Poems and PlaysDent, 1975 - 258 pages |
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Page 53
... hear me . CROAKER . What , you intend to bring ' em off , I suppose ; I'll hear 30 nothing . HONEYW . Madam , you seem at least calm enough to hear reason . OLIVIA . Excuse me . HONEYW . Good Jarvis , let me then explain it to you ...
... hear me . CROAKER . What , you intend to bring ' em off , I suppose ; I'll hear 30 nothing . HONEYW . Madam , you seem at least calm enough to hear reason . OLIVIA . Excuse me . HONEYW . Good Jarvis , let me then explain it to you ...
Page 85
... hear of his mother being a justice of peace . But let's hear the bill of fare . ΙΟ MARLOW . ( Perusing ) What's here ? For the first course ; for the second 20 course ; for the desert . The devil , Sir , do you think we have brought ...
... hear of his mother being a justice of peace . But let's hear the bill of fare . ΙΟ MARLOW . ( Perusing ) What's here ? For the first course ; for the second 20 course ; for the desert . The devil , Sir , do you think we have brought ...
Page 112
... hear the rest , Madam . A little more this way , or he may hear us . You'll hear how he puzzled him again . MRS . HARDCASTLE . He seems strangely puzzled now himself , methinks . TONY . ( Still gazing ) A damn'd up and down hand , as if ...
... hear the rest , Madam . A little more this way , or he may hear us . You'll hear how he puzzled him again . MRS . HARDCASTLE . He seems strangely puzzled now himself , methinks . TONY . ( Still gazing ) A damn'd up and down hand , as if ...
Contents
Prologue of Laberius | 133 |
Description of an Authors BedChamber | 139 |
an Oratorio | 147 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
20 MARLOW BAILIFF believe bless blest bliss breast BULKLEY Bunbury charms comedy Copies CROAKER dear Deserted Village DIGGORY Ecod edition emended Epilogue Exeunt Exit eyes face father favour fear fellow folly fool fortune friendship GARNET gentleman give Good-Natur'd happiness HASTINGS hear heart heaven Henry Thrale HONEYW honour hope impudence JARVIS Kate keep lady laugh leave LEONT Leontine letter LOFTY look Lord Lumpkin Madam maid married mean mind Miss CATLEY MISS HARDCASTLE MISS NEVILLE MISS RICH Miss Richland modest never night Oliver Goldsmith OLIVIA on't pardon passion play pleasure poem poor praise Pray pretty punctuation scene sentimental SERVANT shew SIR CHARLES Sir William Honeywood song Stoops to Conquer sure talk tell Text thee there's thing Thomas Parnell thou thought TONY Vicar of Wakefield virtue young Zounds ΙΟ