Amadis of Gaul, Volume 1N. Biggs, 1803 |
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Page 9
... , when he saw a door open behind the hangings , of which he had not known , and leaping from the bed he caught up his sword and shield , What is this ? cried Darioleta . The ; King then knew her , and saw Elisena his B 5 9.
... , when he saw a door open behind the hangings , of which he had not known , and leaping from the bed he caught up his sword and shield , What is this ? cried Darioleta . The ; King then knew her , and saw Elisena his B 5 9.
Page 15
... cried what will you do ? Place him here , she answered , and launch him down the stream , and belike he may escape . Then the Mother took him in her arms , and wept bitterly over him . But Darioleta took ink and parchment , and wrote ...
... cried what will you do ? Place him here , she answered , and launch him down the stream , and belike he may escape . Then the Mother took him in her arms , and wept bitterly over him . But Darioleta took ink and parchment , and wrote ...
Page 16
... cried , this is from no mean place ! and this he said be- cause of the rich garments , and the ring and the good sword , and he cursed the mother who had for fear abandoned so fair a child . He carefully laid aside all the things that ...
... cried , this is from no mean place ! and this he said be- cause of the rich garments , and the ring and the good sword , and he cursed the mother who had for fear abandoned so fair a child . He carefully laid aside all the things that ...
Page 24
... cried , hold ! Forthwith the Knight who had pursued her drew back , and she said to him - come , make obeisance to me ! that shall I do willingly , said he , as to the thing in the world which I most love : and throwing the shield from ...
... cried , hold ! Forthwith the Knight who had pursued her drew back , and she said to him - come , make obeisance to me ! that shall I do willingly , said he , as to the thing in the world which I most love : and throwing the shield from ...
Page 25
... cried , hold ! Forthwith the Knight who had pursued her drew back , and she said to him - come , make obeisance to me ! that shall I do willingly , said he , as to the thing in the world which I most love : and throwing the shield from ...
... cried , hold ! Forthwith the Knight who had pursued her drew back , and she said to him - come , make obeisance to me ! that shall I do willingly , said he , as to the thing in the world which I most love : and throwing the shield from ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agrayes Amadis of Gaul Angriote answered Arcalaus asked bade Balays battle beseech besought best Knight blow boon Brisena brother called castle Certes CHAPTER Child chivalry combat command courser court cried Dames and Damsels Dardan Darioleta daugh dead death departed drew Duke Dwarf enter fair fair Lady father fear fell fiercely forest Gandales Gandalin Gaul gave Giant give God's sake goodly greatly halberders hand hath head heard heart helmet honour horse Infante Dom Pedro King Abies King Lisuarte King Perion knew Lady lance leave Lisu Lisuarte's Lord Mabilia mantle Medina del Campo mistress never old Knight Olinda Oriana palfrey prison promise Queen Elisena quoth Amadis quoth Galaor quoth the Knight rejoiced replied rode sent shalt shield Sir Knight slain slew smote Squire succour sword tell thee thing thought Timoneda told took traitor Urganda wounded
Popular passages
Page 28 - Sea was now twelve years old, but in stature and size he seemed fifteen, and he served the queen ; but now that Oriana was there, the queen gave her the Child of the Sea that he should serve her, and Oriana said that it pleased her, and that word which she said the Child kept in his heart, so that he never lost it from his memory, and in all his life he was never weary of serving her, and his heart was surrendered to her...
Page xxix - To have translated a closely printed folio would have been absurd. I have reduced it to about half its length, by abridging the words, not the story ; by curtailing the dialogue, avoiding all recapitulations of the past action, consolidating many of those single blows which have no reference to armorial anatomy, and passing over the occasional moralizings of the author.
Page 80 - Child's iword which was at the bed's-head, and looking at it he knew it well, as one wherewith he had given many and hard blows ; and he said to Elisena, By my God I know the sword ! Then Elisena took the Child by the arm, and wakened him, who awoke in wonder, and asked her why she wept. Ah ! said she, whose son art thou ? — So help me God I know not, for by great hap I was found in the sea ! The Queen fell at his feet, hearing him, and he cried, My God ! what is all this ? My son, quoth she, you...
Page 36 - Now are you a knight, and may receive the sword. The king took the sword, and gave it to him, and the child girded it on. Then, said Perion, According to your manner and appearance, I would have performed this ceremony with more honours, and I trust in God that your fame will prove that so it ought to have been done.
Page 33 - Remember, lady, the day whereon your father departed, the queen took me by the hand, and leading me before you, said, I give you this child to be your servant ; and you said it pleased you. And from that time I have held and hold myself yours to do you service : yours only, that neither I nor any other while I live can have command over me.
Page 28 - How, Child of the Sea ! said Languines, are you strong enough to maintain knighthood ? it is easy to receive, but difficult to maintain ; and he who would keep it well, so many and so difficult are the things he must achieve, that his heart will often be troubled ; and if, through fear, he forsakes what he ought to do, better is death to him than life with shame.
Page 30 - He took the presents, and laid the ring and the wax in his lap, while he unrolled the sword from a linen cloth in which it was wrapt, wondering that it should be without a scabbard. Meantime Oriana took up the wax, and said, I will have this...
Page vi - Briolania's desires, he remained, losing both his appetite and his sleep, till his life was in great danger. This being known in the court of King Lisuarte, his Lady Oriana, that she might not lose him, sent and commanded him to grant the damsel's desire ; and he having this command, and considering that by no other means could he recover his liberty, or keep his word, took that fair Queen for his leman, and had by her a son and a daughter at one birth. But it was not so, unless Briolania, seeing...
Page xv - ... here, and left the reader to infer that Amadis and Oriana, like the heroes of every nursery tale, lived very happy after. The chapters which follow in the Spanish are evidently added to introduce the fifth book, or what Montalvo, in something like a Quack's Greek, calls the Sergas of Esplandian. It is one romance growing out of another as clumsily as a young oyster upon the back of its parent.
Page xxx - D'Herberay, or obsolete in his time, is accordingly omitted, and all the foolish anachronisms and abominable obscenities of the Frenchman are retained. I kept my eye upon it as I proceeded, for the purpose of preserving its language where it was possible. A modern style would have altered the character of the book ; as far as was in my power I have avoided that fault, not by intermixing obsolete words, but by rendering the original structure of sentence as literally as was convenient, and by rejecting...