Campaspe ; Sappho and Phao |
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Page 59
... mind ] Manes is absolutely dissolute by the nature of his body ; it brings art into contempt that a wit so unusual should belong to a mind that lives in such a body . There may be a quibble on the logical and grammatical senses of ...
... mind ] Manes is absolutely dissolute by the nature of his body ; it brings art into contempt that a wit so unusual should belong to a mind that lives in such a body . There may be a quibble on the logical and grammatical senses of ...
Page 78
... mind whose greatness the world could not con- tain drawn within the compass of an idle alluring eye ? Will you handle the spindle with Hercules when you should shake the spear with Achilles ? Is the warlike sound of drum and trump ...
... mind whose greatness the world could not con- tain drawn within the compass of an idle alluring eye ? Will you handle the spindle with Hercules when you should shake the spear with Achilles ? Is the warlike sound of drum and trump ...
Page 245
... mind - glasses ] Compare Euphues , 11.83 , 7-8 , ' Wine is the glass of the mind ' , and 1.279 , 13-15 , ' Wine therefore is to be refrained which is termed to be the glass of the mind . ' Bond ( 11.559 ) cites Aeschylus , Fragment 393 ...
... mind - glasses ] Compare Euphues , 11.83 , 7-8 , ' Wine is the glass of the mind ' , and 1.279 , 13-15 , ' Wine therefore is to be refrained which is termed to be the glass of the mind . ' Bond ( 11.559 ) cites Aeschylus , Fragment 393 ...
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actors Actus Adagia Aelian Alexander Alexander's Amatoria Anaxarchus antithesis antithetical Apelles Apophthegmata appears Aristotle arrows Athens beauty Blackfriars Blackfriars theatre Blount Bond subst Callipho Callisthenes Campaspe Canope Chrysippus Chrysus cites Clitus colour comedy Compare Euphues compositor court courtiers courtly Criticus Cupid Cyclopes Dent Diogenes Drama dream edition Elizabeth Elizabethan Endymion English Enter Erasmus Erasmus's Eugenua Euphues Exeunt Exit eyes fair Favilla forge fortune Gallathea gods Granichus hath heart Hephestion I.iii II.ii Ismena John Lyly king ladies Laertius Laïs London Lyly's play Manes master meaning Mileta Molus never Ovid painting Pandion Parmenio performance Phao's Phaon philosophers Plato play's Pliny Plutarch presumably Prologue proverbial Psyllus quarto Queen reference Sappho and Phao Scaena scene seems Shakespeare Sibylla song speech spelling stage story suggests sweet Sylvius tells theatre thee thine thou art thought Timoclea Trachinus Tudor Udall Venus Vulcan women words ΙΟ