The Double Dealer: A ComedyJ. Bell, 1797 - 120 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 64
Sivu 17
... speak but three wolland khoa you . Brisk . Enough , enough . Careless , por ou prehension along with you . Care . Pert coxcomb . Mel . ' Faith , ' t is a good - natured és qu'a , very entertaining follies- -You m to him ; at this ...
... speak but three wolland khoa you . Brisk . Enough , enough . Careless , por ou prehension along with you . Care . Pert coxcomb . Mel . ' Faith , ' t is a good - natured és qu'a , very entertaining follies- -You m to him ; at this ...
Sivu 48
... speak what I do think , and when I speak what I do not think - the very same and dear dissimulation is the only art not to be known from nature . Why will mankind be fools , and be deceiv'd ? And why are friends ' and lovers ' oaths ...
... speak what I do think , and when I speak what I do not think - the very same and dear dissimulation is the only art not to be known from nature . Why will mankind be fools , and be deceiv'd ? And why are friends ' and lovers ' oaths ...
Sivu 48
... speak what I do and when I speak what I do not think- same -and dear dissimulation is the only art be known from nature . Why will mankind be fools , and be deceiv And why are friends ' and lovers ' oath each who searches strictly his o ...
... speak what I do and when I speak what I do not think- same -and dear dissimulation is the only art be known from nature . Why will mankind be fools , and be deceiv And why are friends ' and lovers ' oath each who searches strictly his o ...
Sivu 48
... speak his security in her unfeigned plea- You censure hardly , my lord ; my sister's very well known . -Yes , I believe I know some that have been acquainted with it . This is a little trick by some pitiful contriver , envious of my ne ...
... speak his security in her unfeigned plea- You censure hardly , my lord ; my sister's very well known . -Yes , I believe I know some that have been acquainted with it . This is a little trick by some pitiful contriver , envious of my ne ...
Sivu 48
... speak my thoughts in any thing that may be to my cousin's disadvantage ; besides , I find , my lord , you are pre- pared to receive an ill impression from any opinion of mine which is not consenting with your own : but since I am like ...
... speak my thoughts in any thing that may be to my cousin's disadvantage ; besides , I find , my lord , you are pre- pared to receive an ill impression from any opinion of mine which is not consenting with your own : but since I am like ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Abbot agad Araminta arms Bell Bellmour Bless blót Bluff breast Brisk Careless charms confess Crete crimes cruel Cynthia dear death devil egad Enter Ev'n Exeunt Exit eyes father fear Fond fool fury Gads-bud give godlike gods grief guilt hath hear heart Heartwell Heaven Henry's Hippolitus honour hope incest Ismena King Lady F Lady Froth ladyship Laet laugh letter look lord Lord Harry lov'd Lucy Lycon madam marriage marry Mask Maskwell Mellefont Minos never o'er passion Phad Phaed Phædra pity pow'rs Pr'ythee Procrustes Queen rage Rosa Rosamond Sharp Sharper shew sighs Sir Jos Sir Joseph Sir Paul sorrows soul speak stay swear sword tears tell thee there's Theseus thing thou art thou hast thought TOUCHWOOD Vainlove vengeance vex'd villain virtue what's wife woman wretched youth
Suositut otteet
Sivu 11 - WELL then, the promised hour is come at last, The present age of wit obscures the past: Strong were our sires, and as they fought they writ, Conquering with force of arms and dint of wit: Theirs was the giant race before the flood ; And thus, when Charles return'd, our empire stood. Like Janus...
Sivu 11 - But what we gain'd in skill, we lost in strength. Our builders were with want of genius cursed; The second temple was not like the first: Till you, the best Vitruvius, come at length, Our beauties equal, but excel our strength.
Sivu 2 - O Gad, I hate your hideous fancy — you said that once before — if you must talk impertinently, for Heaven's sake let it be with variety; don't come always, like the devil, wrapt in flames. I'll not hear a sentence more, that begins with an 'I burn' — or an 'I beseech you, madam.
Sivu 55 - Then she's always ready to laugh when Sneer offers to speak, and sits in expectation of his no jest, with her gums bare, and her mouth open — Brisk. Like an oyster at low ebb, egad — Ha ! ha ! ha ! Cyn. [Aside.] Well, I find there are no fools so inconsiderable in themselves, but they can render other people contemptible by exposing their infirmities.
Sivu 69 - Ay, but by your own virtue and continency that matter of fact is all his own doing. I confess I had a great desire to have some honours conferred upon me, which lie all in your ladyship's breast, and he being a well-spoken man, I desired him to intercede for me.
Sivu 53 - No ; for the sun it won't, but it will do for the coachman ; for you know there's most occasion for a coach in wet weather. Brisk. Right, right ; that saves all. Lady F.
Sivu 82 - I'll bear the railings of a losing gamester. — But should he find me out before! 'tis dangerous to delay. — Let me think — should my lord proceed to treat openly of my marriage with Cynthia, all must be discovered, and Mellefont can be no longer blinded.
Sivu 36 - No, marriage is rather like a game at bowls: fortune indeed makes the match, and the two nearest, and sometimes the two farthest, are together, but the game depends entirely upon judgment. CYNT. Still it is a game, and consequently one of us must be a loser.
Sivu 43 - Well, you must know, then, that all my contrivances were but bubbles ; till at last I pretended to have been long secretly in love with Cynthia ; that did my business ; that convinced your aunt I might be trusted, since it was as much my interest as hers to break the match : then, she thought my jealousy might qualify me to assist her in her revenge; and, in short, in that belief, told me the secrets of her heart. At length we made this agreement, if I accomplish her designs (as I told you before)...
Sivu 128 - Undoubtedly he did, sir. Faith, Hannibal was a very pretty fellow. But, Sir Joseph, comparisons are odious. Hannibal was a very pretty fellow in those days, it must be granted. But alas! sir, were he alive now, he would be nothing, nothing in the earth.