| Cyrus Hoy - 1980 - 380 lapas
...Asper in the induction to Every Man out of his Humour, 16-20: But (with an armed, and resolued hand) He strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, as at their birth: . . . . . . and with a whip of steele, Print wounding lashes in their yron ribs. And cf. Sat., I.ii.225-237.... | |
| Anne Barton - 1984 - 394 lapas
...infallibility of his own judgement of other people, his right to correct vice and folly by violent means, strip the ragged follies of the time, Naked, as at their birth . . . and with a whip of steele, Print wounding lashes in their yron ribs. (17-20) In Satiromastix,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1994 - 692 lapas
...Jonson's boast in the Induction to Every Man out of his Humour, 'With an armed and resolved hand, | I'll strip the ragged follies of the time | Naked as at their birth', is certainly similar in tone. There are other parallels not only in Jonson's work but also in Marston's.... | |
| Richard Harp, Stanley Stewart - 2000 - 238 lapas
...at amusing his audiences, Jonson never abandoned the aim, expressed through his mouthpiece Asper to "strip the ragged follies of the time / Naked as at their birth" (EMO "After the second sounding," 17-18). As we might expect, this obsessive urge to expose pretension,... | |
| James Bednarz - 2001 - 358 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. ("AFTER THE SECOND SOUNDING," LL. 4~l8) In the character sketches added to the First Quarto of 1600,... | |
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