The book Count Alarcos a Tragedy was written by author Benjamin Disraeli Here you can read free online of Count Alarcos a Tragedy book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Count Alarcos a Tragedy a good or bad book?
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No, not to mourn I came to bless thee, came to tell to thee I hoped that thou wert happy. I:3:26 ALAR. Come to mourn. I'll find delight in my unbridled grief: Yes! let me fling away at last this mask, And gaze upon my woe. I:3:27 SOL. O, it was rash, Indeed 'twas rash, Alarcos; what, sweet sir, What, after all our vows, to hold me false, And place this bar between us! I'll not think Thou ever loved'st me as thou did'st profess, And that's the bitter drop. I:3:28 ALAR. Indeed, indeed -- I:3:29 S...OL. I could bear much, I could bear all, but this My faith in thy past love, it was so deep, So pure, so sacred, 'twas my only solace; I fed upon it in my secret heart, And now e'en that is gone. I:3:30 ALAR. Doubt not the past, 'Tis sanctified. It is the green fresh spot In my life's desert. I:3:31 SOL. There is none to thee As I have been? Speak, speak, Alarcos, tell me Is't true? Or, in this shipwreck of my soul, Do I cling wildly to some perishing hope That sinks like me? I:3:32 ALAR. The May-burst of the heart Can bloom but once; and mine has fled, not faded.
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