| Charles Mackay, William Shakespeare - 1884 - 78 lapas
...drudges of all the rest." Gregory ! o' my word we'll not carry coals. — Romeo and Jtdiet, Act I. Sc. I. See, here comes one that will carry coals; ergo, will hold my dog. — BEN JONSON, Every Man Out of Humour. Saxon philologists make a mistake in the meaning of the word... | |
| George Newman (writer of verse.) - 1884 - 58 lapas
...for coal and salt ; The Duke of N , he deals in malt, The Douglas in red herrings." SECOND VISIT. " Here comes one that will carry coals, ergo, will hold my dog." BEN JONSON, Every Man out of Ms Humour. MY second visit, in September of the same year, was made under... | |
| Charles Mackay - 1887 - 512 lapas
...drudges of all the rest." Gregory ! o' my word we'll not carry coals. Romeo and Juliet, act i. scene i . See, here comes one that will carry coals; ergo, will hold my dog. Ben Jonson, Every Man out of Humour. All previous philologists mistake the meaning of the word coals.... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1887 - 888 lapas
...prove this : — "Now my ancient being a man of an un-coal-carrying spirit." Chapman's May-day, 1610. "Here comes one that will carry coals, ergo, will hold my dog." Every Man out of his Humour. " He has had wrong, and if I were he, I would beare no coales." Antonio... | |
| Robert Nares - 1888 - 514 lapas
...coals. Ufti. V, lii, 2. He means to insinuate that they were base, cowardly rascals. Puntarvolo says, See ! here comes one that will carry coals, ergo, will hold my dog. 11. Jvtij. Ev. Sf. out ofu., v, 1. This is said upon the approach of a servant with a basket, probably... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1893 - 262 lapas
...that piece of service the men would carry coals "; Jonson, Every Man Out of His Humour, v. 1. 18, 9, " here comes one that will carry coals, ergo, will hold my dog"; Chapman, May Day, iii., speaks of "an uncole-carrying spirit." From the same source we have the word... | |
| John Phin - 1902 - 464 lapas
...lowest menials of the court. " Ben Jonson, in his Every Man out of his Humour, makes Puntarvolo say: "See here comes one that will carry coals, ergo will hold my dog." coats. The passage in Mids. III, 2, 213 : 3o with two seeming bodies, but one heart; Two of the first,... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1912 - 594 lapas
...presence. Punt. I know it, and I, like a dull beast, forgot to bring one of my cormorants to attend me.2 Fast. Why, you were best leave him at the porter's...commit the tuition of this dog to thy prudent care ? in the preceding comedy, yet it is almost certain that he was in llie list ; and he, not improbably,... | |
| Ebenezer Cobham Brewer - 2001 - 1166 lapas
...cools " — ie submit to be " put upon (Borneo and Juliet, i, 1). So in Every Man out of his Humour, " Here comes one that will carry coals, ergo, will hold my dog." The allusion is to the dirty, laborious occupation of coalcarriers, the most forlorn wretches being... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1855 - 576 lapas
...being a man of an un-coal-carrying spirit ;" and in Ben Jonson's Every Man out of his humour, — " Here comes one that will carry coals ; ergo, will hold my dog." 3 Thou hadst been Poor John. Poor John, is hake, dried and salted. 1 I will btie ~ny thumb at them... | |
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