The Dramatick Works of Mr. George Farquhar ...: The beaux strategem. Love and a bottle. The constant couple. The stage-coachB. Lintot, 1736 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
Page 6
... pretty well known upon this Road , as the Saying is . Aim . O ! Mr. Bonniface , your Servant . Bon . O , Six - What will your Honour please to drink , as the Saying is . Aim . I have heard your Town of Litchfield much fam'd for Ale , I ...
... pretty well known upon this Road , as the Saying is . Aim . O ! Mr. Bonniface , your Servant . Bon . O , Six - What will your Honour please to drink , as the Saying is . Aim . I have heard your Town of Litchfield much fam'd for Ale , I ...
Page 15
... pretty Fellow ; I like his Pride . pray , Sir , you fee , Sir , [ Archer returns ] I have the Cre- dit to be intrufted with your Mafter's Fortune here , which fets me a degree above a Footman ; I hope , Sir , you a'n't affronted . Arch ...
... pretty Fellow ; I like his Pride . pray , Sir , you fee , Sir , [ Archer returns ] I have the Cre- dit to be intrufted with your Mafter's Fortune here , which fets me a degree above a Footman ; I hope , Sir , you a'n't affronted . Arch ...
Page 17
... pretty fair Opening of an Adventure ; but we are Knight- Errants , and fo Fortune be our Guide . The END of the FIRST ACT . [ Exit . АСТ ACT II . SCENE , A Gallery in Lady Bountiful's Dor . Houfe . Mrs. Sullen and Dorinda , meeting . M ...
... pretty fair Opening of an Adventure ; but we are Knight- Errants , and fo Fortune be our Guide . The END of the FIRST ACT . [ Exit . АСТ ACT II . SCENE , A Gallery in Lady Bountiful's Dor . Houfe . Mrs. Sullen and Dorinda , meeting . M ...
Page 18
... pretty things , called Pleasures . Dor . You fhare in all the Pleasures that the Country affords . Mrs. Sul . Country Pleafures ! Racks and Torments ! Doft think , Child , that my Limbs are made for leaping of Ditches , and clambring ...
... pretty things , called Pleasures . Dor . You fhare in all the Pleasures that the Country affords . Mrs. Sul . Country Pleafures ! Racks and Torments ! Doft think , Child , that my Limbs are made for leaping of Ditches , and clambring ...
Page 25
... pretty Fellow that ; who's Servant are you , Friend ? Arch . My Master's . Gib . Really ? Arch . Really . Gib . That's much- Bar by his Evasions . Master's Name ? -- The Fellow has been at the But pray , Sir , what is your Arch . Tall ...
... pretty Fellow that ; who's Servant are you , Friend ? Arch . My Master's . Gib . Really ? Arch . Really . Gib . That's much- Bar by his Evasions . Master's Name ? -- The Fellow has been at the But pray , Sir , what is your Arch . Tall ...
Common terms and phrases
Afide Aimwell Alderman Arch Archer becauſe beſt Bount Brother Bufinefs Buſineſs Cher Clin Cloaths Colonel cou'd Coufin d'ye Darl Daugh dear defign Devil Dorinda Enter Erra Exeunt Exit fafe fame felf Fellow fent feven fhall fhew fhou'd fince firft Foig fome fomething Fool Fortune Friend ftill fuch fuppofe fure Gentleman GEORGE FARQUHAR Guineas Honour Houfe Houſe Hufband Ifab Igad juft Lady laft Lean Leanthe Lord Love Lovewell Lucinda Lure Lurewell Lyrick Madam Mafter Miftrefs Miſtreſs Mock Mockmode moft moſt muft muſt never on't Paffion Perfon pleaſe Pleaſure pray prefently Prithee Roeb Roebuck Rogue Scrub Servant ſhall ſhe Sifter Sir Ch Sir Harry Sirrah Smug Squi Stand tell thefe there's theſe thofe thou thouſand Trifle underſtand Univerſe Vizard What's Whore Wife Wild Wildair Woman wou'd
Popular passages
Page 49 - ... em fast. Wedlock we own ordain'd by Heaven's decree, But such as Heaven ordain'd it first to be; — Concurring tempers in the man and wife As mutual helps to draw the load of life. View all the works of Providence above, The stars with harmony and concord move; View all the works of Providence below, The fire, the water, earth, and air, we know, All in one plant agree to make it grow.
Page 8 - O that's right, you have a good many of those gentlemen : pray, how do you like their company ? Bon. So well, as the saying is, that I could wish we had as many more of 'em. They're full of money, and pay double for every thing they have.
Page 79 - I am no lord, but a poor, needy man, come with a mean, a scandalous design to prey upon your fortune.
Page 31 - What sort of livery has the footman? SCRUB. Livery! Lord, Madam, I took him for a captain, he's so bedizened with lace!
Page 58 - Was he successful in his amours ? Arch. There he has left us in the dark. He was too much a gentleman to tell. Mrs.
Page 65 - Nay, if your honour be concerned with a woman, get it out of her hands as soon as you can. — An honourable lover is the greatest slave in nature: some will say, the greatest fool.
Page 72 - I would have taken nothing but what you might ha' spared; but your crying thieves has waked this dreaming fool, and so he takes 'em for granted. Scrub. Granted ! 'tis granted, sir, take all we have. Mrs.
Page 61 - I should have believed him a footman in good earnest. Dor. But my lover was upon his knees to me. Mrs. Sul. And mine was upon his tiptoes to me. Dor. Mine vowed to die for me.
Page 19 - Ay, but, on t'other hand, I have money enough to bribe the rogues with : so, upon mature deliberation^ I would fight for her. — But no more of her.
Page 59 - Master order'd you. Scrub. A Guinea, hi, hi, hi, a Guinea! eh — by this Light it is a Guinea; but I suppose you expect One and twenty Shillings in change.