The Misfortunes of ArthurSeptimus Prowett, 1828 - 83 sider |
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Side 7
... winne Astrea's servants to remove Their service once devote to better things . They , with attentive mindes and serious wits , Revolve records of deepe judiciall acts ; They waigh , with steaddy and indifferent hand , Each word of lawe ...
... winne Astrea's servants to remove Their service once devote to better things . They , with attentive mindes and serious wits , Revolve records of deepe judiciall acts ; They waigh , with steaddy and indifferent hand , Each word of lawe ...
Side 28
... winne unto their most renowne . Then Arthur tooke Tiberius breathlesse corse , And sent it to the Senators at Rome , With charge to say : -This is the tribute due Which Arthur ought ; as time hereafter serves He'il pay the like againe ...
... winne unto their most renowne . Then Arthur tooke Tiberius breathlesse corse , And sent it to the Senators at Rome , With charge to say : -This is the tribute due Which Arthur ought ; as time hereafter serves He'il pay the like againe ...
Side 31
... winne it thus : To make it yours you strive to make it none . This reply , which belongs to Mordred , is given to Conan in the old copy . Where kings impose too much the commons grudge ; * SC . II . ] 31 THE MISFORTUNES OF ARTHUR .
... winne it thus : To make it yours you strive to make it none . This reply , which belongs to Mordred , is given to Conan in the old copy . Where kings impose too much the commons grudge ; * SC . II . ] 31 THE MISFORTUNES OF ARTHUR .
Side 34
... winne . Gawin . The more your foile if you should hap to loose : For Arthur's fame and vallure's such , as you Should rather imitate , or at the least Envie , if hope of better fansies failde : For whereas envie raignes , though it ...
... winne . Gawin . The more your foile if you should hap to loose : For Arthur's fame and vallure's such , as you Should rather imitate , or at the least Envie , if hope of better fansies failde : For whereas envie raignes , though it ...
Side 35
... winne ; The likelier now to loose . His hautie heart And minde I know : I feele mine owne no lesse . As for his strengh and skill , I leave to happe . Where many meete , it lies not all in one . What though he vanquisht have the Romaine ...
... winne ; The likelier now to loose . His hautie heart And minde I know : I feele mine owne no lesse . As for his strengh and skill , I leave to happe . Where many meete , it lies not all in one . What though he vanquisht have the Romaine ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Angharat Argument and manner blood bloud Brytaines Cador cause chaunce Chorus civill warres commaund Conan conquest crimes crowne dare deadly wound death doome doth Duke dumb shewe erst Exeunt fame farre fates feare fell foes foile force former forreine fortune FOURTH SCENE friends Fronia furie Gawin ghost Gildas Gilla Gorlois griefe Guenevora hand happe harmes hate hath heavens Herault himselfe hope Howell Igerna inough insue king King of Norway liedge Maister Mars minde Misfortunes of Arthur moodes Mordred Mordred's mought ne'r nere Nicholas Trotte Nuncius peace Pendragon Picts plague pompe powre praise prince rage raignes realme renowme rest revenge rule Saxons SECOND SCENE seeke selfe shoare sinne sire sonne souldiers speach spide spoyle subdude swage sword thee THIRD SCENE Thomas Hughes thou Thyestes toyles unto Uther Pendragon valure waight weale whereof whiles William Fulbecke winne wonne woonted wrath wrong yeelde
Populære avsnitt
Side 51 - That n'er yet waged warres ; that 's yet to learne To give the charge : yea, let that Princocke come. With sodaine souldiers pamper'd up in peace, And gowned troupes and wantons worne with ease ; With sluggish Saxons crewe, and Irish kernes And Scottish aide, and false redshanked Picts' — is extremely spirited, and contrasts powerfully with the subdued melancholy of the King's previous speeches.
Side 9 - Inn, and here set down as it passed from under his hands, and as it was presented, excepting certain words and lines, where some of the actors either helped their memories by brief omission, or fitted their acting by some alteration...
Side 10 - Whiles they went masking about the stage, there came from another place three nuns, which walked by themselves. Then after a full sight given to the beholders, they all parted, the furies to Mordred's house, the nuns to the cloister. By the first fury with the snake and cup was signified the banquet of Uther Pendragon, and afterward his death, which insued by the poysoned cup.
Side 45 - Mordreds crimes have wrongd the lawes In so extreame a sort, as is too strange, Let right and justice rule with rigours aide, And worke his wracke at length, although too late ; That damning lawes, so damned by the lawes, Hee may receive his deepe deserved doome.
Side 27 - These orderly, one after another, offered these presents to the king, who scornfully refused : a second after which there came a man bareheaded, with long black shagged hair down to his shoulders, apparelled with an Irish jacket and shirt, having an Irish dagger by his side, and a dart in his hand.
Side 16 - Come, spiteful fiends, come, heaps of furies fell, Not one by one, but all at once! my breast Raves not enough: it likes me to be fill'd With greater monsters yet.
Side 4 - The substance of the story is to be found in the Morte Arthur. The action is one, but the unities of time and place are disregarded ; and although the tragedy in many respects is conducted upon the plan of the ancients, there are in it evident approaches to the irregularity of our romantic drama. It forms a sort of connecting link between such pieces of unimpassioned formality as Ferrex and Porrei, and rule-rejecting historical plays, as Shakespeare found them and left them.
Side 4 - The mere rarity of this unique drama would not have recommended it to our notice; but it is not likely that such a man as Bacon would have lent his aid to the production of a piece which was not intrinsically good, and unless we much mistake, there is a richer and a nobler vein of poetry running through it than is to be found in any previous work of the kind.
Side 26 - In Rome the gaping gulfe would not decrease, Till Curtius corse had closde her yawning jawes : In Theb's the rotte and murreine would not cease, Till Laius broode had paide for breach of lawes : In Brytain warres and discord will not stent, Till Uther's line and offspring quite be spent.
Side 5 - gainst such as wrongfully witheld The service by choice wits to Muses due, In humbliest wise these Captives we present. And least your highnes might suspect the gift, As spoile of warre that justice might impeach, Heare and discerne how just our quarrell was, Avowed* (as you see) by good successe. A dame there is, whom men Astrea terme, Shee that pronounceth oracles of lawes, Who to prepare fit servants for her traine, As by commission, takes up flowring wits, Whom first she schooleth to forget and...