"BILL OF THE PLAY"
[I.—Is all our company here?—Shakespeare]
[II.—What stories I'll tell when my sojerin' is o'er.—Lever]
[III.—Come all ye warmheart'd countrymen I pray you will draw near.—Old Ballad]
[IV.—Now would I give a thousand furlongs of sea for an acre of ground.—Shakespeare]
[V.—I would rather live in Bohemia than in any other land.—John Boyle O'Reilly]
[VI.—What strange things we see and what queer things we do.—Modern Song]
[VII.—He employs his fancy in his narrative and keep his recollections for his wit.—Richard Brindsley Sheridan]
[VIII.—Every one shall offer according to what he hath.—Deut.]
[IX.—One man in his time plays many parts.—Shakespeare]
[X.—Originality is nothing more than judicious imitation.—Voltaire]
[XI.—All places that the eye of heaven visits are happy havens.—Shakespeare]
[XII.—There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio.—Shakespeare]
[XIII.—Life is mostly froth and bubble.—The Hill]
[XIV.—Nature hath fram'd strange fellows in her time.—Shakespeare]
[XV.—Come what come may, time and the hour runs through the roughest day.—Shakespeare]
[XVI.—A new way to pay old debts.]
[XVII.—The actors are at hand.—Shakespeare]
[XVIII.—Twinkle, twinkle little star.—Nursery Rhymes]
[XIX.—Experience is a great teacher—the events of life its chapters.—Sainte Beuve]
[XX.—I am not an imposter that proclaim myself against the level of my aim.—Shakespeare]
[XXI.—I'll view the town, peruse the traders, gaze upon the buildings.—Shakespeare]
[XXII.—Is this world and all the life upon it a farce or vaudeville.—Geo. Elliott]
[XXIII.—All the world's a stage and all the men and women merely players.—Shakespeare]
[XXIV.—There's nothing to be got nowadays, unless thou can'st fish for it.—Shakespeare]
[XXV.—Joy danced with Mirth, a gay fantastic crowd.—Collins]
[XXVI.—Say not "Good Night," but in some brighter clime bid me "Good Morning."—Barbauld]