented were famous patterns of unlawful love; and their end accordingly was unfortunate.
Page 93 - Men are but children of a larger growth; Our appetites as apt to change as theirs, And full as craving too, and full as vain ; And yet the soul, shut up in her dark room, Viewing so clear abroad, at home sees nothing: But, like a mole in earth, busy and blind, Works all her folly up, and casts it outward To the world's open view...
Page 84 - Go to him, children, go; Kneel to him, take him by the hand, speak to him ; For you may speak, and he may own you too, Without a blush; and so he cannot all His children: go, I say, and pull him to me, And pull him to yourselves, from that bad woman.
Page 82 - I can ne'er be conquered but by love; And you do all for duty. You would free me, And would be dropt at Athens; was't not so? Octav. It was, my lord. Ant. Then I must be obliged To one who loves me not ; who, to herself, May call me thankless and ungrateful man: — I'll not endure it; no.
Page 11 - I'en croit. My comfort is, that by this opinion my enemies are but sucking critics, who would fain be nibbling ere their teeth are come. Yet, in this nicety of manners does the excellency of French poetry consist. Their heroes are the most civil people breathing; but their good breeding seldom extends to a word of sense. All their wit is in their ceremony; they want the genius which animates our stage; and therefore 'tis but necessary, when they cannot please, that they should take care not to offend.
Page 144 - And guard the traitor well. Char. The next is ours. Iras. Now, Charmion, to be worthy Of our great queen and mistress.
Page 11 - I am sure will commend him for it. But we of grosser apprehensions are apt to think that this excess of generosity is not practicable, but with fools and madmen.
Page 93 - What you have said so sinks into my soul, That, if I must speak, I shall speak just so. ANT. I leave you then to your sad task : Farewell.
Page xv - Tis much more hard to please himself than you; And out of no feign'd modesty, this day Damns his laborious trifle of a play: Not that it's worse than what before he writ, But he has now another taste of wit; And, to confess a truth, (though out of time,) Grows weary of his long-lov'd mistress, Rhyme. Passion's too fierce to be in fetters bound, And nature flies him like enchanted ground.
Page 99 - I'm sure I want it. My disdainful lord Can never break that quiet; nor awake The sleeping soul, with hollowing in my tomb Such words as fright her hence.