Catiline His ConspiracyYale University Press, 1916 - 236 pagine |
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Pagina xxxii
... close com- parison of the kind which we have just made will prove Jonson's translations to be remarkably free , a hasty reading without such comparison is likely to leave the impression that they are slavishly literal - a fact which no ...
... close com- parison of the kind which we have just made will prove Jonson's translations to be remarkably free , a hasty reading without such comparison is likely to leave the impression that they are slavishly literal - a fact which no ...
Pagina xlv
... close it we find it more difficult to believe that the additions made by its author some ten years before to The Spanish Tragedy can possibly have been those printed in the later issues of that famous play . Their subtle and spontaneous ...
... close it we find it more difficult to believe that the additions made by its author some ten years before to The Spanish Tragedy can possibly have been those printed in the later issues of that famous play . Their subtle and spontaneous ...
Pagina liii
... close at hand , each head , each hand , each strap and buckle is masterly , but , at a distance sufficiently great to permit the whole canvas to be taken in at one glance , nothing is seen but a meaningless glitter .... He awakens only ...
... close at hand , each head , each hand , each strap and buckle is masterly , but , at a distance sufficiently great to permit the whole canvas to be taken in at one glance , nothing is seen but a meaningless glitter .... He awakens only ...
Pagina lix
... close to the Latin method to be successful on our stage . Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris , which comes about as near as may be to catching the classical atmosphere ( although the subjective treatment of the Furies is modern ) , is a ...
... close to the Latin method to be successful on our stage . Goethe's Iphigenie auf Tauris , which comes about as near as may be to catching the classical atmosphere ( although the subjective treatment of the Furies is modern ) , is a ...
Pagina 10
... Close vp , with ATLAS ; and sustaine her name As strong , as he doth heau'n ? And , was I Of all her brood , mark'd out for the repulse By her no voice , when I stood Candidate , 90 To be commander in the Pontick warre ? I will ...
... Close vp , with ATLAS ; and sustaine her name As strong , as he doth heau'n ? And , was I Of all her brood , mark'd out for the repulse By her no voice , when I stood Candidate , 90 To be commander in the Pontick warre ? I will ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
ALLOBROGES Antonius Asconius Pedianus atque Aurelia Ben Jonson bloud braue CAES Cæsar CAIVS CATI Catiline Catiline his Conspiracy Catiline's CATO CATV CATVLVS CETHEGVS Cicero common-wealth conspiracy conspirators Consul Crassus Curius CVRIVS Dio Cassius do's doth Drama English enuy erat esset 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 thought Thyestes tragedy translation traytors VARGVNTEIVS vero vertue vnto vpon warre word yeere
Brani popolari
Pagina 156 - Alas ! and did my Saviour bleed ? And did my Sovereign die ? Would he devote that sacred head For such a worm as I...
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 218 - Catalina,' spoken by Sylla's Ghost, was writ after I parted with my friend at the Devil tavern. I had drank well that night, and had brave notions. There is one scene in that play which I think is flat. I resolve to drink no more water with my wine.
Pagina 14 - If the gods had call'd Them to a purpose, they would just have come With the same tortoise speed ; that are thus slow To such an action, which .the gods will envy ; As asking no less means than all their powers Conjoin'd to effect.
Pagina 237 - XV. Essays on the Study and Use of Poetry by Plutarch and Basil the Great, translated from the Greek, with an Introduction. FREDERICK M.
Pagina 182 - Ad hoc maledicta alia quum adderet, obstrepere omnes, hostem atque parricidam vocare. Tum ille furibundus: 'Quoniam quidem circumventus, inquit, ab inimicis praeceps agor, incendium meum ruina restinguam.
Pagina xv - Conspiracy," l yesterday being the first day: a play of much good sense and words to read, but that do appear the worst upon the stage, I mean, the least diverting, that ever I saw any, though most fine in clothes; and a fine scene of the Senate, and of a fight, that ever I saw in my life.
Pagina 214 - Catilina vero longe a suis inter hostium cadavera repertus est, paululum etiam spirans ferociamque animi, quam habuerat vivos, in voltu retinens.