| Christopher Marlowe - 1885 - 250 páginas
...sore tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. Edw. Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer ? Who wounds me with...on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. 0 might I never ope these eyes agiiin ! Never again lift up this drooping head I 0 never more lift... | |
| Alfred Hix Welsh - 1882 - 1134 páginas
...bloody man? Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head laden with mickle care. O, might I never ope Ihesc In presence of you, I had had my end. , For this I did delude my noble father With a feign ! ' Single lines, struck in the heat of glowing passion or fancy, seem to leave a track of fire: 'Tyrants... | |
| Christopher Marlowe, Percy Pinkerton - 1885 - 354 páginas
...sore tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. Edw. Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer ? Who wounds me with the name of Mortimer ? I That bloody man ! Good father, on thy lap [Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. f O might I... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 1889 - 408 páginas
...sore tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. Edw. Mortimer! who talks of Mortimer? Who wounds me with the name of Mortimer? That bloody man I Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. O might I never ope these eyes again... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1895 - 138 páginas
...passions, take this speech, in which the indignant Edward first gives way to anger, and then to misery : Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer, Who wounds me with...on thy lap Lay I this head laden with mickle care, O, might I never ope these eyes again, Never again lift up this drooping head, O, never more lift up... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1895 - 140 páginas
...name of Mortimer, That bloody man ? Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head laden with mickle care, O, might I never ope these eyes again, Never again...drooping head, O, never more lift up this dying heart ! 25 The didactic dignity of Marlowe's verse may be gathered from these lines in " Tamburlaine " :... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 1896 - 178 páginas
...tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. K. Edw. Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer? Who wounds me with...drooping head ! O never more lift up this dying heart ! Y. Spen. Look up, my lord. — Baldock, this drowsiness Betides no good ; here even we are betrayed.... | |
| Thomas Donovan - 1896 - 500 páginas
...tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear, Of Mortimer and his confederates. Edw. Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer ? Who wounds me with...on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. O might I never ope these eyes again ! Never again lift up this drooping head ! 0 never more lift up... | |
| 1898 - 876 páginas
...wounds me with thé naine of Mortimer, That bloody m an ? Et, retombant dans sa tristesse, il continue : Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. O might I never open thèse eyes again ! Xever agnin lift up this drooping head ! 0, never more lift... | |
| 1900 - 476 páginas
...tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. K. Edw. Mortimer ! who talks of Mortimer? Who wounds me with...on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. O. might I never open these eyes again ! Never again lift up this drooping head ! O never more lift... | |
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