The Minor Theatre: Being a Collection of the Most Approved Farces, Operas, and Comedies, in One, Two and Three Acts, Випуск 2J. Jarvis, 1794 |
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Сторінка 13
... look'd - for come at last . pray , Mr. Hartop , how many newspapers may you have printed in a week ? But Har . About an hundred and fifty , Sir Gregory . Sir Greg . Good now , good now ! and all full , I reckon ; full as an egg ...
... look'd - for come at last . pray , Mr. Hartop , how many newspapers may you have printed in a week ? But Har . About an hundred and fifty , Sir Gregory . Sir Greg . Good now , good now ! and all full , I reckon ; full as an egg ...
Сторінка 28
... look so well . You keep your own , Sir Penuri- ous . Har . Ay , ay , stout enough , Sir Gregory ; stout enough , brother knight ; hearty as an oak . Hey , Dick Gad , now I talk of an oak , I'll tell you a story of an oak . It will make ...
... look so well . You keep your own , Sir Penuri- ous . Har . Ay , ay , stout enough , Sir Gregory ; stout enough , brother knight ; hearty as an oak . Hey , Dick Gad , now I talk of an oak , I'll tell you a story of an oak . It will make ...
Сторінка 31
... look at me , knight ; I am in the tip of the mode ; now am I in full dress ; hey Dick ? Jenk . You , Sir , don't want the aid of dress ; but in Mr. Gazette , a little regard to that particular is but a necessary compliment to his ...
... look at me , knight ; I am in the tip of the mode ; now am I in full dress ; hey Dick ? Jenk . You , Sir , don't want the aid of dress ; but in Mr. Gazette , a little regard to that particular is but a necessary compliment to his ...
Сторінка 5
... look upon't , it makes me cry : This play would tears from blood - stain'd soldiers draw , And melt the bowels of hard - hearted law ! Would fore and aft the storm - proof sailor rake ; Keep turtle - eating aldermen awake ! Would the ...
... look upon't , it makes me cry : This play would tears from blood - stain'd soldiers draw , And melt the bowels of hard - hearted law ! Would fore and aft the storm - proof sailor rake ; Keep turtle - eating aldermen awake ! Would the ...
Сторінка 9
... look You'll deign to view me , grant my earnest pray'r ! Let me but finish this my sad inscription ; Then let this busy , this afflicted heart , Be still at once , and beat my breast no more . [ She goes on with her work . Enter SYLVIA ...
... look You'll deign to view me , grant my earnest pray'r ! Let me but finish this my sad inscription ; Then let this busy , this afflicted heart , Be still at once , and beat my breast no more . [ She goes on with her work . Enter SYLVIA ...
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The Minor Theatre: Being a Collection of the Most Approved Farces ..., Випуск 2 Повний перегляд - 1794 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
aunt Belf Bell Belleisle better Betty bull-baiting Capt Captain Ch'am coming child Colonel Tamper Const Constantia cousin Hartop d'ye dan't dear devil Dick ecod Emily Enter Sir ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes fath and sole father fellow Ferdinand Flash Flora Florival fortune Frib Fribble Friendly's gentleman give glad happy Havannah hear heart Heav'n Henrico honour Jasper Jenk Jenkins Jenny knight Lack-a-day lady look Ma'am Madam Major Belford mind Miss Biddy Miss Suck ne'er never o'er passion poor Prat Prattle pray Prithee Puff rawg rogue SAMUEL FOOTE SCENE servant shou'd Sir Greg Sir Gregory Gazette Sir Penurious Sir Sim Sir Simon Sir Tho sirrah soul sure sweet SYLVIA Taunton Dean tell thee there's thing thou thro Trifle twill wife Wonderful young Zounds
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Сторінка 19 - Tag. Not directly, perhaps ; but I may be the means of helping you to it ; as for example — If you should not like to marry the old man your aunt designs for you, one may find a way to break Bid.
Сторінка 5 - Or — I, a gentleman, did wed The lady I would never bed, Great Agamemnon's royal daughter, Who's coming hither to draw water.
Сторінка 34 - Pardon me, sir ; I never deceived you; nay, you see that I disdained the thought of deceiving you even for a day. Out of respect to our late mutual attachment, I am resolved to deal openly with you. In a word, then, every tl.iii".
Сторінка 10 - Then, as to his intellectual, he is a mere carte blanche ; the last man he is with must afford him matter for the next he goes to. But a story is his idol ; throw him in that, and he swallows it ; no matter what, raw or roasted, savoury or insipid, down it goes, and up again to the first person he meets.
Сторінка 26 - Tag. I have given the Captain one of your old gloves to mumble ; but my Strephon is diverting himself with the more substantial comforts of a cold venison pasty. Bid. What shall we do with the next that comes ? Tag. If Mr. Fribble comes first, I'll clap him up into my lady's store-room. I suppose he is a great maker of marmalade himself, and will have an opportunity of making some critical remarks upon our pastry and sweetmeats.
Сторінка 30 - I am fit to see any company now . This discovery will do me more good, I believe, than all Mr. Prattle's cordial mixtures, as he calls them. Bell. Oh, you're in charming spirits, sister — But Captain Johnson ! you abound in the military, Captains, Colonels, and Majors, by wholesale : Who is Captain Johnson, pray t Em.
Сторінка 21 - Bid. Quite another sort of a man. He speaks like a lady for all the world, and never swears as Mr. Flash does, but wears nice white gloves, and tells me what ribbons become my complexion, where to stick my patches, who is the best milliner, where they sell the best tea, and which is the best wash for the face, and the best paste for the hands ; he is always playing with my...
Сторінка 31 - ... her.] The devil take me but there is no talking to you — how can you use me in this barbarous manner ! if I had the constitution of an alderman, it would sink under my sufferings — hooman nater can't support it.
Сторінка 41 - A very reasonable request. — Come, Madam, pity the poor fellow, and admit him to (your good graces again. Flo. Let us prevail on you, dear Madam. Em. Well ; now I see he is most heartily mortified, I am half inclined to pity him.
Сторінка 8 - With fifteen thousand pounds for her fortune — strong motives, I must confess. — And now, Sir, as you are pleased to say you must depend upon my care and abilities in this affair, I think I have a just right to be acquainted with the particulars of your passion, that I may be the better enabled to serve you.