The modern British drama, Band 51811 |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 100
Seite 12
... leave me , Scapin , in this Sca . To put such an affront upon me as you did ! Lean . I wronged thee , I confess . Sca . To use me like a scoundrel , a villain , a rascal ; to threaten to run your sword in my guts ! Lean . I cry thy ...
... leave me , Scapin , in this Sca . To put such an affront upon me as you did ! Lean . I wronged thee , I confess . Sca . To use me like a scoundrel , a villain , a rascal ; to threaten to run your sword in my guts ! Lean . I cry thy ...
Seite 16
... leave him so ; he's like to pay in other coin , for telling tales of me to his son . Lean . Is't possible ? SCENE I. Enter LUCIA and CLARA . Luc . Was ever such a trick played , for us to run away from our governesses , where our ...
... leave him so ; he's like to pay in other coin , for telling tales of me to his son . Lean . Is't possible ? SCENE I. Enter LUCIA and CLARA . Luc . Was ever such a trick played , for us to run away from our governesses , where our ...
Seite 18
... leave , joy . [ Beats him in the sack , A plague on him , he's gone ; he has almost kill- ed me . Gripe . I can hold no longer the blows all fell upon my shoulders . Sca . You can't tell me ; they fell on mine : oh my shoulders . Gripe ...
... leave , joy . [ Beats him in the sack , A plague on him , he's gone ; he has almost kill- ed me . Gripe . I can hold no longer the blows all fell upon my shoulders . Sca . You can't tell me ; they fell on mine : oh my shoulders . Gripe ...
Seite 27
... leave thee , can I leave thee ? what pain it is to part ! Can thy Polly ever leave thee ? But lest death my love should thwart , And bring thee to the fatal cart , Thus I tear thee from my bleeding heart ; Fly hence and let me leave ...
... leave thee , can I leave thee ? what pain it is to part ! Can thy Polly ever leave thee ? But lest death my love should thwart , And bring thee to the fatal cart , Thus I tear thee from my bleeding heart ; Fly hence and let me leave ...
Seite 29
... leave of the ladies ; and , if they have a mind to make you a visit , they will be sure to find you at home . This gentleman , ladies , lodges in Newgate . Constables , wait upon the captain to his lodgings . AIR . — When first I laid ...
... leave of the ladies ; and , if they have a mind to make you a visit , they will be sure to find you at home . This gentleman , ladies , lodges in Newgate . Constables , wait upon the captain to his lodgings . AIR . — When first I laid ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Æsop better Buck Cape Char Chrononhotonthologos Crab d'ye damned daugh daughter dear devil Dick Dotterel ecod Enter SIR Erit Exeunt Exit father fellow Flint fool fortune Fungus gentleman girl give happy hear heart hold honour hope Jenny King Kitty Lack-a-day Lady Pent Lady Rac look Lord Aim Lucy madam marriage marry master Mech Mechlin Miss Gran Miss Har Miss Lin mistress Neph never night Old Phil Old Wild Papillion passion Polly poor Pr'ythee pray pretty Puff Quid rascal SCENE servant Sir Archy Sir Cha Sir Geo Sir Gre Sir Gregory Sir Jac Sir John Sir Luke Sir Tho Sir Wil Sneak speak Spright suppose sure tell thee there's thing thou Thrifty what's Whit wife woman Young Wild Zounds
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 2 - Can any mortal mixture of earth's mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment? Sure something holy lodges in that breast, And with these raptures moves the vocal air To testify his hidden residence.
Seite 1 - We, that are of purer fire, Imitate the starry quire; Who, in their nightly watchful spheres, Lead in swift round the months and years.
Seite 2 - But such a sacred and home-felt delight, Such sober certainty of waking bliss, I never heard till now.
Seite 25 - But money, wife, is the true fuller's earth for reputations, there is | not a spot or a stain but what it can take out. A rich rogue now-a-days is fit company for any gentleman ; and the world, my dear, hath not such ^ a contempt for roguery as you imagine.
Seite 31 - But if I could raise a small Sum Would not twenty Guineas, think you, move him? Of all the Arguments in the way of Business, the Perquisite is the most prevailing. Your Father's Perquisites for the Escape of Prisoners must amount to a considerable Sum in the Year.
Seite 30 - A jealous woman believes everything her passion suggests. To convince you of my sincerity, if we can find the ordinary, I shall have no scruples of making you my wife; and I know the consequence of having two at a time. Lucy. That you are only to be hanged, and so get rid of them both.
Seite 30 - Married! very good. The wench gives it out only to vex thee, and to ruin me in thy good opinion. 'Tis true I go to the house, I chat with the girl, I kiss her, I say a thousand things to her (as all gentlemen do) that mean nothing, to divert...
Seite 229 - When house and land are gone and spent, Then learning is most excellent.
Seite 158 - But let concealment like a worm i' th' bud Feed on her damask cheek: she pin'd in thought, And with a green and yellow melancholy, She sat like Patience on a Monument, Smiling at grief.
Seite 625 - I say nothing — I take away from no man's merit— am hurt at no man's good fortune — I say nothing. — But this I will say — through all my knowledge of life, I have observed — that there is not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy.