Philip Massinger

Philip Massinger
Philip Massingerwas an English dramatist. His finely plotted plays, including A New Way to Pay Old Debts, The City Madam and The Roman Actor, are noted for their satire and realism, and their political and social themes...
NationalityEnglish
ProfessionDramatist
Date of Birth2 May 1908
call majesty mean remarkable
And what, in a mean man, I should call folly,/ Is in your majesty remarkable wisdom.
ignorant learned pray worse
Pray enter, You are learned Europeans, and we worse Than ignorant Americans
glued mine takes undone widow wronged
Some undone widow sits upon mine arm,/ And takes away the use of it; 1 and my sword,/ Glued to my scabbard with wronged orphans' tears,/ Will not be drawn.
last love violent
Let us love temperately, things violent last not.
govern
He that would govern others, first should be Master of himself.
dares valiant
He is not valiant that dares die, but he that boldly bears calamity.
cannot desperate driven middle steer
I am driven / Into a desperate strait and cannot steer / A middle course.
Now speak, / Or be for ever silent.
death doors shall thousand
Death has a thousand doors to let out life: I shall find one
mean greatness men
Greatness, with private men Esteem'd a blessing, is to me a curse; And we, whom, for our high births, they conclude The happy freemen, are the only slaves. Happy the golden mean!
summer adversity autumn
0 summer friendship, whose flat-tering leaves shadowed us in our prosperity, With the least gust, drop off in the autumn of adversity.
men liberty wedlock
For any man to match above his rank is but to sell his liberty.
greatness challenges vices
Virtue, thou in rags, may challenge more than vice set off with all the trim of greatness.
suicide lying bears
He is not valiant that dares lie; but he that boldly bears calamity.