Philip Van Artevelde: A Dramatic Romance. In Two Parts, Tema 73E. Moxon, 1852 - 431 páginas |
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Página 121
... highness I entreat That you give order to have lists prepared , Where I may meet the miscreant spear to spear , And do God's will upon him . EARL . Soft , my son ; I'll have no fighting for a private cause Till Ghent be down . I cannot ...
... highness I entreat That you give order to have lists prepared , Where I may meet the miscreant spear to spear , And do God's will upon him . EARL . Soft , my son ; I'll have no fighting for a private cause Till Ghent be down . I cannot ...
Página 123
... highness better fortune , Than that the fools you count amongst your friends Were number'd with your foes , —or with the dead . Enter Attendant . ATTENDANT . According to the summons , please your highness , The Lords are met in council ...
... highness better fortune , Than that the fools you count amongst your friends Were number'd with your foes , —or with the dead . Enter Attendant . ATTENDANT . According to the summons , please your highness , The Lords are met in council ...
Página 165
... Highness will be here anon . Sir Guy , Freely accept the combat for the morrow . Count on my speed . There's not a man in Bruges Who has outlived the day I wish'd him dead . The threads of many destinies I hold , Unknown to them they ...
... Highness will be here anon . Sir Guy , Freely accept the combat for the morrow . Count on my speed . There's not a man in Bruges Who has outlived the day I wish'd him dead . The threads of many destinies I hold , Unknown to them they ...
Página 169
... Highness's own mouth Give out the order . EARL Hang the slave ! he lied . MAYOR . Why so the warders thought , and had not done it , But that the people , being much inflamed , Menaced their lives . Enter a Squire . SQUIRE . Sir Walter ...
... Highness's own mouth Give out the order . EARL Hang the slave ! he lied . MAYOR . Why so the warders thought , and had not done it , But that the people , being much inflamed , Menaced their lives . Enter a Squire . SQUIRE . Sir Walter ...
Página 214
... ? YEOMAN . Please your highness , " Twas a small holding from my lord of Vergues Close to the liberties of Fontenoy . BOURBON . This side the bourn ? YEOMAN . Three miles , my lord , and long 214 [ ACT 1 . PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE .
... ? YEOMAN . Please your highness , " Twas a small holding from my lord of Vergues Close to the liberties of Fontenoy . BOURBON . This side the bourn ? YEOMAN . Three miles , my lord , and long 214 [ ACT 1 . PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE .
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Philip Van Artevelde: A Dramatic Romance. In Two Parts, Tema 73 Sir Henry Taylor Vista completa - 1852 |
Términos y frases comunes
ACKERMAN ADRIANA AESWYN amongst arms ARTEVELDE Artevelde's BOSCH BOURBON bring Bruges BULSEN BURGHER BURGOMASTER BURGUNDY CAPTAIN CECILE CLARA CONSTABLE D'ARLON Duke 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 God's grace hand hath hear heard heart Heaven KING knight KORTZ lady LESTOVET live LOIS OF SANXERE look Lord of Arlon LORD OF COUCY Lord of Occo market-place master MESSENGER mind MUCK never Oudenarde pardon peace Philip PHILIP VAN ARTEVELDE RAOUL OF RANEVAL ROOSDYK SCENE Scheldt seem'd SIR FLEUREANT SIR GUISEBERT SIR LOIS SIR RAOUL sleep soul speak stand STOCKENSTROM tell thee There's thine things thou hast thought to-morrow town Twas VAN DEN BOSCH VAN MUCK VAN RYK VAUCLAIRE wherefore whilst White-Hoods WOMAN word Ypres
Pasajes populares
Página xvi - 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 29 - He that lacks time to mourn, lacks time to mend. Eternity mourns that. 'Tis an ill cure For life's worst ills, to have no time to feel them. Where sorrow's held intrusive and turned out, There wisdom will not enter, nor true power, Nor aught that dignifies humanity.
Página 29 - 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...
Página 1 - ... 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 122 - 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 368 - And I perceived the river and the bridge, The mottled sky and horizontal moon, The distant camp, and all things as they were. Elena. If you are not afraid to see such things, I am to hear them. Go not near that bridge ; — You said that something happened there before — Oh, cross it not again. Artevelde. Not cross the bridge ? The river cannot otherwise be passed.
Página 39 - tis ignoble to have led my life In idle meditations — that the times Demand me, echoing 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. Oh ! my father ! Thy life is eloquent, and more persuades Unto dominion than thy death deters ; For that reminds me of a debt of blood Descended with my patrimony to me, Whose paying off would clear...
Página 29 - Whose story is a fragment, known to few. Then comes the man who has the luck to live, And he's a prodigy. Compute the chances, And deem there'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...
Página 232 - Ordered the common weal ; where great men grew Up to their natural eminence, and none Saving the wise, just, eloquent, were great ; Where power was of God's gift, to whom he gave Supremacy of merit, the sole means And broad highway to power, that ever then Was meritoriously administer'd, Whilst all its instruments from first to last, The tools of state for service high or low, Were chosen for their aptness to those ends Which virtue meditates.
Página 423 - Yet they do leave us. You behold me here, A man bereaved, with something of a blight Upon the early blossoms of his life, And its first verdure — having not the...