Eh well, tha'rt more cocky than me, an' tha says less. John Thomas! Dost want her! Dost want my lady Jane? Tha's dipped me in again, tha hast. Ay, an' tha comes up smilin'.—Ax 'er then! Ax lady Jane! Say: Lift up your heads o' ye gates, that the king... The History of Antiquity - Page 162by Max Duncker - 1879Full view - About this book
| T. R. Wright - Literary Criticism - 2000 - 296 pages
...even more shockingly, coaxes John Thomas to request entry into Lady Jane in the language of Psalm 24: 'Lift up your heads o' ye gates, that the king of glory may come in' (21o). His far-from-Pauline letter at the very end of the novel celebrates not 'the peace that passeth... | |
| Nancy Kaplan - Religion - 2004 - 174 pages
...you. I am here to tell you that God has put you on my heart. I will pray for you. So I say to you: "Lift up your heads O ye Gates that the KING OF GLORY may come in!" CHAPTER 2 Go Through, Go Through the Gates "Go through, go through the gates! Clear the way for the... | |
| Peter Happé - Drama - 2004 - 354 pages
...continues. but the devils' parts. in contrast. are only spoken. Even during the liturgical sequence. "Lift up your heads. O ye gates. [that the King of Glory may come in]'. the devils reply in words. 'Who is this king of glory?' (1. 7134sd). From these details it appears... | |
| Irene Visser, Helen Wilcox - Art - 2006 - 258 pages
...some outrageously trangressive biblical allusions. Mellors, for example, is made to employ Psalm 24, 'Lift up your heads o' ye gates that the king of glory may come in' as part of his foreplay, an encouragement to John Thomas to enter Lady Jane.90 To transplant passages... | |
| George Howard Wilkinson (Bishop of St. Andrews) - Lord's Supper - 1899 - 108 pages
...passage from the Prophets, or the Psalms, or our LORD'S last Discourse, or the Epistles. For instance : " Lift up your heads, O ye gates, that the King of Glory may come forth ! THOU art the King of Glory, O CHRIST ! Come, LORD JESUS, and all the Saints with Thee ! Gather... | |
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