Women beware women; Trick to catch the old one, by T. Middleton. A new wonder, a woman never vext, by W. Rowley. Appius and Virginia, by J. WebsterWhittingham and Rowland, 1815 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
Appius APPIUS AND VIRGINIA blessings blood Bran Brancha brother Bruin Claud Claudius Clown Corb Court Cred Damp Decemviri dost Duke e'en Enter Exeunt Exit fair Faith father fear for't fortune Foster friends Gentlem gentlemen gentlewoman give Guard hand hath hear heart heaven honour Host husband i'faith Icil Icilius is't Isab Jane keep kiss lady Lamb Laun Lean Leantio Lictors look lord Lucre Ludgate lust madam marriage married Master Dampit Master Hoard Master Witgood Methinks mistress Moth ne'er nephew never niece noble Old Fost on't pity poison'd poor pray prison prithee quarto Rome servant sirrah Sold soldiers Sord soul speak Steph Stephen Foster sure sweet tell thank thee there's thing troth twas twill uncle unto vex'd vext Virg Virginius Ward what's wife WILLIAM ROWLEY woman
Populära avsnitt
Sida 285 - But nature makes that mean : so, over that art Which you say adds to nature, is an art That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry A gentler scion to the wildest stock, And make conceive a bark of baser kind By bud of nobler race : this...
Sida 50 - ... great lord, Make me not bold with death and deeds of ruin, Because they fear not you ; me they must fright ; Then am I best in health : should thunder speak, And none regard it, it had lost the name, And were as good be still. I'm not like those That take their soundest sleeps in greatest tempests ; Then wake I most, the weather fearfullest, And call for strength to virtue.
Sida 61 - I would not stand thus, And gaze upon you always ; troth, I could not, sir ; As good be blind, and have no use of sight, As look on one thing still : what's the eye's treasure, But change of objects ? You are learned, sir, And know I speak not ill ; 'tis full as virtuous For woman's eye to look on several men, As for her heart, sir, to be fixed on one. Lean. Now thou come'st home to me ; a kiss for that word.
Sida 60 - Now for a welcome Able to draw men's envies upon man: A kiss now that will hang upon my lip, As sweet as morning dew upon a rose, And full as long!
Sida 54 - Moth. You have not seen all since, sure ? Bian. That have I, mother, The monument and all : I'm so beholding To this kind, honest, courteous gentleman, You'd little think it, mother ; ' show'd me all, Had me from place to place so fashionably ; The kindness of some people, how 't exceeds ! Faith, I've seen that I little thought to see "1 II the morning when I rose.
Sida 47 - Liv. You play well the whilst : How she belies her skill ! I hold two ducats, I give you check and mate to your white king, Simplicity itself, your saintish king there.
Sida 62 - Is there no kindness betwixt man and wife, Unless they make a pigeon-house of friendship, And be still billing ? 'tis the idlest fondness That ever was invented, and 'tis pity It's grown a fashion for poor gentlewomen; There's many a disease...
Sida 96 - I'll have this sauciness Soon banish'd from these lodgings, and the rooms Perfum'd well after the corrupt air it leaves : His breath has made me almost sick, in troth; A poor, base start-up! life, because has got Fair clothes by foul means, comes to rail and shew 'em!
Sida 352 - White Devil, or, the Tragedy of Paulo Giordano Ursini, Duke of Brachiano, with the Life and Death of Vittoria Corombona, the famous Venetian Curtizan.
Sida 82 - Methinks by right I should not now be living, And then 'twere all well. What a happiness Had I been made of had I never seen her; For nothing makes man's loss grievous to him, But knowledge of the worth of what he loses ; For what he never had, he never misses : She's gone for ever, utterly ; there is As much redemption of a soul from hell, As a fair woman's body from his palace.