Poems and Plays |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 49
Page 154
... madam , that I want a due sense of the honour and happiness intended me . My father , madam , tells me your humble servant is not totally indifferent to you . He admires you ; I adore you ; and when we come together , upon my soul I ...
... madam , that I want a due sense of the honour and happiness intended me . My father , madam , tells me your humble servant is not totally indifferent to you . He admires you ; I adore you ; and when we come together , upon my soul I ...
Page 187
... madam -Who loves you with the most ardent passion ; whose whole happiness is placed in you- Miss Rich . I fear , sir , I shall never find whom you mean , by this description of him . Honeyw . Ah , madam , it but too plainly points him ...
... madam -Who loves you with the most ardent passion ; whose whole happiness is placed in you- Miss Rich . I fear , sir , I shall never find whom you mean , by this description of him . Honeyw . Ah , madam , it but too plainly points him ...
Page 243
... madam . But I love to converse only with the more grave and sensible part of the sex . -But I'm afraid I grow tiresome . Miss Hard . Not at all sir ; there is nothing I like so much as grave conversation myself : I could hear it for ...
... madam . But I love to converse only with the more grave and sensible part of the sex . -But I'm afraid I grow tiresome . Miss Hard . Not at all sir ; there is nothing I like so much as grave conversation myself : I could hear it for ...
Contents
THE DESERTED VILLAGE | 16 |
Part of a Prologue written and spoken by the Poet Laberius | 53 |
On Seeing Mrs perform in the Character of | 59 |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Bailiff beauty believe BULKLEY Bunbury charms Comedy Covent Garden Croaker Dancing Master dear Diggory Ecod Enter Epilogue Exeunt Exit eyes favour fear fellow folly fortune friendship gentleman give Goldsmith Good-Natur'd hand happiness Hastings hear heart Heaven Honeyw honour hope horses humour impudence J. G. Lockhart Jarvis keep King lady laugh Leont Leontine letter Lofty look Lord madam maid manner Marlow married mind MISS CATLEY Miss Hard Miss Hardcastle Miss Neville Miss Rich Miss Richland modest never night o'er Oliver Goldsmith Olivia pardon passion perhaps Phoebus pity plain play pleas'd pleasure poem poet poetry poor Pray pretty pride printed Queen scarce scene Servant Sir Charles Sir William Honeywood Sourby Stoops to Conquer sure talk tell thee there's things thou thought Tony Vicar of Wakefield young Zounds