Love in the Suds;: A Town Ecologue. Being the Lamentation of Roscius for the Loss of His Nyky. With Annotations and an AppendixJ. Wheble, 1772 - 44 sidor |
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Sida 10
... King Arthur , lately revived at Drury - lane Theatre , and attend the pleadings in our courts of law and equity at Westminster , Guildhall , and Lincoln's - inn . Their Their tale to Minos would they glibly tell ; Minos [ 10 ]
... King Arthur , lately revived at Drury - lane Theatre , and attend the pleadings in our courts of law and equity at Westminster , Guildhall , and Lincoln's - inn . Their Their tale to Minos would they glibly tell ; Minos [ 10 ]
Sida 19
... King Richard . It is but three or four years ago fince this mock- monarch died so tamely that he was hiffed off the stage , on which occafion the following epigram appeared in the papers . ROSCIUS REDIVIVUS . ' George ! did'nt I hear ...
... King Richard . It is but three or four years ago fince this mock- monarch died so tamely that he was hiffed off the stage , on which occafion the following epigram appeared in the papers . ROSCIUS REDIVIVUS . ' George ! did'nt I hear ...
Sida 20
... king ! Th ' immortal allor , who can die fo clever , In pile of fate will live to die for ever ! + A Briton blunt , bred to plain mathematics , Who hates French b -- gres , and Italian pathics . The plaintive Roscius feems here to have ...
... king ! Th ' immortal allor , who can die fo clever , In pile of fate will live to die for ever ! + A Briton blunt , bred to plain mathematics , Who hates French b -- gres , and Italian pathics . The plaintive Roscius feems here to have ...
Sida 30
... King's Bench to be moved for a rule to fhew caufe , why leave should not be given him to file an information against the author for a libel : which being granted of courfe , the fame was exultingly ancunced in the fol- lowing paragraphs ...
... King's Bench to be moved for a rule to fhew caufe , why leave should not be given him to file an information against the author for a libel : which being granted of courfe , the fame was exultingly ancunced in the fol- lowing paragraphs ...
Sida 36
... king of bards dramatic . Happy for KEN had Drury's fultan Efteem'd his bantling an adult one ! But fatal to the fale of tickets ! He faid the child had got the rickets ; Tho ' fome few features in't were sprightly , Yet altogether ...
... king of bards dramatic . Happy for KEN had Drury's fultan Efteem'd his bantling an adult one ! But fatal to the fale of tickets ! He faid the child had got the rickets ; Tho ' fome few features in't were sprightly , Yet altogether ...
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Love in the Suds: A Town Eclogue, Being the Lamentation of Roscius for the ... William Kenrick Begränsad förhandsgranskning - 1772 |
Love in the Suds;: A Town Ecologue. Being the Lamentation of Roscius for the ... Joseph Reed,William Kenrick Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2016 |
Love in the Suds: A Town Eclogue. Being the Lamentation of Roscius for the ... Kenrick William Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2016 |
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advertiſed affured againſt alfo anſwer baſe BENEDICK beſt bring brother buſineſs cafe caufe cauſe character comedy Corydon courſe crime Curfe DAVID GARRICK defire deteftable difpofition eclogue Engliſh envy eſpecially ev'ry fafe falfe falſe Falstaff Falſtaff's Wedding fame fatire favour feems fenfible fhall fhame fince firft firſt folly fome fomething foon ftage ftill fubject fuccefs fuch fufficient fuppofed GARRICK greateſt hath himſelf honour humble fervant imitation of Shakeſpeare infolence intereft itſelf juftify juſtice Kenrick laft lampoon laſt leaſt lefs mea carmina ducite moft MORNING CHRONICLE moſt mufe muft Muſe muſt myſelf neceffary NYKY back occafion perfonal performance piece play pleaſed poets prefent profeffion publiſhed puniſhment queftion racter raiſed reafon refpecting repreſentation Rofcius Rofcius's ſay ſeaſon ſee ſhall ſhame ſhould ſpirit ſtage ſtill Suds theatre theatrical themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thought turn unleſs uſe Widowed Wife winter worfe write yourſelf
Populära avsnitt
Sida 16 - ... accent of Christians, nor the gait of Christian, pagan, nor man, have so strutted, and bellowed, that I have thought some of Nature's journeymen had made men, and not made them well, they imitated humanity so abominably.
Sida 7 - It is an action of virtue to make examples of vicious men. They may and ought to be upbraided with their crimes and follies, both for their own amendment (if they are not yet incorrigible), and for the terror of others, to hinder them from falling into those enormities, which they see are so severely punished in the persons of others.
Sida 25 - I thought so : but know, that speaking well of all mankind is the worst kind of detraction ; for it takes away the reputation of the few good men in the world, by making all alike.
Sida 29 - ... the race is not to the fwift, nor the battle to the ftrong...
Sida 5 - Difcerptum latos juvenem fparsere per agros. Turn quoque marmorea caput a cervice revulfum, Gurgite cum medio portans Oeagrius Hebrus Volveret, Eurydicen vox ipfa et frigida lingua Ah miferam Eurydicen anima fugiente, vocabat ; Eurydicen toto referebant flumine ripae ! NOTES, * The celebrated villa of R oscius . On On Hebrus' banks fb tuneful Orpheus died ; His limbs the fields receiv'd, his head the tide.
Sida 4 - Dîne hune ardorem mentibus addunt, « Euryale? an sua cuique deus fit dira cupido? « Aut pugnam , aut aliquid jamdudum invadere magnum « Mens agitat mihi ; nec placida contenta quiete est.
Sida 7 - A'merry fong about murder, beginning with, " In Tyburn-road there liv'da man," &c. Yet Yet flight tliecaufe of NYKV'S late mi/Lap ; NYK. but miftook the colour of the cap : A common -errour, frequent in the Park, Where love is apt to ftumble in the dark. Why rais'd the haughty female head fo high, With the tall caps of grenadiers to vie ? Why does it like tremendous figure make, To...
Sida 25 - I never attempted to abufe or leflen any one in my life. Manly. What ! you were afraid ? Plaufible. No : but ferioufly I hate to do a rude thing. No, faith, I fpeak well of all mankind. Manly. I thought fo : but know that this is the word fort of detraction, for it takes away the reputation of the few good men in the world by making all alike ! Now I fpeak ill of many men, becaufe they deferve it.
Sida 24 - And wolves with loving lionesses meet. By different means is different love made known. And each fond lover will prefer his own. Strange lot of love! two friends, my soul's delight, Men call that M r, this a Catamite! Yet bring him back; for who chaste roundelay Shall sing, now B — st-ff is driv'n away? Who now correct...
Sida 8 - And takes the bantling from the midwife's hands. If any author of prolific brains, In this good company, feels labourpains; If any gentle poet, big with rhime, Has run his reck'ning out and gone his time; If any critic, pregnant with ill-nature,