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" I might ! but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable ! Here receive my crown ; Receive it ? no, these innocent hands of mine Shall not be guilty of so foul a crime. "
Specimens of English Dramatic Poets: Who Lived about the Time of Shakespeare ... - Page 24
by Charles Lamb - 1808 - 484 pages
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A Select Collection of Old Plays, Volume 2

English drama - 1744 - 378 pages
...fo foul a crime. .. » • . .., He of you all that moft defires my blood, And And will be cal I'd the murtherer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me ? Then fend for unrelenting Mortimer, And Ifabel, whofe eyes being turn'd to fteel, Will fooner fparkle fire...
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A Select Collection of Old Plays: Gammer Gurton's needle

English drama - 1780 - 428 pages
...thefe innocent hands of mine Shall not be guilty or" fo foul a crime. He of you all that mod defires my blood, And will be call'd the murtherer of a king,...Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me ? Then fend for unrelenting Mortimer, And Habel, u hole eyes, being turn'd to fieel, Will fooner fparkle fire...
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The Ancient British Drama ...

Walter Scott - English drama - 1810 - 618 pages
...is willing to resign. Win. If he be not, let him choose. Edw. O would I might ! but heaven and earl! conspire To make me miserable ! here, receive my crown...of you all, that most desires my blood, And will be called the murderer of a king, Take it What, are you moved ? pity you me ? Then 9«nd for unrelenting...
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The Ancient British Drama ...

Walter Scott - English drama - 1810 - 620 pages
...Edai. О would I might ! but heaven and earth conspire To make me miserable ! here, receive my crown Y Receive it ! no, these innocent hands of mine Shall...of you all, that most desires my blood, And will be called the murderer of a king, Take it. What, are you moved? pity you me ? Then send for unrelenting...
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Specimens of English Dramatic Poets: Who Lived about the Time of ..., Volume 1

Charles Lamb - Drama - 1813 - 508 pages
...the king is willing to resign. Bish. If he be not, let him choose. Edw. O would I might ! but heav'n and earth conspire To make me miserable ! here, receive...hands of mine Shall not be guilty of so foul a crime. •i He of you all that most desires my blood, And will be call'd the murtherer of a king, Take it....
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Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 2

England - 1818 - 764 pages
...you resign or no ? Edit. I'll not resign — but whilst I live be King. O would I might ! but Heaven and Earth conspire To make me miserable : here, receive...of you all that most desires my blood, And will be called the Murtherer of a King, Take it. What, are you moved ? pity you me? Then send for unrelenting...
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 2

1818 - 782 pages
...you resign or no ? Edy. I'll not resign — but whilst I live be King. . O would I might ! but Heaven and Earth conspire To make me miserable : here, receive...of you all that most desires my blood, And will be called the Murtherer of a King, Take it. What, are you moved ? pity you me? Then send for unrelenting...
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The Retrospective Review, Volume 4

Books - 1821 - 408 pages
...the king is willing to resign. Bisk. If he be not, let him choose. Edw. O would I might! but heav'n and earth conspire To make me miserable ! here, receive...that most desires my blood, And will be call'd the murlherer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me?. Then send for unrelenting Mortimer,...
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The Works of Christopher Marlowe, Volumes 1-3

Christopher Marlowe - Dramatists, English - 1826 - 1070 pages
...the king is willing to resign. WINCH. If he be not, let him choose. EDW. O would I might! but heav'n and earth conspire To make me miserable ! here receive...that most desires my blood, And will be call'd the murthererof a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me ? Then send for unrelenting Mortimer,...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 46

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1832 - 654 pages
...willing to resign. WINCHESTER. — If he be not, let him choose. EDWARD. — O would I might ! but heaven and earth conspire To make me miserable ! Here, receive...of you all that most desires my blood, And will be called the murtherer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me ? Then send for unrelenting...
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