The Works of John Webster, 4. sējumsW. Pickering, 1830 |
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ALCADE Altofront ANTIMON ARIAD AUREL Aurelia banish banish'd beauty BIAN BIANCA BILIOSO blood breath CELSO CLOWN Cornets court crown cuckold CUNDALL dance dead death devil dost doth duke dutchess EMILIA Enter MALEVOLE EQUATO EUSANIUS Exeunt Exit eyes fair faith falling band father favour fear Ferneze FERRARDO fool FRANCIS KIRKMAN Garrick collection give hand hast hate hath hear heart heaven here's honour JOHN WEBSTER king knave lady leave live LORD lust Malcontent Maquerelle MARIA marry Mendoza methinks ne'er never night old copy PALEMON PASS PHEAN PIETRO play PREPASSO prince prisoner Radagon second 4to Serena shepherds SICIL Sicilia sing SINKLOW slave SOPH Sophos soul speak strange sure sweet tell thee thing thou art thou shalt Thrace Thracian TITYRUS twas unto villain Webster whilst woman women wounded
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78. lappuse - Tugs at his oar against the stubborn wave, Straining his rugged veins, snores fast; The stooping scythe-man, that doth barb the field, Thou makest wink sure.
14. lappuse - tis neither satire nor moral, but the mean passage of a history: yet there are a sort of discontented creatures that bear a stingless envy to great ones, and these will wrest the doings of any man to their base, malicious...
8. lappuse - I have myself, therefore, set forth this comedy ; but so, that my enforced absence must much rely upon the printer's discretion : but I shall entreat slight errors in orthography may be as slightly over-passed, and that the unhandsome shape which this trifle in reading presents, may be pardoned for the pleasure it once afforded you when it was presented with the soul of lively action.
73. lappuse - Bil. Thou art ever my politician. O, how happy is that old lord that hath a politician to his young lady ! I'll have fifty gentlemen shall attend upon me : marry, the most of them shall be farmers...
129. lappuse - And by my troth, beauties, why do you not put you into the fashion ? this is a stale cut, you must come in fashion : look ye, you must be all felt, felt and feather, a felt upon your bare hair * : look ye, these tiring things are justly out of request now : and, do ye hear ? you must wear falling...
166. lappuse - I'll not forsake thee; Runn'st thou ne'er so fast, I'll o'ertake thee : O'er the dales, o'er the downs, Through the green meadows, From the fields, through the towns, To the dim shadows.
58. lappuse - Rivels the skin, casts ashes in men's faces, Bedulls the eye, unstrengthens all the blood, Chance to remove me to another world, As sure I once must die, let him succeed.
67. lappuse - How fortune dotes on impudence ! I am in private the adopted son of yon good prince. I must be duke. Why, if I must, I must. Most silly lord, name me? O heaven! I see God made honest fools to maintain crafty knaves.
15. lappuse - Why not Malevole in folio with us, as Jeronimo in decimo-sexto with them? They taught us a name for our play: we call it One for another.
103. lappuse - Which we abhor; like deed, not doer. Then conclude, They live not to cry out 'ingratitude!' One stick burns t'other, steel cuts steel alone. 'Tis good trust few, but O, 'tis best trust none!