| Andrew Carnegie - 2005 - 337 pages
...such a disposition of our dead as would still render it possible for us to say with Laertes : "Lay her i' the earth; And from her fair and unpolluted flesh May violets spring." Hard times are everywhere, and produce some strange changes. The Banyan caste of Suerah has just resolved... | |
| Peggy O'Brien - 2006 - 244 pages
...that way tend"; "angels and ministers of grace" (1.4.43) reemerges in 5.1 as "minist'ring angel" in "I tell thee, churlish priest, / A minist'ring angel shall my sister be / When thou liest howling" (250-252); and "the dead waste and middle of the night" (1.2.208) returns reshaped in 2.2.250-254,... | |
| 528 pages
...some slight change, the wondrously poetic and pathetic words of Laertes at Ophelia's grave : Leave her i* the earth ; And from her fair and unpolluted...May violets spring ! I tell thee, churlish priest, A ministering angel shall this woman be, When thou liest howling ! I have no words with which to tell... | |
| 650 pages
...neighbors whom I have loved, and who are now at rest. You will lay her where my father sleeps. " Lay her i' the earth, And from her fair and unpolluted flesh May violets spring." I never knew, I never met, a braver spirit than the one that once inhabited tnis silent form of dreamless... | |
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