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1831 Deaths (X) Literature & drama (X)

       
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The First Part of Henry the Sixth. Edited by Louise Pound

By: William Shakespeare

...neuer shall reuiue: 27 Vpon a Woodden Coffin we attend; 28 And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, 29 We with our stately presence glorif... ...ble Prince. 1830 Som. And this is mine (sweet Henry) fauour him. 1831 King. Be patient Lords, and giue them leaue to speak. 1832 ... ...ne day. 2209 In thee thy Mother dyes, our Households Name, 2210 My Deaths Reuenge, thy Youth, and Englands Fame: 2211 All these, and more,...

... Hand, but conquered. Exe. We mourne in black, why mourn we not in blood? Henry is dead, and never shall revive: Upon a Woodden Coffin we attend; And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, We with our stately presence glorifie, Like Captives bound to a Triumphant Carre. What? shall we curse the Planets of Mishap, That plotted thus our Glories overthrow? Or shall we thinke the subt...

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The Life and Death of King Richard the Second

By: William Shakespeare

...t; 656 Though Richard my liues counsell would not heare, 657 My deaths sad tale, may yet vndeafe his eare. 658 Yor. No, it is stop... ...hands, here in the view of men, 1319 I will vnfold some causes of your deaths. 1320 You haue mis- led a Prince, a Royall King, 1321 A happ... ..., and not with Hands: those whom you curse 1498 Haue felt the worst of Deaths destroying hand, 1499 And lye full low, grau’d in the hollow gro... ...hou weepe. 1830 La. I could weepe, Madame, would it doe you good. 1831 Qu. And I could sing, would weeping doe me good, 1832 And n... ...s Death in this rude assalt? 2777 Villaine, thine owne hand yeelds thy deaths instrument, 2778 Go thou and fill another roome in hell. 2779 ...

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The First Part of Henry the Fourth. Edited by Frederic W. Moorman

By: William Shakespeare

...l the Debt he owes vnto you, 509 Euen with the bloody Payment of your deaths: 510 Therefore I say— 511 Wor. Peace Cousin, say no mo... ...streadings. Tell me else, 1830 Could such inordinate and low desires, 1831 Such poore, such bare, such lewd, such meane attempts, 1832 Suc... ...end of Life cancells all Bands, 1978 And I will dye a hundred thousand Deaths, 1979 Ere breake the smallest parcell of this Vow. 1980 ... ...of Henry the Fourth Shakespeare: First Folio 2033 many a man doth of a Deaths- Head, or a Memento Mori. 2034 I neuer see thy Face, but I thin... ...71 Dow. Talke not of dying, I am out of feare 2372 Of death, or deaths hand, for this one halfe yeare. 2373 Exeunt Omnes. [f3 S... ...e and stiffe 2936 Vnder the hooues of vaunting enemies, 2937 Whose deaths are vnreueng’d. Prethy lend me thy sword 2938 Fal. O Hal, I...

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The Second Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...Tis that they seeke; and they, in seeking that, 1042 Shall finde their deaths, if Yorke can prophecie. 1043 Salisb. My Lord, breake we of... ... Card. Did he not, contrary to forme of Law, 1353 Deuise strange deaths, for small offences done? 1354 Yorke. And did he not, in his... ...g in his reuenge. 1830 My selfe haue calm’d their spleenfull mutinie, 1831 Vntill they heare the order of his death. 1832 King. That h... ...But that the guilt of Murther bucklers thee, 1922 And I should rob the Deaths- man of his Fee, 1923 Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand sham... ...ercy, whil’st ’tis offered you, 2789 Or let a rabble leade you to your deaths. 2790 Who loues the King, and will imbrace his pardon, 2791 ...

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The Merry Wiues of Windsor

By: William Shakespeare

...nds of Moneyes, 52 and Gold, and Siluer, is her Grand- sire vpon his deaths-bed, 53 (Got deliuer to a ioyfull resurrections) giue, when 5... ...e sequell (Master Broome) I suffered the pangs 1775 of three seuerall deaths: First, an intollerable fright, 1776 to be detected with a ieali... ...is Master 1830 comes; ’tis a playing day I see: how now Sir Hugh, no 1831 Schoole to day? 1832 Eua. No: Master Slender is let the Bo...

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The Tragedie of Julius C‘Sar

By: William Shakespeare

...he death of Princes 1020 Caes. Cowards dye many times before their deaths, 1021 The valiant neuer taste of death but once: 1022 Of all... ...nke: 1374 If I my selfe, there is no houre so fit 1375 As Caesars deaths houre; nor no Instrument 1376 Of halfe that worth, as those your... ...r. 1830 2 That’s as much as to say, they are fooles that mar-rie: 1831 you’l beare me a bang for that I feare: proceede di-rectly. 1833 ...

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The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus

By: William Shakespeare

...ooke Competitors in loue? 637 I tell you Lords, you doe but plot your deaths, 638 By this deuise. 639 Chi. Aaron, a thousand death... ...a Pigge prepared to th’ spit. 1830 Deme. What mean’st thou Aron? 1831 Wherefore did’st thou this? 1832 Aron. O Lord sir, ’tis a d...

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The Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet

By: William Shakespeare

...aside the Law, 1830 And turn’d that blacke word death, to banishment. 1831 This is deare mercy, and thou seest it not. 1832 Rom. ’Tis ... ... so deepe an O. 1907 Rom. Nurse. 1908 Nur. Ah sir, ah sir, deaths the end of all. 1909 Rom. Speak’st thou of Iuliet? how is i... ...he hath wedded. I will die, 2620 And leaue him all life liuing, all is deaths. 2621 Pa. Haue I thought long to see this mornings face, 26... ...igne yet 2948 Is Crymson in thy lips, and in thy cheekes, 2949 And Deaths pale flag is not aduanced there. 2950 Tybalt, ly’st thou there i...

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The Tragedy of Richard the Third

By: William Shakespeare

...omething into a slower method. 303 Is not the causer of the timelesse deaths 304 Of these Plantagenets, Henrie and Edward, 305 As bl... ...85 Shall for thy loue, kill a farre truer Loue, 386 To both their deaths shalt thou be accessary. 387 An. I would I knew thy heart. ... ...s kindly. 1830 Mess. Ile goe, my Lord, and tell him what you say. 1831 Exit. 1832 Enter Catesby. 1833 Cates. Many good morrow... ...endernesse, and milde compassion, 2712 Wept like to Children, in their deaths sad Story. 2713 O thus (quoth Dighton) lay the gentle Babes: 2...

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Loues Labour's Lost

By: William Shakespeare

...fa-miliar, 1830 I doe assure ye very good friend: for what is in-ward 1831 betweene vs, let it passe. I doe beseech thee re-member 1832 th... ...Citterne head. 2564 Dum. The head of a bodkin. 2565 Ber. A deaths face in a ring. 2566 Lon. The face of an old Roman coine, sc...

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The Merchant of Venice

By: William Shakespeare

... 243 sadnesse in his youth.) I had rather to be marri-ed 244 to a deaths head with a bone in his mouth, then to ei-ther 245 of these: Go... ... waies. 1830 Ies. I shall be sau’d by my husband, he hath made me 1831 a Christian. 1832 Clow. Truly the more to blame he, we were...

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The Tragedie of Macbeth

By: William Shakespeare

..., and Donalbaine: Malcolme awake, 831 Shake off this Downey sleepe, Deaths counterfeit, - 19 - The Tragedie of Macbeth Shakespeare: First Foli... ..., but something 1830 You may discerne of him through me, and wisedome 1831 To offer vp a weake, poore innocent Lambe 1832 T’ appease an an...

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The Third Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...s that which takes hir heauy leaue? 1325 A deadly grone, like life and deaths departing. 1326 See who it is. 1327 Ed. And now the Batt... ...rth. 1830 Oxf. Why Warwicke, canst thou speak against thy Liege, 1831 Whom thou obeyd’st thirtie and six yeeres, 1832 And not bewray ... ...from Winters pow’rfull Winde. 2817 These Eyes, that now are dim’d with Deaths black Veyle, 2818 Haue beene as piercing as the Mid- day Sunne, ... ... a Childe, 3046 Looke in his youth to haue him so cut off. 3047 As deathsmen you haue rid this sweet yong Prince. 3048 King. Away with...

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The Winters Tale

By: William Shakespeare

...the greene Neptune 1830 A Ram, and bleated: and the Fire- roab’d- God 1831 Golden Apollo, a poore humble Swaine, 1832 As I seeme now. Thei... ...too soft for him 2661 (say I:) Draw our Throne into a Sheep- Coat? all deaths - 59 - The Winters Tale Shakespeare: First Folio 2662 are too f... ... 2968 Bohemia stops his eares, and threatens them 2969 With diuers deaths, in death. 2970 Perd. Oh my poore Father: 2971 The Heaue...

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The Tragedie of Cymbeline

By: William Shakespeare

...place: Th’ Ambassador, 1830 Lucius the Romane comes to Milford- Hauen 1831 To morrow. Now, if you could weare a minde 1832 Darke, as your ... ...e: 2516 Thus smiling, as some Fly had tickled slumber, 2517 Not as deaths dart being laugh’d at: his right Cheeke 2518 Reposing on a Cushi...

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The Second Part of Henry the Fourth

By: William Shakespeare

...oines disguis’d. 1257 Fal. Peace (good Dol) doe not speake like a Deaths-head: 1258 doe not bid me remember mine end. 1259 Dol. S... ...Exit. 1830 Falst. Fare you well, gentle Gentlemen. On Bar-dolph, 1831 leade the men away. As I returne, I will fetch off 1832 these I...

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The Tragedie of Anthonie and Cleopatra

By: William Shakespeare

...nchus of Arabia, King of Pont, 1830 Herod of Iewry, Mithridates King 1831 Of Comageat, Polemen and Amintas, 1832 The Kings of Mede, and... ...urposes, and being Royall 3601 Tooke her owne way: the manner of their deaths, 3602 I do not see them bleede. 3603 Dol. Who was last w...

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Democracy in America

By: Alexis de Tocqueville

... their enemy, when he was found in the person of a single despot. When, in 1831, Alexis de Tocqueville came to study De- mocracy in America, the trial... ...twenty-two was ap- pointed judge-auditor at the tribunal of Versailles. In 1831, commissioned ostensibly to investigate the peni- tentiary system of t... ...very parish, in which the results of public deliberations, and the births, deaths, and marriages of the citizens were entered;*** clerks were directed... ...e laws; the town-clerk records all the town votes, orders, grants, births, deaths, and marriages; the treasurer keeps the funds; the overseer of the p... ...m to associations – Dangers resulting to the State – Great Con- vention of 1831 relative to the Tariff – Legislative character of this Convention – Wh... ... the sole source of the political animosities which agitated the Union. In 1831, when the dispute was raging with the utmost virulence, a private citi... ... took up arms in the same cause, sent sixty-three delegates. On October 1, 1831, this assembly, which according to the American custom had taken the n...

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The Alkahest

By: Honoré de Balzac

...oor mother is happy,” said Marguerite; “she would have suffered a thousand deaths before she died: as it was, her first encounter with Science killed ... ...“Hear me, father: better kill us at one blow than make us suffer a hundred deaths a day. Let it now be seen which of us must yield.” “Do you mean to k... ...nsieur and Madame de Solis reached Flanders in the last days of September, 1831, and arrived at Douai during the morning. Marguerite ordered the coach...

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Beatrix

By: Honoré de Balzac

...came an orphan in 1793. Her property escaped confiscation by reason of the deaths of her father and brother. The first was killed on the 10th of Augus... ... tell you now what made us intimate friends. For three years, from 1828 to 1831, Beatrix, while enjoying the last fetes of the Restoration, mak- ing t... ...ment the world caused her prevented her heart from waking up. From 1830 to 1831 she spent the time of the revolutionary disturbance at her husband’s c... ...It is forbidden to you to love me; I know that. You will suffer a thousand deaths, you will be betrayed, humiliated, unhappy; but you have in you a de...

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Autobiographic Sketches Selections, Grave and Gay

By: Thomas de Quincey

...lly baited into the ranks of the rebels. One picturesque difference in the deaths of these two gentlemen was remarkable, as contrasted with their pre-... ...remember well, on occasion of the memorable tumults in Bristol, (autumn of 1831,) that I, for my part, could not read, without horror and indignation,... ...alamities that overwhelmed his family; to the removal from him by tragical deaths, in so rapid a succession, of the Princesse de Lamballe, of his aunt...

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Dead Souls

By: D. J. Hogarth

...burned them in his room. His next effort, Evenings at the Farm of Dikanka (1831) was more successful. It was a series of gay and colourful pictures of... ...ve. John Cournos Evenings on the Farm near the Dikanka, 1829-31; Mirgorod, 1831-33; Taras Bulba, 1834; Arabesques (includes tales, The Portrait and A ... ...lba, 1834; Arabesques (includes tales, The Portrait and A Madman’s Diary), 1831-35; The Cloak, 1835; The Revizor (The Inspector-General), 1836; Dead S... ...computed for me?” said Chichikov. “And also to have a detailed list of the deaths made out?” “Yes, I will—a detailed list,” agreed Manilov. “Very well...

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The Lesser Bourgeoisie (The Middle Classes)

By: Honoré de Balzac

...g a suitable porter, and then of obtaining tenants occupied Thuillier from 1831 to 1832. When the phenomenon of the change was accomplished, and the s... ...sted the poisoned apple of passion, undergoes a solemn shock; she sees two deaths before her: that of the body and that of the heart. Dividing women i... ...he Phellions had long had their eye, cost them eighteen thousand francs in 1831. The house was separated from the courtyard by a balustrade with a bas...

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Kenilworth

By: Sir Walter Scott

... they’ve espied The haunted towers of Cumnor Hall. Arbotsford, 1st March 1831. KENIL WORTH CHAPTER I. I am an innkeeper, and know my grounds, And st... ...onically the marvellous good luck of this great favourite in the opportune deaths of those who stood in the way of his wishes. There is a curious pass...

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Measure, For Measure

By: William Shakespeare

...s habitation where thou keepst 1214 Hourely afflict: Meerely, thou art deaths foole, 1215 For him thou labourst by thy flight to shun, 1216 ... ...at beares the name of life? Yet in this life 1243 Lie hid moe thousand deaths; yet death we feare 1244 That makes these oddes, all euen. 1245... ...ur companion by the hand 1830 Who hath a storie readie for your eare: 1831 I shall attend your leisure, but make haste 1832 The vaporous n...

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Twelfe Night, Or What You Will

By: William Shakespeare

...f this yong Gentleman 1830 Haue done offence, I take the fault on me: 1831 If you offend him, I for him defie you. 1832 To. You sir? W... ...nd I most iocund, apt, and willinglie, 2289 To do you rest, a thousand deaths would dye. 2290 Ol. Where goes Cesario? 2291 Vio. A...

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Records of a Family of Engineers

By: Robert Louis Stevenson

...wfarren’), killed with shots of pistols and hagbuts in 1608. Three violent deaths in about seventy years, against which we can only put the case of Th... ..., and Alan, born June 1752. With these two brothers my story begins. Their deaths were simultaneous; their lives unusually brief and full. Tra- dition... ...the tropics, and simultaneously struck down. The dates and places of their deaths (now before me) would seem to indicate a more scattered and prolonge... ...eceived,’ she writes to Miss Janet, ‘the melancholy news of my dear babys’ deaths. My heart is like to break for my dear Mrs. Stevenson. O may she be ... ...piritually-minded. After this date there were two more births and two more deaths, so that the number of the family remained un- changed; in all five ... ...ood, and the fragile furniture of light-rooms. It was often impossible. In 1831 I find my grandfather ‘hovering for a week’ about the Pentland Sker- r...

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Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin

By: Robert Louis Stevenson

...look for at their father’s death; and yet when that happened in September, 1831, the heir was still apathetically waiting. Poor John, the days of his ... ...friend who should have kept a lodge; yet he led the procession of becoming deaths, and began in the mind of Fleeming that train of tender and grateful... ... for his own. Already I find him writing in the plural of ‘these impending deaths’; already I find him in quest of consola- tion. ‘There is little pai...

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Cousin Pons

By: Honoré de Balzac

...trong iron bolts and bars of the shop-front. When Remonencq came hither in 1831, after the Revolu- tion of July, he began by displaying a selection of... ...in the first instance to work as an errand-boy. Between the years 1825 and 1831 he ran er- rands for dealers in curiosities in the Boulevard Beaumarch... ...ught the house, an old-fashioned mansion, for a song, as the saying is, in 1831. Yet there were sumptuous apartments within it, decorated in the time ... ...-student; he was a prudent practitioner, and not with- out experience. His deaths caused no scandal; he had plenty of opportunities of studying all ki... ...ttle- field—all these may possess this supreme lucidity to the full; their deaths fill us with surprise and wonder. But many, on the other hand, die o...

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The Voyage of the Beagle

By: Charles Darwin

...yage of the Beagle R. N., sailed from Devonport on the 27th of Decem- ber, 1831. The object of the expedition was to com- plete the survey of Patagoni... ...ittle white things.” Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me that he witnessed in 1831 in India, a hail-storm, which killed numbers of large birds and much i... ...andering habits increase; and hence the popu- lation, without any apparent deaths from famine, is repressed in a manner extremely sudden compared to w...

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