Bell's British Theatre, Volume 14John Bell J. Bell, 1797 |
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Page 27
... shame ; with all thy boasted sanctity , to own before my face a carnal in- clination ! Nay , and to put thy hand to pen and paper to court him to thy arms ! Out on thee ! I am ashamed of thee . Dor . Nay , now thou art scurrilous ! I ...
... shame ; with all thy boasted sanctity , to own before my face a carnal in- clination ! Nay , and to put thy hand to pen and paper to court him to thy arms ! Out on thee ! I am ashamed of thee . Dor . Nay , now thou art scurrilous ! I ...
Page 63
... shame , proud creature , let not your vain folly get the better of your sense and reason ; take to your arms the man you love . Come , I see good- nature in your eyes : thus I seize your hand , and am resolved to give it him who has ...
... shame , proud creature , let not your vain folly get the better of your sense and reason ; take to your arms the man you love . Come , I see good- nature in your eyes : thus I seize your hand , and am resolved to give it him who has ...
Page 87
... shame , they make it even their glory to proclaim it . - Oh , Worthy , if thou bearest a human soul , as basely as I plotted to betray thee , even thou thyself must pity me . Wor . I do pity thee , pity both of you ; and to prove I do ...
... shame , they make it even their glory to proclaim it . - Oh , Worthy , if thou bearest a human soul , as basely as I plotted to betray thee , even thou thyself must pity me . Wor . I do pity thee , pity both of you ; and to prove I do ...
Page 89
... shame no more , I'm a true penitent . Wor . And for thee , Flip , I knew thee such a rake , that the least mad drunken fit would run thee head- long into irrevocable shame and ruin ; and therefore , even for thy mere preservation , I ...
... shame no more , I'm a true penitent . Wor . And for thee , Flip , I knew thee such a rake , that the least mad drunken fit would run thee head- long into irrevocable shame and ruin ; and therefore , even for thy mere preservation , I ...
Page 22
... shame , Set up the worthless pageant of vain grandeur . Meantime I thank the justice of the king , Who has my right bequeath'd me . Thee Siffredi , I thank thee - Oh , I ne'er enough can thank thee ! Yes , thou hast been - thou art ...
... shame , Set up the worthless pageant of vain grandeur . Meantime I thank the justice of the king , Who has my right bequeath'd me . Thee Siffredi , I thank thee - Oh , I ne'er enough can thank thee ! Yes , thou hast been - thou art ...
Common terms and phrases
Barn Barnwell Belinda Betty Blunt breast brother Brush cann't Canton captain Cham Constantia Crib daughter dear death Dorcas Enter Exeunt Exit eyes faith father fear Flip fortune friendship gentlemen GEORGE LILLO give hand happy hear heart Heaven Heidel Heidelberg honour hope king ladies Laura look Lord Og Lord Ogleby lordship Lovewell Lucy ma'am madam maid marry Mill Millwood mind Miss Fanny Miss Sterl Mizen murder navy ne'er never noble Osmond passion pity Plea poor pray prince purser Quaker rage Rodolpho Rove ruin Sail SCENE servant shame shew Sicily Siffredi Sigismunda Sir Charles Sir John Melvil sister soul spurrit sure sweet Tancred tears tell tender thee there's thing Thor thou art thought thousand True TRUEMAN virtue William the Bad Worthy wretched young youth
Popular passages
Page v - 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 18 - Melvil to interest himself in this affair. He may mention it to Lord Ogleby with a better grace than I can, and more probably prevail on him to interfere in it. I can open my mind also more freely to Sir John. He told me, when I left him in town, that he had something of consequence to communicate, and that I could be of use to him.
Page 42 - Ay, or a bowl of punch, or a can of flip, Mr. Sterling! for it looks like a cabin in the air. If flying chairs were in use, the captain might make a voyage to the Indies in it still, if he had but a fair wind.
Page iv - If princes, &e. were alone liable to misfortunes arising from vice or weakness in themselves or others, there Would be good reason for confining the characters in tragedy to those of superior' rank ; but since the contrary is evident, nothing can be more reasonable than to proportion the remedy to the disease...
Page 9 - But let me tell you both, you must leave off your soft looks to each other, and your whispers, and your glances, and your always sitting next to one another at dinner, and your long walks together in the evening. For my part, if I had not been in the secret, I should have known you were a pair of lovers at least, if not man and wife, as Fanny.
Page 22 - You ? — You're above pity. — You would not change conditions with me. — You're over head and ears in love, you know. — Nay, for that matter, if Mr. Lovewell and you come together, as I doubt not you will, you will live very comfortably, I dare say.
Page 74 - 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. Thus you go on deceiving and being deceived; harassing and plaguing and destroying one another: but women are your universal prey.
Page 44 - Twill be well worth your pains to study it as a science. See how it is founded in reason, and the nature of things; how it has promoted humanity, as it has opened and yet keeps up an intercourse between nations, far remote from one another in situation, customs and religion; promoting arts, industry, peace and plenty; by mutual benefits diffusing mutual love from pole to pole.
Page 23 - BARN. If you mean the love of women, I have not thought of it at all. My youth and circumstances make such thoughts improper in me yet. But if you...
Page 72 - .all professions I have known, yet found no difference but in their several capacities; all were alike wicked to the utmost of their power. In pride, contention, avarice, cruelty and revenge, the reverend priesthood were my unerring guides.