= Sir John
Suckling
(ed.
Ben Jonson - The Devil's Association
6.
92 when I said, a glasse could speake=, etc.
Cf.
1. 6. 80 f.
=2. 6. 100 And from her arched browes=, etc. Swinburne
says of this line: 'The wheeziest of barrel-organs, the most
broken-winded of bagpipes, grinds or snorts out sweeter music
than that. '--_Study of Ben Jonson_, p. 104.
=2. 6. 104 Have you seene.
= Sir John Suckling (ed. 1874, p.
79) imitates this stanza:
Hast thou seen the down in the air
When wanton blasts have tossed it?
Or the ship on the sea,
When ruder winds have crossed it?
Hast thou marked the crocodile's weeping,
Or the fox's sleeping?
Or hast viewed the peacock in his pride,
Or the dove by his bride
When he courts for his lechery?
O, so fickle, O, so vain, O, so false, so false is she!
=2. 6. 104 a bright Lilly grow. = The figures of the lily, the snow,
and the swan's down have already been used in _The Fox_, _Wks. _ 3.
195. The source of that passage is evidently Martial, _Epig. _ 1. 115:
Loto candidior puella cygno,
Argento, nive, lilio, ligustro.
1. 6. 80 f.
=2. 6. 100 And from her arched browes=, etc. Swinburne
says of this line: 'The wheeziest of barrel-organs, the most
broken-winded of bagpipes, grinds or snorts out sweeter music
than that. '--_Study of Ben Jonson_, p. 104.
=2. 6. 104 Have you seene.
= Sir John Suckling (ed. 1874, p.
79) imitates this stanza:
Hast thou seen the down in the air
When wanton blasts have tossed it?
Or the ship on the sea,
When ruder winds have crossed it?
Hast thou marked the crocodile's weeping,
Or the fox's sleeping?
Or hast viewed the peacock in his pride,
Or the dove by his bride
When he courts for his lechery?
O, so fickle, O, so vain, O, so false, so false is she!
=2. 6. 104 a bright Lilly grow. = The figures of the lily, the snow,
and the swan's down have already been used in _The Fox_, _Wks. _ 3.
195. The source of that passage is evidently Martial, _Epig. _ 1. 115:
Loto candidior puella cygno,
Argento, nive, lilio, ligustro.