I will consider your musick the better:7 if it do not, it is a vice in her ears, which horse-hairs, and cats-guts, nor the voice of unpaved eunuch to boot, can never amend. [Exeunt Musicians. Grantley Manor: A Tale - Page 159by Georgiana Fullerton - 1849 - 318 pagesFull view - About this book
| William Shakespeare - 1805 - 496 pages
...those springs On chalicdjlowers that lies;' And winking Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes;8 With every thing that pretty bin: My lady sweet, arise; Arise, arise. So, get you gone: If this penetrate, I will consider your musick the better:7 if it do not, it is a... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1805 - 490 pages
...those springs On chalicd flowers that lies',* And winking Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes;6 With every thing that pretty bin; My lady sweet, arise; Arise, arise. So, get you gone : If this penetrate, I will consider your musick the better:7 if it do not, it is... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1811 - 498 pages
...Mary-buds begin And Phoebus 'gins arise, His steeds to water at those springs To ope their golden eyes ; 6 With every thing that pretty bin: My lady sweet, arise; Arise, arise. So, get you gone : If this penetrate, I will consider your musick the better: 7 if it do not, it is... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1826 - 578 pages
...those springs On chalic'd jkwers that lies,- s And winking Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes; 6 With every thing that pretty bin : My lady sweet, arise ,Arise, arise. So, get you gone; If this penetrate, I will consider your musick the better 7 : if it do not, it is... | |
| Georgiana Fullerton - Religious fiction - 1847 - 326 pages
...ties; And winking Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes, With everything that pretty bin : My tady sweet, arise! Arise! arise!" These words were adapted...been yielded to, or never to have been dispelled. He came to gaze again on the face that had bewitched him— on the voice that had entranced him. He... | |
| George Fletcher (essayist.) - Acting - 1847 - 418 pages
...lachimo's proud celebration of her sleeping charms, do we find in the closing strain of the serenade — With every thing that pretty bin, My lady sweet, arise ! Arise, arise ! But the troubles of poor Imogen thicken around her: it is just when she is most tormentingly "sprighted... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1875 - 498 pages
...seemed to open their smiling eies, which were oppressed with the drowsinesse of the passed night," &c. With every thing that pretty bin*: My lady sweet, arise ; Arise, arise. So, get you gone : If this penetrate, I will consider your musick the better3 : if it do not, it is... | |
| Jehiel Keeler Hoyt, Anna Lydia Ward - Quotations - 1882 - 926 pages
...to water at those springs On chalic'd flowers that lies ; And winking Mary-buds begin To ope theidr golden eyes ; With every thing that pretty bin : My lady sweet, arise ; Arise, arise. ij. Cymbeline. Sony. Act II. Sc. 3. The wolves have prey'd : and look, the gentle day, Before the wheels... | |
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