Plays

⊕    A Christian turned Turk
⊕    A Game at Chess: A Later Form
⊕    A Mad World, My Masters
⊕    A Maidenhead Well Lost
⊕    A Midsummer Night's Dream
⊕    A Yorkshire Tragedy
⊕    Aglaura
⊕    Albumazar: A Comedy
⊕    All Fools
⊕    All's Well that Ends Well
⊕    Antonio and Mellida
⊕    Antonio's Revenge
⊕    Antony and Cleopatra
⊕    As You Like It
⊕    Bartholomew Fair
⊕    Bird in a Cage
⊕    Brennoralt
⊕    Bussy d'Ambois
⊕    Caesar and Pompey
⊕    Campaspe
⊕    Catiline
⊕    Cleopatra
⊕    Comus
⊕    Contention for Honour and Riches
⊕    Coriolanus
⊕    Cymbeline
⊕    Cynthia's Revels
⊕    Dutch Courtesan
⊕    Epicoene
⊕    Every Man in his Humour
⊕    Every Man out of his Humour
⊕    Hamlet
⊕    Henry IV, part 1
⊕    Henry IV, part 2
⊕    Henry V (Q1)
⊕    Henry VI, part 1
⊕    Henry VI, part 2
⊕    Henry VI, part 3
⊕    Henry VIII
⊕    Hyde Park
⊕    Hymen's Triumph
⊕    Jack Drum's Entertainment
⊕    Julius Caesar
⊕    King John
⊕    King Lear
⊕    Locrine
⊕    Love In its Ecstasy: Or, the large Prerogative
⊕    Love Tricks, or The School of Compliments
⊕    Love's Labour's Lost
⊕    Loves Metamorphosis
⊕    Macbeth
⊕    Measure for Measure
⊕    Merry Wives of Windsor
⊕    Much Ado About Nothing
⊕    Mustapha
⊕    not in source
⊕    Othello
⊕    Pericles
⊕    Philaster
⊕    Philotas
⊕    Poetaster
⊕    Richard II
⊕    Richard III
⊕    Romeo and Juliet
⊕    Satiro-mastix: or, The Untrussing of the humorous poet
⊕    Sejanus His Fall
⊕    Sir Giles Goosecap
⊕    Sophonisba
⊕    Taming of the Shrew
⊕    The Atheist's Tragedy
⊕    The Blind Beggar of Alexandria
⊕    The Bondman
⊕    The Case is Altered
⊕    The Changes, or Love in a Maze
⊕    The Comedy of Errors
⊕    The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Byron
⊕    The Custom of the Country
⊕    The Devil's Law Case
⊕    The Elder Brother
⊕    The Fancies, Chaste and Noble
⊕    The Fawn
⊕    The Goblins
⊕    The Golden Age
⊕    The Grateful Servant
⊕    The Great Duke of Florence
⊕    The Gypsies Metamorphosed
⊕    The Honest Whore, Part I
⊕    The Insatiate Countess
⊕    The Lady of May
⊕    The Little French Lawyer
⊕    The Mad Lover
⊕    The Maid of Honour
⊕    The Malcontent
⊕    The Martyred Souldier
⊕    The Merchant of Venice
⊕    The Miseries of Inforc't Marriage
⊕    The Nice Valour
⊕    The Phoenix
⊕    The Puritan Widow
⊕    The Raging Turk
⊕    The Rival Friends
⊕    The Royal Master
⊕    The Royal Slave
⊕    The Sophy
⊕    The Spanish Curate
⊕    The Staple of News
⊕    The Tempest
⊕    The Tragedy of Nero
⊕    The Traitor
⊕    The Valiant Scot
⊕    The Virgin Widow
⊕    The Wedding
⊕    The White Devil
⊕    The Widow
⊕    The Wonder of a Kingdom
⊕    Timon of Athens
⊕    Titus Andronicus
⊕    Troilus and Cressida
⊕    Twelfth Night
⊕    Two Gentlemen of Verona
⊕    Volpone
⊕    What You Will
⊕    Winter's Tale

The Atheist's Tragedy - Results found: 15

While yet we have not lived to such an age
That the increasing canker of our sins
Hath spread too far upon us.
By Castabella, in The Atheist's Tragedy (5.2.p.332), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Atheist's Tragedy
I am glad I had the occasion to make known
How readily my substance shall unlock
Itself to serve you.
By D'Amville, in The Atheist's Tragedy (1.1.p.248), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Now let thy trust
For undertaking and for secresy
Hold measure with thy amplitude of wit
And thy reward shall parallel thy worth.
By D'Amville, in The Atheist's Tragedy (1.1.p.249), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
My worthy servant, you mistake the intent Of kissing 'Twas not meant to separate A pair of lovers, but to be the seal
Of love importing by the joining of
Our mutual and incorporated breaths
That we should breathe but one contracted life.
By Castabella, in The Atheist's Tragedy (1.2.p.252), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Tush, you mistake the way into a woman
The passage lies not through her reason but her blood
By Levidulcia, in The Atheist's Tragedy (1.4.p.261), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Why what is't but a rape to force a wench
To marry since it forces her to lie
With him she would not.
By Sebastian, in The Atheist's Tragedy (1.4.p.263), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
I
Shall hardly please therefore let her rest
By Rousard, in The Atheist's Tragedy (2.1.p.269), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Has set
My blood o' boiling i' my veins. And now
Like water poured upon the ground that mixes
Itself with every moisture it meets, I could
clasp with any man.
By Levidulcia, in The Atheist's Tragedy (2.3.p.274), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
Ladies are as courteous as yeomen's wives and methinks they should be more gentle . Hot diet and soft ease make 'hem like wax always kept warm
more easy to take impression.
By Levidulcia, in The Atheist's Tragedy (2.5.p.281), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
The want of money makes a free spirit more
mad than the possession does an usurer.
By Sebastian, in The Atheist's Tragedy (3.2.p.294), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
For want is like the rack, it draws a man to endanger himself to the gallows rather than endure it
By Sebastian, in The Atheist's Tragedy (3.2.p.294), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
You expose your honesty
To strange construction . Why should you so urge Release for Charlemont? Come, you profess
More nearness to him than your modesty
Can answer.
By D'Amville, in The Atheist's Tragedy (3.4.p.299), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
I woukd ha' borne
The course and inclination of my love
According to the motion of the sun,
Invisibly enjoyed and understood.
By D'Amville, in The Atheist's Tragedy (3.4.p.300), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
The love of a woman is like a mushroom, it grows in one night and will serve somewhat pleasingly next morning to breakfast, but afterwards waxes fulsome and unwholesome.
By Sebastian, in The Atheist's Tragedy (4.5.p.321), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v
 
O with what virtue lust should be withstood
Since 'tis a fire quenched seldom without blood.
By The Watch, in The Atheist's Tragedy (4.5.p.322), Cyril Tourneur
in Bodleian Library MS English poetry d. 3, f. 80v