The WorksOUP Oxford, 1910 - 664 Seiten For this edition the originals have been carefully recollated, and all doubtful places checked. Some eccentricities of typography have been normalized; but the spelling and punctuation of the first editions are substantially preserved. The textual notes give in a condensed form all variants of any importance. Each work is preceded by a brief critical introduction. -- From publisher's description. |
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Seite 60
... Beauty , mother to the Muses sits , 1925 And comments vollumes with her Yuory pen : Taking instructions from thy flowing eies , Eies when that Ebena steps to heauen , In silence of thy solemn Euenings walk , Making the mantle of the ...
... Beauty , mother to the Muses sits , 1925 And comments vollumes with her Yuory pen : Taking instructions from thy flowing eies , Eies when that Ebena steps to heauen , In silence of thy solemn Euenings walk , Making the mantle of the ...
Seite 61
... beauty beat on his conceites , I thus conceiuing and subduing both That which hath st ( o ) opt the tempest of the Gods , 1965 Euen from the fiery spangled vaile of heauen , To feele the louely warmth of shepheards flames , And martch ...
... beauty beat on his conceites , I thus conceiuing and subduing both That which hath st ( o ) opt the tempest of the Gods , 1965 Euen from the fiery spangled vaile of heauen , To feele the louely warmth of shepheards flames , And martch ...
Seite 93
... beauty of the brightest day , The golden balle of heauens eternal fire , That danc'd with glorie on the siluer waues : Now wants the fewell that enflamde his beames And all with faintnesse and for foule disgrace , He bindes his temples ...
... beauty of the brightest day , The golden balle of heauens eternal fire , That danc'd with glorie on the siluer waues : Now wants the fewell that enflamde his beames And all with faintnesse and for foule disgrace , He bindes his temples ...
Seite 95
... beauty hath enchaunted heauen , And had she liu'd before the siege of Troy , Hellen , whose beauty sommond Greece to armes , And drew a thousand ships to Tenedos , Had not bene nam'd in Homers Iliads : Her name had bene in euery line he ...
... beauty hath enchaunted heauen , And had she liu'd before the siege of Troy , Hellen , whose beauty sommond Greece to armes , And drew a thousand ships to Tenedos , Had not bene nam'd in Homers Iliads : Her name had bene in euery line he ...
Seite 118
... beauty thou wast woont to light , Enrag'd , I ran about the fields for thee , Supposing amorous Ioue had sent his sonne , The winged Hermes , to conuay thee hence : But now I finde thee , and that feare is past . Tell me Olympia , wilt ...
... beauty thou wast woont to light , Enrag'd , I ran about the fields for thee , Supposing amorous Ioue had sent his sonne , The winged Hermes , to conuay thee hence : But now I finde thee , and that feare is past . Tell me Olympia , wilt ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Actus armes Ascanius Barabas Bind bloud Brey Coll coniuring conj crowne Cunn damnd death Dido diuels Doctor Faustus doth Duke of Guise Dyce to Bull earth edition Elegia Emperour Eneas Enter Euen euery Exeunt Exit faire father feare gaue Gaueston giue Gouernour grace Guise hand hath haue heart heauen heere hell Hero and Leander honor Hurst I'le Ioue Jew of Malta king Leander leaue liue looke Lord loue Lucifer Mahomet maiesty maister Malta Marlowe Meph Mephastophilis Mortimer Natolia neuer ouer Persea Pope Queene S.D. add saue Scana Scene Scythian shal shew sirra slaue sonne souldiers soule stay sweet sword Tamb Tamburlaine Techelles tell thee Ther Theridamas thine thinke thou art thou shalt thy selfe Trebizon Turke villaine vnder vnto vpon warres wilt yeeld Zenocrate Zounds
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 572 - Woods, or steepie mountaine yeeldes. And wee will sit vpon the Rocks, Seeing the Sheepheards feede theyr flocks By shallow Riuers, to whose falls Melodious byrds sings Madrigalls. And I will make thee beds of Roses, And a thousand fragrant poesies, A cap of flowers, and a kirtle, Imbroydred all with leaues of
Seite 516 - will in vs is ouer-rul'd by fate. -— When two are stript long ere the course begin, We wish that one should loose, the other win ; And one especiallie doe we affect Of two gold Ingots like in each respect. The reason no man knowes, let it suffise, What we behold is censur'd by our eies.
Seite 169 - Fau. How comes it then that thou art out of hel ? Me. Why this is hel, nor am I out of it : Thinkst thou that I who saw the face of God, And tasted the eternal ioyes of heauen, Am not tormented with ten thousand hels,
Seite 572 - A gowne made of the finest wooll, Which from our pretty Lambes we pull, Fayre lined slippers for the cold, With buckles of the purest gold. A belt of straw and
Seite 205 - yea all the world, for which Faustus hath lost both Germany, and the world, yea heauen it selfe, heauen the seate of God, the throne of the blessed, the kingdome of ioy, and must remaine in hel for euer, hel, ah hel for euer, sweete friends, what shall become of Faustus, being in hel for euer
Seite 387 - As with the wings of rancor and disdaine, Full often am I sowring vp to heauen, To plaine me to the gods against them both : But when I call to minde I am a king, Me thinkes I should reuenge me of the wronges, That Mortimer and Isabell haue done.
Seite 193 - they say thou hast a familiar spirit, by whome thou canst accomplish what thou list : this therefore is my request, that thou let me see some proofe of thy skil, that mine eies may be witnesses to confirme what mine eares haue heard reported, and here I sweare to thee, by the honor of mine Imperial
Seite 402 - Something still busseth in mine eares, And tels me, if I sleepe I neuer wake, This feare is that which makes me tremble thus, And therefore tell me, wherefore art thou come ? Light. To rid thee of thy life.
Seite 207 - Where is it now ? tis gone : And see where God Stretcheth out his arme, and bends his irefull browes : Mountaines and hilles, come, come, and fall on me, , And hide me from the heauy wrath of God. No, no. 1440
Seite 166 - Yes sir, I will tell you, yet if you were not dunces you would neuer aske me such a question, for is not he corpus naturale, and is not that mobile ? then wherefore should you aske me such a question ? but that I am by nature flegmaticke, slowe to wrath, and prone to leachery (to loue I