Miscellaneous Works, in Verse and Prose, Volume 2J. and R. Tonson and S. Draper, 1753 |
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Page 181
... ABIGA L. Here are your drunken fots for you ! Is this a time to be guzzling , when gentry are come to the house ! why you lay your cloth ? How come you out of the ftables ? Why are not you at work in your garden ? don't GAR- GARDINER ...
... ABIGA L. Here are your drunken fots for you ! Is this a time to be guzzling , when gentry are come to the house ! why you lay your cloth ? How come you out of the ftables ? Why are not you at work in your garden ? don't GAR- GARDINER ...
Page 182
... ABIGA L. Ay , ' tis fuch cowards as you that go about with idle ftories to difgrace the houfe , and bring fo many Stran- gers about it ; you firft frighten yourselves , and then . your neighbours . GARDINER .. Frighten'd ! I fcorn your ...
... ABIGA L. Ay , ' tis fuch cowards as you that go about with idle ftories to difgrace the houfe , and bring fo many Stran- gers about it ; you firft frighten yourselves , and then . your neighbours . GARDINER .. Frighten'd ! I fcorn your ...
Page 183
... ABIGA L. Well , these drunken rogues take it as I could wish . GARDINER . [ Afide I fcorn to be frightned , now I am in for't ; if old Dub- a - dub fhould come into the room , I wou'd take him BUTLER . Pr'ythee hold thy tongue ...
... ABIGA L. Well , these drunken rogues take it as I could wish . GARDINER . [ Afide I fcorn to be frightned , now I am in for't ; if old Dub- a - dub fhould come into the room , I wou'd take him BUTLER . Pr'ythee hold thy tongue ...
Page 184
... ABIGA L. Well , O ' my confcience , you are the merriest ghoft ! and the very Picture of Sir George Truman . FANTOM E. There you flatter me , Mrs. Abigal : Sir George had that freshness in his looks , that we Men of the town cannot come ...
... ABIGA L. Well , O ' my confcience , you are the merriest ghoft ! and the very Picture of Sir George Truman . FANTOM E. There you flatter me , Mrs. Abigal : Sir George had that freshness in his looks , that we Men of the town cannot come ...
Page 185
... ABIGA L. Well , tell me truly , Mr. Fantome , have you not a great opinion of my fidelity to my dear Lady , that I would not fuffer her to be deluded in this manner , for less than a thousand pound ? FANTOM E. Thou art always remembring ...
... ABIGA L. Well , tell me truly , Mr. Fantome , have you not a great opinion of my fidelity to my dear Lady , that I would not fuffer her to be deluded in this manner , for less than a thousand pound ? FANTOM E. Thou art always remembring ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABIGA ABIGA L Abigal æther Afide atque becauſe buſineſs BUTLER Cæfar Cafar caft Cato Cato's cauſe COACHMAN Conjurer cou'd dear death DECIUS doft thou Drum Duke of Anjou faid fame fancy FANTOM E Fantome father fecond fecret fervants fhall fhou'd firft firſt fome foon foul fpeak friends ftand ftill ftories fuch fuffer fure GARDINER Ghoft give good-natur'd hear heart Heav'n himſelf Ho--nour honour houfe houſe huſband JUBA juft LADY laft laſt loft lov'd LUCIA LUCIUS Madam mafter Marcia Marcus moſt muft muſt myſelf Numidian paffion perfon pleaſure Portius Pr'ythee praiſe Pray prefent Prince reaſon rife rifu Roman Rome ſay SCENE SEMPRONIUS ſhall ſhe Sir GEORGE ſpeak Steward ſtill ſuch Syphax talk tell thee thefe theſe thing thofe thoſe thought thouſand Tinfel TINSE TINSE L uſe VELLU virtue Widow wiſh woman wou'd САТО