The dramatic works of ... George Granville |
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Página 12
... comes not here , I know it by my fears , For honours , nor for wealth : for me he comes , To take me from your arms , and from your bosom , And bear me where I ne'er fhall fee you more . Will Agamemnon let him ? Ag . What armies brings ...
... comes not here , I know it by my fears , For honours , nor for wealth : for me he comes , To take me from your arms , and from your bosom , And bear me where I ne'er fhall fee you more . Will Agamemnon let him ? Ag . What armies brings ...
Página 15
... comes down , And covers with its ruins all the place : So look our strong battalions , and fo fall Whole ranks at once , and the dead lie on heaps . O Phoebus ! stay thy hand that shoots unseen ; All peftilence , all fevers are from ...
... comes down , And covers with its ruins all the place : So look our strong battalions , and fo fall Whole ranks at once , and the dead lie on heaps . O Phoebus ! stay thy hand that shoots unseen ; All peftilence , all fevers are from ...
Página 17
... comes not empty - handed to demand His daughter back- - the priest a ransom brings As might content Ag . The avarice of a priest . Were I old Neftor , past the age of love , I might fell mine — I scorn his proffer'd treasure ; My ...
... comes not empty - handed to demand His daughter back- - the priest a ransom brings As might content Ag . The avarice of a priest . Were I old Neftor , past the age of love , I might fell mine — I scorn his proffer'd treasure ; My ...
Página 35
... comes in view , Her beauty reconciles the most enrag'd ; The fick , who know they perish for her fake , Crawl from their tents to gaze upon her face , And looking on her , feel returns of strength . Soldiers and captains throng in ...
... comes in view , Her beauty reconciles the most enrag'd ; The fick , who know they perish for her fake , Crawl from their tents to gaze upon her face , And looking on her , feel returns of strength . Soldiers and captains throng in ...
Página 37
... comes on apace , and treads us near . To stay , is to undo the man I love ; Shall I , fhall I do that ? Art . Ulyffes , madam . Ulyffes entering . Chru . Ha ! thou haft rous'd a thought ! no ; ' tis impoffible : To doubt's an injury ...
... comes on apace , and treads us near . To stay , is to undo the man I love ; Shall I , fhall I do that ? Art . Ulyffes , madam . Ulyffes entering . Chru . Ha ! thou haft rous'd a thought ! no ; ' tis impoffible : To doubt's an injury ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
Achilles afide againſt Agamemnon Airy Amadis Angelica Anto Antonio Arcab Arcabon Arcal Arcalaus arms Atrides Baff Baffa Baffanio Bellamour beſt bleffing Brifeis Chalcas charms chooſe Chru Chrufeis Clever Conft Conftantia Courtall curfe dear ducats Eurybates ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes fafe falfe fame fate feem fervants fhall fifters fight fince firſt flave fome fool foul Fred ftand ftill fuch fure fword give gods Grat Gratiano hand heart heaven himſelf honour juſt king lady Dorimen laſt leaſt loft lover Lucinda madam moſt mufic muſt myſelf Neft Neftor Neriffa never Oriana paffion paſt Patroclus pleaſe pleaſure Portia pow'r Prate prieſt reaſon rife ſay SCENE ſhall ſhe ſhould Shyl Shylock Sir Toby ſpeak ſtage ſtand ſtay ſtill ſtrange Talthybius thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand Ulyf Ulyffes Vaunter woman worfe yourſelf
Passagens conhecidas
Página 148 - And all for use of that which is mine own. Well then, it now appears you need my help : Go to, then ; you come to me, and you say Shylock, we would have moneys...
Página 3 - Thine be the laurel then j thy blooming age Can beft, if any can, fupport the ftage ; Which fo declines, that fhortly we may fee Players and plays reduc'd to fecond infancy. Sharp to the world, but thoughtlefs of renown, They plot not on the ftage, but on the town, And, in defpair their empty pit to fill, Set up fome foreign monfter in a bill. Thus they jog on, ftill tricking, never thriving, And murd'ring plays, which they mifcal reviving. Our fenfe is nonfenfe, thro...
Página 222 - Blame them who wound, and not your flave who dies: If we may love, then fure we may declare ; If we may not, ah ! why are you fo fair ? Who can unmov'd behold that heavenly face, Thofe radiant eyes, and that rcfiftlcfs grace i OK i AN A.
Página 209 - What faid I not, upon the fatal night, When you avow'd your meditated flight ? ^Was it your love that prompted you to part, To leave me dying, and to break my heart ? See whom you fled, inhuman and ingrate, Repent your folly, but repent too late.
Página 231 - Love had been yours, to die had been my part : Thus Fate divides the prize; though Beauty's mine, Yet Fame, our other mistress, is more thine.
Página 228 - Wrong not my virtue, to fuppofe that I Can grant to love, what duty muft deny ; A father's will is wanting, and my...
Página 211 - Frefti from her Wound: Pale Horror and Affright Seiz'd the falfe Man, confounded at the Sight, Trembling he gaz'd...
Página 230 - sa burthen to himfelf and you, Fate and the king all other means deny To fet you free, but that Conftantius die : A Roman arm had play'da...
Página 211 - Banifh'd from joy, from empire, and from light; In death involve me, and in endlefs night, But keep— that odious objeft— from my fight.
Página 200 - Friendfhip, efteem, be yours ; bereft before Of all my love, what can I offer more ? Your rival's image in your worth I view, And what I lov'd in him, efteem in you ; Had your complaint been...