Philip Van Artevelde: A Dramatic Romance, in Two Parts, Volumen1J. Munroe, 1835 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 38
Página iii
... meet A friendlier censor than by Greta's side , A warmer welcome than at Skiddaw's feet . Unhappily infrequent in the land Is now the sage seclusion , the retreat Sacred to letters : but let this command Fitting acknowledgment , that ...
... meet A friendlier censor than by Greta's side , A warmer welcome than at Skiddaw's feet . Unhappily infrequent in the land Is now the sage seclusion , the retreat Sacred to letters : but let this command Fitting acknowledgment , that ...
Página 73
... Meet two hours hence , and ere we separate Our course must be determined . ARTEVELDE . In two hours , If I be for you , I will send this ring In token I have so resolved . Farewell . VAN DEN BOSCH . Philip Van Artevelde , a greater man ...
... Meet two hours hence , and ere we separate Our course must be determined . ARTEVELDE . In two hours , If I be for you , I will send this ring In token I have so resolved . Farewell . VAN DEN BOSCH . Philip Van Artevelde , a greater man ...
Página 80
... - WOMAN . ) WAITING - WOMAN . My mistress , Sir , so please you , takes her walk Along the garden terrace , and desires That you I'll go forth to meet her . ARTEVELDE . For if fate ah ! I come . 80 PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE .
... - WOMAN . ) WAITING - WOMAN . My mistress , Sir , so please you , takes her walk Along the garden terrace , and desires That you I'll go forth to meet her . ARTEVELDE . For if fate ah ! I come . 80 PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE .
Página 85
... vantage ground , But rather meet the times where best I may , And mould and fashion them as best I can . Reflect then that I soon may be embarked In all the hazards of these troublous times , And PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE . 85.
... vantage ground , But rather meet the times where best I may , And mould and fashion them as best I can . Reflect then that I soon may be embarked In all the hazards of these troublous times , And PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE . 85.
Página 95
... meet it were , my friends , ' Quoth I , that we go seek this noble youth ; 6 On such high worth we humbly should attend , And not expect such worth should wait on us . ' To this they gave assent , and will be here Soon as the crafts are ...
... meet it were , my friends , ' Quoth I , that we go seek this noble youth ; 6 On such high worth we humbly should attend , And not expect such worth should wait on us . ' To this they gave assent , and will be here Soon as the crafts are ...
Contenido
241 | |
1 | |
7 | |
30 | |
60 | |
102 | |
147 | |
166 | |
94 | |
101 | |
116 | |
144 | |
154 | |
169 | |
176 | |
195 | |
209 | |
177 | |
197 | |
200 | |
206 | |
215 | |
216 | |
222 | |
223 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Philip Van Artevelde: A Dramatic Romance, in Two Parts, Volumen1 Sir Henry Taylor Vista completa - 1835 |
Términos y frases comunes
ADRIANA AESWYN amongst arms ARTEVELDE Artevelde's BOSCH bring Bruges BULSEN BURGHER BURGOMASTER CAPTAIN CECILE CLARA Constable D'ARLON death deem DUKE OF BOURBON DUKE OF BURGUNDY Earl of Flanders ELENA Enter Exeunt Exit FATHER JOHN Flemish FLEUREANT OF HEURLÉE France FRIAR friends Ghent GILBERT MATTHEW give grace hand hath hear heard heart KING KORTZ lady live look Lord of Arlon Lord of Occo market-place master mind MUCK never night OLIVER OF CLISSON Oudenarde pardon pass peace Philip PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE RAOUL OF RANEVAL ROOSDYK SCENE Scheldt SIR FLEUREANT SIR GUISEBERT GRUTT SIR OLIVER SIR RAOUL SIR SIMON BETTE sleep soul speak stand STEENSEL STOCKENSTROM sword tell thee There's thine things thou hast thought to-morrow town TRISTRAM OF LESTOVET VAN DEN BOSCH VAN MUCK VAN RYK VAUCLAIRE wherefore whilst White-Hoods WOMAN word Ypres
Pasajes populares
Página xv - That they are not a pipe for fortune's finger To sound what stop she please. Give me that man That is not passion's slave, and I will wear him In my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart, As I do thee.
Página 226 - Writers, however, whose appeal is made so exclusively to the excitabilities of mankind, will not find it possible to work upon them continuously without a diminishing effect. Poetry of which sense is not the basis, though it may be excellent of its kind, will not long be reputed to be poetry of the highest order. It may move the feelings and charm the fancy; but failing to satisfy the understanding, it will not take permanent possession of the strong-holds of fame.
Página 4 - ... fruit thereof is uncertain, and consequently no culture of the earth, no navigation nor use of the commodities that may be imported by sea, no commodious building, no instruments of moving and removing such things as require much force, no knowledge of the face of the earth; no account of time, no arts, no letters, no society, and, which is worst of all, continual fear and danger of violent death, and the life of man solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.
Página 85 - No vital chord nor troubled what she loved, Philosophy might look her in the face, And like a hermit stooping to the well That yields him sweet refreshment, might therein See but his own serenity reflected With a more heavenly tenderness of hue ! Yet whilst the world's ambitious empty cares, Its small disquietudes and insect stings, Disturb'd her never, she was one made up Of feminine affections, and her life Was one full stream of love from fount to sea.
Página 225 - The elastic force no burthen ere could bow, The various talents and the single mind, Which give him moral power and mastery o'er mankind. His sixty summers — what are they in truth ? By Providence peculiarly blest, With him the strong hilarity of youth Abides, despite grey hairs, a constant guest. His sun has veered a point toward the west, But light as dawn his heart is glowing yet ; That heart the simplest, gentlest, kindliest, best, Where truth and manly tenderness are met With faith and heavenward...
Página 169 - There lies a sleeping city, God of dreams ! What an unreal and fantastic world Is going on below ! Within the sweep of yon encircling wall How many a large creation of the night, Wide wilderness and mountain, rock and sea, Peopled with busy, transitory groups, Finds room to rise, and never feels the crowd.
Página 64 - s ne'er a one in dangerous times, Who wins the race of glory, but than him A thousand men more gloriously endowed Have fallen upon the course ; a thousand others Have had their fortunes foundered by a chance, Whilst lighter barks pushed past them ; to whom add A smaller tally, of the singular few, Who, gifted with predominating powers, Bear yet a temperate will, and keep the peace. The world knows nothing of its greatest men.
Página 186 - Appeared all blood, and swelled and weltered sore, And midmost in the eddy and the whirl My own face saw I, which was pale and calm As death could make it : — then the vision passed, And I perceived the river and the bridge, The mottled sky and horizontal moon, The distant camp, and all things as they were.
Página xi - Had he united a philosophical intellect to his peculiarly poetical temperament, he would probably have been the greatest poet of his age. But no man can be a very great poet who is not also a great philosopher. Whatever Lord Byron's natural powers may have been, idleness and light reading, an early acquisition of popularity by the exercise of a single talent, and an absorbing and contracting self-love, confined the field of his operations within narrow limits. He was in knowledge merely a man of...
Página 74 - t is ignoble to have led my life In idle meditations — that the times Demand me, that they call my father's name. Oh ! what a fiery heart was his ! such souls Whose sudden visitations daze the world, Vanish like lightning, but they leave behind A voice that in the distance far away Wakens the slumbering ages.