Homework for Tues.

13
Homework for Tues. continue to work on research project, new deadline, May 5 Group performance assignment Last participation paragraph Play tonight (or this weekend)

description

Homework for Tues. continue to work on research project, new deadline, May 5 G roup performance assignment Last participation paragraph Play tonight (or this weekend). Bottom’s Dream. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Homework for Tues.

Page 1: Homework for Tues.

Homework for Tues.•continue to work on research project, new deadline, May 5•Group performance assignment•Last participation paragraph•Play tonight (or this weekend)

Page 2: Homework for Tues.

Bottom’s DreamI haue had a most rare vision. I had a dreame, past the wit of man, to say, what dreame it was. Man is but an Asse,if he goe about to expound this dreame. Me-thought Iwas, there is no man can tell what. Me-thought I was,and me-thought I had. But man is but a patch'd foole,if he will offer to say, what me-thought I had. The eye ofman hath not heard, the eare of man hath not seen, manshand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceiue, nor hisheart to report, what my dreame was. I will get PeterQuince to write a ballet of this dreame, it shall be calledBottomes Dreame, because it hath no bottome; and I willsing it in the latter end of a play, before the Duke. Per-aduenture, to make it the more gracious, I shall sing it

at her death.

Page 3: Homework for Tues.

1 Corinthians 2[7] But we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hidden wisdom, which God ordained before the world unto our glory:[8] Which none of the princes of this world knew: for had they known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.[9] But as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him.[10] But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.[11] For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.

Page 4: Homework for Tues.

Love MagicThou, thou Lysander, thou hast giuen her rimes,And interchang'd loue-tokens with my childe:Thou hast by Moone-light at her window sung,With faining voice, verses of faining loue,And stolne the impression of her fantasie,With bracelets of thy haire, rings, gawdes, conceits,Knackes, trifles, Nose-gaies, sweet meats (messengersOf strong preuailment in vnhardned youth)With cunning hast thou filch'd my daughters heart,Turn'd her obedience (which is due to me)To stubborne harshnesse. (1.1.36-46)

Page 5: Homework for Tues.

Love MagicLys. Or if there were a simpathie in choise,Warre, death, or sicknesse, did lay siege to it;Making it momentarie, as a sound:Swift as a shadow, short as any dreame,Briefe as the lightning in the collied night,That (in a spleene) vnfolds both heauen and earth;And ere a man hath power to say, behold,The iawes of darkness do deuoure it vp:So quicke bright things come to confusion. (1.1.151-9)

Page 6: Homework for Tues.

Stage MagicBot. That will aske some teares in the true performing of it: if I do it, let the audience looke to their eies:I will mooue stormes; I will condole in some measure.To the rest yet, my chiefe humour is for a tyrant. I could play Ercles rarely, or a part to teare a Cat in, to make all split the raging Rocks; and shiuering shocks shall break the locks of prison gates, and Phibbus carre shall shine from farre, and make and marre the foolish Fates. This was lofty. (1.2.293-301)

Page 7: Homework for Tues.

Herb MagicOb. That very time I say (but thou couldst not)Flying betweene the cold Moone and the earth,Cupid all arm'd; a certaine aime he tookeAt a faire Vestall, throned by the West,And loos'd his loue-shaft smartly from his bow,As it should pierce a hundred thousand hearts,But I might see young Cupids fiery shaftQuencht in the chaste beames of the watry Moone;And the imperiall Votresse passed on,In maiden meditation, fancy free.Yet markt I where the bolt of

Cupid fell.It fell vpon a little westerne flower;Before, milke-white; now purple with loues wound,And maidens call it, Loue in idlenessFetch me that flower; the hearb I shew'd thee once,The iuyce of it, on sleeping eye-lids laid,Will make or man or woman madly doteVpon the next liue creature that it sees.Fetch me this hearbe, and be thou heere againe,Ere the Leuiathan can swim a league.

Page 8: Homework for Tues.

The English Physician, Nicholas Culpepper

Heart's-Ease (Love in Idleness)This is that herb which such physicians as are licensed to blaspheme by authority, without danger of having their tongues burned through with an hot iron, called an herb of the Trinity. It is also called by those that are more moderate, Three Faces in a Hood, Love in Idleness, Cull me to you; and in Sussex we call them Pancies.Place : Besides those which are brought up in gardens, they grow commonly wild in the fields, especially in such as are very barren: sometimes you may find it on the tops of the high hills.Government and virtues : The herb is really saturnine, something cold, viscous, and slimy. A strong decoction of the herbs and flowers (if you will, you may make it into syrup) is an excellent cure for the French pox, the herb being a gallant antivenereal: and that antivenereals are the best cure for that disease, far better and safer than to torment them with the flux, divers foreign physicians have confessed. The spirit of it is excellently good for the convulsions in children, as also for the falling sickness, and a gallant remedy for the inflammation of the lungs and breasts, pleurisy, scabs, itch, &c. It is under the celestial sign Cancer. (http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/66/113/frameset.html)

Page 9: Homework for Tues.

Herb MagicOb I know a banke where the wilde time blowes,Where Oxslips and the nodding Violet growes,Quite ouer-cannoped with luscious woodbine,With sweet muske roses, and with Eglantine;There sleepes Tytania, sometime of the night,Lul'd in these flowers, with dances and delight:And there the snake throwes her enammel'd skinne,Weed wide enough to rap a

Fairy in.And with the iuyce of this Ile streake her eyes,And make her full of hatefull fantasies.Take thou some of it, and seek through this groue;A sweet Athenian Lady is in loueWith a disdainefull youth: annoint his eyes,But doe it when the next thing he espies,May be the Lady.

Page 10: Homework for Tues.

The English Physician, Nicholas Culpepper

Thyme It is in vain to describe an herb so commonly known.Government and virtues : It is a noble strengthener of the lungs, as notable a one as grows; neither is there scarce a better remedy growing for that disease in children which they commonly call the Chin- cough, than it is. It purges the body of phlegm, and is an excellent remedy for shortness of breath. It kills worms in the belly, and being a notable herb of Venus, provokes the terms, gives safe and speedy delivery to women in travail, and brings away the after birth. It is so harmless you need not fear the use of it. An ointment made of it takes away hot swellings and warts, helps the sciatica and dullness of sight, and takes away pains and hardness of the spleen. Tis excellent for those that are troubled with the gout.It eases pains in the loins and hips. The herb taken any way inwardly, comforts the stomach much, and expels wind.http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/66/113/frameset.html

Page 11: Homework for Tues.

Violet

They are a fine pleasing plant of Venus, of a mild nature, no way harmful. All the Violets are cold and moist while they are fresh and green, and are used to cool any heat, or distemperature of the body, either inwardly or outwardly, as inflammations in the eyes, in the matrix or fundament, in imposthumes also, and hot swellings, to drink the decoction of the leaves and flowers made with water in wine, or to apply them poultice-wise to the grieved places: it likewise eases pains in the head, caused through want of sleep; or any other pains arising of heat, being applied in the same manner, or with oil of roses…only picked and dried and drank in water, is said to help the quinsy, and the falling-sickness in children, especially in the beginning of the disease. The flowers of the white Violets ripen and dissolve swellings. http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/66/113/frameset.html

Page 12: Homework for Tues.

Oxslips, Muskroses, Eglantine

Page 13: Homework for Tues.

Woodbine, or Honey-Suckles

It is an herb of Mercury, and appropriated to the lungs; neither is it Crab claims dominion over it; neither is it a foe to the Lion; if the lungs be afflicted by Jupiter, this is your cure. It is fitting a conserve made of the flowers of it were kept in every gentlewoman's house; I know no better cure for an asthma than this: besides, it takes away the evil of the spleen, provokes urine, procures speedy delivery of women in travail, helps cramps, convulsions, and palsies, and whatsoever griefs come of cold or stopping; if you please to make use of it as an ointment, it will clear your skin of morphew, freckles, and sun-burnings, or whatsoever else discolours it, and then the maids will love it. http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/66/113/frameset.html