Bartholomew FairH. Holt, 1904 - 238 pages |
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Page xxiv
... charge Busy with too much learning ; as Quarlous wittily remarks : ' He will ever be in the state of innocence though and childhood ; derides all antiquity , defies any other learning than inspiration ; and what discretion soever ...
... charge Busy with too much learning ; as Quarlous wittily remarks : ' He will ever be in the state of innocence though and childhood ; derides all antiquity , defies any other learning than inspiration ; and what discretion soever ...
Page xxvi
... charged With covetise and rage , when to their store They add the poor man's yeanling , and dare sell Both fleece and carcass , not gi'ing him the fell.1 As we have thus enumerated the charges made by Jonson , the question naturally ...
... charged With covetise and rage , when to their store They add the poor man's yeanling , and dare sell Both fleece and carcass , not gi'ing him the fell.1 As we have thus enumerated the charges made by Jonson , the question naturally ...
Page xxviii
... charges in our author's satire was that of narrowness and intolerance . Before 1595 the main causes of difference between Puritan and churchman had been questions of ceremony - as the wearing of the surplice , the reading of the service ...
... charges in our author's satire was that of narrowness and intolerance . Before 1595 the main causes of difference between Puritan and churchman had been questions of ceremony - as the wearing of the surplice , the reading of the service ...
Page xxix
... charge , with stern plainness , is repeated in The Sad Shepherd . But dishonesty is so far removed from what history tells us of the rigid moral integrity of the Puritans , that although no doubt there was ground for Jon- son's ...
... charge , with stern plainness , is repeated in The Sad Shepherd . But dishonesty is so far removed from what history tells us of the rigid moral integrity of the Puritans , that although no doubt there was ground for Jon- son's ...
Page xxxi
... charge them with social impurity . I can- not regard it as accidental ; the suggestion of making such an accusation certainly is found in Marston's Malcontent , The Puritan , and Middleton's Family of Love , all of which were produced a ...
... charge them with social impurity . I can- not regard it as accidental ; the suggestion of making such an accusation certainly is found in Marston's Malcontent , The Puritan , and Middleton's Family of Love , all of which were produced a ...
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Common terms and phrases
allusion ballad Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson beſt Cokes cutpurse do's Edgworth elſe euery felfe fellow fhall fome foole French hood fuch Gentlemen Gifford giue Grace hath haue heere Hero and Leander Honest Whore i'faith I'le i'the Fayre i'your Iohn is't Iuftice Jonson Lady Leander Leatherhead leaue Littlewit London looke Lord loue Maſter Miftreffe Miftris muſt neuer Numps o'the on't ouer Ouerdoo Overdo Pigge play pleaſe pray thee preſently prophane puppets Puritans purſe Quarlous QVAR Rogue satire ſay SCENE ſee ſelfe Shakespeare ſhall ſhee ſhould Sifter Smithfield ſome ſpeake ſtill ſuch tabacco there's theſe thinke thou vapours veluet vpon Vrla warrant Whit wife WIN-W Winwife ΙΟ Іон Сок
Popular passages
Page 217 - The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man, neither shall a man put on a woman's garment : for all that do so are abomination unto the LORD thy God.
Page 185 - 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. Legg'd like a man! and his fins like arms! Warm, o
Page 151 - To Banbury came I, O profane one, Where I saw a Puritane one Hanging of his cat on Monday For killing of a mouse on Sunday.
Page 144 - We had determin'd that thou should'st have come In a Spanish suit, and have carried her so ; and he, A brokerly slave ! goes, puts it on himself. Hast brought the damask?
Page 146 - Maygame, or Pageant jestingly or prophanely speake or use the holy Name of God or of Christ Jesus, or of the Holy Ghoste or of the Trinitie...
Page 237 - Middle English Metrical Romances dealing with English and Germanic Legends, and with the Cycles of Charlemagne and of Arthur. ANNA HUNT BILLINGS, Ph.D. $1.50. X. The Earliest Lives of Dante, translated from the Italian of Giovanni Boccaccio and Lionardo Bruni Aretino. JAMES ROBINSON SMITH. $0.75. XL A Study in Epic Development. IRENE T. MYERS, Ph.D. $1.00. XII. The Short Story. HENRY SEIDEL CANBY. $0.30. XIII. King Alfred's Old English Version of St.
Page 148 - ts own hall ; when these (in worthy scorn Of those that put out monies on return From Venice, Paris, or some inland passage Of six times to and fro, without embassage, Or him that backward went to Berwick, or which Did dance the famous Morris unto Norwich) At Bread Street's Mermaid, having dined, and merry, Proposed to go to Holborn in a wherry: A harder task than either his to Bristo', Or his to Antwerp.
Page 238 - XXII. King Alfred's Old English Version of St. Augustine's Soliloquies, turned into Modern English. HENRY LEE HARGROVE, Ph.D. $0.75.
Page 154 - ... and sometime painted with variable colours, with two or three hundred men, women and children following it with great devotion. And thus being reared up with...
Page 163 - The custom of eating a gammon of bacon at Easter (which is still kept up in many parts of England) was founded on this, viz. to shew their abhorrence of Judaism at that solemn commemoration of our Lord's resurrection. " The use of your humble servant came first into England on the marriage of Queen Mary, daughter of Hen.