The British Theatre: Or, A Collection of Plays, which are Acted at the Theatres Royal, Drury Lane, Convent Gardin, Haymarket, and Lyceum, Volume 14Mrs. Inchbald Hurst, Robinson, 1824 |
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Página 17
... out a Purse - she eyes it . Phil . What pretence have I to what is in your hands , Mr Thomas ? Tom . As thus : there are hours , you B 2 SCENE L ] THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS . 17 Phil. Commands about parting are grown mighty ...
... out a Purse - she eyes it . Phil . What pretence have I to what is in your hands , Mr Thomas ? Tom . As thus : there are hours , you B 2 SCENE L ] THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS . 17 Phil. Commands about parting are grown mighty ...
Página 18
... eyes quite open to look at her own dear image in the glass . Phil . Explain thyself , and don't be so fond of thy own prating . Tom . There are also prosperous and good natured moments , as when a knot or a patch is happily fixed , when ...
... eyes quite open to look at her own dear image in the glass . Phil . Explain thyself , and don't be so fond of thy own prating . Tom . There are also prosperous and good natured moments , as when a knot or a patch is happily fixed , when ...
Página 30
... eyes , and the guiltless joy of my heart . But the best condition of human life is but a gentler misery , To hope for perfect happiness is vain , And love has ever its allays of pain . [ Exit SCENE II . INDIANA'S Lodgings . Enter ...
... eyes , and the guiltless joy of my heart . But the best condition of human life is but a gentler misery , To hope for perfect happiness is vain , And love has ever its allays of pain . [ Exit SCENE II . INDIANA'S Lodgings . Enter ...
Página 31
... eyes are cast another way , and I dare survey him , my heart is painfully divided between shame and love- I say , thus it is with me while I see him ; and in his absence I am entertained with nothing but your en- deavours to tear this ...
... eyes are cast another way , and I dare survey him , my heart is painfully divided between shame and love- I say , thus it is with me while I see him ; and in his absence I am entertained with nothing but your en- deavours to tear this ...
Página 32
... eyes are all that ever told me that he was mine . I know his virtue , I know his filial piety , and ought to trust his management with a father to whom he has uncommon obligations . What have I to be concerned for ? My lesson is very ...
... eyes are all that ever told me that he was mine . I know his virtue , I know his filial piety , and ought to trust his management with a father to whom he has uncommon obligations . What have I to be concerned for ? My lesson is very ...
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The British Theatre; Or, A Collection of Plays: Which are Acted at the ... Mrs. Inchbald Visualização integral - 1808 |
The British Theatre; Or, A Collection of Plays: Which are Acted at the ... Mrs. Inchbald Visualização integral - 1808 |
The British Theatre; Or, A Collection of Plays: Which are Acted at the ... Mrs. Inchbald Visualização integral - 1808 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Balaam Bevil Bronze Brul Brulgruddery Charles CHARLES STANLEY Cimb Cimberton CONSCIOUS LOVERS daughter dear Dennis Ellen Exeunt Exit father fellow FERMENT feyther Frank Fred Frederick gentleman give hand happiness hear heart Heaven honour hope Humph Jessy Julia LADY BETTY Lady Car Lady Caroline Lady E LADY EASY Lady G Lady Graveairs letter look LORD AVONDALE Lord F Lord Fitz Lord Foppington LORD MORELOVE lordship madam marriage married Mary matter MISS VORTEX Myrt Nabob never Oatland Old Rap pardon Pereg Phil poor Pray pretty PROMPT BOOK Rochdale SCENE Seal SEALAND servant Shelah Shuff Shuffleton Sir Char Sir Hub Sir Hubert Sir Simon soul speak Stanley suppose sure talk Tarragan tell THEATRES ROYAL thee there's thing Thornberry thou thought told Tyke What's wife woman Young Rap YOUNG RAPID Zounds
Passagens conhecidas
Página 57 - Bounty! when gluttons give high prices for delicates, they are prodigious bountiful! IND. Still, still you will persist in that error. But my own fears tell me all. You are the gentleman, I suppose, for whose happy daughter he is designed a husband by his good father, and he has, perhaps, consented to the overture. He was here this morning, dressed beyond his usual plainness— nay, most sumptuously— and he is to be, perhaps, this night a bridegroom.
Página 30 - Cimberton is your mother's kinsman, and three hundred years an older gentleman than any lover you ever had; for which reason, with that of his prodigious large estate, she is resolved on him, and has sent to consult the lawyers accordingly— nay, has (whether you know it or no) been in treaty with Sir...
Página 2 - ... like a woman of condition, as it were, on the same floor with them, pass by. Alas! alas! it is a sad thing to walk. O Fortune! Fortune! TOM. What! a sad thing to walk? Why, Madam Phillis, do you wish yourself lame? PHIL. No, Mr.
Página 16 - ... like one ; in my appearance abroad and my furniture at home, every way in the most sumptuous manner, and he that does it has an artifice, a design in it?
Página 10 - ... tis the beauty of the mind alone that gives us lasting value. " LADY BETTY. Oh ! my dear ! my dear ! you have been a married woman to a fine purpose indeed, that know so little of the taste of mankind. Take my word, a new fashion upon a fine woman is often a greater proof of her value than you are aware of.
Página 33 - Don't take on so — don't you, now! Pray, listen to reason. JOB. I won't! BUR. Pray do! JOB. I won't! Reason bid me love my child and help my friend: what's the consequence? My friend has run one way and broke up my trade ; my daughter has run another and broke my no, she shall never have it to say she broke my heart. If I hang myself for grief, she shan't know she made me. BUR. Well, but master JOB. And reason told me to take you into my shop when the fat churchwardens starved you at the workhouse...