| Richard Brinsley Sheridan, George Gabriel Sigmond - 1857 - 592 páginas
...see — what soon you '11 see On. . . . Hold, daughter ! peace ! this love hath turn'd thy brain : The Spanish fleet thou canst not see — because — It is not yet in sight I " Dang. Egad, though, the governor seems to make no allowance for this poetical figure you talk of.... | |
| John William Cole - 1859 - 388 páginas
...Critic,' very little disposed to admit the possibility of seeing things that are invisible : — ' The Spanish fleet thou can'st not see, because It is not yet in sight.' " When Bouffe was last in London, in 1851, it so happened that the writer of these pages had never... | |
| John William Cole - 1859 - 810 páginas
...Critic,' very little disposed to admit the possibility of seeing things that are invisible : — ' The Spanish fleet thou can'st not see, because It is not yet in sight." " When BoufTe was last in London, in 1851, it so happened that the writer of these pages had never... | |
| William Earle - 1859 - 706 páginas
...see, I see, what soon you'll see. Oov. Hold ! daughter— peace ; this love hath turned thy brain. The Spanish fleet thou can'st not see, because It is not yet in sight. Dang. Egad, though, the governor seems to make no. allowance for this poetical figure you talk of.... | |
| Alpine Club (London, England) - 1862 - 650 páginas
...assigned for the invisibility of the Spanish fleet by the Governor of Tilbury Fort in the " Critic " — " The Spanish fleet thou canst not see, Because — it is not yet iu sight." The bottle had been left behind at the col. My barometer was carefully replaced in its case,... | |
| 1864 - 554 páginas
...see — what soon you'll see — Loremer. Hold, daughter ! P»ace ! This love has turn'd thy brain ! The Spanish fleet thou canst not see, because It is not yet in sight I" But reeenont <) not moutons. Enoch departs, and the wife's prophecy • The Bathos, or art of sinking... | |
| 1865 - 336 páginas
...I see — what scon you'll nee — ' Gov. Hold, daughter! peace! this love bath 1 turn'd thy brain: 'The Spanish fleet thou canst not see— because ' — It is not yet in sight !' Dan. Egad! though, tho governor seems to moke no и llinvnure for this poetical figure you talk... | |
| sir John Thomas Gilbert - 1865 - 86 páginas
...reasoning somewhat similar to that of the father of " Tilburina," who declared to his mad daughter, " The Spanish fleet thou canst not see — because — It is not yet in sight !" In this important matter the Commissioners appear not to have been fairly dealt with by those on... | |
| Acrostics - 1866 - 280 páginas
...brook by our side, What is this castle that rises above us, and lords it over a land so wide ? " 3. " The Spanish fleet thou canst not see, because — It is not yet in sight." 4. " Sport that wrinkled care derides, And Laughter holding both his sides." 6. " No prize, alas 1... | |
| Mrs. Wm. Pitt Byrne - 1866 - 326 páginas
...BULL-FIGHT ........ 241 DYING HORSE ON THE ARENA ..... 270 PEEFAC E. INTRODUCTION OF EAILWAYS INTO SPAIN. " The Spanish fleet thou canst not see, because — It is not yet insight :" SHERIDAN. "De duro, est ultima, ferro." OVID. introduction of railways into that country,... | |
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