The Works of His Grace George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham: Containing His Plays and Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, with Explanatory Notes and Memoirs of the Author ...T. Evans, 1770 |
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Page 63
... not betray it . Which way wilt thou take , That I may fhun thee ? for thy eyes to mine Are poifon ; and I'm loth to grow in rage : Say , which way wilt thou take ? End . End . Which way you please : Since I can't RIGHT WILL TAKE PLACE . 63.
... not betray it . Which way wilt thou take , That I may fhun thee ? for thy eyes to mine Are poifon ; and I'm loth to grow in rage : Say , which way wilt thou take ? End . End . Which way you please : Since I can't RIGHT WILL TAKE PLACE . 63.
Page 64
... please : Since I can't go with you . I have no choice ; But I'm refolv'd where'er I go to have That path in chafe which leads unto my grave . [ Exeunt feverally . Enter Cleon , and the Woodmen . Cleon . This is the ftrangest sudden ...
... please : Since I can't go with you . I have no choice ; But I'm refolv'd where'er I go to have That path in chafe which leads unto my grave . [ Exeunt feverally . Enter Cleon , and the Woodmen . Cleon . This is the ftrangest sudden ...
Page 90
... please your Majefty , to view the city , and the new platform , with some gentlemen attending on him . King . Is the Princess ready to bring her pri foners out ? Adel . I'll go fee . King . Tell her , we stay . Cleon . King , you may be ...
... please your Majefty , to view the city , and the new platform , with some gentlemen attending on him . King . Is the Princess ready to bring her pri foners out ? Adel . I'll go fee . King . Tell her , we stay . Cleon . King , you may be ...
Page 146
... please her were employ'd , When of her fmiles the bleffing I enjoy'd , So now by her forfaken and forlorn , I'll rack invention to excufe her fcorn . While the to truth and me unjuft does prove , From her to fate the blame I will remove ...
... please her were employ'd , When of her fmiles the bleffing I enjoy'd , So now by her forfaken and forlorn , I'll rack invention to excufe her fcorn . While the to truth and me unjuft does prove , From her to fate the blame I will remove ...
Page 153
... us from growing bad , But wholesome remedies few palates please , Men rather love what flatters their difeafe ; Pimps , parafites , buffoons , and all the crew Pimps , POEMS . 153 By his one facred light he folemnly swore, ...
... us from growing bad , But wholesome remedies few palates please , Men rather love what flatters their difeafe ; Pimps , parafites , buffoons , and all the crew Pimps , POEMS . 153 By his one facred light he folemnly swore, ...
Common terms and phrases
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Popular passages
Page 85 - Alas, my lord, my life is not a thing Worthy your noble thoughts ! 'tis not a life, 'Tis but a piece of childhood thrown away.
Page 29 - tis so; and when time is full, That thou hast well discharged this heavy trust, Laid on so weak a one, I will again With joy receive thee ; as I live, I will ! Nay...
Page 75 - Madam, who did it ? Are. Some dishonest wretch ; Alas ! I know him not, and do forgive him. Coun. He's hurt too; he cannot go far ; I made my father's old fox fly about his ears.
Page 235 - ... time make it good in law; I have heard, indeed, that two negatives make an affirmative ; but I never heard before that two nothings ever made anything.
Page 16 - DION. See, how his fancy labours ! Has he not Spoke home and bravely? What a dangerous train Did he give fire to ! How he shook the King, , Made his soul melt within him, and his blood Run into whey ! It stood upon his brow Like a cold winter-dew.
Page 24 - I ask'd him all his story ; He told me that his parents gentle died, Leaving him to the mercy 'of the fields, Which gave him roots; and of the crystal springs, Which did not stop their courses; and the sun, Which still, he...
Page 29 - I am gone. But since I am to part with you, my lord, And none knows whether I shall live to do...
Page 58 - Now you may take that little right I have To this poor kingdom : give it to your joy ; For I have no joy in it. Some far place, Where never womankind durst set her foot For...
Page 42 - Set hills on hills betwixt me and the man That utters this, and I will scale them all, And from the utmost top fall on his neck, Like thunder from a cloud. DION. This is most strange: Sure, he does love her. PHI. I do love fair truth. She is my mistress, and who injures her Draws vengeance from me. Sirs, let go my arms.
Page 81 - Tis not the treasure of all kings in one, The wealth of Tagus, nor the rocks of pearl That pave the court of Neptune, can weigh down That virtue. It was I that hurt the princess. Place me, some god, upon a pyramis* Higher than hills of earth, and lend a voice Loud as your thunder to me, that from thence I may discourse to all the under-world The worth that dwells in him ! PHA.