Lillo's Dramatic Works: With Memoirs of the Author, Volume 1W. Lowndes, 1810 - English drama |
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Page 58
... tell what else to do with them . AIR VI . [ " There was a Jovial Beggar - Man . " ] Sex . Strange tales some lying travellers tell , How men on men have fed ; Of public shambles , where they sell For food their friends when dead . The ...
... tell what else to do with them . AIR VI . [ " There was a Jovial Beggar - Man . " ] Sex . Strange tales some lying travellers tell , How men on men have fed ; Of public shambles , where they sell For food their friends when dead . The ...
Page 59
... telling my Mother now . [ Goes from him . G. Busy . Good Timothy Stitch , don't take on so . We did not all come together , nor must we all go together ; and our loss is her gain , as we all know , neighbours . All . Ay , ay , to be ...
... telling my Mother now . [ Goes from him . G. Busy . Good Timothy Stitch , don't take on so . We did not all come together , nor must we all go together ; and our loss is her gain , as we all know , neighbours . All . Ay , ay , to be ...
Page 62
... ! Tim . My resolution may seem stranger than it is ; I will therefore tell you the reason of it . Some time ago , my wife was very sick ( that cursed Geneva often made her so ) then I fell sick with grief 62 SILVIA , OR THE.
... ! Tim . My resolution may seem stranger than it is ; I will therefore tell you the reason of it . Some time ago , my wife was very sick ( that cursed Geneva often made her so ) then I fell sick with grief 62 SILVIA , OR THE.
Page 67
... tell you I am . If you would but feel me once , you would be satis- fied . Tim . She was always given to lying -- I dare not trust her . Yet if she should be alive again -I have a good mind to venture . [ Aside going towards the Grave ...
... tell you I am . If you would but feel me once , you would be satis- fied . Tim . She was always given to lying -- I dare not trust her . Yet if she should be alive again -I have a good mind to venture . [ Aside going towards the Grave ...
Page 72
... Tell me , kind Sir , tell me true , What you will , and I must do : How shall I say , Yes or No ? Can I stay , can I stay , or dare I go ? AIR XXI . [ " Flocks are sporting . " ] Sir John . Faint denying ' s half complying ; Whilst the ...
... Tell me , kind Sir , tell me true , What you will , and I must do : How shall I say , Yes or No ? Can I stay , can I stay , or dare I go ? AIR XXI . [ " Flocks are sporting . " ] Sir John . Faint denying ' s half complying ; Whilst the ...
Other editions - View all
Lillo's Dramatic Works: With Memoirs of the Author: By Thomas Davies;, Volume 2 George Lillo No preview available - 2017 |
Lillo's Dramatic Works: With Memoirs of the Author (Classic Reprint) Thomas Davies No preview available - 2018 |
Lillo's Dramatic Works: With Memoirs of the Author (Classic Reprint) Thomas Davies No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Adrianople Albania Althea Amasie Amurath Aranthes Bajazet Barn behold Betty Blunt breast Castriot charms Christian Cleora Costive crimes Croia daughter dear death despair distress dreadful Enter Epirots Epirus ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes fair fame father fear flowing tears GEORGE BARNWELL George Lillo give Goody Busy grief guilt happy hate hear heart Heaven Hellena honour hope innocence John Freeman Jonathan justice king Lettice Lillo live lost Lucy Macedon Madam maid mankind marriage master mercy Mill Millwood murder ne'er never night pain passion peace pity pleasure prince racter rage revenge ruin Scan Scanderbeg SCENE scorn shame Silvia Sir John slave sorrow soul Sultan sure tears THEATRE ROYAL thee Thor thou thought tragedy TRUEMAN truth Turkish Turks virtue Welf Welford wife Wilm woes woman wretch youth
Popular passages
Page 147 - I have heard That guilty creatures, sitting at a play, Have by the very cunning of the scene Been struck so to the soul that presently They have proclaim'd their malefactions; For murder, though it have no tongue, will speak With most miraculous organ.
Page 164 - Why, birds are their prey, as men are cure; though, as you observed, we are sometimes caught ourselves : but that I dare say will never be the case with our mistress. Blunt. I wish it may prove so ; for you know we all depend upon her : should she trifle away her time with a young fellow, that there's nothing to be got by, we must all starve. Lucy. There's no danger of that, for I am sure she has no view in this affair, but interest.
Page 147 - What's Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba That he should weep for her? What would he do Had he the motive and the cue for passion That I have? He would drown the stage with tears, And cleave the general ear with horrid speech, Make mad the guilty and appal the free, Confound the ignorant, and amaze indeed The very faculties of eyes and ears.
Page 204 - What are your laws, of which you make your boast, but the fool's wisdom and the coward's valour? the instrument and screen of all your villainies, by which you punish in others what you act yourselves, or would have acted had you been in their circumstances. The judge who condemns the poor man for being a thief had been a thief himself had he been poor.
Page 158 - First made me a wretch, and still continue me so. Men, however generous or sincere to one another, are all selfish hypocrites in their affairs with us ; we are no otherwise esteemed or regarded by them, but as we contribute to their satisfaction.
Page 158 - I would have my conquest complete, like those of the Spaniards in the New World; who first plundered the natives of all the wealth they had, and then condemned the wretches to the mines for life, to •work for more.
Page 184 - BLUNT. I have not heard of this before ! How did she receive him ? LUCY. As you would expect. She wondered what he meant, was astonished at his impudence, and, with an air of modesty peculiar to herself, swore so heartily that she never saw him before, that she put me out of countenance. BLUNT. That's much indeed ! But how did Barnwell behave ? LUCY.
Page 159 - I talked of honour and reputation, and invited him to my house : he swallowed the bait, promised to come, and this is the time I expect him. [Knocking at the door, L.] Somebody knocks :— nl'ye hear, I am at home to nobody to-day but him.
Page 181 - tis needless to inform you, that I intend never to return again : though this might have been known by examining my accounts ; yet, to prevent that unnecessary trouble, and to cut off all fruitless expectations of my return, I have left this from the lost
Page 210 - Never, never will I taste such joys on earth; never will I so soothe my just remorse! Are those honest arms and faithful bosom fit to embrace and to support a murderer? These iron fetters only shall clasp, and flinty pavement bear me (throwing himself on the ground) — even these too good for such a bloody monster.