Catiline: His ConspiracyYale University Press, 1916 - 236 pagine |
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Pagina xx
... Fulvia acquaints Cicero with the plot , in Act 3 , Lucan supplies many of Cicero's exclamations of horror . He also furnishes part of Catiline's speech in the senate in Act 4 , and figures for the description of Catiline's death in Act ...
... Fulvia acquaints Cicero with the plot , in Act 3 , Lucan supplies many of Cicero's exclamations of horror . He also furnishes part of Catiline's speech in the senate in Act 4 , and figures for the description of Catiline's death in Act ...
Pagina xxxix
... Fulvia , who loves him ; Aurelia , a veritable devil , discovering the existence of Charinus , kills him , and pours his blood into the pledge - cup of the conspirators ; and Catiline , on discov- ering this horrible deed , takes his ...
... Fulvia , who loves him ; Aurelia , a veritable devil , discovering the existence of Charinus , kills him , and pours his blood into the pledge - cup of the conspirators ; and Catiline , on discov- ering this horrible deed , takes his ...
Pagina xliii
... Fulvia , and Sempronia , vain of her knowledge of Greek and ambitious to be dabbling in politics , are second to nothing in the satirical high com- edy that the age has left us . ' But there is yet another aspect in which Jonson's later ...
... Fulvia , and Sempronia , vain of her knowledge of Greek and ambitious to be dabbling in politics , are second to nothing in the satirical high com- edy that the age has left us . ' But there is yet another aspect in which Jonson's later ...
Pagina xlv
... Fulvia , are drawn with Jonson's most self - conscious care and skill . But the part of Cicero is burden enough to stifle any play and some even of the finest passages , such as the much - praised description of the dying Catiline ...
... Fulvia , are drawn with Jonson's most self - conscious care and skill . But the part of Cicero is burden enough to stifle any play and some even of the finest passages , such as the much - praised description of the dying Catiline ...
Pagina xlviii
... Fulvia's jealousy ( whereby Rome is finally to be saved ) -is not at all tragic . Nor can the characters be considered truly tragic . Take Catiline . Swinburne is too supercilious in the utter dismissal of him as impossible , for he is ...
... Fulvia's jealousy ( whereby Rome is finally to be saved ) -is not at all tragic . Nor can the characters be considered truly tragic . Take Catiline . Swinburne is too supercilious in the utter dismissal of him as impossible , for he is ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
ALLOBROGES Antonius Asconius Pedianus atque Aurelia Ben Jonson bloud braue CAES Cæsar CAIVS CATI Catiline Catiline's CATO CATV CATVLVS CETHEGVS Cicero common-wealth conspiracy conspirators Consul Crassus Curius CVRIVS Dio Cassius do's doth Drama edited with Introduction English enuy Epicoene erat etiam euery Exeunt Fathers feare fortune FVLVIA GABINIVS GALLA giue Glossary gods hæc hath haue honor illi iust Jonson Juvenal Latin leaue LECCA Lentulus LENTVLVS Lictors liue London LONGINVS loue Lucan madame mihi neque omnes Ovid Petronius Ph.D Phars play plot Plutarch præterea prætor Praetors quæ quam quibus quid quod QVINTVS reipublicæ Roman Rome Sallust SANGA scene Sejanus selfe selues SEMPRONIA Senate Seneca sense shee slaues speech Suetonius sunt thee thinke thou Thyestes tragedy translation traytors VARGVNTEIVS vero vertue vnto vpon warre word yeere
Brani popolari
Pagina 237 - III. The Life of St. Cecilia, from MS. Ashmole 43 and MS. Cotton Tiberius E. VII, with Introduction, Variants, and Glossary.
Pagina 162 - SUB. Yes, or my art is an egregious liar. KAS. How know you? SUB. By inspection on her forehead, And subtlety of her lip, which must be tasted Often to make a judgment. (Kisses...
Pagina xliii - I see not then, but we should enjoy the same license, or free power to illustrate and heighten our invention, as they did ; and not be tied to those strict and regular forms which the niceness of a few, who are nothing but form, would thrust upon us.
Pagina 150 - Caesar , figuli tua castra sequantur." vicit digna viro sententia. noverat ille luxuriam imperii veterem noctesque Neronis iam medias aliamque famem , cum pulmo Falerno arderet. nulli maior fuit usus edendi 140 tempestate mea: Circeis nata forent an Lucrinum ad saxum Rutupinove edita fundo ostrea , callebat primo deprendere morsu , et semel aspecti litus dicebat echini.
Pagina 168 - ... nil ergo optabunt homines? si consilium vis, permittes ipsis expendere numinibus quid conveniat nobis rebusque sit utile nostris; nam pro iucundis aptissima quaeque dabunt di. carior est illis homo quam sibi.
Pagina 239 - XL. The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates, by John Milton, edited with Introduction and Notes. WILLIAM TALBOT ALLISON, Ph.D. $1.25. XLI. Biblical Quotations in Middle English Literature before 1350.
Pagina 8 - I am much afraid that this is so. Thy parricide late on thy only son, After his mother, to make empty way For thy last wicked nuptials, worse than they That blaze that act...
Pagina 187 - Coierant enim (ambo, ut) Ciceronem consulatu deicerent, adiutoribus usi firmissimis M. Crasso et C. Caesare.
Pagina 207 - Omnis homines, Patres conscripti, qui de rebus dubiis consultant, ab odio, amicitia, ira atque misericordia, vacuos esse decet.
Pagina 183 - But Paul said, I am a Jew, of Tarsus in Cilicia, a citizen of no mean city: and I beseech thee, give me leave to speak unto the people.