Short Plays for Young PeopleJames Plaisted Webber, Hanson Hart Webster Houghton Mifflin, 1925 - 231 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 59
22 psl.
... stand it any longer ! I couldn't stand it another minute ! I took my little girl in my arms ! I ran away ! I left you ! THE PIERROT [ opening his arms sadly ] . Pierrette ! Ah , Pierrette ! THE MASKED DOLL [ pushing him away ] . I am ...
... stand it any longer ! I couldn't stand it another minute ! I took my little girl in my arms ! I ran away ! I left you ! THE PIERROT [ opening his arms sadly ] . Pierrette ! Ah , Pierrette ! THE MASKED DOLL [ pushing him away ] . I am ...
28 psl.
... stands gazing at her as if he could not believe his eyes , gazing at her as if his eyes were drinking her in . But Mother is thinking of only one thing ; her lips whisper just one name . Silently , peering anxiously to right and left ...
... stands gazing at her as if he could not believe his eyes , gazing at her as if his eyes were drinking her in . But Mother is thinking of only one thing ; her lips whisper just one name . Silently , peering anxiously to right and left ...
30 psl.
... stands in the upper left corner . On the extreme right , separated from the players by a railing , is the orchestra composed of three or more children dressed as Chinamen . They have no leader and they play with- out notes . Any ...
... stands in the upper left corner . On the extreme right , separated from the players by a railing , is the orchestra composed of three or more children dressed as Chinamen . They have no leader and they play with- out notes . Any ...
32 psl.
... stands behind them holding the branch over them . Now and then he becomes tired of holding the branch in one hand and he carelessly shifts it to the other . ] CHORUS . Long Fo and Wing Lee , a little sister and a little brother ...
... stands behind them holding the branch over them . Now and then he becomes tired of holding the branch in one hand and he carelessly shifts it to the other . ] CHORUS . Long Fo and Wing Lee , a little sister and a little brother ...
33 psl.
... stands behind the chairs . The Nurse enters carrying two dolls , one on each arm . One doll has a string of jade around its neck . That is the boy . The other doll is dressed in white and is the girl . ] NURSE ( sitting on one of the ...
... stands behind the chairs . The Nurse enters carrying two dolls , one on each arm . One doll has a string of jade around its neck . That is the boy . The other doll is dressed in white and is the girl . ] NURSE ( sitting on one of the ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Alan-a-Dale ANTOINE BABETTE BARELLE BESSIE BETSY BOBBY bows Capet chair CHILD CHORUS comes CURTAIN dear Deborah Deborah Read door duck ELIZABETH Emperor Enter EUDO eyes FANNY FAT FRIAR father fire fool FRANKLIN FRIAR TUCK girl give Go to sleep goes GYPSY WOMAN hand head heard Home Sweet Home JACK-IN-THE-BOX Jeanne Marie JUGGLER KING RICHARD kiss LADY laugh Lee Mee Little John LONG FO looks LORD MARGARET MARIAN MARSH MASKED DOLL MILO Mother never night NURSE OSWALD palace PENROSE PETER PETERKIN Pierrette PIERROT poor Poor Richard's Almanac porridge PRINCESS Property Pyramus Quack RIGBY Robert ROBIN HOOD RUBBER DOG SAILOR DOLL SAINT DOROTHY SALLY Scarlet Schwellenberg SECOND THIEF sing sits SMOLLETT STAMBOUL stands TANCRED tell thee THEOPHILUS there's THIRD WOMAN Thisbe thou wall WIGGINS window WING LEE WOODEN SOLDIER
Populiarios ištraukos
17 psl. - Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep ; If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take ; And this I ask for Jesus
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69 psl. - Once at the Angelus (Ere I was dead), Angels all glorious Came to my Bed; Angels in blue and white Crowned on the head." M. VIEUXBOIS [drowsily]. "She was an Angel" . . . "Once she laughed" . . . What, was I dreaming? Where's the draught? BABETTE [showing the empty cup]. The draught, M'sieu'?
145 psl. - Here will I sit and wait, While to my ear from uplands far away The bleating of the folded flocks is borne; With distant cries of reapers in the corn — All the live murmur of a summer's day.
69 psl. - One was the Friend I left Stark in the Snow; One was the Wife that died Long, — long ago; One was the Love I lost — How could she know ? " M. VIEUXBOIS {murmuring} Ah PAUL! . . . old PAUL! . . . EULALIE, too! And ROSE . . . And O! "the sky so blue!
69 psl. - Ah! I am old — and I forget. Was the place growing green, Babette? Babette. But of a greenness — yes, M'sieu' ! And then the sky so blue — so blue! And when I dropped my immortelle, How the birds sang! (Lifting her apron to her eyes.) This poor Ma'am'selle!
119 psl. - Moon. All that I have to say, is, to tell you that the lanthorn is the moon ; I, the man i' the moon ; this thorn-bush, my thorn-bush ; and this dog, my dog.
227 psl. - Be brave, your Majesty, as she was brave. A man on horseback told me what she said. She said: ' I was a Queen and you dethroned me. I was a wife and you have killed my husband. I was a mother and you tear my children Away from me. Only my blood is left. Make haste to shed it. And be satisfied.
82 psl. - Travelling Man. Will you give me a bit of that dough to bring with me ? I have gone a long time fasting. Mother. It is not often in the year I make bread like this. There are a few cold potatoes on the dresser, are they not good enough for you ? There is many a one would be glad to get them. Travelling Man. Whatever you will give me, I will take it. Mother (going to the dresser for the potatoes and looking at the shelves). What in the earthly world has happened all the delf ? Where are the jugs gone...
68 psl. - M'sieu' speaks So loud he won't be well for weeks ! M. VIEUXBOIS Where have you been ? BABETTE Why, M'sieu' knows: — April ! — Ville-d'Avray ! — Ma'am 'selle Rose ! M. VIEUXBOIS Ah ! I am old, — and I forget. Was the place growing green, Babette? BABETTE But of a greenness ! — yes, M'sieu...