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Page 32
Humbly on my knees I kiss your gracious hand . It is our duty To love the virtuous
. Men . If my prayers or service Hold any value , they are vowed yours ever . Rhe .
I have a fist for thee too , stripling ; thou ' rt started up prettily since I saw thee .
Humbly on my knees I kiss your gracious hand . It is our duty To love the virtuous
. Men . If my prayers or service Hold any value , they are vowed yours ever . Rhe .
I have a fist for thee too , stripling ; thou ' rt started up prettily since I saw thee .
Page 55
Looking at the paper . Enter PELIAS , with a crown of feathers and anticly rich .
Pel . I will hang ' em all , and burn my wife . Was I not an emperor ? my hand was
kissed , and ladies lay down before me ; in triumph did I ride with my nobles
about ...
Looking at the paper . Enter PELIAS , with a crown of feathers and anticly rich .
Pel . I will hang ' em all , and burn my wife . Was I not an emperor ? my hand was
kissed , and ladies lay down before me ; in triumph did I ride with my nobles
about ...
Page 70
The most excellent , most wise , most dainty , precious , loving , kind , sweet ,
intolerably fair lady Thamasta commends to your little hands this letter of
importance . By your leave , let me first kiss , and then deliver it in fashion to your
own proper ...
The most excellent , most wise , most dainty , precious , loving , kind , sweet ,
intolerably fair lady Thamasta commends to your little hands this letter of
importance . By your leave , let me first kiss , and then deliver it in fashion to your
own proper ...
Page 87
Come hither , let me kiss thee . [ To EROCLEA ] With a pride , Strength , courage ,
and fresh blood , which now thy presence Hạth stored me with , I kneel before
their altars , Whose sovereignty kept guard about thy safety . Ask , ask thy sister ...
Come hither , let me kiss thee . [ To EROCLEA ] With a pride , Strength , courage ,
and fresh blood , which now thy presence Hạth stored me with , I kneel before
their altars , Whose sovereignty kept guard about thy safety . Ask , ask thy sister ...
Page 89
Sir , with your noble favour , Kissing your hand first , that point I can answer . Mel .
Honest , right honest Rhetias ! Rhe . Your grave brother Perceived with what a
hopeless love his son , Lord Menaphon , too eagerly pursued Thamasta , cousin
...
Sir , with your noble favour , Kissing your hand first , that point I can answer . Mel .
Honest , right honest Rhetias ! Rhe . Your grave brother Perceived with what a
hopeless love his son , Lord Menaphon , too eagerly pursued Thamasta , cousin
...
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Common terms and phrases
Amet attend Bass beauty Bian blessing blood brother comes command court D'Av dare daughter dear death doth Duke duty Earl Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair fall fate father fear Fern Fernando Fior follow fool Ford fortunes Friar give grace hand happy hast hath hear heart Heaven Here's highness honour hope Hunt I'll Ithocles keep king kiss lady leave live look lord madam master means mind nature never noble once pass peace pity play pleasure poor pray present prince reason rest Rich SCENE servant sister soul speak stand sure sweet tell thank thee thine thou thou art thought true truth vows wife wise wish young youth
Popular passages
Page i - What things have we seen Done at the Mermaid! Heard words that have been So nimble and so full of subtle flame As if that every one from whence they came Had meant to put his whole wit in a jest, And had resolved to live a fool the rest Of his dull life.
Page xvi - twas my father's last bequest. \Places a ring on the finger of ITHOCLES. Thus I new-many him whose wife I am ; Death shall not separate us. O, my lords, I but deceived your eyes with antic gesture, When one news straight came huddling on another Of death ! and death ! and death ! still I danced forward ; But it struck home, and here, and in an instant. Be such mere women, who with shrieks and outcries Can vow a present end to all their sorrows, Yet live to court new pleasures, and outlive them :...
Page i - Souls of Poets, dead and gone, What Elysium have ye known, Happy field or mossy cavern, Choicer than the Mermaid Tavern?
Page 99 - Friar. Dispute no more in this, for know, young man, These are no school-points ; nice philosophy May tolerate unlikely arguments, But heaven admits no jest ! wits that presumed On wit too much, by striving how to prove There was no God, with foolish grounds of art, Discover'd first the nearest way to hell; And fill'd the world with devilish atheism.
Page 105 - I'll undertake with a handful of silver to buy a headful of wit at any time : but, sirrah, I have another purchase in hand ; I shall have the wench, mine 'uncle says. I will but wash my face and shift socks, and then have at her, i'faith ! — Mark my pace, Poggio ! [Passes over the stage, and exit.
Page 100 - Shall a peevish sound, A customary form, from man to man, Of brother and of sister, be a bar Twixt my perpetual happiness and me? Say that we had one father, say one womb (Curse to my joys) gave both us life and birth; Are we not therefore each to other bound 30 So much the more by nature? By the links Of blood, of reason? Nay, if you will have't, Even of religion, to be ever one, One soul, one flesh, one love, one heart, one all?
Page vi - I do not know where to find, in "any play, a catastrophe so grand, so solemn, and so surprising, as in this. This is indeed, according to Milton, to describe high passions and high actions. The fortitude of the Spartan boy, who let a beast gnaw out his bowels till he died, without expressing a groan, is a faint bodily image of this dilaceration of the spirit, and exenteration" of the inmost mind, which Calantha, with a holy violence against lier nature, keeps closely covered, till the last duties...
Page 226 - Wrong'd soul, thy prayers are heard. Pen. Here, lo, I breathe, A miserable creature, led to ruin By an unnatural brother! Ith. I consume In languishing affections for that trespass ; Yet cannot die. Pen. The handmaid to the wages...
Page 164 - Giovanni, that hast had the spoil Of thine own virtues and my modest fame, Would thou hadst been less subject to those stars That luckless...
Page 456 - I expect No less than what severity calls justice, And politicians safety; let such beg As feed on alms, but if there can be mercy In a protested enemy, then may it Descend to these poor creatures, whose engagements, To th...