81 collocations for plagued

" "Doth my youth plague thee still, messire?

At length, proud prince, ambitious Louis, cease To plague mankind, and trouble Europe's peace; Think on the structures which thy pride has razed, On towns unpeopled, and on fields laid waste; Think on the heaps of corps and streams of blood, On every guilty plain, and purple flood, Thy arms have made, and cease an impious war, Nor waste the lives intrusted to thy care.

What honor to thy Godhead will arise To plague a silly Lady in this wise?

He never sought with vast huge mountain towers To reach aloft, and over-view your reign: Or what offence of mine was it unwares, That thus your fury should on me be thrown, To plague a woman with such endless cares?

I must, I doubt, have something in my temper like Miss Howe, who loves to plague the man who puts himself in her power.

his old mouth may long water in vain, Who tries by this method a mistress to gain A miss is the sure termination: For a maiden's delight is to plague the old boy, And to think sixty-five not the period for joy; Alas!

His eye was on the bell and float, Quoth he, "My men, put down the boat, And row me to the Inchcape Rock, I'll plague the priest of Aberbrothock!".

"Why, it's that plagued Betsy and Jane, my two young sows," he cried the next moment.

how can you plague little Birdie so?

If I'm no Ormond, I like to find out why, and I love to dispute the Ormond claim which Walter Butler makeshe with his dark face and hair, and those dusky, golden eyes of his, which turn so yellow when I plague himthe mad wild-cat that he is.

Now shall I plague proud Chester. QU.

But George rejected all amusements but the very one he wanted, and went instead into the nursery, where he plagued the younger children, took away their little toys, played with them so roughly, that he threw them on the floor, made them all fretful, and the maid so vexed, that she told him he had grown quite tiresome, and "that she panted for the time when he would be packed off to school again."

Like aneuch, he may be infected with the heresy of the Melchisedecians,a pestilent sect, who plagued the early Christian Church sairly, placing their master aboon our Blessed Lord himself, and holding him to be identical wi' the Holy Ghaist.

The weary passengers were allowed no rest, but plagued by the thundering of the cannon, the clamor of drums, the glare of bonfires, and the whooping of boys, who were delighted with the idea of a candidate for the Presidency who thirty years before split rails on the Sangamon Riverclassic stream now and for evermoreand whose neighbors named him 'honest.'" "It is true indeed that the national domain is ours.

Lower down the slope there were three other lads plaguing a young jackass colt; and further off, on the town edge of the moor, several children from the streets hard by, were wandering about the green hollow, picking daisies, and playing together in the sunshine.

For these Moors are not honest liars like plain Englishmen, who do generally give you some hint of their business by shifting of their eyes this way and that, hawking, stammering, etc., but they will ever look you calmly and straight in the face, never at a loss for the right word, or over-anxious to convince you, so that 'twill plague a conjurer to tell if they speak truth or falsehood.

When we had sat down, this Civility amongst us turned the Discourse from Eatables to other sorts of Aversions; and the eternal Cat, which plagues every Conversation of this nature, began then to engross the Subject.

They corresponded every day, and he used to plague the cabinet council with reading her letters to them.

His Head is full of Costs, Damages, and Ejectments: He plagued a couple of honest Gentlemen so long for a Trespass in breaking one of his Hedges, till he was forced to sell the Ground it enclosed to defray the Charges of the Prosecution: His Father left him fourscore Pounds a Year; but he has cast and been cast so often, that he is not now worth thirty.

All they knew about itthe most of themwas that it was some sort of an out-of-hours frolic, such as boarding-school ne'er-do-weels delight in; and it was to plague Miss Craydocke, against whom, by this time, they had none of them really any manner of spite; neither had they any longer the idea of forcing her to evacuate; but they had got wound up on that key at the beginning, and nobody thought of changing it.

His horses plagued him a good deal, he says, and the sick mare, owing to a dose of physic administered the night he reached Chester, was so much weakened as to be unable to carry Austin

But what course can you take to plague these dogges? Hat.

As to the restthe dukes, the glory, the greatnessI hold it concerns nobody but the dead, and it is a foolishness to plague folks' ears by boasting of deeds done by those you never knew, like a Seminole chanting ere he strikes the painted post.

and I know how it came to thy hands: How thou pursued'st him in his misery, And how heaven plagued thy heart's extremity.

A blind desire, the same which on warm moonlit nights was used to shake like fever in the veins of a boy whom I remember, is futilely plaguing a gray fellow with the gray wraiths of innumerable old griefs and with small stinging memories of long-dead delights.

81 collocations for  plagued