British Theatre, Том 6J. Bell, 1791 |
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Сторінка 19
... breast e'er felt more woe than mine , “ And Burleigh now may rank me for his friend . " Bur . That such a worth of soul should be abus'd ! " Could I accuse my heart but of a thought " To do you wrong ; if any purpose ever " Against your ...
... breast e'er felt more woe than mine , “ And Burleigh now may rank me for his friend . " Bur . That such a worth of soul should be abus'd ! " Could I accuse my heart but of a thought " To do you wrong ; if any purpose ever " Against your ...
Сторінка 20
... breast ; Honour and gratitude their force resume Within my heart , and every wish is yours . O Cecil , Cecil , what a foe hast thou , A deadly foe , whilst hated Essex lives ! Bur . I know it well , but can assign no cause . Not ...
... breast ; Honour and gratitude their force resume Within my heart , and every wish is yours . O Cecil , Cecil , what a foe hast thou , A deadly foe , whilst hated Essex lives ! Bur . I know it well , but can assign no cause . Not ...
Сторінка 26
... breast of truth . Fair innocence , and faith , Those strangers to thy practis'd heart , shall shield My honour , and preserve my friend . — In vain , Thy malice , with unequal arm , shall strive To tear the applauded wreath from Essex ...
... breast of truth . Fair innocence , and faith , Those strangers to thy practis'd heart , shall shield My honour , and preserve my friend . — In vain , Thy malice , with unequal arm , shall strive To tear the applauded wreath from Essex ...
Сторінка 53
... breast should lodge it ? Call the monster , And let me meet this rebel face to face . Do you withdraw , and wait within our call . [ Exeunt BURLEIGH , & c . Enter ESSEX . You see we dare abide your dang❜rous presence , Tho ' treason ...
... breast should lodge it ? Call the monster , And let me meet this rebel face to face . Do you withdraw , and wait within our call . [ Exeunt BURLEIGH , & c . Enter ESSEX . You see we dare abide your dang❜rous presence , Tho ' treason ...
Сторінка 56
... breast . Essex . Say but , my gracious sovereign , ere I go For ever from your presence , that you think me Guiltless of all attempts against your throne , And sacred life . Your faithful Essex ne'er Could harbour in his breast so foul ...
... breast . Essex . Say but , my gracious sovereign , ere I go For ever from your presence , that you think me Guiltless of all attempts against your throne , And sacred life . Your faithful Essex ne'er Could harbour in his breast so foul ...
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Загальні терміни та фрази
Alic Alicia arms art thou behold Belmour Boad Boadicea bosom brave breast Burleigh Carmelite Christian Cross Cour Courci death dost thou dreadful Dumnorix Earl of Essex Ebran Enob Enter Essex Ev'n ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes faithful falchion fall fame fate fear Flam Flaminius foes gen'rous gentle give Glost Gloster grace gracious grief Gyfford hand hast thou hath hear heart Heav'n Hild honour hope horror husband Icenian injur'd JANE SHORE justice lady live Lord HASTINGS Lord Hildebrand Madam malice mercy Mont Montgomeri ne'er never noble Nottingham o'er passion peace pity pow'r queen rage Roman royal Saint Valori SCENE scorn shame sorrows soul Southampton speak Suetonius tears tell Tenan Tenantius tender terrors thee thou art thou hast thought thro trembling Trinobantians truth valour Venusia virtue woman wou'd wounds wretch
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Сторінка 19 - Age sits with decent grace upon his visage, And worthily becomes his silver locks; He wears the marks of many years well spent, Of virtue, truth well tried, and wise experience; A friend like this would suit my sorrows well.
Сторінка 21 - And yet some of those days my friend has known, Some of those years might pass for golden ones, At least if womankind can judge of happiness. What could we wish, we who delight in empire, Whose beauty is our...
Сторінка 23 - Does Hastings undertake to plead your cause? But wherefore should he not? Hastings has eyes; The gentle lord has a right tender heart, Melting and easy, yielding to impression, And catching the soft flame from each new beauty.
Сторінка 66 - Should'ring each other, crowding for a view, Gaping and gazing, taunting and reviling; Some pitying, but those, alas! how few! The most, such iron hearts we are, and such The base barbarity of human kind, With...
Сторінка 20 - The senseless grave feels not your pious sorrows : Three years and more are past, since I was bid, With many of our common friends, to wait him To his last peaceful mansion. I attended, Sprinkled his clay-cold corse with holy drops, According to our church's rev'rend rite, And saw him laid in hallow'd ground, to rest.
Сторінка 28 - What proof, alas! have I not given of love? What have I not abandon'd to thy arms? Have I not set at nought my noble birth, A spotless fame and an unblemish'd race, The peace of innocence and pride of virtue?
Сторінка 55 - Dare not, ev'n for thy soul, to thwart me , further ! None of your arts, your feigning and your foolery ; Your dainty squeamish coying it to me ; Go — to your lord, your paramour, begone ! Lisp in his ear, hang wanton on his neck, And play your monkey gambols o'er to him.
Сторінка 16 - Till life fled from us like an idle dream, A show of mommery without a meaning. My brother, rest and pardon to his soul, Is gone to his account; for this his minion.
Сторінка 69 - Which the sun ripens in the Indian mine, Or the rich bosom of the ocean yields ; What was there art could make, or wealth could buy, •• Which I have left unsought to deck her beauty ? What could her king do more?