The Dramatic Works of John O'Keeffe, 2. köideauthor, 1798 |
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Page 112
... tapes , and needles , fpectacles for all ages - Do extend your charity to the poor old man ! -very well . Ha , ha , ha ! --- - SCENE SCENE II . The Mountains . ROSA's Cabin in the [ Exit . 112 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
... tapes , and needles , fpectacles for all ages - Do extend your charity to the poor old man ! -very well . Ha , ha , ha ! --- - SCENE SCENE II . The Mountains . ROSA's Cabin in the [ Exit . 112 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
Page 113
... ROSA fitting at the door knitting . AIR . - ROSA . Here at her Cabin door is Rofa fitting , But oh , her thoughts in Dublin are with thee --- Move filly fingers , I muft mind my knitting , For ah ! my Felix may not think of me . That ...
... ROSA fitting at the door knitting . AIR . - ROSA . Here at her Cabin door is Rofa fitting , But oh , her thoughts in Dublin are with thee --- Move filly fingers , I muft mind my knitting , For ah ! my Felix may not think of me . That ...
Page 120
... , let me know no more than you think proper . DUET - FELIX AND ROSA .. Ah dearest love will you ever love me ? Treafur'd in Vi'lets are fweets for the bee ? Felix . Rofa . Felix . Rofa . Felix . Is 120 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
... , let me know no more than you think proper . DUET - FELIX AND ROSA .. Ah dearest love will you ever love me ? Treafur'd in Vi'lets are fweets for the bee ? Felix . Rofa . Felix . Rofa . Felix . Is 120 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
Page 121
... Rosa ! Adieu my dearest Felix ! Oh , may our hour's in love ferenely glide away . [ Exeunt feverally . Sul . And SCENE III . Sullivan's Houfe . Enter SULLIVAN and BILLY . you must be courting Rofa Bil . Yes I muft - And the Horfes were ...
... Rosa ! Adieu my dearest Felix ! Oh , may our hour's in love ferenely glide away . [ Exeunt feverally . Sul . And SCENE III . Sullivan's Houfe . Enter SULLIVAN and BILLY . you must be courting Rofa Bil . Yes I muft - And the Horfes were ...
Page 140
... knell of poor Felix ' paffing Chor . bell , Bear me then quick along , love hear my dying fong . Felix you have robb'd the mail , & c , END OF THE FIRST ACT . " ACT II . SCENE I : Infide of Rosa's Cabin 140 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
... knell of poor Felix ' paffing Chor . bell , Bear me then quick along , love hear my dying fong . Felix you have robb'd the mail , & c , END OF THE FIRST ACT . " ACT II . SCENE I : Infide of Rosa's Cabin 140 THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS .
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Common terms and phrases
afide Araminta Arklow Baffa Billy Captain Ambush Chronicle Clod Coventry Cross-L Crum Crumpy daughter dear defire devil Dinah Donnybrook door Drofs Dunderman Earl of Mercia Epaulette Exeunt Exit fafe father Felix fellow fhall fhew fhould fifter fince fings fome fquire fuch fure fweet gentleman give Grog heart honeft honor houfe houſe Jacob Jane John John Dory Lack Lackland Lady Godiva Lapo look Lord Ma'am Madam mafter Maud Mifs muft muſt myſelf never Otho PEEPING PEEPING TOM Pink pleaſe poor pretty Quin Re-enter REDMOND O'HANLON Rofa rogue Rover Sadboy SCENE Shadrach ſhall Sir G Sir George SOKOKI Spatterdash Tallyho tell there's theſe thou WAITER What's YOUNG QUAKER yourſelf Zebede Zounds
Popular passages
Page 52 - Excellent wretch ! Perdition catch my soul, But I do love thee ! and when I love thee not Chaos is come again.
Page 8 - From harmony, from heavenly harmony This universal frame began : From harmony to harmony Through all the compass of the notes it ran, The diapason closing full in Man.
Page 64 - Why, all the souls that were, were forfeit once ; • And He that might the vantage best have took, Found out the remedy : How would you be, If he, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are ? O, think on that ; And mercy then will breathe within your lips, Like man new made.
Page 192 - Whether ancient chroniclers looked upon the story of Peeping Tom as fabulous, we cannot say ; but we have not been able to meet with the least account of it in any of our English authors — we mean those who have written histories in that tongue. Leofrick, or Leofricus, Duke of...
Page 87 - I'll be dom'd, if I'll be your watchdog, to bite the poor, that I won't. Mr. Banks, as feyther intends to put up your goods at auction, if you could but get a friend to buy the choice of them for you again. Sister Jane has got steward to advance her a quarter's wages, and when I've gone to sell corn for feyther, besides presents, I've made a market penny now and then. Here — it's not much ! but every little helps. [ Takes out a small leather...
Page 64 - I must shut mine ears. Lady Am. And thy mouth also, good Ephraim. I have bidden my cousin Henry to my house, and I will not set bounds to his mirth, to gratify thy spleen, and show mine own inhospitality.
Page 192 - Baron Munchausen." There is one kind of conversation which most people aim at, and in which almost every one fails ; it is that of story-telling. It is very common for these gentry to lay one under the persecution of a long story, and be as much in earnest, as if the lives, and fortunes, and felicity of the three kingdoms depended upon it. A humour most unaccountable ! that a man should be letting off words for an hour or two, with a very innoAS cent intention, and after he has done his best, only...
Page 22 - Harry. Jack, you and I have often met on a stage in assumed characters ; if it's your wish we should ever meet again in our real ones, of sincere friends, without asking whither I go, or my motives for leaving you, when I walk up this road, do you turn down that.
Page 78 - ... without a home ? Let her come to mine. Banks. The hand of misery hath struck us beneath your notice. Lady Am. Thou dost mistake — To need my assistance is the highest claim to my attention : let me see her. [Exit BANKS.] I could chide myself that these pastimes have turned my eye from the house of woe. Ah ! think, ye proud and happy affluent, how many, in your dancing moments, pine in want, drink the salt tear ; their morsel, the bread of misery, and shrinking from the cold blast into their...