Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
deals 1
dear 8
dearer 1
death 55
debt 1
debts 1
decay 1
Frequency    [«  »]
56 make
56 sense
56 yet
55 death
55 species
55 well
54 also
Giordano Bruno
The Heroic Enthusiasts

IntraText - Concordances

death

   Part,  Dialogue
1 1, Int| immortal honours after their death: the light of genius burned 2 1, Int| aggregation, which we call death and life, is no other than 3 1, Int| or fell chance,~In living death, dead life I live?"~he writes 4 1, Int| received the sentence of death passed upon him, saying: " 5 1, 1 | heart, spirit, brows adorn;~Death, cypresses, and hells~You 6 1, 1 | cool my brows! Change my death into life, my cypress to 7 1, 1 | loftiest beauty, and my death alone~Show to me paradise, 8 1, 1 | As would this world were death and hate away.~To the above 9 1, 1 | is sometimes the ruin and death of the lover, but~often 10 1, 1 | subject and captive to it. "My death itself," he says of Jealousy, 11 1, 1 | takes my life, she gives me death,~She wings, he burns my 12 1, 1 | to burn me, to give me death, and to be to me the burden 13 1, 1 | for he delivers me from death -- wings, enlivens, and 14 1, 2 | or fell chance,~In living death, dead life I live?~Love 15 1, 2 | dead, alack! and such a death,~That death and life together 16 1, 2 | and such a death,~That death and life together I must 17 1, 2 | whence he says, "In a living death a dead life I live." He 18 1, 2 | in himself; deprived of death, because he gives birth 19 1, 2 | has me for his own, nor death.~F. Who's to blame~S. Love.~ 20 1, 3 | Truly a dignified and heroic death is better than a mean, low 21 1, 3 | can compare with this my death?~Out on the air my heart' 22 1, 3 | thee to such illustrious death."~CIC. I understand when 23 1, 4 | Now turning on me give me death with cruel savage bite.~ 24 1, 4 | his great dogs "give him death," and thus ends his life 25 1, 4 | me.~Here he describes the death of the soul, which by the 26 1, 4 | Kabbalists is called the death by kisses, symbolized in 27 1, 4 | too leave me? Why does not death succour me, now that I am 28 1, 4 | part of me to the peril of death. How have you gotten this 29 1, 4 | to reach, he would love death, which would open to him 30 1, 5 | then my pains, happy my death.~The ardour of those flames 31 1, 5 | and his blessedness in his death.~TANS. And with this he 32 1, 5 | and amicably to meet its death in the devouring flames. 33 1, 5 | er untie~That knot which death unable is to loose;~To heart, 34 1, 5 | As these hard bonds, this death of mine,~To which by fate, 35 1, 5 | sun's presence, changes~death into life, and that other, 36 1, 5 | love, transmutes life into death. The one kindles his fire 37 1, 5 | and the conditions of his death, where with these words 38 1, 5 | gives me naught, not even death.~CIC. I understand the meaning 39 1, 5 | without mercy and unto death, by means of various instruments 40 1, 5 | to thee deliverance from death.~Thou dost become congealed. 41 2, 1 | nor the impediments~Of death of body, joy and happiness, 42 2, 1 | birth, through life, to death in sheltered home.~Non dà, 43 2, 1 | that one learns not to fear death, suffers not pain of body, 44 2, 1 | if thou wouldst give me death!~ ./. paragraph continues] 45 2, 1 | CES. Does he mean that death of lovers, which comes from 46 2, 1 | fierce enemy,~Waiting for death with calm collected thought,~ 47 2, 1 | make endeavour to escape my death:~Let every other life to 48 2, 1 | weakness of nerves and~peril of death. He has no knowledge suitable 49 2, 2 | within their bosom life and death,~Who most with virtues high 50 2, 2 | who were found up to their death occupied with numbers, lines, 51 2, 4 | knocking at the doors~To meet a death less painful, more profound.~ 52 2, 4 | brought themselves to suffer death and pains, and to being 53 2, 5 | with nothing worse than death, which they considered a 54 2, 5 | cruel fate,~That in a living death,~Does hold them fast, we 55 2, 5 | of as~Unhappy ones reach death, ere we~Praising thy act~


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License