Until four hundred one-and-twenty years / After defunction of King Pharamond […]
We notice that Racine's Phaedra, like Euripides', displays high moral dignity because she considers her passion for Hippolytus to be abominable.
The judge read a list of prisoners' names. She then indicated that the aforementioned were to be set free.
Marney's pre-eminence was evident in the new reign's first meeting of the Order of the Garter, which the young king called with alacrity for 18 May – and for which occasion he had bought himself a Lancastrian collar of esses, in emulation of his hero Henry V.
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