Tis poor and not becoming perfect gentry
- DMI number:
- 13527
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- First Line:
- Tis poor and not becoming perfect gentry
- Last Line:
- But what our actions make us worthy of
- Poem Genre / Form:
- Extract / snippet from longer work
- Themes:
- Parents and children and Virtue / vice
- Author:
- George Chapman
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Parrott (1914): 583-584 (extract from 'The Ball', Act 4, Scene 1, co-written with James Shirley).
- Author:
- James Shirley
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Parrott (1914): 583-584 (extract from 'The Ball', Act 4, Scene 1, co-written with George Chapman).
- Title:
- The British muse, or, a collection of thoughts moral, natural, and sublime, of our English poets: who flourished in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. [T131617] [ecco]
- Page No(s):
- p.33
- Poem Title:
- [no title]
- Attribution:
- Chapman's and Shirley's Ball
- Attributed To:
- George ChapmanJames Shirley
Poem Aliases
Chapman and Shirley. Ball. Act 4.
Related People
Content/Publication