Belfegor [a verse adaptation of N. Machiavelli's novella di Belfegor]. |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... fact a palimsest * Too precious to be Vulcan's guest . Disposed in many a formal square , Of arrowy shape the letters were- Begot , it is believed , when tipsy Upon a geometric gipsy By one of Chaldee origin , Who thus abducted from her ...
... fact a palimsest * Too precious to be Vulcan's guest . Disposed in many a formal square , Of arrowy shape the letters were- Begot , it is believed , when tipsy Upon a geometric gipsy By one of Chaldee origin , Who thus abducted from her ...
Page 7
... facts were sworn to by the men , Since they the married state had known , And felt for pangs so like their own ! * Eacus and Rhadamanthus . E'en Minos too , * Hell's Chancellor , To whom BELFEGOR . 7 The writing therefore has defied ...
... facts were sworn to by the men , Since they the married state had known , And felt for pangs so like their own ! * Eacus and Rhadamanthus . E'en Minos too , * Hell's Chancellor , To whom BELFEGOR . 7 The writing therefore has defied ...
Page 10
... fact , with dexterous judgment , splitting , ( A task for legal heads most fitting ) Until he , without more ado , Out of one crime , created two ! To Pluto then , Hell's Autocrat , With due respect he doffed his hat , And from a bag of ...
... fact , with dexterous judgment , splitting , ( A task for legal heads most fitting ) Until he , without more ado , Out of one crime , created two ! To Pluto then , Hell's Autocrat , With due respect he doffed his hat , And from a bag of ...
Page 14
... fact is No other way the knaves have got , To let the audience know the plot ; And therefore with great nonchalance , They make some sapient wight advance Towards the foot - lamps , and declare His secrets to the open air ; Avowing ...
... fact is No other way the knaves have got , To let the audience know the plot ; And therefore with great nonchalance , They make some sapient wight advance Towards the foot - lamps , and declare His secrets to the open air ; Avowing ...
Page 28
... fact . He lived to a very advanced age , sat in several Parliaments , and only died in , I believe , 1795. A gentleman of high professional rank and unimpeachable veracity , who is still alive , told me that , dining at the late Earl of ...
... fact . He lived to a very advanced age , sat in several Parliaments , and only died in , I believe , 1795. A gentleman of high professional rank and unimpeachable veracity , who is still alive , told me that , dining at the late Earl of ...
Common terms and phrases
Abaddon BELFEGOR Belial believe beneath brain brow burst Church clamour Court of Chancery crowd curious damned dark debate deem demon devil digression doctrine doth doubt Dunciad ears earth elves eyes fact fame fast fear female fierce folks fool frame friends glorious Gold Golden Legend grave Hades head Heav'n hell Hell's Hence holy horn Imps Incubus infernal isoceles triangle Kings known labour learned length Lest light Lord Lord Byron male man's manuscript marriage matter means mighty mind Minos monarch mortal multitude never Nicksa nostrum o'er Old Nick once oyster sauce pain palimsest passed passion Peers Persepolis Pluto proud prove quoth Ross Mackay round rude Saint sapient scarcely scorn shame shew shewn silly fool soul speech strange strife Styx tails thee things thou thought Tis true toil told tongues twas whence wife Winfarthing wives woman's wrath
Popular passages
Page 101 - ... refused, to inform and prosecute on this law. Every Roman Catholic was, under the same act, to forfeit his estate to his nearest Protestant relation, until, through a profession of what he did not believe, he redeemed by his hypocrisy, what the law had transferred to the kinsman as the recompense of his profligacy.
Page 42 - No sooner had the Almighty ceased, but all The multitude of angels, with a shout Loud as from numbers without number...
Page 101 - Latin tongue, not exactly the same as our liturgy, but very near it and containing no offence whatsoever against the laws, or against good morals) was forged into a crime punishable with perpetual imprisonment. The teaching school...
Page 108 - A patriot, sir! Why, patriots spring up like mushrooms! I could raise fifty of them within the four-andtwenty hours. I have raised many of them in one night. It is but refusing to gratify an unreasonable or an insolent demand, and up starts a patriot.
Page 101 - Catholic was, under the same act, to forfeit his estate to his nearest Protestant relation, until, through a profession of what he did not believe, he redeemed, by his hypocrisy, what the law had transferred to the kinsman as the recompense of his profligacy. When thus turned out of doors from his paternal estate, he was disabled from acquiring any other by any industry, donation, or charity; but was rendered a foreigner in his native land...
Page 126 - ... and such disinterested forbearance was least of all to be expected in the clergy of the middle ages. The history of one of the absurd relics mentioned in the preceding pages, the good sword of Winfarthing, is probably a fair sample of that of a majority of the shrines, if their origin could be known. This precious relic was originally the sword of a robber, who took sanctuary in the churchyard, but escaped through the negligence of the watchman, and left this sword behind him. It was laid up...
Page 116 - Ireton's regiment, that at Cashell, in the county of Tipperary, in the province of Munster, in Carrick- Patrick church, seated on a hill or rock, stormed by the Lord Inchequine, and where there were neare 700 put to the sword, and none saved but the mayor's wife and his son...
Page 28 - The peace of 1763,' continued he, ' was carried through and approved by a pecuniary distribution. Nothing else could have surmounted the difficulty. I was myself the channel through which the mony passed.
Page 67 - He was nearly wholly in the water of the well, his feet just above the surface. Williams fastened the other end of the cord round the paling, to prevent the body getting beyond our reach. The boy struggled a little with his arms and legs in the water; the water bubbled for a minute. We waited till these symptoms were past, and then went in, and afterwards I think we went out, and walked down Shoreditch to occupy the time...
Page 118 - ... binding themselves thereby with a perpetual reproach : for afterward, by the will of God, it so happened, that every one which came of that kinred of men which had plaied that naughty prank, were borne with tailes, even as brute beasts bee.