Edwin the Fair: An Historical DramaJohn Murray, 1842 - 262 psl. |
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12 psl.
... chamber , And Kingston is beset by bands of theirs . ATHULF . Gramercy , Monks ! I'll thunder in a whisper , And say , God save the King ! inaudibly , That only heaven shall hear . - A truce to Kings , To Monks , to madmen ! Leolf , at ...
... chamber , And Kingston is beset by bands of theirs . ATHULF . Gramercy , Monks ! I'll thunder in a whisper , And say , God save the King ! inaudibly , That only heaven shall hear . - A truce to Kings , To Monks , to madmen ! Leolf , at ...
23 psl.
... CHAMBER IN THE PALACE . Enter ATHULF and ELGIVA . ELGIVA . This is the chamber where the Council sits : I leave thee here : the very rushes bristle , Disdaining to be trodd'n by female feet . ATHULF . To meet at eight , the summons said ...
... CHAMBER IN THE PALACE . Enter ATHULF and ELGIVA . ELGIVA . This is the chamber where the Council sits : I leave thee here : the very rushes bristle , Disdaining to be trodd'n by female feet . ATHULF . To meet at eight , the summons said ...
30 psl.
... CHAMBER IN THE PALACE . ELGIVA AND ETHILDA . ELGIVA . How is it I find favour in the sight Of the Queen Mother , and so suddenly ? When I was last at Court no word she spake Of welcome by herself , the King , or thee . Whence is the ...
... CHAMBER IN THE PALACE . ELGIVA AND ETHILDA . ELGIVA . How is it I find favour in the sight Of the Queen Mother , and so suddenly ? When I was last at Court no word she spake Of welcome by herself , the King , or thee . Whence is the ...
33 psl.
... chamber , Let us be children once again , to rove O'er hill , through vale , with interlacing arms , And thrid the thickets where wild roses grow Entangled with each other like ourselves . Can you , and will you , those sweet days ...
... chamber , Let us be children once again , to rove O'er hill , through vale , with interlacing arms , And thrid the thickets where wild roses grow Entangled with each other like ourselves . Can you , and will you , those sweet days ...
36 psl.
... chamber lends ! I've loved it from my childhood . How long since Is it that standing in this compass'd window The blackbird sang us forth ; from yonder bough That hides the arbour , loud and full at first Warbling his invitations , then ...
... chamber lends ! I've loved it from my childhood . How long since Is it that standing in this compass'd window The blackbird sang us forth ; from yonder bough That hides the arbour , loud and full at first Warbling his invitations , then ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Edwin the Fair An Historical Drama: and Isaac Comnenus: a Play Sir Henry Taylor Visos knygos peržiūra - 1845 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Accursed amongst Austin's eve BISHOP OF ROCHESTER blood BOOR Brethren BRIDFERTH bring Brother CEOLWULF CEORL CHAMBER Church CLARENBALD Court crown Cumba Dane deem DEPUTY doth DUNSTAN EADBALD Earl Athulf Earl Leolf Earl Sidroc ears ECFRID EDWIN THE FAIR ELGIVA Enter ATHULF Enter EMMA ERNWAY ETHILDA Exeunt Exit Farewell Father Fcap fear force Grace Greymalkin GRIMBALD GURMO hand HARCATHER Hark hast hath head hear heard heart Heaven HEIDA Heretoch hither holy King King's Kingston LEOFWYN look Lord Abbot Lord Archbishop Malpas marriage monasteries MORCAR night o'er PALACE pass peace pray Priest Primate QUEEN MOTHER QUEEN-MOTHER reign RICOLA round RUOLD saith Satan SCENE VII SECOND MONK Secular SENESCHAL SIGERIC smile soul speak spirit stand swine SWINEHERD sword Synod tell thee Thou art Tis true TOSTY Twas voice wisdom WULFSTAN THE WISE youth
Populiarios ištraukos
261 psl. - But I have sinuous shells of pearly hue Within, and they that lustre have imbibed In the sun's palace-porch, where when unyoked His chariot-wheel stands midway in the wave: Shake one and it awakens, then apply Its polisht lips to your attentive ear, And it remembers its august abodes, And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there.
260 psl. - The wind when first he rose and went abroad Through the waste region, felt himself at fault, Wanting a voice and suddenly to earth Descended with a wafture and a swoop, Where wandering volatile from kind to kind He wooed the several trees to give him one. First he besought the ash ; the voice she lent Fitfully with a free and lashing change Flung here and there its sad uncertainties : The aspen next ; a fluttered frivolous twitter Was her sole tribute : from the willow came, So long as dainty...
75 psl. - In your grey faces smiling but like you The worse for weather. Here again I stand, Again and on the solitary shore Old ocean plays as on an instrument, Making that ancient music, when not known ? That ancient music only not so old As He who parted ocean from dry land And saw that it was good. Upon my ear, As in the season of susceptive youth, The mellow murmur falls...
84 psl. - In middle-age, a garden through whose soil The roots of neighbouring forest trees have crept, It strikes on stringy customs bedded deep, Perhaps on alien passions ; still it grows And lacks not force nor freshness ; but this age Shall aptly choose...
260 psl. - So long as dainty summer dressed her out, A whispering sweetness, but her winter note Was hissing, dry, and reedy : lastly the pine Did he solicit, and from her he drew A voice so constant, soft, and lowly deep, That there he rested, welcoming in her A mild memorial of the ocean-cave Where he was born.
17 psl. - Truths else to them ineffable ? Where's Satan ? His presence, life and kingdom ? Not the air Nor bowels of the earth nor central fires His habitat exhibits ; it is here, Here in the heart of Man ; and if from hence I cast him with discomfiture, that truth Is verily of the vulgar sense conceived, By utterance symbolic, when they deem That met in bodily oppugnancy I tweak him by the snout ; a fair belief Wherein the fleshly and the palpable type Doth of pure truth substantiate the essence. Enough !...
46 psl. - ATHULF. A sort of swarming, curling, tremulous tumbling, As though there were an ant-hill in my bosom. I said I was ashamed. Sidroc, you smile ; If at my folly, well ! But if you smile Suspicious of a taint upon my heart...
196 psl. - The soften'd soul, of mild voluptuous ease, And tender sports that chased the kindling hours In odorous gardens or on terraces. To music of the fountains and the birds, Or else in skirting groves by sunshine smitten, Or warm winds kiss'd, whilst we from shine to shade Roved unregarded.
76 psl. - Rides high, and on the thoroughfares of life I find myself a man in middle age, Busy and hard to please. The sun shall soon Dip westerly, but oh ! how little like Are life's two twilights ! Would the last were first And the first last ! that so we might be soothed Upon the thoroughfares of busy life Beneath the noon-day sun, with hope of joy Fresh as the morn with hope of breaking lights, Illuminated mists and spangled lawns And woodland orisons and unfolding flowers, As things in expectation....
15 psl. - God, thou'st given unto me a troubled being So move upon the face thereof, that light May be, and be divided from the darkness ! Arm thou my soul that I may smite and chase The spirit of that darkness, whom not I But Thou through me compellest.