| 1910 - 500 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office, But such whose fathers were right worshipful. 'Tis a rich man's pride ! there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy, Between us and true gentry. Enter WELLBORN MAR. See, who's here, sir. OVER. Hence, monster ! prodigy ! WELL. Sir, your wife's nephew.... | |
| Felix Emmanuel Schelling - 1926 - 840 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office, But such whose fathers were right worshipful. Tie a rich man's pride! there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy, Between us and true gentry. Enter WELUOBN Mar. See, who's here, eir. Over. Hence, monster! prodigy! Well. Sir, your wife's nephew.... | |
| Henri Jacob Makkink - 1927 - 226 páginas
...as his slaves, for he looks upon the nobility as his natural enemies, which is proved by his words: "there having ever been/ More than a feud, a strange antipathy,/ Between us and true gentry". Ghosts appear in two plays : in The unnatural Combat the ghosts of his victims rise up before the terrified... | |
| Robert Metcalf Smith - 1928 - 780 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office, But such whose fathers were right worshipful. 'Tis a rich man's pride! there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy, Between us and true gentry. [Enter WELLBORN.] MARRALL. See, who's here, sir. OVERREACH. Hence, monster! prodigy! WELLBORN. Sir,... | |
| Harold F. Rubinstein - 1928 - 1138 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office, But such whose fathers were right worshipful. 'Tis to Conquer, Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816) stepped into Enter WELLBORN. MAR. : See, who's here, sir. OVER. : Hence, monster ! prodigy ! WELL. : Sir, your wife's... | |
| Colin Gibson - 1978 - 408 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office, 85 But such whose fathers were right worshipful. Tis a rich man's pride; there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy Between us, and true gentry. Enter WELLBORN. MARRALL. See who's here, sir. OVERREACH. Hence, monster! Prodigy! WELLBORN. Sir, your... | |
| Margot Heinemann - 1980 - 316 páginas
...chambermaid That ties her shoes, or any meaner office. But such whose fathers were right worshipful. 'Tis a rich man's pride! there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy Between us and true gentry. (II.i.8 1 )' ' The 'popular Lord Lovell ', however, has far too high a regard for his own rank to entertain... | |
| David L. Smith, Richard Strier, David Bevington - 2003 - 312 páginas
...from the city, To have their issue, whom I have undone, To kneel to mine, as bond-slaves . . . 'Tis a rich man's pride, there having ever been More than...feud, a strange antipathy Between us and true gentry. (2.1.81-9) This implies a scenario which owes less to close observation of provincial change than it... | |
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