Bell's British Theatre: Consisting of the Most Esteemed English Plays, Zväzok 25and under the direction of George Cawthorn, British Library, Strand, 1797 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 62.
Strana vi
... kind consent ! Love's passion here in each extreme is shown , In CHARLOT'S smile , or in MARIA'S frown . With words like these , that fail'd not to engage , Love courted beauty in a golden age ; Pure and untaught , such nature first ...
... kind consent ! Love's passion here in each extreme is shown , In CHARLOT'S smile , or in MARIA'S frown . With words like these , that fail'd not to engage , Love courted beauty in a golden age ; Pure and untaught , such nature first ...
Strana viii
... kind ; Sincere and equal to thy neighbour's name , How swift to praise , how guiltless to defame ! Bold in thy presence bashfulness appears , And backward merit loses all its fears . Supremely blest by heaven , heaven's richest grace ...
... kind ; Sincere and equal to thy neighbour's name , How swift to praise , how guiltless to defame ! Bold in thy presence bashfulness appears , And backward merit loses all its fears . Supremely blest by heaven , heaven's richest grace ...
Strana x
... Kind muse , skiff to the bent away , To try anes mair the landart lay , With a ' thy speed , Since BURCHET awns that thou can play Upon the reed . Anes , anes again , beneath some tree , Exert thy skill and natʼral glee , To him wha has ...
... Kind muse , skiff to the bent away , To try anes mair the landart lay , With a ' thy speed , Since BURCHET awns that thou can play Upon the reed . Anes , anes again , beneath some tree , Exert thy skill and natʼral glee , To him wha has ...
Strana 20
... Kind Patie , now fair fa ' your honest heart , Ye're ay sae cadgy , and ha'e sic an art To hearten ane : For now as cleen's a leek , Ye've cherish'd me , since ye began to speak . Sae for your pains , I'll mak ye a propine , ( My mither ...
... Kind Patie , now fair fa ' your honest heart , Ye're ay sae cadgy , and ha'e sic an art To hearten ane : For now as cleen's a leek , Ye've cherish'd me , since ye began to speak . Sae for your pains , I'll mak ye a propine , ( My mither ...
Strana 23
... `ry like , and may be free : The chiels may a ' knit up themselves for me . Peggy . Be doing your wa's ; for me I have a mind To be as yielding as my Patie's kind . Jenny . Heh , lass ! how can you looe Act I. 23 THE GENTLE SHEPHERD .
... `ry like , and may be free : The chiels may a ' knit up themselves for me . Peggy . Be doing your wa's ; for me I have a mind To be as yielding as my Patie's kind . Jenny . Heh , lass ! how can you looe Act I. 23 THE GENTLE SHEPHERD .
Časté výrazy a frázy
Abdalla Amestris arms Arsaces art thou Arta Artaban Artaxerxes Artemisa Aspasia auld Bauldy beauty blate blood bonny breast Cali Camillo charms Cleone dear death Demetrius Don Fel dost dread Elspa enters ev'n Exeunt Exit eyes fair fatal beauty fate father fear fool frae gi'e give Glaud gods Greece ha'e hand happy hast hear heart heaven honour hope Irene Isab Jacin Jacinta Jenny king lassie Leonora Leontius lord madam Madge maid master maun Mause Memnon Metaph Mirza nae mair ne'er night o'er passion Patie peace Peggy pity prince Queen rage Roger SANG SCENE secret Sir William slave smile snood soon soul speak sultan sure Symon tell thee there's thine thing thou art thought villain virtue weel wretched
Populárne pasáže
Strana 16 - The wise and active conquer difficulties, By daring to attempt them. Sloth and folly Shiver and shrink at sight of toil and hazard, And make th
Strana vii - The peaceful dwellings where she fix'd her seat. The pleasing fields she wont of old to grace. Companion to an upright sober race ; When on the sunny hill or verdant plain, Free and familiar with the sons of men, To crown the pleasures of the blameless feast, She uninvited came a welcome guest: Ere yet an age, grown rich in impious arts...
Strana 14 - Just enter'd in her teens, Fair as the day, and sweet as May, Fair as the day, and always gay ; My Peggy is a young thing, And I'm not very auld, Yet well I like to meet her at The wauking o
Strana 37 - To-morrow's action ? Can that hoary wisdom, Borne down with years, still doat upon to-morrow ? That fatal mistress of the young, the lazy, The coward, and the fool condemned to lose An useless life in waiting for to-morrow, To gaze with longing eyes upon to-morrow, Till interposing death destroys the prospect ! Strange ! that this general fraud from day to day Should fill the world with wretches undetected.
Strana 5 - Unmov'd, though witlings sneer and rivals rail, " Studious to please, yet not asham'd to fail, " He scorns the meek address, the suppliant strain, " With merit needless, and without it vain ; " In Reason, Nature, Truth, he dares to trust; " Ye fops be silent, and ye wits be just ! " was written by Sir William Yonge.
Strana 61 - tis useless to reproach you ; she that is capable of what you have done, is formed too cruel ever to repent of it. Go on then, tyrant ; make your bliss complete ; torment me still ; for still, alas ! I love enough to be tormented. Leo. Ah, Carlos ! little do you know the tender movements of that thing you name ; the heart where love presides, admits no thought against the honour of its ruler.
Strana 27 - May sic ill luck befa' that silly she Wha has sic fears, for that was never me ! Let fowk bode weel, and strive to do their best ; Nae mair's required, — let Heaven make out the rest. I've heard my honest uncle aften say That lads should a...
Strana 10 - Awake, Demetrius, from this dismal dream, Sink not beneath imaginary sorrows ; Call to your aid your courage and your wisdom ; Think on the sudden change of human scenes ; Think on the various accidents of war ; Think on the mighty power of awful virtue ; Think on that Providence that guards the good.
Strana 8 - San. For my part, master, I'm not so great a philosopher as you be, nor (thank my stars) so bitter a lover, but what I see — that I generally believe ; and when Jacinta tells me she loves me dearly, I have good thoughts enough of my person never to doubt the truth on't. See, here the baggage comes.
Strana 14 - Flows through each member of th' embodied state; Sure, not unconscious of the mighty blessing, Her grateful sons shine bright with ev'ry virtue ; Untainted with the LUST OF INNOVATION, Sure all unite to hold her league of rule Unbroken as the sacred chain of nature, That links the jarring elements in peace.