work_id,theme,provenance,created_at,text,reviewed_on,id,comments,metaphor,dictionary,updated_at,context
7037,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-07-28 18:37:20 UTC,"HIACINTHA
Alas! Why must our just Inclinations be cross'd? How delightful a thing it is to love, when there is no Obstacle to those aimiable Chains with which two Hearts are united together!
(III.i)",,19034,"","""How delightful a thing it is to love, when there is no Obstacle to those aimiable Chains with which two Hearts are united together!""",Fetters,2011-07-28 18:37:20 UTC,"Act III, scene i"
4275,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-07-28 18:59:38 UTC,"MR. OMBRE
No, Madam, I say, not that I mean to use my Power, I tell you only what it is, my Heart has broke your Chain, I claim no Right over you: Return, to your Ruin: Associate with your Faithless Friends, see how they will receive you, now your Honour, that is your Money, is lost?
(IV.iv)",,19038,"","""No, Madam, I say, not that I mean to use my Power, I tell you only what it is, my Heart has broke your Chain, I claim no Right over you.""",Fetters,2011-07-28 18:59:38 UTC,"Act IV, scene iv"
4477,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-07-28 19:03:24 UTC,"AIR XL.
Draw, Cupid, draw.
Reign, Silvia, Reign;
The Rebel quits his Arms:
Your Power's compleat,
And I submit
To your Victorious Charms.
The pleasing Pain,
The gentle Chain,
That constant Hearts unite,
Such Joy bestows,
That Freedom knows
No such sincere Delight.
(II.xv)
",,19039,"","""The pleasing Pain, / The gentle Chain, / That constant Hearts unite, / Such Joy bestows, / That Freedom knows / No such sincere Delight.""",Fetters,2011-07-28 19:03:24 UTC,"Act II, scene xv"
4263,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-07-28 19:12:02 UTC,"BELLAMY
Here,
[Flinging away his Sword]
do a Piece of Justice to your self and all your Sex. Pierce this treacherous Heart, which Vice so long has held in Chains. You are a Blessing which I don't deserve.",,19040,"","""Pierce this treacherous Heart, which Vice so long has held in Chains.""",Fetters,2011-07-28 19:12:02 UTC,Act V
7042,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-07-28 19:28:08 UTC,"SAVILLE
Pardon me, madam, his heart was not only free from that lady's chains, but absolutely captivated by another.
MRS. RACKET
No, Sir! no; it was Miss Hardy that captivated him; she met him last night at the masquerade, and charm'd him in disguise; he profess'd the most violent passion for her, and a plan was laid this evening, to cheat him into happiness.
(V.v)",,19042,"","""Pardon me, madam, his heart was not only free from that lady's chains, but absolutely captivated by another.""",Fetters,2011-07-28 19:28:08 UTC,"Act V, scene v"
3989,As it Were,"Searching ""passion"" and ""chain"" in HDIS (Drama)",2011-08-01 19:48:58 UTC,"But the third thing requisite for the succeeding in Comedy is a due Application, and that likewise includes two things, the one of which is Leisure, and the other Serenity. First, Leisure, for Poetry is of that Dignity, that it requires the whole man. And never any man writ any thing that was admirable, who had any avocations at the time that he writ it. But secondly, to succeed in Comedy requires Serenity. For a Comick Poet is obliged to put off himself, and transform himself into his several Characters; to enter into the Foibles of his several persons, and all the Recesses and secret turns of their minds, and to make their Passions, their Interests, and their Concern his own. Now how should he possibly do this, unless he is absolutely free, and undisturbed by tormenting Passions, which bind him, as it were, and if I may use that expression, chain him fast to himself.",,19081,"","""Now how should he possibly do this, unless he is absolutely free, and undisturbed by tormenting Passions, which bind him, as it were, and if I may use that expression, chain him fast to himself.""",Fetters,2011-08-01 19:48:58 UTC,Epistle Dedicatory
7550,"",C-H Lion,2013-07-18 21:34:10 UTC,"CALISTA.
Force, and the Wills of our Imperious Rulers,
May bind two Bodies in one wretched Chain;
But Minds will still look back to their own Choice.
So the poor Captive in a Foreign Realm,
Stands on the Shoar, and sends his Wishes back
To the dear Native Land from whence he came.
(III.i, p. 27)",,21873,"","""Force, and the Wills of our Imperious Rulers, / May bind two Bodies in one wretched Chain; / But Minds will still look back to their own Choice. / So the poor Captive in a Foreign Realm, / Stands on the Shoar, and sends his Wishes back / To the dear Native Land from whence he came.""",Fetters,2013-07-18 21:34:10 UTC,"Act III, scene i"
7551,"",C-H Lion,2013-07-20 20:38:04 UTC,"LORD HASTINGS
Well then, I own my Heart has broke your Chains.
Patient I bore the painful Bondage long,
At length my generous Love disdains your Tyranny;
The Bitterness and Stings of taunting Jealousie,
Vexatious Days, and jarring joyless Nights,
Have driv'n him forth to seek some safer Shelter,
Where he may rest his weary Wings in Peace.
(II.i, pp. 16-17)",,21891,"","""Well then, I own my Heart has broke your Chains. / Patient I bore the painful Bondage long, / At length my generous Love disdains your Tyranny.""",Fetters,2013-07-20 20:38:04 UTC,"Act II, scene i"
7565,"",C-H Lion,2013-07-25 03:16:02 UTC,"SEOFRID.
The Heroe and the King are glorious Names;
But oh! my Master, wherefore is the Lover?
In Honour's Name remember what you are,
Break from the Bondage of this feeble Passion,
And urge your way to Glory: Leave with Scorn
Unmanly Pleasures to unmanly Minds,
And thro' the rough, the thorny Paths of Danger,
Aspire to Virtue, and immortal Greatness.
(I.i, p. 9)",,22006,"","""In Honour's Name remember what you are, / Break from the Bondage of this feeble Passion, / And urge your way to Glory.""",Fetters,2013-07-25 03:16:02 UTC,"Act I, scene i"
7565,"","",2013-07-25 03:48:48 UTC,"RODOGUNE.
Hence with 'em, take 'em, drive 'em from my Sight,
The fatal Pair.--
[Exeunt Aribert and Ethelinda guarded.]
That Look shall my last.
I feel my Soul impatient of its Bondage,
Disdaining this unworthy, idle Passion,
And strugling to be free. Now, now it shoots,
It tow'rs upon the Wing to Crowns and Empire;
While Love and Aribert, those meaner Names,
Are left far, far behind, and lost for ever.
So if by chance the Eagle's noble Off-spring,
Ta'en in the Nest, becomes some Peasant's Prize,
Compell'd a while he bears his Cage and Chains,
And like a Pris'ner with the Clown remains;
But when his Plumes shoot forth, and Pinions swell,
He quits the Rustick, and his homely Cell,
Breaks from his Bonds, and in the face of Day,
Full in the Sun's bright Beams he soars away;
Delights thro' Heav'n's wide pathless Ways to go,
Plays with Joue's Shafts, and grasps his dreadful Bow,
Dwells with immortal Gods, and scorns the World below.
(IV.i, p. 45)
",,22028,typo? Joue? or e.m. spelling?,"""I feel my Soul impatient of its Bondage, / Disdaining this unworthy, idle Passion, / And strugling to be free.""","",2013-07-25 03:48:48 UTC,"Act IV, scene i"