The Works of Henry Fielding, Esq: Dramatic worksSmith, Elder & Company, 1882 |
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance assure beaus believe better BLISTER brother CAPTAIN SPARK CAPTAIN WEAZEL CHARLOTTE CLARINDA COLONEL RAFFLER COUPEE cuckold damned dance daughter dear devil Enter EURYDICE Exeunt Exit faith farce father fellow fortune FUSTIAN GAYLOVE gentleman ghost give glad GOODWILL happy Harlequin hate hath heart HEARTFORT honour hope humble servant husband LADY RAFFLER LORD BAWBLE LORD DAPPER LORD PLACE LUCY madam married MAYOR MEDLEY MIDNIGHT MILLAMOUR MISS BONCOUR MISS MAYORESS MISS VALENCE mistress MONDISH never obliged OLD VALENCE ORPHEUS pardon passion PILLAGE play PLAYER PLOTWELL PLUTO pray pretty PROMPTER PROSERPINE QUAVER QUEEN COMMON-SENSE QUEEN IGNORANCE reason SCENE SIR GEORGE BONCOUR SIR GREGORY KENNEL SIR HARRY SIR SIMON RAFFLER sister SNEERWELL SOURWIT STEDFAST suppose sure tell thee thing town tragedy TRAPWIT virtue What's wife wish woman YOUNG BONCOUR YOUNG KENNEL YOUNG MUTABLE YOUNG VALENCE ZOROBABEL
Popular passages
Page 179 - Now, Mr Sneerwell, we shall begin my third and last act; and I believe I may defy all the poets who have ever writ, or ever will write, to produce its equal: it is, sir, so crammed with drums and trumpets, thunder and lightning, battles and ghosts, that I believe the audience will want no entertainment after it...
Page 334 - What think you now? Whose face looks worst, yours or mine? Ah ! thou foolish follower of the ragged Nine, You'd better stuck to honest Abraham Adams, by half: He, in spite of critics, can make your readers laugh. But to the Prologue. — What shall I say? Why, faith, in my sense, I take plain truth to be the best defence. I think, then, it was horrid stuff; and in my humble apprehension, Had it been spoke, not worthy your attention. I'll give you a sample, if I can recollect it.
Page 228 - Damned, sir, damned; they were damned at my first rehearsal, for which reason I have cut them out ; and to tell you the truth, I think the town has honoured 'em enough with talking of 'em for a whole month; though, faith, I believe it was owing to their having nothing else to talk of.
Page 123 - Pasquin. A Dramatick Satire on the Times : Being the Rehearsal of Two Plays, viz. A Comedy call'd The Election ; and a Tragedy call'd The Life and Death of Common-Sense.
Page 170 - Will they, my lord? then better we had none: But I have also heard a sweet bird sing, That men unable to discharge their debts At a short warning, being sued for them, Have, with both power and will their debts to pay, Lain all their lives in prison for their costs.
Page 197 - This is a day, in days of yore, Our fathers never saw before : This is a day, 'tis one to ten, Our sons will never see again.
Page 168 - Voices were heard i' th' air, and seem'd to say, Awake my drowsy sons, and sleep no more: They must mean something ! • Law. Certainly they must— — — We have our omens too ! The other day A mighty deluge swam into our hall, As if it meant to wash away the law : Lawyers were forc'd to ride on porters' shoulders; One, O prodigious omen ! tumbled down, And he and all his briefs were sous'd together.
Page 327 - How, my Lord, resign my wife ! Fortune, which made me poor made me a servant ; but nature, which made me an Englishman, preserved me from being a slave. I have as good a right to the little I claim, as the proudest peer hath to his great possessions ; and whilst I am able, I will defend it.
Page 228 - I have too great an honour for Shakespeare to think of burlesquing him, and to be sure of not burlesquing him, I will never attempt to alter him for fear of burlesquing him by accident, as perhaps some others have done/ > LORD DAPPER.
Page 398 - Custom may lead a man into many errors, but it justifies none ; nor are any of its laws more absurd and unjust than those relating to the commerce between the sexes : for what can be more ridiculous than to make it infamous for...