The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher: The tragedy of Valentinian. Monsieur Thomas. The chances. The bloody brother. The wild-goose chaseUniversity Press, 1906 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 65 筆
第 6 頁
... Fathers , and not such as you are ; If ever any thing were constant in you , Besides your sins , or coming , but your courses ; If ever any of your Ancestors Dyed worth a noble deed , that would be cherish'd ; Soul - frighted with this ...
... Fathers , and not such as you are ; If ever any thing were constant in you , Besides your sins , or coming , but your courses ; If ever any of your Ancestors Dyed worth a noble deed , that would be cherish'd ; Soul - frighted with this ...
第 11 頁
... Fathers Famous and fast to Rome ? why are their Vertues Stampt in the dangers of a thousand Battels ? For goodness sake , their honours , time outdaring ? I think for our example . Ecius . Ye speak nobly . Max . Why are we seeds of ...
... Fathers Famous and fast to Rome ? why are their Vertues Stampt in the dangers of a thousand Battels ? For goodness sake , their honours , time outdaring ? I think for our example . Ecius . Ye speak nobly . Max . Why are we seeds of ...
第 16 頁
... Fathers The Sons of lazie Moors , our Princes Persians , Nothing but silks and softness ? Curses on ' em That first taught Nero wantonness and blood , Tiberius doubts , Caligula all vices ; For from the spring of these , succeeding ...
... Fathers The Sons of lazie Moors , our Princes Persians , Nothing but silks and softness ? Curses on ' em That first taught Nero wantonness and blood , Tiberius doubts , Caligula all vices ; For from the spring of these , succeeding ...
第 34 頁
... Father of the Empires honour , Ye are too near the nature of the Gods , To wrong the weakest of all creatures , women . Emp . I dare not do it here , rise fair Lucina , I did but try your temper , ye are honest , And with the ...
... Father of the Empires honour , Ye are too near the nature of the Gods , To wrong the weakest of all creatures , women . Emp . I dare not do it here , rise fair Lucina , I did but try your temper , ye are honest , And with the ...
第 53 頁
... , If she be dead- Chil . Alas Sir . Empe . Hang ye Rascals , Ye blasters of my youth , if she be gone , ' Twere better ye had been your Fathers Camels , Groan'd under daily weights of wood and water : Am 53 ACT IV VALENTINIAN.
... , If she be dead- Chil . Alas Sir . Empe . Hang ye Rascals , Ye blasters of my youth , if she be gone , ' Twere better ye had been your Fathers Camels , Groan'd under daily weights of wood and water : Am 53 ACT IV VALENTINIAN.
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常見字詞
Aeci Alice Aretus bless bloud brave Brother Cæsar Chil Const danger dare Devil divides the line Don John Duke e're Ecius Emperour Enter Exeunt Exit fair faln farewel Father fear fool fortune Francis Beaumont Fred Frederick Gent Gentleman give gods Grace handsom hear heart Heaven honest honour hope Hylas I'le i'th John Lowin Lady Latorch Licinius live look Lord Luci Lycias Maid Mary Maximus Mirabel Monsieur Monsieur Thomas Musick ne'r never noble omits on't Oria Petr Phidias Phorba Pinac pray ye Prince Proculus Quartos Rollo Scena SCENE Servant setled shew Sirrah sorrow soul Souldier speak sure sweet sword take heed tell ye thee there's thing Thom thou art twill Valentinian vertue wench Whore woman women
熱門章節
第 60 頁 - Or painfull to his slumbers ; easie, sweet, And as a purling stream, thou son of night, Pass by his troubled senses ; 'sing his pain Like hollow murmuring wind, or silver Rain, Into this Prince gently, Oh gently slide, And kiss him into slumbers like a Bride.
第 291 頁 - bears, On whose tops the Pinks that grow Are of those that April wears, But first set my poor heart free, Bound in those Ivy chains by thee.
第 74 頁 - God of youth, let this day here Enter neither care nor fear. Boy. Bellona's seed, the glory of old Rome, Envy of conquer'd Nations, nobly come And to the fulness of your war-like noise Let your feet move, make up this hour of joys ; Come, come I say, range your fair Troop at large, And your high measure turn into a charge.
第 13 頁 - the lusty Spring hath staid, Blushing red and purest white, Daintily to love invite, Every Woman, every Maid, Cherries kissing as they grow ; And inviting men to taste, Apples even ripe below, Winding gently to the waste
第 247 頁 - cough and tissick, And is for all diseases Physick. Then let us swill boyes for our health, Who drinks well, loves the common-wealth. And he that will to bed go sober, Falls with the leaf still in
第 264 頁 - thee ; And may sweet mercy when thy soul sighs for it, When under thy black mischiefs thy flesh trembles, When neither strength, nor youth, nor friends, nor gold Can stay one hour, when thy most wretched Conscience Wak'd from her dream of death, like fire shall melt thee, When all thy Mothers tears, thy Brothers wounds, Thy
第 48 頁 - die, All leave our selves, it matters not where, when, Nor how, so we die well : and can that man that does so Need lamentation for him ? Children weep Because they have offended, or for fear ; Women for want of will, and anger ; is there In noble man, that truly feels both
第 73 頁 - ever sung ; Stain'd with bloud of lusty Grapes, In a thousand lusty shapes ; Dance upon the Mazers brim, In the Crimson liquor swim : From thy plenteous hand divine, Let a River run with
第 314 頁 - wench. Bel. Methinks the other, The home-spoken Gentlewoman, that desires to be fruitful, That treats of the full manage of the matter, For there lies all my aim ; that wench, methinks If I were but well set on ; for she is a fable, If I were but hounded right, and one to teach me
第 13 頁 - sailing on the stream, To deceive the hopes of man, Love accounting but a dream, Doted on a silver Swan, Danae in a Brazen Tower, Where no love was, lov'da