... Ben Jonson was the actual writer of at least part of the epistle, merely using the names of Heminge and Condell, is credible because of Jonson's own familiarity with the classics which he often paraded, as when he spoke disparagingly ...
... Jonson in praise of Shakespeare in the 1623 Folio. Leave thee alone for the comparison Of all, that insolent Greece or haughty ROME Sent, forth . . . Are we to suppose that Ben Jonson was so bankrupt of words and ideas that he needed to ...
... Ben Jonson Hugh Holland, Leonard Digges, and James Mabbe, whose verses in the First Folio eulogize the author of the works, were closely associated with Ben Jonson in school or in literary work.17 Of these, Jonson was, of course, by far ...
... Ben Jonson Restaurant in San Francisco's Ghirardelli Square featured Hearst Castle decor. The Mediterranean and Steer's for Steaks were two fine-dining venues that sat across the street from The Prime Rib in Los Angeles and often ...
... Ben Jonson in Every Man Out of His Humour). We suggest that the open-minded reader carefully examine the drawing and then ask himself whether or not it could be a fictitious portrait. Beneath the portrait are the words "London Printed ...
... Ben Jonson, who wrote the Address to the Readers and the eulogy of "Shakespeare" was down and out financially, when ... Jonson, regularly received from them substantial gifts in money, as did Donne, Massinger, Browne and other ...
... Ben Jonson in the Cannery near Fisherman's Wharf is a different sort of experience. The Ben Jonson is an old English pub reconstructed from Elizabethan times. The menu contains English dishes — beef Wellington and steak and oyster pie ...
... Ben Jonson's plays, though a fine piece of advocacy, will not bear examination. Ben Jonson uses legal terms in mere buffoonery and satire, and these do not stand up to the examples of Shakespearean legal profundity, noticed by Lord ...
... Ben Jonson makes a volte- face and, in a spirit of devotion to truth, gives us the real Shakespeare, the supreme poet, in his Introductory Poem. ... I confess thy writings to be such As neither Man nor Muse can praise too much. 'Tis ...
... Ben Jonson: "Not for an age but for all time." The class emblem was a tree with seven leaves symbolizing the seven ideals of Monticello: dignity, beauty, loyalty, thoroughness, service, democracy and friendship. GRADUATION EXERCISES ...