Bell's British Theatre, Band 15John Bell J. Bell, 1797 |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 53
Seite 38
... Vengeance shall have room : Revenge ! Pier . And liberty ! Jaf . Revenge ! revenge- [ Exeunt . SCENE III . Changes to Aquilina's House , the Greek Courtezan . Enter RENAULT . Ren . Why was my choice ambition ? the worst ground A wretch ...
... Vengeance shall have room : Revenge ! Pier . And liberty ! Jaf . Revenge ! revenge- [ Exeunt . SCENE III . Changes to Aquilina's House , the Greek Courtezan . Enter RENAULT . Ren . Why was my choice ambition ? the worst ground A wretch ...
Seite 61
... vengeance , butcher'd in his age ? The sacred fountain of my life destroy'd ? And can'st thou shed the blood that gave me being ? Nay , be a traitor too , and sell thy country ? Can thy great heart descend so vilely low , Mix with hir'd ...
... vengeance , butcher'd in his age ? The sacred fountain of my life destroy'd ? And can'st thou shed the blood that gave me being ? Nay , be a traitor too , and sell thy country ? Can thy great heart descend so vilely low , Mix with hir'd ...
Seite 62
... vengeance sure . Bel . He drew the hideous dagger forth , thou gav'st him , And with upbraiding smiles , he said , Behold it : This is the pledge of a false husband's love : And in my arms , then press ' d , and would have clasp'd me ...
... vengeance sure . Bel . He drew the hideous dagger forth , thou gav'st him , And with upbraiding smiles , he said , Behold it : This is the pledge of a false husband's love : And in my arms , then press ' d , and would have clasp'd me ...
Seite 71
... vengeance were enough for such a villain ? Eli . Death here without repentance , Hell hereafter . Ren . Let that be my lot , if as here I stand , Listed by fate among her darling sons , Tho ' I had one only brother , dear by all The ...
... vengeance were enough for such a villain ? Eli . Death here without repentance , Hell hereafter . Ren . Let that be my lot , if as here I stand , Listed by fate among her darling sons , Tho ' I had one only brother , dear by all The ...
Seite 104
... vengeance , -would " I had it without book ; let me see- " " " Most reverend senators , " That there is a plot , surely by this time no man " that hath eyes or understanding in his head , will presume to doubt ; ' tis as plain as the ...
... vengeance , -would " I had it without book ; let me see- " " " Most reverend senators , " That there is a plot , surely by this time no man " that hath eyes or understanding in his head , will presume to doubt ; ' tis as plain as the ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adrastus Alcander Alvarez arms art thou behold Belvidera Belzara blood bosom brave Carlos Creon crown cruel curs'd curse dagger dare dear death Dioc dreadful Duchess of SUFFOLK e'er Enter Eurydice ev'n ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes faith fatal fate father fear give gods Gormaz grief guard Guil Guilford Hæmon hand hear heart Heav'n honour hope incest Jaffier Jocasta king L. J. Gray Lady JANE Laius lord Lord Guilford Dudley mercy mourn murder Nacky ne'er night noble o'er OEdip passion peace Pembroke Phor Phorbas Pier Pierre pity Polybus pow'r prince queen rage revenge royal ruin sacred Sanchez senate shew sorrows soul speak Suff sword tears tell Thebans Thebes thee there's thou art thou hast thought thy love Tiresias traitor twas vengeance villain virtue wretched wrong'd Ximena
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 111 - Pour down your blessings on this beauteous head, Where everlasting sweets are always springing, With a continual giving hand: let peace, Honour, and safety, always hover round her: Feed her with plenty, let her eyes ne'er see A sight of sorrow, nor her heart know mourning: Crown all her days with joy, her nights with rest, Harmless as her own thoughts; and prop her virtue, To bear the loss of one that too much lov'd, And comfort her with patience in our parting.
Seite 76 - Last night, my love! JAFF. Name, name it not again. It shows a beastly image to my fancy Will wake me into madness. Oh, the villain! That durst approach such purity as thine On terms so vile! Destruction, swift destruction Fall on my coward head, and make my name The common scorn of fools if I forgive him!
Seite 122 - Lead me into some place that's fit for mourning; Where the free air, light, and the cheerful sun May never enter. Hang it round with black; ;Set up one taper that may last a day — As long as I've to live; and there all leave me, Sparing no tears when you this tale relate, But bid all cruel fathers dread my fate.
Seite 25 - The bitterness her tender spirit tastes of, I own myself a coward: bear my weakness, If throwing thus my arms about thy neck, I play the boy, and blubber in thy bosom. Oh! I shall drown thee with my sorrows! Pierr. Burn ! First burn, and level Venice to thy ruin. What! starve like beggars' brats in frosty weather, Under a hedge, and whine ourselves to death!
Seite 47 - To you, Sirs, and your honours, I bequeath her, And with her this. When I prove unworthy — (gives a dagger) You know the rest — then strike it to her heart; And tell her, he who three whole happy years Lay in her arms, and each kind night repeated The passionate vows of still increasing love, Sent that reward for all her truth and sufferings.
Seite 114 - Oh, there's all quiet, here all rage and fury: The air's too thin, and pierces my weak brain: I long for thick substantial sleep: hell, hell. Burst from the centre, rage and roar aloud, If thou art half so hot, so mad as I am.
Seite 88 - I have not wrong'd thee, by these tears I have not. But still am honest, true, and hope too, valiant: My mind still full of thee, therefore still noble; Let not thy eyes then shun me, nor thy heart Detest me utterly; oh, look upon me, Look back and see my sad sincere submission ! How my heart swells, as even 'twould burst my bosom; Fond of its gaol, and labouring to be at thee ! What shall I do ? what say to make thee hear me ? Pierr.
Seite 17 - You stole her from me ; like a thief you stole her, At dead of night ! that cursed hour you chose To rifle me of all my heart held dear.
Seite 16 - I receiv'd you, Courted, and sought to raise you to your merits: My house, my table, nay, my fortune, too, My very self, was yours; you might have us'd me To your best service.
Seite 24 - Priuli's cruel hand had sign'd it. Here stood a ruffian with a horrid face, Lording it o'er a pile of massy plate, Tumbled into a heap for public sale. There was another making villainous jests At thy undoing.