The Works of George Chapman ...Chatto and Windus, 1875 |
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Page xiv
... eyes falling asleep in a half - dream , " it will be found ( in Chapman's phrase ) " pervial " enough to any but a sluggish or a sandblind eye ; but at no time and in no mood will a really obscure writer be found other than obscure ...
... eyes falling asleep in a half - dream , " it will be found ( in Chapman's phrase ) " pervial " enough to any but a sluggish or a sandblind eye ; but at no time and in no mood will a really obscure writer be found other than obscure ...
Page xv
... eyes , or with the eyes of the living mask which he assumes for his momentary impersonation of saint or sophist , philosopher or malefactor ; without accepting one conclusion , conceding one point , or condoning one crime . It is ...
... eyes , or with the eyes of the living mask which he assumes for his momentary impersonation of saint or sophist , philosopher or malefactor ; without accepting one conclusion , conceding one point , or condoning one crime . It is ...
Page xxvii
... eyes looked up which would have looked down on him , as ever did the illustrious Latinist Buchanan against the mother of the worthy patron whose countenance would probably have sufficed to protect the meanest and obscurest creature of ...
... eyes looked up which would have looked down on him , as ever did the illustrious Latinist Buchanan against the mother of the worthy patron whose countenance would probably have sufficed to protect the meanest and obscurest creature of ...
Page xli
... eyes of London playgoers ; and at his instigation the play was not unreasonably prohibited , by an act of censorship assuredly not so absurd or so arbitrary as in our own day has repeatedly exposed the direction of the English stage to ...
... eyes of London playgoers ; and at his instigation the play was not unreasonably prohibited , by an act of censorship assuredly not so absurd or so arbitrary as in our own day has repeatedly exposed the direction of the English stage to ...
Page lx
... eyes , And she supposed she saw in Neptune's skies How her star wander'd , wash'd in smarting brine , For her love's ... eye responsible , the golden hair , And none is held without the other fair ; All spring together , all together ...
... eyes , And she supposed she saw in Neptune's skies How her star wander'd , wash'd in smarting brine , For her love's ... eye responsible , the golden hair , And none is held without the other fair ; All spring together , all together ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. B. GROSART Andromeda bear beauty blest blood breast Bussy d'Ambois cast Chapman cloth extra cloth limp Crown 8vo dear death Deities divine doth earth Edited eternal Exit eyes fair fame Fcap fear fire flames George Chapman give Gods grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven Hero and Leander Hesiod Homer honour Iliad illustrated boards immortal Jove Jove's king labour Lady Leander learning light live lord love's lute master men's mind mistress Muse never night noble nought Ovid oxen peace Perseus Phoebus play poem poet poor Post 8vo praise Prince Proberio rich sacred Second Maiden's Tragedy shine sight Simplo sing soul spirit sweet thee thine things thou thought true truth verse vex'd virtue Vols Votarius Wife words worth
Popular passages
Page 57 - It lies not in our power to love or hate, For will in us is overruled by Fate. When two are stripped, long ere the course begin We wish that one should lose, the other win; And one especially do we affect Of two gold ingots, like in each respect. The reason no man knows; let it suffice. What we behold is censured by our eyes.