The Mysterious Freebooter: Or, The Days of Queen Bess. A Romance ...Printed at the Minerva Press, for Lane, Newman, and Company, 1806 |
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acquainted already Alwin apartment appeared arms arrival Auskerry Baron de Mowbray behold Bonny Mabel booters breast cause chamber CHAP chapel child command companion countenance court crime daugh daughter death demand desire door doubt drawbridge dreaded Edward judged Elizabeth endeavoured enemy enquired entered exclaimed eyes father favour fear feelings Flanders fortress Frasier freebooters hand happiness heard heart Heaven honour hour husband informed inhabitants instantly Irwin Lady Butler Lady Margaret Murray Laird Archibald Laird of Glenross Lambrun Lednoch lips Lord Rufus Lord William Madgine marriage ment mind moss-troopers Mowbray Castle nature night palace passed perceived Philip Watkins possessed present prisoner proceeded promise queen Ravil received rendered repentance resolved returned Hubert rienced Rockmount Castle Rosalind Rufus de Madginecourt Saint Agnes salind scarcely secretary at war Sir Allanrod Sir Edward soul sovereign spot thee thou tion vaults walls ward whilst wife William de Mowbray
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Sivu 252 - Well believe this, No ceremony that to great ones 'longs, Not the king's crown, nor the deputed sword, The marshal's truncheon, nor the judge's robe, Become them with one half so good a grace, As mercy does.
Sivu 20 - Ah! gentle pair, ye little think how nigh Your change approaches, when all these delights Will vanish, and deliver ye to woe; More woe, the more your taste is now of joy...
Sivu 291 - VOL. iv. o had had been so fortunate as to have had it in my power to preserve, the life of his babe.
Sivu 205 - I am settled, and bend up Each corporal agent to this terrible feat. Away, and mock the time with fairest show : False face must hide what the false heart doth know.
Sivu 50 - Lancaster; thyself a prisoner here ; Thy captive son torn from his mother's arms, And in the tyrant's power ; a kingdom lost : Amidst so many sorrows, what new hope Hath wrought this wondrous change ? Marg.
Sivu 382 - Our son, too, he shall hang upon The sounds, and lift his little hands in praise To heaven : taught by his mother's bright example, That, to be truly good, is to be bless«L [Exevnt, EPILOGUE. Tins virgin author's such a blushing rogue — What ! no gay, lively, laughing epilogue ? ' Madam,' says he, and looked so wise ! ' in Greece'— (Greece, that's their cant)
Sivu 144 - O'erhangs thy soul, thy ev'ry look proclaims. Why then refuse it words ? The heart, that bleeds From any stroke of fate or human wrongs, Loves to disclose itself, that list'ning pity May drop a healing tear upon the wound. 'Tis only when with inbred horror smote At some base act, or done, or to be done, That the recoiling soul, with conscious dread, Shrinks back into itself.
Sivu 205 - And by opposing end them: to die to sleep; No more; and by sleep, to say we end The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks That flesh is heir to?
Sivu 382 - Rccall'd shall be th' amusing narrative, And story of our future evening, oft Rehears'd. Our son too, — he shall hang upon The sounds, and lift his little hands in praise To Heaven: taught by his mother's bright example, That, to be truly good, is to be bless'd. THE...