| Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb - 1904 - 710 pages
...life. Friar. Hie to thy father's house, there lock thee fast Alone within thy chamber, then fall down On both thy knees, and grovel on the ground ; Cry...wretch, a worm, a nothing : weep, sigh, pray Three times a day, and three times every night ; For seven days' space do this ; then, if thou findest No change... | |
| Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb - Authors, English - 1904 - 686 pages
...life. Friar. Hie to thy father's house, there lock thee fast Alone within thy chamber, then fall down On both thy knees, and grovel on the ground ; Cry...heart, wash every word thou utter'st In tears, and (ift be possible) of blood : Beg Heaven to cleanse the leprosy of lust That rots thy soul ; acknowledge... | |
| Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb - Authors, English - 1904 - 702 pages
...life. Friar. Hie to thy father's house, there lock thee fast Alone within thy chamber, then fall down On both thy knees, and grovel on the ground ; Cry...heart, wash every word thou utterst In tears, and (ift be possible) of blood : Beg Heaven to cleanse the leprosy of lust I That rots thy soul ; acknowledge... | |
| John Ford - 1915 - 356 pages
...house, there locke thee fast Alone within thy chamber, then fall downe 70 On both thy knees, and grovell on the ground : Cry to thy heart, wash every word thou utter'st In teares, — and if't bee possible, — of blood : Begge heaven to cleanse the leprosie of lust That... | |
| Henry Dugdale Sykes - Authorship, Disputed - 1924 - 248 pages
...that recalls the language of the Friar's exhortation to Giovanni in the first scene of 'Tis Pity : Wash every word thou utter'st In tears (and if 't...to cleanse the leprosy of lust That rots thy soul. The scene ends with the double-rimed couplet already referred to : My shame may live without me But... | |
| John George Robertson, Charles Jasper Sisson - Languages, Modern - 1924 - 556 pages
...recalls the language of the Friar's exhortation to Giovanni in the first scene of 'Tis Pity : Weak every word thou utter'st In tears (and if "t be possible)...to cleanse the leprosy of lust That rots thy soul. The scene ends with the double-rhymed couplet already referred to : My shame may live without me But... | |
| John Webster - 1947 - 376 pages
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