confine it. But if this foundation fails, all his fabric falls with it, and governments must be left again to the old way of being made by contrivance, and the consent of men ( ) making use of their reason to unite together into society. To prove this grand position of his, he tells us, p. 12. Menare born in subjection to their parents, and therefore cannot be free. And this authority of parents, he calls royal authority, p. 12, 14. Fatherly authority, right of fatherhood, p. 12, 20. One would have thought he would, in the beginning of such a work as this, on which was to depend the authority of princes, and the obedience of subjects, have told us expresly, what that fatherly authority is, have defined it, though not limited it, because in some other treatises of his he tells us, it is unlimited, and* unlimitable; he should at least have given us such an
o –ed – having X/being provided with X – broad-minded, pig-headed, bearded, bigoted, quick- witted o –ish – somewhat X/vaguely X – can attach to adjectives, numerals and syntactic phrases, nouns, : greenish, fiveish, out-of-the-wayish, James-Deanish, o –less without X – senseless, pennyless, homeless o –like similar to X lifelike, warlike, coward-like, o –ly in the manner of X/like an X denoting persons – fatherly, brotherly or denoting temporal concepts or directions monthly, yearly, easterly, southerly o –some characterized by being as X, productive of X, apt to X – wholesome, fulsome, cuddlesome, fearsome, handsome, tiresome, cumbersome o –en – of the nature of X earthen, woollen, wooden. Non-productive - archaic Adverb forming suffixes are only native
I must go let him know what's happening here. ACT II SCENE I ORGON, MARIANE ORGON Now, Mariane. MARIANE Yes, father? ORGON Come; I'll tell you A secret. MARIANE Yes . . . What are you looking for? ORGON (looking into a small closet-room) To see there's no one there to spy upon us; That little closet's mighty fit to hide in. There! We're all right now. Mariane, in you I've always found a daughter dutiful And gentle. So I've always love you dearly. MARIANE I'm grateful for your fatherly affection. ORGON Well spoken, daughter. Now, prove you deserve it By doing as I wish in all respects. MARIANE To do so is the height of my ambition. ORGON Excellent well. What say you of--Tartuffe? MARIANE Who? I? ORGON Yes, you. Look to it how you answer. MARIANE Why! I'll say of him--anything you please. SCENE II ORGON, MARIANE, DORINE (coming in quietly and standing behind Orgon, so that he does not see her) ORGON Well spoken. A good girl. Say then, my daughter,