Dramatic Works: To which is Prefixed a Life of the Author, Volumen3A. Millar, 1798 |
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Página 83
... free-- Good night ; this company's too good for me . [ going . Col. T. Your judgment , dear Sir Patrick , makes us proud . All laugh . Sir Pat . Laugh if you please , but pray don't laugh too Col. T. loud . RECITATIVE . [ Exit . Now the ...
... free-- Good night ; this company's too good for me . [ going . Col. T. Your judgment , dear Sir Patrick , makes us proud . All laugh . Sir Pat . Laugh if you please , but pray don't laugh too Col. T. loud . RECITATIVE . [ Exit . Now the ...
Página 95
... free from the head - ach ever since . Miss Fuz . I shall never forget what a flump my papa came down with - Ha , ha , ha ! Sir Mac . The tenderness runs in the family , ' Sir Toby . Lady Fuz . Pray , don't you adore Shakespear , Sir Mac ...
... free from the head - ach ever since . Miss Fuz . I shall never forget what a flump my papa came down with - Ha , ha , ha ! Sir Mac . The tenderness runs in the family , ' Sir Toby . Lady Fuz . Pray , don't you adore Shakespear , Sir Mac ...
Página 98
... free with ? Miss Fuz . This is the young gentleman actor , mama whose benefit we were at last summer , and while you were , busy acting in the Green Room , I stole out to try how my voice would sound upon the stage , and finding him ...
... free with ? Miss Fuz . This is the young gentleman actor , mama whose benefit we were at last summer , and while you were , busy acting in the Green Room , I stole out to try how my voice would sound upon the stage , and finding him ...
Página 103
... - sleep - and - sno - o - re . [ Sinks by degrees upon a couch , and falls asleep . ] Orph . Rec . ' Tis done , I'm free , And now for thee , Eurydice ! E 3 Pehold Behold what's seldom seen in life , I leave my THE CURTAIN , 103.
... - sleep - and - sno - o - re . [ Sinks by degrees upon a couch , and falls asleep . ] Orph . Rec . ' Tis done , I'm free , And now for thee , Eurydice ! E 3 Pehold Behold what's seldom seen in life , I leave my THE CURTAIN , 103.
Página 107
... free with her father and mo- ther , she shou'd have more manners than to treat me so ; I'll tell her as much when I see her . The second act shall be ready next week : I depend upon you for a prologue ; your genius- Pat . You are too ...
... free with her father and mo- ther , she shou'd have more manners than to treat me so ; I'll tell her as much when I see her . The second act shall be ready next week : I depend upon you for a prologue ; your genius- Pat . You are too ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Artb Auth Bates Betty Britons Brush Cant Canton Ch Maid Clod Colonel dancing daughter dear devil door Duke Emmeline Enter Sir excuse Exeunt Exit father fellow fool fortune Free gentlemen Gipsy girl give Grimbald happy hear heart heav'n Heidel Heidelberg honour hope Jessamy Keck Kitty L Ogle Lady Fuz Lady Min Lady Minikin ladyship LOgle look Lord Min lord Ogleby lordship Lovewell ma'am Madam marriage marry matter Miss Fanny Miss Fuz Miss Ster Miss Tit Nepb Neph Nephew never Ogle Orph Orpheus passion Patrick O'Neale Pbil Phil Philidel poor pray Promp SCENE servant sigbs Sir Har Sir Harry Sir John Melvil Sir Mac Sir Toby sister spirits Sterl sure sweet tell thee there's thing thou Tittup Tivy Whit Whittle Widow wife wou'd young Zounds
Pasajes populares
Página 36 - ... enough, almost just on the eve of the circuits. — Let me see — the Home, the Midland, and Western, — ay, we can all cross the country well enough to our several destinations. — Traverse, when do you begin at Hertford ? Traverse.
Página 167 - What wretches are ordinary servants, that go on in the same vulgar track every day ! eating, working, and sleeping ! — But we, who have the honour to serve the nobility, are of another species. We are above the common forms, have servants to wait upon us, and are as lazy and luxurious as our masters.
Página 35 - I am determined on a discovery. I dread it, and am resolved to hasten it. It is surrounded with more horrors every instant, as it appears every instant more necessary. [Exit.
Página 39 - After having carried the negotiation between our families to so great a length, after having assented so readily to all your proposals, as well as received so many instances of your cheerful compliance with the demands made on our part, I am extremely concerned, Mr. Sterling, to be the involuntary cause of any uneasiness.
Página 41 - I'll tell you, Sir, — You know, that by the articles at present subsisting between us, on the day of my marriage with Miss Sterling, you agree to pay down the gross sum of eighty thousand pounds.
Página 26 - Ay, or a bowl of punch, or a can of flip, Mr. Sterling! for it looks like a cabin in the air. If flying chairs were in use, the captain might make a voyage to the Indies in it still, if he had but a fair wind.
Página 40 - Come, come, Mr. Sterling, I know you to be a man of sense, a man of business, a man of the world. I'll deal frankly with you ; and you shall see that I don't desire a change of measures for my own gratification without endeavouring to make it advantageous to you.
Página 195 - O'Neale? NEPHEW: The same. She was sacrificed to the most senseless, drunken profligate in the whole country. He lived to run out his fortune, and the only advantage she got from the union was he broke that and his neck, before he had broke her heart. BATES: The affair of marriage is in this country put upon the easiest footing; there is neither love or hate in the matter; necessity brings them together; they are united at first for their mutual convenience, and...
Página 28 - John. At length, thank heaven, I have an opportunity to unbosom. — I know you are faithful, Lovewell, and flatter myself you would rejoice to serve me.
Página 6 - Do not disturb yourself with conjectures — but rest assured, that though you are unable to divine the cause, the consequence of a discovery, be it what it will, cannot be attended with half the miseries of the present interval.