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Browsing named entities in a specific section of T. Maccius Plautus, Aulularia, or The Concealed Treasure (ed. Henry Thomas Riley). Search the whole document.

Found 6 total hits in 2 results.

Jupiter (Canada) (search for this): act 4, scene 4
ur own pleasure, and yet you've found nothing of yours in my possession. EUCLIO starting. Stop, stop; who was that? Who was the otherWho was the other: This suspicion in Euclio is very natural; and he asks the question very artfully, for the purpose of catching a confession from him by inadvertence. that was within here, together with yourself? Troth, I'm undone; he's now rummaging about within. If I let this one go, he'll escape. At last, I've now searched this one all over; he has got nothing. Be off where you please; Jupiter and the Gods confound you! STROBILUS He returns his thanks not amissThanks not amiss: He says this sarcastically. If he gets such thanks when he has not stolen the treasure, what would he have got supposing that he had?. EUCLIO I'll go in here now, and I'll at once throttle this accomplice of yours. Will you not fly hence from my sight? Will you away from here, or no? STROBILUS I'm off. EUCLIO Take you care, please, how I see you. (He goes into the Temple.)
Thornton (United Kingdom) (search for this): act 4, scene 4
trifling now. STROBILUS What am I to put down? Why don't you mention it, whatever it is, by its own name? By my faith, I really have neither taken nor touched anything. EUCLIO Show me your hands, here. STROBILUS Well, I do show them; see, here they are. Holdinq out his hands. EUCLIO I see them. Come, show me the thirdShow me the third: This passage has been considered as extravagant; but it really does not appear inconsistent with the ridiculous conduct of the wretched Euclio throughout. Thornton supposes that the following passage in the old play of Albumazar, Act III., Sc. 8 (where Trinculo questions Ronca about the purse, which the latter has stolen from him), is an imitation of this passage: Trin.Show me your hand. Ron.Here 'tis. Trin.But where's the other? Ron.Why, here. Trin.But I mean, where's your other hand? Ron.Think you me the giant with an hundred hands? Trin.Give me your right. Ron.My right? Trin.Your left? Ron.My left? Trin.Now both. Ron.There's both, my dear Antonio,