Dramas and Poems of Edward Bulwer Lytton (Lord Lytton).Little, Brown, 1898 - 454 ページ |
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57 ページ
... human kindness ? if thou hast , why , kill me , And save thy wife from madness . No , it cannot It cannot be : this is some horrid dream : - I shall wake soon .— ( Touching him . ) Art flesh ? art man ? or but The shadows seen in sleep ...
... human kindness ? if thou hast , why , kill me , And save thy wife from madness . No , it cannot It cannot be : this is some horrid dream : - I shall wake soon .— ( Touching him . ) Art flesh ? art man ? or but The shadows seen in sleep ...
73 ページ
... human or divine , separate the wife from her husband's sorrows . Claude Claude- all is forgotten forgiven - I am thine for ever ! ― MADAME DESCHAPPELLES . What do I hear ? Come away , or never see my face again . MONS . DESCHAPPELLES ...
... human or divine , separate the wife from her husband's sorrows . Claude Claude- all is forgotten forgiven - I am thine for ever ! ― MADAME DESCHAPPELLES . What do I hear ? Come away , or never see my face again . MONS . DESCHAPPELLES ...
89 ページ
... human ! groom - hush ! Now , call the bride- You see I am prepared no tears all calm ; - But , father , talk no more of love ! -- MONS . DESCHAPPELLES . My child , ' Tis but one struggle ; he is young , rich , noble ; Thy state will ...
... human ! groom - hush ! Now , call the bride- You see I am prepared no tears all calm ; - But , father , talk no more of love ! -- MONS . DESCHAPPELLES . My child , ' Tis but one struggle ; he is young , rich , noble ; Thy state will ...
162 ページ
... human nature , he learnt how to veil them , - at least when he obtained the scar- Jet . In earlier life he had been prone to gallantries which a little prepossessed the King ( who was formal and decorous , and threw a singular coldness ...
... human nature , he learnt how to veil them , - at least when he obtained the scar- Jet . In earlier life he had been prone to gallantries which a little prepossessed the King ( who was formal and decorous , and threw a singular coldness ...
168 ページ
... Humanity , and must Fulfil Humanity's condition - Love ! Debarred the Actual , we but breathe a life To the chill Marble of the Ideal - Thus , In thy unseen and abstract Majesty , My France my Country , I have bodied forth to convulse ...
... Humanity , and must Fulfil Humanity's condition - Love ! Debarred the Actual , we but breathe a life To the chill Marble of the Ideal - Thus , In thy unseen and abstract Majesty , My France my Country , I have bodied forth to convulse ...
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Adrien ANDRÉ CHÉNIER BARADAS beauty BERINGHEN bless Blount brave Cardinal Cardinal Richelieu charms child Cinq Mars Clara Claude Count COURTIER cousin DAMAS dare dear death earth EDWARD BULWER LYTTON Evelyn Exeunt Exit eyes father flowers forgive fortune France FRANÇOIS Georg Georgina give Gloss GLOSSMORE Graves Groginhole hand happy hear heart Heaven honor hope hour HUGUET Hush John Vesey JOSEPH JULIE King Lady F Lady Franklin laugh lips live look Lord LOUIS Lyons Mac Finch MADAME DESCHAPPELLES MARION marriage marry MAUPRAT MELNOTTE Miss Douglas Miss Vesey mother never o'er ORLEANS pardon PAULINE poor Popkins Prince RICHELIEU SCENE scorn Sharp sigh Sir Frederick Sir John Sire sizar smile Smooth snuff-box soul speak star Stout sweet tears tell thee there's thine thou art thou hast thought Toke vewy WIDOW word young youth
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57 ページ - Were made a living thing, and wore thy shape ! I saw thee ! and the passionate heart of man Entered the breast of the wild-dreaming boy ; And from that hour I grew — what to the last I shall be — thine adorer ! Well ! this love, Vain, frantic, guilty, if thou wilt, became A fountain of ambition and bright hope : I thought of tales that by the winter hearth Old gossips tell — how maidens, sprung from kings, Have stooped from their high sphere : how Love, like Death, Levels all ranks, and lays...
160 ページ - The pen is mightier than the sword. Behold The arch-enchanter's wand! — itself a nothing! But taking sorcery from the master hand To paralyse the Caesars — and to strike The loud earth breathless! — Take away the sword; States can be saved without it!
218 ページ - Of that high throne — spurn you the greyhair'd man, Who gave you empire — and now sues for safety? Louis. No: — when we see your Eminence in truth At the foot of the throne — we'll listen to you.
223 ページ - JOSEPH. The King is chafed Against his servant. Lady, while we speak, The lackey of the anteroom is not More powerless than the Minister of France.
179 ページ - Could I recall the past — or had not set The prodigal treasures of the bankrupt soul In one slight bark upon the shoreless sea; The yoked steer, after his day of toil, Forgets the goad, and rests — to me alike Or day or night — Ambition has no rest ! Shall I resign ? — who can resign himself...
314 ページ - That fable hath but fooled the hour ; Each age that ripens power in man But subjects man to power. Yet every day in seven, at least, One bright republic shall be known ; Man's world awhile hath surely ceased, When God proclaims his own ! Six days may rank divide the poor, O Dives, from thy banquet-hall ; The seventh the Father opes the door, And holds his feast for all ! PRANCES ANNE KEMBLE.
359 ページ - I contemplate you both ; the man there — the gold here ! Now, there is many a man in those streets honest as you are, who moves, thinks, feels and reasons as well as we do ; excellent in form — imperishable in soul ; who, if his pockets were three days empty, would sell thought, reason, body, and soul too, for that little coin ! Is that the fault of the man ? — no ! it is the fault of mankind ? God made man ; behold what mankind have made a god ! When I was poor, I hated the world ; now I am...
40 ページ - Even then, Methinks thou wouldst be only made more dear By the sweet thought that I could prove how deep Is woman's love! We are like the insects, caught By the poor glittering of a garish flame; But, oh, the wings once scorch'd, the brightest star Lures us no more; and by the fatal light We cling till death! Mel. Angel! [Aside.] O conscience! conscience!
227 ページ - Burst forth to curb the great, and raise the low. Mark, where she stands, around her form I draw The awful circle of our solemn Church! Set but a foot within that holy ground, And on thy head — yea, though it wore a crown — I launch the curse of Rome!
341 ページ - Returning, he proclaims by many a grace, By shrugs and strange contortions of his face, How much a dunce that has been sent to roam, Excels a dunce that has been kept at home.