No, no ; now it is all mixed up with intrigue, and politics, and management, and baffled schemes, and cunning arts of men. You may be, you are, free from all this, but your faith is not the same. You no longer believe in Arabia.' ' Why, thou to me art... Tancred, Or, The New Crusade - Page 289by Benjamin Disraeli (Earl of Beaconsfield) - 1847Full view - About this book
| Benjamin Disraeli (Earl of Beaconsfield) - 1866 - 686 pages
...angels, and of our peculiar and gifted laud. No, no ; now it is all mixed up with intrigue, and polities, and management, and baffled schemes, and cunning arts...why, thou art my cause, and thou art most divine! O Eva! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes full... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli (earl of Beaconsfield.) - 1871 - 508 pages
...and cunning arts of men. Yon may be, you are, free from all this, but your faith is not the same. Yon no longer believe in Arabia.' ' Why, thou to me art...: why, thou art my cause, and thou art most divine ! O Eva ! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart ! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli (earl of Beaconsfield.) - 1881 - 506 pages
...sustained, and would be, come what might. 'And yet ' said Eva ; and she paused. 'And what?' ' Your feelings cannot be what they were before all this...: why, thou art my cause, and thou art most divine ! O Eva ! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart ! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli - English literature - 1904 - 450 pages
...sustained, and would be, come what might.' 'And yet ' said Eva; and she paused. 'And what? " ' Your feelings cannot be what they were before all this...why, thou art my cause, and thou art most divine! O Eva! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes full... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli - 1904 - 636 pages
...thou to me art Arabia,' said Tancred, advancing and kneeling at her side. ' The angel of Arabia, and my life and spirit! Talk not to me of faltering faith...why, thou art my cause, and thou art most divine! O Eva! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes full... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli (Earl of Beaconsfield) - English literature - 1905 - 698 pages
...sustained, and would be, come what might." "And yet " said Eva; and she paused. " And what ? " "Your feelings cannot be what they were before all this...a divine cause : why, thou art my cause, and thou an most divine ! O Eva ! deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart ! Yes, I too, like thee,... | |
| William Flavelle Monypenny, George Earle Buckle - Great Britain - 1914 - 650 pages
...and Tancred in that garden at Bethany where their acquaintance began. She is despondent, and says : and baffled schemes, and cunning arts of men. You...thou art my cause, and thou art most divine ! 0 Eva 1 deign to accept the tribute of my long agitated heart ! Yes, I too, like thee, am sometimes full... | |
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