Virgidemiarum: SatiresWilliam Pickering, 1825 - 151 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 10.
Strana 4
... deed dreads Enuy and ill tongues , Nor shrinks so soone for feare of causelesse wrongs . Needs me then hope , or doth me need mis - dread ; 25 Hope for that honor , dread that wrongfull spight ; Spight of the partie , honor of the deede ...
... deed dreads Enuy and ill tongues , Nor shrinks so soone for feare of causelesse wrongs . Needs me then hope , or doth me need mis - dread ; 25 Hope for that honor , dread that wrongfull spight ; Spight of the partie , honor of the deede ...
Strana 7
... deed . But now , ye Muses , sith your sacred hests Profaned are by each presuming tongue , In scornfull rage I vow this silent rest , That neuer field nor groue shall heare my song ; Only these refuse rymes I here mispend , 110 To chide ...
... deed . But now , ye Muses , sith your sacred hests Profaned are by each presuming tongue , In scornfull rage I vow this silent rest , That neuer field nor groue shall heare my song ; Only these refuse rymes I here mispend , 110 To chide ...
Strana 10
... deed , That pleas'd both heauen and earth : till that of late , Whome should I fault ? or the most righteous fate ? 10 Or heauen , or men , or fiends , or ought beside , That euer made that foule mischance betide ? Some of the sisters ...
... deed , That pleas'd both heauen and earth : till that of late , Whome should I fault ? or the most righteous fate ? 10 Or heauen , or men , or fiends , or ought beside , That euer made that foule mischance betide ? Some of the sisters ...
Strana 19
... deed , And handsomely leaue off with cleanly speed . But arts of whoring , stories of the stewes , Ye Muses , will ye beare , and may refuse ? Nay , let the diuell and Saint Valentine Be gossips to those ribald rimes of thine . 39 30 35 ...
... deed , And handsomely leaue off with cleanly speed . But arts of whoring , stories of the stewes , Ye Muses , will ye beare , and may refuse ? Nay , let the diuell and Saint Valentine Be gossips to those ribald rimes of thine . 39 30 35 ...
Strana 22
... deed , That cause men stop their noses when they read ? Both good things ill , and ill things well ; all one ? For shame ! write cleanly , Labeo , or write none . 60 SAT . II . To what end did our lauish 22 VIRGIDEMIARVM .
... deed , That cause men stop their noses when they read ? Both good things ill , and ill things well ; all one ? For shame ! write cleanly , Labeo , or write none . 60 SAT . II . To what end did our lauish 22 VIRGIDEMIARVM .
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Časté výrazy a frázy
aboue alludes allusion angrie Arcesilas brest brow certes cote crowne dare dead deed despight doth eare earst English English Poetry Enuy eternall euery eyes eyther faire fayre feare fist foole foule Gallio ghost giue gold golden graue Hall Hall's hath haue head heauen Heraclite heyre hide honour hundreth Juvenal Labeo Labulla lands late lauish leaue liue liuer Lolio loue Mahound margent Matho Muses natiue neighbours neuer nought Persius poesie poet poetry Pontice Pope Joan racter rage rimes Robert Dexter Saint Saint Valentine Satire of Juvenal Satires Satyre Satyrist saue scorne selfe serue shame shee sith sleeue sonne spight spondees Stesichorus stewes Strabo striuing syre tayle Thames thee thine thou thought thrise Tiresias tongue VIRGIDEMIARVM vnder Vntill vnto vpon Warton weene Whiles wont word write yeeld
Populárne pasáže
Strana iv - Lo, there th' unthankful swallow takes her rest, And fills the tunnel with her circled nest. " His satires are neither cramped by personal hostility, nor spun out to vague declamations on vice ; but give us the form and pressure of the times, exhibited in the faults of coeval literature, and in the foppery or sordid traits of prevailing manners. The age was undoubtedly fertile in eccentricity.
Strana 89 - Satyrs should be like the Porcupine, That shoots sharpe quils out in each angry line, And wounds the blushing cheeke, and fiery eye, Of him that heares, and readeth guiltily.
Strana 12 - One higher pitch'd doth set his soaring thought On crowned kings, that Fortune hath low brought: Or some upreared, high-aspiring swaine, As it might be the Turkish Tamberlaine...
Strana xiii - These satires are marked with a classical precision to which English poetry had yet rarely attained. They are replete with animation of style and sentiment.
Strana 93 - Megwra in the tragedie, Threatning her twined snakes at Tantales ghost ; Or the grim visage of some frowning post, The crab-tree porter of the Guild-hall gates ; Whiles he his frightfull beetle eleuates, 10 His angry eyne looke all so glaring bright, Like th...
Strana 60 - And tells how first his famous ancestor Did come in long since with the Conquerour. Nor hath some bribed herald first assign'd His quartered arms and crest of gentle kind ; The Scottish Barnacle, if I might choose, That, of a worme, doth waxe a winged goose.
Strana 74 - All scarfed with pied colours to the knee, Whom Indian pillage hath made fortunate, And now he 'gins to loath his former state...
Strana 126 - Halifax, next after such his apprehension, and being condemned, be taken to the Gibbet, and there have his head cut off from his body.
Strana 34 - Could no unhusked acorn leave the tree But there was challenge made whose it might be And if some nice and...