| Ian McAdam - 1999 - 300 páginas
...in quiet lead! Good father, 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 up this dying heart! (4.7.20-43) This scene recalls Doctor Faustus, where Faustus ironically lectures Mephistopheles on... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 2000 - 564 páginas
...tempests driven, To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates! KING Mortimer! Who talks of Mortimer? Who wounds me with...drooping head, O, never more lift up this dying heart! SPENSER Look up, my lord — Baldock, this drowsiness Betides no good; here even we are betray'd. Enter,... | |
| Simon Barker, Hilary Hinds - 2003 - 492 páginas
...tempests driven To fall on shore and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. EDWARD Mortimer! Who talks of Mortimer? Who wounds me with the name of Mortimer, That hloody man? (Kneelingl Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head, laden with mickle care. 40 O might... | |
| Felix Emmanuel Schelling - 1926 - 834 páginas
...tempests driven To fall on shore, and here to pine in fear Of Mortimer and his confederates. Eflw. 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! О never more lift... | |
| 1867 - 818 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 the name of Mortimer, That bloodv man ? Good father, on thy lap Lay I this head laden with mickle care. O, might I never ope these... | |
| 1902 - 504 páginas
...is felt. In his dramas for the first time we find ourselves in the region of real human passion. " Good Father, 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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