The Works of George Chapman ...Chatto and Windus, 1875 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 87
Page xxvii
... true taste of the old city life so often turned to mere ridicule and caricature by playwrights of less good humour , or feel about us such a familiar air of ancient London as blows through every scene ; the homely household of the rich ...
... true taste of the old city life so often turned to mere ridicule and caricature by playwrights of less good humour , or feel about us such a familiar air of ancient London as blows through every scene ; the homely household of the rich ...
Page xlviii
... true height and purity of its power ; majestic intellect lighted and enkindled by poetic imagination , the high beauty of heroic thought warmed and winged with the spiritual fire of a living sentiment . It is true that those who read ...
... true height and purity of its power ; majestic intellect lighted and enkindled by poetic imagination , the high beauty of heroic thought warmed and winged with the spiritual fire of a living sentiment . It is true that those who read ...
Page lxviii
... true content ; ' but in a later extract at p . 38 it gives the right reading , and cites the two first lines of the stanza following , which with the third and fourth are here omitted . It attempts however to correct two seeming errors ...
... true content ; ' but in a later extract at p . 38 it gives the right reading , and cites the two first lines of the stanza following , which with the third and fourth are here omitted . It attempts however to correct two seeming errors ...
Page lxix
... true content ' 40. Action is fiery valour's sovereign good 47. Round - headed Custom th ' apoplexy ist 56. In things without us no delight is sure 67 . Fierce lightning from her eyes . 68. Begin where lightness will , in shame it ends ...
... true content ' 40. Action is fiery valour's sovereign good 47. Round - headed Custom th ' apoplexy ist 56. In things without us no delight is sure 67 . Fierce lightning from her eyes . 68. Begin where lightness will , in shame it ends ...
Page lxxi
... true source . In his critical memoir of Marlowe ( Works , vol . i . p . lvii . ed . 1850 ) , Mr. Dyce observes that the editor of England's Parnassus appears never to have resorted to manuscript sources ; ' and if , as is of course most ...
... true source . In his critical memoir of Marlowe ( Works , vol . i . p . lvii . ed . 1850 ) , Mr. Dyce observes that the editor of England's Parnassus appears never to have resorted to manuscript sources ; ' and if , as is of course most ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. B. GROSART Andromeda bear beauty blest blood breast Bussy d'Ambois cast Chapman cloth extra cloth limp Crown 8vo dear death Deities divine doth earth Edited eternal Exit eyes fair fame Fcap fear fire flames George Chapman give Gods grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven Hero and Leander Hesiod Homer honour Iliad illustrated boards immortal Jove Jove's king labour Lady Leander learning light live lord love's lute master men's mind mistress Muse never night noble nought Ovid oxen peace Perseus Phoebus play poem poet poor Post 8vo praise Prince Proberio rich sacred Second Maiden's Tragedy shine sight Simplo sing soul spirit sweet thee thine things thou thought true truth verse vex'd virtue Vols Votarius Wife words worth
Popular passages
Page 57 - It lies not in our power to love or hate, For will in us is overruled by Fate. When two are stripped, long ere the course begin We wish that one should lose, the other win; And one especially do we affect Of two gold ingots, like in each respect. The reason no man knows; let it suffice. What we behold is censured by our eyes.