| Henry Fielding, Arthur Murphy - 1806 - 518 pages
...the Tragic Authis their observation is, I will thors : I'll put down one ; not presume to determine. Untie your folded thoughts, and let them dangle loose as a bride's hair. iNjuu'd LOVK. Which line seems to have as much title to.a milliner's shop, as our author's to a shoemaker's.... | |
| Charles Lamb - English drama - 1808 - 512 pages
...thence, that's foe to men, For with his nails he'll dig them up again.72 Folded Thoughts. Come, come, my Lord, untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose as a bride's hair. Your sister's poison'd. Dying Princes. To see what solitariness is about dying Princes ! As heretofore they have... | |
| Walter Scott - English drama - 1810 - 610 pages
...him, and go drink some wine. {Exeunt. Enter FRANCISCO and MONTICELSO. Man. Come, come, my lord, *3 untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair. Your sister's poison'd. F. de Med. Far be it from my thoughts To seek revenge. Man. What, are you turn'd all marble... | |
| Walter Scott - English drama - 1810 - 614 pages
...dies. To pass away these thoughts, my honour'd lord, It is reported you possess a book, 45 — until your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair. — Brides formerly walked to church with their hair hanging loose behind. Anne Bnllen's was thus dishevelled... | |
| Thomas Dekker - Crime - 1812 - 228 pages
...are informed, at her marriage with Henry 8. John Webster thus refers to the fashion : " Come come, my lord, untie your folded thoughts, '• And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair." WHITE DEVIL, or VITTORIA COROMBONA, A. 3. christian, but the first mark they set upon him, to make... | |
| Charles Lamb - English drama - 1813 - 502 pages
...thence, that's foe to men, For with his nails he'll dig them up again.72 Folded Thoughts. Come, come, my Lord, untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose as a bride's hair. Your sister's poison'd. Dying Princes. To see what solitariness is about dying Princes ! Ai heretofore they have... | |
| John Webster, Alexander Dyce - English drama - 1830 - 384 pages
...him, and go drink some wine. [Exeunt. Enter FRANCISCO DE MKDICIS aud MONTICELSO. MONT. Come, come, my lord, untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair.* Your sister's poison'd. FRAN. DE MED. Far be it from my thoughts To seek revenge. MONT. What, are you turn'd all... | |
| John Webster, Alexander Dyce - 1830 - 398 pages
...me. We see that undermining more prevails Than doth the cannon. Bear your wrongs conceal'd, • — untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair] Brides formerly walked to church with their hair hanging loose behind. Anne Bullen's was thus dishevelled... | |
| Women - 1832 - 348 pages
...recommendation to the volume — although a fanciful quotation from the fine old poet, Webster — -" Untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle, loose as a bride's hair," and some stanzas of Shelley's on the succeeding page, certainly were. These happier omens were verified... | |
| Archaeology - 1838 - 570 pages
...Elizabeth had been." In the " White Devil, or Vittoria Corombona" by Webster, 1612 — " Come, come, my lord, untie your folded thoughts, And let them dangle loose, as a bride's hair" Anne of Cleves on the day of her marriage was "attired in cloth of gold embroidered with flowers in... | |
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