| Edmund Burke - 1871 - 670 pages
...hearts ") — hearts, our hearts — hem ! Again a revolving year, ladies, had brought us to a pause in our studies — let us hope our greatly advanced studies...traveller in his various conveyances, we yearned for homo. Did we say on such an occasion,, in the opening words of Mr. Addison's impressive tragedy —... | |
| British drama - 1804 - 946 pages
...Scene, — .d Ляй in the governor's palace in Utica. ACT I. SCENE I. Enter PORTIUS and MARCUS. Por. THE dawn is overcast, the morning lowers, And heavily in clouds brings on the day ; The great, the impôt tant day, big with the fate Of Cato and of Rome. Our father's death Would fill up all the... | |
| British drama - 1804 - 954 pages
...Scene, — A hall in the governor's palace in Utica. ACT I. SCENE I. Enter PORTIUS and MARCUS. for. THE dawn is overcast, the morning lowers, And heavily in clouds brings on the day ; The great, the impoi tant day, big with the fate Of Cato and of Rome. Our father's death Would fill up all the... | |
| 1804 - 516 pages
...4"''Seene, — A hall in the governor's palace in Utitn. ACT I. SCENE I. ínter PORTIUS ßnd MARCUS. Por. THE dawn is overcast, the morning lowers, And heavily in clouds brings on the day ; The great, the impoi tant day, big with the fate Of Cato and of Rome. Our father's death Would fill up all the... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1810 - 312 pages
...Porter. Scene, a large Hall in the Governor's Palace of Utica. ACT I. SCENE I. PORTIUS, MARCUS. Par. The dawn is over-cast, the morning lowers, and heavily in clouds brings on the day, the great, the important day; big with the fate of Cato and Rome.— Our father's death would fill up all the... | |
| Abraham Cowley - 1810 - 314 pages
...Porter. Scene, a large Hall in the Governor's Palace of Utica. ACT I. SCENE I. FORTIUS, MARCUS. Par. The dawn is over-cast, the morning lowers, and heavily in clouds brings on the day, the great, the important day; big with the fate of Cato and Rome.— Our father's death •would fill up all the... | |
| William Windham - 1812 - 452 pages
...of Cato, remarks that there is nothing in the two beautiful lines with which the poem opens : — " The dawn is overcast, the morning lowers, " And heavily in clouds brings on the day — " that there is nothing in all this but what a watchman tells us when he calls out " past four... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - 1812 - 714 pages
...remarks that there is nothing in the two beautiful lines with which the poem opens : — " The datvn is overcast, the morning lowers, " And heavily in clouds brings on the day — ." that there is nothing in all this but what a watchman tells us when he calls out " past four... | |
| Richard Ryan - 1825 - 526 pages
...part of Portius, and having stepped forward with a prodigious though an accustomed strut, began — " The dawn is overcast ; the morning lowers ; And heavily, in clouds, brings on the day." The audience began upon this to vociferate " Prologue! prologue! prologue!" when Wignell, finding them... | |
| Richard Ryan - 1825 - 332 pages
...of Porlius, and having stepped forward with a prodigious though an accustomed strut, began — . " The dawn is overcast ; the morning lowers ; And heavily, in clouds, brings on the day." The audience began upon this to vociferate " Prologue! prologue! prologue!" when Wignell, finding them... | |
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