. Character sketches of romance, fiction and the drama. k, smooth kiss thy fair large ears, my gentlejoy. BottomWheres PeaseblossomReady. BottomScratch my head, Monsieur Cobweb ?Cobweb BottomMonsieur Cobweb ; good Monsieur, getyour weapon in your hand, and kill mea red-hipped humble-bee on the top of athistle; and good Monsieur, bring methe honey-bag. Wheres Monsieur Mus-tard-Seed .? / Mustard-SeedWhatsyour will? BottomNothing, good Monsieur, but to helpCavalery Cobweb to scratch. .TitaniaWhat, wilt thou l)ear some music, mysweet love? BottomI have a


. Character sketches of romance, fiction and the drama. k, smooth kiss thy fair large ears, my gentlejoy. BottomWheres PeaseblossomReady. BottomScratch my head, Monsieur Cobweb ?Cobweb BottomMonsieur Cobweb ; good Monsieur, getyour weapon in your hand, and kill mea red-hipped humble-bee on the top of athistle; and good Monsieur, bring methe honey-bag. Wheres Monsieur Mus-tard-Seed .? / Mustard-SeedWhatsyour will? BottomNothing, good Monsieur, but to helpCavalery Cobweb to scratch. .TitaniaWhat, wilt thou l)ear some music, mysweet love? BottomI have a reasonable good ear in us have the tongs and the say, sweet love, what thou desirestto eat. BottomTruly, a peck of provender ; I couldmunch your good dry oats. Methinks Ihave a great desire to a bottle of hay;good hay, sweet hay bath no fellow. TitaniaI have a venturous fairy that shall seekThe squirrels hoard, and fetch thee newnuts. BottomI had rather have a handful or two ofdried peas. Shakespeares Midsummer Nights BOUNDERBY 155 BOWZYBEUS and metallic laugh. Mr. Bounderby is theson of Mrs. Pegler, an old woman, to whomhe pays £30 a year to keep out of sight,and in a boasting way he pretends thathe was dragged up from the gutter tobecome a millionaire. Mr. Bounderbymarries Louisa, daughter of his neighborand friend, Thomas Gradgrind, Esq., —C. Dickens, Hard Times (1854). Bountiful (Lady), widow of sir CharlesBountiful. Her dehght was curing theparish sick and relieving the indigent. My lady Bountiful is one of the best of late husband, sir Charles Bountiful, left her?ndth £1000 a year; and I beheve she lays outone-half ont in charitable uses for the good ofher neighbors. In short, she has cured morepeople in and about Lichfield within ten yearsthan the doctors have killed in twenty; and thatsa bold word. — George Fsijcqxdxar, Tlie BeauxStratagem, i. 1 (1705). Bounty {Mutiny of the), in 1790, headedby Fletcher Christian. T


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectfiction, booksubjectl