| Ben Jonson - 1908 - 120 páginas
...thinke herselfe wise against all the Iudgements that come. A Lady made all of voyce, & Ayre, talkes any thing of any thing : She is like one of your Ignorant Poetasters of the time ; who when the haue got acquainted with a strange worde, neuer rest till they haue 1120 wronge it in, though it... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1908 - 114 páginas
...thinke herselfe wise against all the Judgements that come. A Lady made all of voyce, & Ayre, talkes any thing of any thing : She is like one of your Ignorant Poetasters of the time ; who when the haue got acquainted with a strange worde, neuer rest till they haue 1 120 wronge it in, though... | |
| David Klein - 1910 - 284 páginas
...outlandish words. Cynth. Rev., II. i. (I. 1620.) :— Cupid. She is like one of your ignorant poetasters of time, who, when they have got acquainted with a strange...though it loosen the whole fabric of their sense. Poetaster, VI (I. 261 a) : — Virgil. You must not hunt for wild outlandish terms, To stuff out a... | |
| Charles Shirley Potts - 1910 - 644 páginas
...(II, 1, p. 162) applied to Moria which sounds as if it were taken from Virgil's charge to Crispinus : "She is like one of your ignorant poetasters of the...a strange word, never rest till they have wrung it ift, though it loosen the whole fabric of their sense." Thus, while the treatment of Crispinus is an... | |
| Charles Read Baskervill - 1911 - 354 páginas
...(II, 1, p. 162) applied to Moria which sounds as if it were taken from Virgil's charge to Crispinus : "She is like one of your ignorant poetasters of the...though it loosen the whole fabric of their sense." Thus, while the treatment of Crispinus is an attack specifically on Marston and the Marstonian vocabulary,... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1912 - 594 páginas
...might this be? Cup. "fis Madam Moria, guardian of the nymphs ; one that is not now to be persuaded of her wit ; she will think herself wise against all...that come. A lady made all of voice and air, talks anything of anything. She is like one of your ignorant poetasters of the time, who, when they have... | |
| 1912 - 740 páginas
...all the iudgements that come. A lady made all of voice, and aire, talkes any thing of any thing. Shee is like one of your ignorant Poetasters of the >* time, who when they haue got acquainted with a strange [205] word, neuer rest till they haue wroong it in, though it loosen... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1912 - 360 páginas
...all the iudgements that come. A lady made all of voice, and aire, talkes any thing of any thing. Shee is like one of your ignorant Poetasters of the ^ time, who when they haue got acquainted with a strange [205] word, neuer rest till they haue wroong it in, though it loosen... | |
| Clarence Edward Andrews - 1913 - 174 páginas
...little heavier than that of most of the comic dramatists. He speaks in one place of a character who is ' like one of your ignorant poetasters of the time,...wrung it in, though it loosen the whole fabric of the sense.'* Again, in the Poetaster, he ridicules Marston for the use of such words as oblatrant,... | |
| Clarence Edward Andrews - 1913 - 166 páginas
...little heavier than that of most of the comic dramatists. He speaks in one place of a character who is ' like one of your ignorant poetasters of the time,...wrung it in, though it loosen the whole fabric of the sense.'* Again, in the Poetaster, he ridicules Marston for the use of such words as oblatrant,... | |
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