Masques and EntertainmentsG. Routledge and Sons, Limited, 1890 - 439 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
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Pagina xi
... fair battle , and then they were departed , and so went out of the place . Then came in an Old Man with a silver beard , and he concluded that Love and Riches both be necessary for Princes ; that is to say , by Love to be obeyed and ...
... fair battle , and then they were departed , and so went out of the place . Then came in an Old Man with a silver beard , and he concluded that Love and Riches both be necessary for Princes ; that is to say , by Love to be obeyed and ...
Pagina xiv
... fair skin and yellow hair , but no great beauty of feature . Her eldest son , Prince Henry , was born at Stirling on the 19th of February 1594. Her daughter , the Princess Elizabeth , was born on the 15th of August 1596. A second ...
... fair skin and yellow hair , but no great beauty of feature . Her eldest son , Prince Henry , was born at Stirling on the 19th of February 1594. Her daughter , the Princess Elizabeth , was born on the 15th of August 1596. A second ...
Pagina xx
... fair ivory skin , to masquerade on that occasion with eleven of her ladies , as negresses . She danced , it is said , with the Spanish ambassador , who , when he kissed Her Majesty's hand , was not sure what might become the colour of ...
... fair ivory skin , to masquerade on that occasion with eleven of her ladies , as negresses . She danced , it is said , with the Spanish ambassador , who , when he kissed Her Majesty's hand , was not sure what might become the colour of ...
Pagina 38
... Fair Niger , 1 son to great Oceanus , Now honoured thus , With all his beauteous race : Who , though but black in face , Yet are they bright , And full of life and light , To prove that beauty best Which not the colour but the feature ...
... Fair Niger , 1 son to great Oceanus , Now honoured thus , With all his beauteous race : Who , though but black in face , Yet are they bright , And full of life and light , To prove that beauty best Which not the colour but the feature ...
Pagina 39
... fair , No cares , no age , can change , or there display The fearful tincture of abhorréd grey ; Since Death herself ( herself being pale and blue ) Can never alter their most faithful hue : All which are arguments to prove how far ...
... fair , No cares , no age , can change , or there display The fearful tincture of abhorréd grey ; Since Death herself ( herself being pale and blue ) Can never alter their most faithful hue : All which are arguments to prove how far ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
Æneid Anne of Denmark ANTIMASQUE arms attired aull beauty behold Ben Jonson boys bright called Cesare Ripa Chro clouds colours Court crown Cupid Dæmon Dame dance delight doth ears earth eyes fair Fame fate feet flame Flamen flowers fortune gipsy give glory gold grace hair hand hath head hear heart heaven honour Hymen Inigo Jones Johp Jonson Jove Juno king's ladies light live look Lord Love Majesty marriage masque Masque of Blackness MASQUERS master Mercury moon never night Nose nymphs Oceanus Ovid peace Poet Post and Pair present Prince quæ quæst Queen Remig rites Satyrs scene shine sight silver sing SONG Sphynx spring stars sweet tell thee thou triumph Twelfth Night unto Venus virtue Welse wherein whilst wonder
Brani popolari
Pagina 58 - IT is a noble and just advantage that the things subjected to understanding have of those which are objected to sense ; that the one sort are but momentary, and merely taking; the other impressing, and lasting : else the glory of all these solemnities had perished like a blaze, and gone out in the beholders
Pagina 260 - The faery beam upon you, The stars to glister on you; A moon of light In the noon of night, Till the fire-drake hath o'ergone you! The wheel of fortune guide you, The boy with the bow beside you Run aye in the way Till the bird of day And the luckier lot betide you!
Pagina 36 - First, for the scene, was drawn a Umtifadjap (landscape) consisting of small woods, and here and there a void place filled with huntings ; which falling, an artificial sea was seen to shoot forth, as if it flowed to the land, raised with waves which seemed to move, and in some places the billows to break, as imitating that orderly disorder which is common in nature.
Pagina 90 - She that will but now discover Where the winged wag doth hover, Shall to-night receive a kiss, How or where herself would wish : But, who brings him to his mother, Shall have that kiss, and another.
Pagina 104 - Dame, dame ! the watch is set : Quickly come, we all are met.— From the lakes, and from the fens, From the rocks, and from the dens, From the woods, and from the caves, From the church-yards, from the graves, From the dungeon, from the tree That they die on, here are we ! Comes she not yet ? Strike another heat.
Pagina 216 - Break, Phant'sie, from thy cave of cloud, And spread thy purple wings ; Now all thy figures are allowed, And various shapes of things ; Create of airy forms a stream, It must have blood, and nought of phlegm; And though it be a waking dream, Cho. Yet let it like an odour rise To all the senses here, And fall like sleep upon their eyes, Or music in their ear.
Pagina 261 - To the old, long life and treasure ! To the young, all health and pleasure ! To the fair, their face With eternal grace, And the soul to be loved at leisure ! To the witty, all clear mirrors ; To the foolish, their dark errors ; To the loving sprite, A secure delight ; To the jealous his own false terrors ! Capt.
Pagina 230 - She, she it is in darkness shines, '7w she that still herself refines, By her own light to every eye ; More seen, more known, when Vice stands by ; And though a stranger here on earth, In heaven she hath her right of birth. There, there is Virtue's seat ; Strive to keep her your own ; 'Tis only she can make you great, Though place here make you known.
Pagina 358 - Spring all the graces of the age, And all the loves of time ; Bring all the pleasures of the stage, And relishes of rhyme. Add all the softnesses of courts, The looks, the laughters, and the sports ; And mingle all their sweets and salts, That none may say the triumph halts.
Pagina 43 - All which ended, they were again accited to sea, with a Song of two trebles, whose cadences were iterated by a double echo from several parts of the land.