| William Shakespeare - 1901 - 618 lapas
...partly as a satire upon the former. Asper's satire is perfectly scorching, his avowed purpose being to " strip the ragged follies of the time naked as at their birth " ; and the Induction has some lines bearing so strong a resemblance to this speech of Jaques', as... | |
| 1903 - 792 lapas
...armed and resolved hand " he will "Strip the ragged follies of their time Naked as at their birth . . . and with a whip of steel Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs." Shakespeare on occasions can wield the whip of steel, but it is when for a time he parts company with... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1904 - 284 lapas
...armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth ... . . . and with a whip of steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. Well, I will scourge those apes, And to these courteous eyes oppose a mirror, As large as is the stage... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1904 - 284 lapas
...of attack, he himself best describes : Introduction xxi But, with an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth . . . . . . and with a whip of steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. Well, I will scourge... | |
| Ben Jonson - 1905 - 584 lapas
...iniquitie : But (with an armed, and resolued hand) l65 He strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, Naked, as at their birth : COR. (Be not too bold. Asp. You trouble me) and with a whip of steele, Print wounding lashes in their yron ribs. I feare no mood stampt in a priuate brow, 170 When... | |
| Alphonso Gerald Newcomer - 1905 - 492 lapas
...comedy. He aimed particularly to satirize the follies of his day. "With an armed and resolved hand I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth." (Prologue to Every man Out of his Humour.) This he did by taking some vice, eccentricity, or affectation,... | |
| Harold Bayley - 1906 - 418 lapas
...into such oily colours To flatter vice and daub iniquity : But with an armed and resolved hand I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth — Cordatus. Be not too bold. 104 t/fsper. You trouble me — and with a whip of steel Print wounding... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1909 - 208 lapas
...partly as a satire upon the former. Asper's satire is perfectly scorching, his avowed purpose being to "strip the ragged follies of the time naked as at their birth"; and the Induction has some lines bearing so strong a resemblance to this speech of Jaques', as might... | |
| David Klein - 1910 - 288 lapas
...with an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth — and with a whip of steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. And further on — (I. 67b) : — Well, I will scourge those apes, And to these courteous eyes oppose... | |
| David Klein - 1910 - 284 lapas
...Introduction (I. 6$a) :-— To flatter vice and daub iniquity; But with an armed and resolved hand, I'll strip the ragged follies of the time Naked as at their birth — and with a whip of steel, Print wounding lashes in their iron ribs. And further on — (I. 6yb)... | |
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