10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ARMIPOTENT»
Discover the use of
armipotent in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
armipotent and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
five hundred years of chaucer criticism and allusion
Who dost pluck With arm armipotent, etc. A most magnificent image. The epithet
armipotent is from Chaucer, and employed in a manner not unworthy of that ill-
understood master of versification. Chaucer took it from Boccaccio, but turned it ...
Caroline Frances Eleanor Spurgeon, 1925
2
Beaumont and Fletcher: Or, the Finest Scenes, Lyrics, and ...
Who dost pluck With hand armipotent, $-c.] A most magnificent image. The
epithet armipotont is from Chaucer, and employed in a manner not unworthy of
that ill-understood master of versification.. Chaucer took it from Boccaccio, but
turned it ...
3
The Works: Collated ... and Corrected
Unearthed Skulls proclaim, ( 8 3) whose Breath blows down, The teeming Ceres
foyzon, who dost pluck With Hand armipotent from forth blue Clouds, The mason'
d Turrets, that both mak'st and break'st The stony _Girths of Cities -, me thy Pupil
...
Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, 1750
4
Shakspeare's Dramatic Works: With Explanatory Notes. To ...
So he nodded, and soberly did mount au arm-gaunt steed Ant. and Cleof.
Armigero. Who writes himself armigero - Merry Wives of Windsor. Armipotent. The
armipotent Mars - Love's Labor Ln/J. — The armipotent soldier - - AW s Wtii.
Armour.
William Shakespeare, Samuel Ayscough, Nicholas Rowe, 1791
5
A glossary and etymological dictionary of obsolete and ...
Neither does the similitude help the interpretation; the arm is not necessarily lean
, nor is there any the most remote resemblance between its shape or figure and
that of a worn out horse. Armipotent (L. armipotens), powerful in arms, mighty in ...
6
The Works of Francis Beaumont, and Mr. John Fletcher: The ...
Unearthed Skulls proclaim, (83) whose Breath blows down, The teeming Ceres
foyzon, who dost pluck With Hand armipotent from forth blue Clouds, The mason '
d Turrets, that both mak'st and break'st The stony Girths of Cities ; me thy Pupil, ...
Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, Mr. Theobald (Lewis), 1750
7
An index to the remarkable passages and words made use of by ...
For I come hither arm'd against myself : stay not, be gone - Romeo and Juliet.
Arm-gaunt. So he nodded, and soberly did mount an arm-gaunt steed Ant. and
Cleop. Armigero. Who writes himself armigero - Merry Wives of 'Windsor.
Armipotent.
8
The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare
This cannot be Hector. Dum. He's a god or a painter ; for he makes faces. Arm.
The armipotent Mars, of lances 1 the almighty, Gave Hector a gift, — Dum. A gilt
nutmeg. Biron. A lemon. Long. Stuck with cloves 2. Dum. No, cloven. Arm. Peace
* !
William Shakespeare, James Boswell, Alexander Pope, 1821
9
Women Making Shakespeare: Text, Reception and Performance
... hearing to be a malapropism committed by actor or author, is in fact the pivotal
term in Arcite's speech. His god is not 'omnipotent', all-powerful, but 'armipotent',
a Latin term meaning 'mightie in armes', Speght tells us. Arcite's misplaced faith ...
Gordon McMullan, Lena Cowen Orlin, Virginia Mason Vaughan, 2013
... Ribner believes the clouds. 54 armipotent mighty in arms. Armipotent Mars
also appears in LLL 5.2.651 and in KnT 1982 and 2441; in AW 4.3.236 the
Second Lord uses 'armipotent soldier' to 2 kept] 1679; hept Q 3—6] Seward; Q
lines this.
William Shakespeare, Robert Kean Turner, Patricia Tatspaugh, 2012