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Indeed, he is due to wed the daughter of his boss, and live wealthily ever after.
Safely, wealthily, elsewhere.
So would have Clarence King had he had your luck-all right, good sense-to marry wealthily and well."
Then she had seeded the results in the deep ocean, "discovered" their existence-but not, of course, produced specimens for inspection-and returned quietly, and wealthily, to Earth.
The novel's hero, Nelson Fairchild Jr., wants to kill his wife, Winona, so he can go off with his mistress and live wealthily ever after.
Morgan Freeman plays Petruchio, her suitor, who has come to wive it wealthily in Padua and who succeeds in his goal.
(860-527-5151) KISS ME, KATE He's come to wive, and wealthily, on 45th.
Petruchio, a friend of Lucentio, expresses a desire to marry into wealth ("I've Come to Wive it Wealthily in Padua").
I come to wive it wealthily in Padua; If wealthily, then happily in Padua.
And Phillip Christian, funny with attitude, comes to woo Portia wealthily and more opportunistically as the Prince of Morocco, lending an air of lightness to a production determined to be diverting.
"I've Come To Wive It Wealthily In Padua" w.m. Cole Porter introduced by Alfred Drake in the musical Kiss Me, Kate.
He helps himself to lines from the play and expands them into songs ("I've Come to Wive It Wealthily in Padua," "Where Is the Life That Late I Led?
Lucentio's friend Petruchio arrives in Padua, seeking a wife, ("I've Come To Wive It Wealthily In Padua"), and when he hears of Katherine, he resolves to woo her.
The use of this slogan, a symptom of our insecurities in the face of economic decline, stifles us from imagining less mercenary reasons to stop punishing ourselves and start living as civilly - if not as wealthily - as the Germans or Japanese.
Ironically, the tempestuous relationship between Petruchio, who's "come to wive it wealthily" and Katherina - say Kate - the "irksome, bawling scold" is so astutely served here that the introductory troupe of strolling players turns out to be little more than a diverting option.
Reset in Little Italy in Manhattan, with a Petruchio who says (sorry Shakespeare, sorry Cole Porter) he comes "to wive it wealthily in America," the production is awash with images of people flashing bankrolls and symbols of conspicuous consumption.