work_id,theme,provenance,created_at,text,reviewed_on,id,comments,metaphor,dictionary,updated_at,context 3700,"",Reading,2003-07-23 00:00:00 UTC,"SIR FOPLING
Hey, Champagne, Norman, La Rose, La Fleur, La Tour, La Verdure!--Dorimant!--

LADY WOODVILL
Here, here he is among this rout! He names him! Come away, Harriet, come away!

Exeunt Lady Woodvill, Harriet, Busy, and Young Bellair.

DORIMANT
This fool's coming has spoiled all: she's gone. But she has left a pleasing image of herself that wanders in my soul. It must not settle there.

SIR FOPLING
What reverie is this? Speak, man.

DORIMANT
""Snatched from myself, how far behind
Already I behold the shore!""
(Act III, scene iii, p. 115)",,9585,"• Dorimant has just met Harriet Woodvill. Dorimant quotes Waller's ""Of Loving at First Sight""
•An early use of ""reverie""? (in 1676!)
•I've included twice: Wandering and Settling","""But she has left a pleasing image of herself that wanders in my soul. It must not settle there.""",Inhabitants,2013-06-04 15:59:11 UTC,"Act III, scene iii"