| Law - 1918 - 1048 pages
...snatched a red rose, the Earl of Warwick, known as the King-maker, remarked : And here I prophesy: this brawl to-day Grown to this faction in the Temple Garden...white A thousand souls to death and deadly night. The omniscient guide, for a consideration, of course, still points to the very bushes from which these... | |
| Horace John Wright, Walter Page Wright - Floriculture - 1922 - 484 pages
...scene in the Temple gardens, where the flowers were plucked as party badges, was fulfilled : "This brawl to-day Grown to this faction, in the Temple...White, A thousand souls to death and deadly night." Sir John Mandeville's description of Damascus : " Non other cytee is not lycke in comparison to it,... | |
| William Shakespeare - Great Britain - 1918 - 176 pages
...apprehension : conception., opinion 111 degree : rank And here I prophesy : this brawl to-day, 124 Grown to this faction in the Temple garden, Shall...night. Plan. Good Master Vernon, I am bound to you, 128 That you on my behalf would pluck a flower. Fer. In your behalf still would I wear the same. Lawyer.... | |
| Bar associations - 1926 - 762 pages
...is celebrated by Shakespeare as being the place where the Wars of the Roses were originated. " The brawl to-day grown to this faction in the Temple Garden...White a thousand souls to death and deadly night." The last incident that I wanted to speak to you about in regard to the hospitality of the Temple was... | |
| Elizabeth Montizambert - London (England) - 1923 - 258 pages
...flatterer, But dare maintain the party of the truth, Pluck a red rose from off this thorn with me. This brawl to-day. Grown to this faction in the Temple...white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night. It seems a pity that the Temple authorities do not so far unbend as to subscribe to the pretty legend... | |
| William Wells - 1923 - 248 pages
...Shakespeare certainly revised, if he did not write it entirely, we find : " And here I prophesy : this brawl to-day, Grown to this faction in the Temple...white A thousand souls to death and deadly night." It was suggested, in the opening paragraph of the first chapter of this book, that it was Marlowe who,... | |
| William Shakespeare - English literature - 1924 - 904 pages
...wear this rose : And here I prophesy : this brawl to-day, Grown to this faction in the Temple-garden, Shall send between the red rose and the white A thousand...to you, That you on my behalf would pluck a flower. Vtr. In your behalf still will I wear the same. Law. And so will I. Plan. Thanks, gentle sir. Come,... | |
| Stanley Wells - Dramatists, English - 1995 - 424 pages
...its close the Earl of Warwick ('the Kingmaker') foreshadows what is to come by prophesying that this brawl today, Grown to this faction in the Temple garden,...white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night. (2.4.124-7) The true hero of the play is Lord Talbot, whose valiant though ultimately unsuccessful... | |
| Normand Berlin - American drama - 1994 - 286 pages
...plays that must come true, of course, precisely because the "history" is behind Shakespeare: "this brawl today, / Grown to this faction in the Temple...White / A thousand souls to death and deadly night" (2.4.124-27). The Temple Garden, a garden in the precincts of two of London's four legal societies,... | |
| Gilian West - Education - 2015 - 105 pages
...of my love to thee, Will I upon thy party wear this rose; And here I prophesy: this brawl to-d£y, Grown to this faction in the Temple Garden, Shall...White A thousand souls to death and deadly night. Arrangement © Gilian West 1995. Multiple copies may be made by the purchasing institution or individual... | |
| |