The Staple of News, Volumes 28-29H. Holt, 1905 - 276 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 65
Page xvi
... office : the printed books by mistake have is made . ' Both 1631 and 1692 read ' it ' ; 1716 alone reads ' is . ' Again , on 5. 4. 5 , ' wine o ' my worship , ' Whalley says : ' It seems most natural to read , " O'my worship , " as we ...
... office : the printed books by mistake have is made . ' Both 1631 and 1692 read ' it ' ; 1716 alone reads ' is . ' Again , on 5. 4. 5 , ' wine o ' my worship , ' Whalley says : ' It seems most natural to read , " O'my worship , " as we ...
Page xviii
... Office is sketched almost as inclusively , and , to some extent , in the same words , as in our play . For example , in one place Jonson makes the Factor say : ' And I have hope to erect a Staple for News ere long , whither all shall be ...
... Office is sketched almost as inclusively , and , to some extent , in the same words , as in our play . For example , in one place Jonson makes the Factor say : ' And I have hope to erect a Staple for News ere long , whither all shall be ...
Page xxvii
... office , when he says : ' I heare you better now . ' ( 7 ) In The London Prodi- gal , when the prodigal's uncle and Luce's father beg her to leave him , she clings to him . In The Staple of News , when Peniboy Senior goes to the Apollo ...
... office , when he says : ' I heare you better now . ' ( 7 ) In The London Prodi- gal , when the prodigal's uncle and Luce's father beg her to leave him , she clings to him . In The Staple of News , when Peniboy Senior goes to the Apollo ...
Page xxxvii
... office , on which most writers on this subject are agreed , is open to much question , it will be worth while to consider him and his work in some detail . The son of a small London stationer , Nathaniel Butter was admitted a freeman of ...
... office , on which most writers on this subject are agreed , is open to much question , it will be worth while to consider him and his work in some detail . The son of a small London stationer , Nathaniel Butter was admitted a freeman of ...
Page xliii
... office . " If , as Jonson asserts in our play , and as Lee and Herford believe , Butter's news was generally made up out of whole cloth , ' and no syllable of truth in it , ' of course he deserved all the reproba- tion that he got at ...
... office . " If , as Jonson asserts in our play , and as Lee and Herford believe , Butter's news was generally made up out of whole cloth , ' and no syllable of truth in it , ' of course he deserved all the reproba- tion that he got at ...
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Common terms and phrases
alludes allusion Arch Aristophanes Aulularia Bartholomew Fair beggar Ben Jonson braue Broker Butter called Canter cites Court Cymbal Cynthia's Revels Devil dial Emiffary father fhall Fitton Flowerdale Folio fome fuch Gentleman Gifford giue Glossary Gondomar Gossip Grace hath haue hence Heyre Hist houſe House of Fame i'the Infanta Intermean Introd jeerers Jonson King Lady Lickfinger Lollard London Prodigal loue Madrigal Magnetic Lady Master means MIRTH muſt Nathaniel neuer o'the Office passage passim Pecunia Peniboy Senior PENNYBOY Peny-boy person phrase Picklock play pleaſe Plutus Poet Princeffe printed probably Prologue Rare satire says SCENE ſhall ſhould Silent Woman Staple TATLE thee theſe Thom thou tion Vncle vnto vpon Whalley word worſhip write yeere ΙΟ
Popular passages
Page 170 - He the half of life abuses, That sits watering with the Muses. Those dull girls no good can mean us ; Wine it is the milk of Venus,* And the poet's horse accounted : Ply it, and you all are mounted. 'Tis the true Phoebian liquor, Cheers the brains, makes wit the quicker.
Page 136 - It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may here discern in its perfectest motion, justling and turning. It is a heap of stones and men, with a vast confusion of languages; and were the steeple not sanctified, nothing liker Babel.
Page 146 - A strange fish! Were I in England now, as once I was, and had but this fish painted, not a holiday fool there but would give a piece of silver. There would this monster make a man. Any strange beast there makes a man. When they will not give a doit to relieve a lame beggar, they will lay out ten to see a dead Indian.
Page 211 - The marshalling of coat-armour, which was formerly the pride and study of all the best families in the kingdom, is now greatly disregarded; and has fallen into the hands of certain officers and attendants upon this court, called heralds...
Page 131 - ... whose play it is ; and by that quest of inquiry the law warrants you to avoid much mistaking. If you know not the author, you may rail against him, and peradventure so behave yourself, that you may enforce the author to know you.
Page 134 - ALL tenures being thus derived, or supposed to be derived, from the king, those that held immediately under him, in right of his crown and dignity, were called his tenants in capite...
Page xxxvi - Newes from Scotland : Declaring the damnable Life of Doctor Fian a notable Sorcerer...
Page 125 - But on the very rushes where the comedy is to dance, yea, and under the state of Cambyses himself, must our feathered estrich, like a piece of ordnance, be planted valiantly, because impudently, beating down the mews and hisses of the opposed rascality.
Page 219 - At either corner of this west end is, also of ancient building, a strong tower of stone, made for bell towers : the one of them, to wit, next to the palace, is at...
Page 128 - As when hee said in the person of Caesar, one speaking to him ; Caesar thou dost me wrong. Hee replyed : Caesar did never wrong, but with just cause and such like: which were ridiculous.