The Man Who Laughs


google search for The Man Who Laughs

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
942 943 944 945 946

Quick Jump
1 236 472 708 944

[
[
[
[
[
[
Footnote 14: Night, away! the dawn sings hallali.]  
Footnote 15: Thou must go to heaven and smile, thou that weepest.]  
Footnote 16: Break the yoke; throw off, monster, thy dark clothing.]  
Footnote 17: O come and love! thou art soul, I am heart.]  
Footnote 18: The Fenian, Burke.]  
Footnote 19: The life and the limbs of subjects depend on the king.  
Chamberlayne, Part 2, chap. iv., p. 76.]  
[Footnote 20: This fashion of sleeping partly undrest came from Italy,  
and was derived from the Romans. "Sub clarâ nuda lacernâ," says  
Horace.]  
[
Footnote 21: The author is apparently mistaken. The Chamberlains of the  
Exchequer divided the wooden laths into tallies, which were given out  
when disbursing coin, and checked or tallied when accounting for it. It  
was in burning the old tallies in an oven that the Houses of Parliament  
were destroyed by fire.--TRANSLATOR.]  
[
Footnote 22: Villiers called James I., "Votre cochonnerie."]  
Footnote 23: "Depart, O night! sings the dawn."]  
[
944  


Page
942 943 944 945 946

Quick Jump
1 236 472 708 944