The British Theatre; Or, A Collection of Plays,: Which are Acted at the Theatres Royal, Drury-Lane, Covent-Garden, and Haymarket ...Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1808 |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 100
Seite 15
... If it were possible my heart could stray , One look from thee would call it back again , And fix the wanderer for ever thine . Sel . Where is my boasted resolution now ? [ c 2 SCENE 1. ] 15 TAMERLANE , Ar. Oh, name it! say!- ...
... If it were possible my heart could stray , One look from thee would call it back again , And fix the wanderer for ever thine . Sel . Where is my boasted resolution now ? [ c 2 SCENE 1. ] 15 TAMERLANE , Ar. Oh, name it! say!- ...
Seite 22
... heart , The rage and fiercer passions of my breast Are lost in new confusion.- Enter HALY and ARPASIA . Arpasia ! -Haly ! Haly . Oh , emperor ! for whose hard fate our pro- phet And all the heros of thy sacred race Are sad in paradise ...
... heart , The rage and fiercer passions of my breast Are lost in new confusion.- Enter HALY and ARPASIA . Arpasia ! -Haly ! Haly . Oh , emperor ! for whose hard fate our pro- phet And all the heros of thy sacred race Are sad in paradise ...
Seite 23
... heart ; nor take alarm At a slave's presence . Mon. It is Arpasia ! -Leave me , thou cold fear . Sweet as the rosy morn she breaks upon me , 1 And sorrow , like the night's unwholesome shade , Gives way before the golden dawn she brings ...
... heart ; nor take alarm At a slave's presence . Mon. It is Arpasia ! -Leave me , thou cold fear . Sweet as the rosy morn she breaks upon me , 1 And sorrow , like the night's unwholesome shade , Gives way before the golden dawn she brings ...
Seite 34
... heart Had fix'd its wishes on , and that is lost ; That sister , for whose safety my sad soul Endur'd a thousand fears . Tam . I well remember , When , ere the battle join'd , I saw thee first , With grief uncommon to a brother's love ...
... heart Had fix'd its wishes on , and that is lost ; That sister , for whose safety my sad soul Endur'd a thousand fears . Tam . I well remember , When , ere the battle join'd , I saw thee first , With grief uncommon to a brother's love ...
Seite 41
... heart , The pangs , that , for unhappy me , bring down . Their reverend ages to the grave with sorrow . And yet there is a woe surpassing all : Ye saints and angels , give me of your constancy , If you expect I shall endure it long ...
... heart , The pangs , that , for unhappy me , bring down . Their reverend ages to the grave with sorrow . And yet there is a woe surpassing all : Ye saints and angels , give me of your constancy , If you expect I shall endure it long ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abudah Alicia Altamont arms Arpasia art thou Axalla BAJAZET behold bless blood Caled Calista canst christian curse Damascus dear death dost thou DUCHESS OF SUFFOLK earth Enter Eudocia Eumenes Eutyches ev'n ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes fair faith fatal fate father fear forc'd friendship gentle give grief guard Guil Guilford Haly hand happy Hast thou heart Heav'n holy honour hope JANE SHORE Lady J. G. LADY JANE LADY JANE GREY lord LORD HASTINGS Loth Lothario mercy Moneses NICHOLAS ROWE noble o'er Omar once passion peace Pembroke Phocyas pity pow'r princely queen rage royal ruin sacred SCENE SCIOLTO scorn SELIMA shame SIEGE OF DAMASCUS slave sorrows soul speak sword Tamerlane tears tell thee thine thou art thou hast thought twas vengeance virtue wait wretched
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 6 - I am in presence either of father or mother, whether I speak, keep silence, sit, stand, or go, eat, drink, be merry or sad, be sewing, playing, dancing or doing anything else, I must do it, as it were, in such weight, measure and number, even so perfectly as God made the world, or else I am so sharply taunted, so cruelly threatened, yea, presently, sometimes with pinches, nips and bobs...
Seite 53 - My guard, too, thatobserv'd me stilbso close, Tire in the task of their inhuman office, And loiter far behind. Alas ! I faint, My spirits fail at once — This is the door Of my Alicia Blessed opportunity ! I'll steal a little succour from her goodness, Now while no eye observes me. [She knocks at the Door.
Seite 17 - And you, the brightest of the stars above, Ye saints, that once were women here below, Be witness of the truth, the holy friendship, Which here to this my other self I vow. If I not hold her nearer to my soul, Than every other joy the world can give, Let poverty, deformity, and shame, Distraction and despair seize me on earth, Let not my faithless ghost have peace hereafter, Nor taste the bliss of your celestial fellowship.
Seite 30 - Teach me, some power, the happy art of speech, To dress my purpose up in gracious words; Such as may softly steal upon her soul, And never waken the tempestuous passions.
Seite 34 - Has mov'd the people much about the lawfulness Of Edward's issue ? By right grave authority Of learning and religion, plainly proving, A bastard scion never should be grafted Upon a royal stock ; from thence, at full Discoursing on my brother's former contract To Lady Elizabeth Lucy, long before His jolly match with that same buxom widow, The queen, he left behind him Hast.
Seite 20 - And yet rush on, tho' conscious of the danger f Oh, hear me, hear your ever faithful creature ! By all the good I wish, by all the ill My trembling heart forebodes, let me intreat you, Never to see this faithless man again ; Let me forbid his coming. Cal. On thy life I charge thee no : my genius drives me on; I must, I will behold him once again : Perhaps it is the crisis of my fate, And this one interview shall end my cares. My lab'ring heart that swells with indignation, Heaves to discharge the...
Seite 49 - Around her, numberless the rabble flow'd, Should'ring each other, crowding for a view, Gaping and gazing, taunting and reviling; Some pitying, but those, alas! how few! The most, such iron hearts we are, and such The base barbarity of human kind, With insolence and lewd reproach pursu'd her, Hooting and railing, and with villainous hands Gathering the filth from out the common ways, To hurl upon her head.
Seite 44 - You heard, the duke's commands to me were absolute. Therefore, my lord, address you to your shrift, With all good speed you may. Summon your courage, And be yourself; for you must die this instant.
Seite 21 - Some sullen influence, a foe to both, Has wrought this fatal marriage to undo us. Mark but the frame and temper of our minds, How very much we differ. Ev'n this day, That fills thee with such...
Seite 19 - Can a king want a cause, when empire bids Go on ? What is he born for, but ambition ? It is his hunger, 'tis his call of nature, The noble appetite which will be satisfy'd, And, like the food of gods, makes him immortal.