The Miscellaneous Works of Richard Linnecar, of WakefieldThomas Wright, 1789 - 300 pages |
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Page 10
... I'll be with you at the time . Exeunt . SCENE an INN . Enter SIR CHARLES FRIENDLY and TRUEMAN . TRUEMAN . Dear Friendly ! How am I rejoiced to find you the fame fteady friend , the fame generous man . SIR CHARLES . As far as my fortune ...
... I'll be with you at the time . Exeunt . SCENE an INN . Enter SIR CHARLES FRIENDLY and TRUEMAN . TRUEMAN . Dear Friendly ! How am I rejoiced to find you the fame fteady friend , the fame generous man . SIR CHARLES . As far as my fortune ...
Page 16
... I'll defer this marriage till- certainties arrive . ' Twas a maxim of my father's and a wife one it is , to look before we leap . Enter a Servant . SERVANT . Sir , a Gentleman defires to fpeak with you . Shew him in . CASHLOVE . Enter a ...
... I'll defer this marriage till- certainties arrive . ' Twas a maxim of my father's and a wife one it is , to look before we leap . Enter a Servant . SERVANT . Sir , a Gentleman defires to fpeak with you . Shew him in . CASHLOVE . Enter a ...
Page 22
... I'll endeavour to find it out , and recon- cile them . Mrs. WORTHY . Do , child . It would grieve me , if two fuch worthy creatures were at variance . Enter a Servant . SERVANT . Madam , a gentleman begs leave to wait upon you . Mrs ...
... I'll endeavour to find it out , and recon- cile them . Mrs. WORTHY . Do , child . It would grieve me , if two fuch worthy creatures were at variance . Enter a Servant . SERVANT . Madam , a gentleman begs leave to wait upon you . Mrs ...
Page 25
... I'll drown in Trent , My whips I'll burn ; my hunters fhall be fent To France . Come , frown not , frowns distort the face . More than Whitfield's enthufiaftic grace . HOR . B. 1. Ode 16 . D but in plain profe , Mifs , thou art a A ...
... I'll drown in Trent , My whips I'll burn ; my hunters fhall be fent To France . Come , frown not , frowns distort the face . More than Whitfield's enthufiaftic grace . HOR . B. 1. Ode 16 . D but in plain profe , Mifs , thou art a A ...
Page 29
... I'll break off the treaty with him . CLARISSA . Since you are fo good as to indulge me with a hearing , whilft I fpeak my fentiments , for which I shall eternally thank you- Mrs. WORTHY . Come , no more of this , child . I defire ...
... I'll break off the treaty with him . CLARISSA . Since you are fo good as to indulge me with a hearing , whilft I fpeak my fentiments , for which I shall eternally thank you- Mrs. WORTHY . Come , no more of this , child . I defire ...
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The Miscellaneous Works of Richard Linnecar, of Wakefield (Classic Reprint) Richard Linnecar No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
ACHMET affured afide Apollo-Lodge Attorney at Law blefs bleft BRISK buſineſs Captain CASHLOVE caufe CHARLOTTE Chloe Chriftians Clariffa CLARISSA Cornwall Damon dear defire Derry ditto DROLIO e'er Edinburgh EGMOND Enter ev'ry Exeunt exit fafe faid FAITHFUL fear fent feven fhall fhew fhip fhould firſt flaves fome foon foul FREEMAN ftill fuch fure fweet Hafan HALI Halyma happineſs HASAN hear heart heaven hope houſe huſband James Jofeph John lady laft LAURA Leeds Leonifa Liverpool Lodge loft London Lord Madam mafons Mafter maid MANCHETTE Mifs STUKELY moſt muft muſt MUSTAPHA myſelf never Newcaſtle night PINUM pleaſe pleaſure Pontefract pray prefent RATTLE RICARDO Servant ſhall ſhe Sheffield Sir Charles Friendly ſpeak Tangier tell thee thefe theſe thofe Thomas thoſe thou thought thouſand TRUEMAN VIXEN Wakefield whilft whofe wife WILDLY William WORTHY wretch your's Zanger
Popular passages
Page 258 - Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.
Page 260 - ALMIGHTY and everlasting God, who art •£*• always more ready to hear than we to pray, and art wont to give more than either we desire or deserve ; Pour down upon us the abundance of thy mercy ; forgiving us those things whereof our conscience is afraid, and giving us those good things which we are not worthy to ask, but through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ, thy Son, our Lord.
Page 262 - But will God indeed dwell on the earth .' Behold the heaven, and the heaven of heavens, cannot contain thee ; how much less this house that I have builded...
Page 239 - Let there be light !" — the Almighty spoke, Refulgent streams from chaos broke, To illume the rising earth ! Well pleas'd the great Jehovah stood, The power supreme pronounc'd it good, And gave the planets birth ! In choral numbers Masons join, To bless and praise this light...
Page 259 - Lay not thy hand upon the lad ; for now I know that thou fearest God, because thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, from him.
Page 257 - I return thither; the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away ; blefied be the name of the Lord.
Page 252 - ... honesty or fidelity, and adds, when they promised anything of old, they gave their hand upon it, as we do now, and therefore she is represented as giving her hand, and sometimes as only two hands conjoined. Chartarius...
Page 218 - Whilfl others run mad, when they find out their wives, Like horn-giggs they whip them each day of their lives. Derry down.
Page 248 - Faul mentions that Moses exceedingly quaked and feared on mount Sinai; but we do not find it so recorded any where in the old Testament.
Page 258 - Ifaac laid to his father, father here is the altar and the fire, but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?