The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected in Eighteen Volumes, Volume 4A. Constable & Company, 1821 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 13
... mean time , while your Royal Highness is preparing fresh employment for our pens , I have been examining my own forces , and making trial of myself , how I shall be able to transmit you to pos- The author seems to refer to the burning ...
... mean time , while your Royal Highness is preparing fresh employment for our pens , I have been examining my own forces , and making trial of myself , how I shall be able to transmit you to pos- The author seems to refer to the burning ...
Page 15
... far as they are capable of being copied by the mean abilities of , SIR , Your Royal Highness's Most humble , and Most obedient servant , JOHN DRYDEN . OF HEROIC PLAYS . AN ESSAY . WHETHER heroic verse THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY . 15.
... far as they are capable of being copied by the mean abilities of , SIR , Your Royal Highness's Most humble , and Most obedient servant , JOHN DRYDEN . OF HEROIC PLAYS . AN ESSAY . WHETHER heroic verse THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY . 15.
Page 35
... Mean time your valiant son , who had before Gain'd fame , rode round to every Mirador ; Beneath each lady's stand a stop he made , And , bowing , took the applauses which they paid . Just in that point of time , the brave unknown ...
... Mean time your valiant son , who had before Gain'd fame , rode round to every Mirador ; Beneath each lady's stand a stop he made , And , bowing , took the applauses which they paid . Just in that point of time , the brave unknown ...
Page 54
... . SCENE I. Enter ALMANZOR and ABDALLA . [ Exeunt . Almanz . That he should dare to do me this dis- grace ! Is fool , or coward , writ upon my face ? Refuse my prisoner ! -I such means will use , 54 ACT III . THE FIRST PART OF.
... . SCENE I. Enter ALMANZOR and ABDALLA . [ Exeunt . Almanz . That he should dare to do me this dis- grace ! Is fool , or coward , writ upon my face ? Refuse my prisoner ! -I such means will use , 54 ACT III . THE FIRST PART OF.
Page 55
... means will use , He shall not have a prisoner to refuse . Abdal . He said , you were not by your promise tied ; That he absolved your word , when he denied . Almans . He break my promise , and absolve my Vow ! " Tis more than Mahomet ...
... means will use , He shall not have a prisoner to refuse . Abdal . He said , you were not by your promise tied ; That he absolved your word , when he denied . Almans . He break my promise , and absolve my Vow ! " Tis more than Mahomet ...
Other editions - View all
The Works of John Dryden, Now First Collected in Eighteen Volumes Volume 11 John Dryden No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
Abdal ABDALLA Abdelm ABDELMELECH Aben ABENAMAR Abencerrages Almah Almahide Almanz Almanzor Amal AMALTHEA Arcos Arga ARGALEON Asca ASCANIO Aurelian beauty Ben Jonson Benito Benz Benzayda betwixt Boab BOABDELIN brave Camillo command Conquest of Granada court crown dare dear death DORALICE Dryden Duke Duke of ARCOS Duke of Mantua Enter Eubulus Exeunt Exit fate father favour fear fight fortune Fred give Granada Guards HAMET hand happy haste hear heart heaven honour hope king lady Laura Leon Leonidas live look lovers Lucretia Lyndar LYNDARAXA madam MARRIAGE A-LA-MODE married Melantha mistress never night Ozmyn Pala Palamede Palm Palmyra pity play poet Poly prince queen revenge Rhodophil SCENE Selin shew soul speak stay sword tell thee there's thing thou art thought twas VIOLETTA virtue wife words Zegrys ZULEMA
Popular passages
Page 211 - ... either in rejecting such old words, or phrases, which are ill sounding, or improper; or in admitting new, which are more proper, more sounding, and more significant.
Page 61 - Beneath a myrtle shade. Which love for none but happy lovers made, I slept ; and straight my love before me brought Phyllis, the object of my waking thought. Undressed she came my flames to meet, While love strewed flowers beneath her feet ; Flowers which, so pressed by her, became more sweet.
Page 225 - ... dull and heavy spirits of the English from their natural reservedness ; loosened them from their stiff forms of conversation, and made them easy and pliant to each other in discourse. Thus, insensibly, our way of living became more free ; and the fire of the English wit, which...
Page 40 - I am as free as Nature first made man, Ere the base laws of servitude began, When wild in woods the noble savage ran.
Page 116 - A watchful fate o'ersees its tender years: Till, grown more strong, it thrusts and stretches out, And elbows all the kingdoms round about: The place thus made for its first breathing free, It moves again for ease and luxury; Till, swelling by degrees, it has...
Page 62 - A careless veil of lawn was loosely spread: From her white temples fell her shaded hair, Like cloudy sunshine not too brown nor fair: Her hands, her lips did love inspire; Her ev'ry grace my heart did fire : But most her eyes which languish'd with desire.
Page 66 - Tis he ; I feel him now in every part : Like a new lord he vaunts about my heart; Surveys, in state, each corner of my breast, While poor fierce I, that was, am dispossessed...
Page 353 - ... in my own defence, neither will I gratify the ambition of two wretched scribblers, who desire nothing more than to be answered. I have not wanted friends, even amongst strangers, who have defended me more strongly than my contemptible pedant could attack me ; for the other, he is only like Fungoso in the play, who follows the fashion at a distance, and adores the Fastidious Brisk of Oxford.
Page 5 - If from thy hands alone my death can be, I am immortal and a god to thee. If I would kill thee now, thy fate's so low, That I must stoop ere I can give the blow : But mine is fixed so far above thy crown, That all thy men, Piled on thy back, can never pull it down : But, at my ease, thy destiny I send, By ceasing from this hour to be thy friend.
Page 213 - Witness the lameness of their plots ; many of which, especially those which they writ first (for even that age refined itself in some measure), were made up of some ridiculous incoherent story, which in one play many times took up the business of an age.