Potential Titles: Disgrace
Apr. 4th, 2010 05:33 pmI fear you have incurr'd Disgrace - Lady Helena Carnegie and Mrs Arthur Jacob "Envy"
The Author of his own Disgrace - Lady Helena Carnegie and Mrs Arthur Jacob "Inevitable Retribution"
Sink his name in deep disgrace - T.D. Curtis "The Cross and Crown: Prologue"
That I will neither do nor suffer aught disgraceful - Euripedes "Andromache" transl. by Michael Wodhull
Emerging from its past disgraces, sinks afresh - Euripedes "The Children of Hercules" transl. by Michael Wodhull
My unhappy nuptials o'erwhelmed with foul disgrace - Euripedes "Helen" transl. by Michael Wodhull
Who have disgraced and plunged my house in ruin - Euripedes "Hercules Distracted" transl. by Michael Wodhull
If he could not his foes disgrace - John Gay "Fable LVI: Squire and Cur" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
Disgraced by acts of lawless violence - "The Gold-Finder" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIX, v.LXXI, May 1852]
Disgrace and reproaches here - Arthur Rimbaud "Hellish Night" transl. by Bertrand Mathieu
When in disgrace with fortune - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XXIX"
And cures not the disgrace - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XXXIV"
Merits not the blame of that disgrace - Gregory Thornton "Sonnets of Shakespeare's Ghost: IV"
And artistry brought to much sad disgrace - Rudolph Valentino "Reflections at Random (To A.T.)"
For honour he will pay him disgrace - "The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach or Ecclesiasticus 29" [Project Gutenberg. The Wisdom of the Apocrypha. 1910. Ed. by L. Cranmer-Byng and S.A. Kapadia]
Grace.
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The Author of his own Disgrace - Lady Helena Carnegie and Mrs Arthur Jacob "Inevitable Retribution"
Sink his name in deep disgrace - T.D. Curtis "The Cross and Crown: Prologue"
That I will neither do nor suffer aught disgraceful - Euripedes "Andromache" transl. by Michael Wodhull
Emerging from its past disgraces, sinks afresh - Euripedes "The Children of Hercules" transl. by Michael Wodhull
My unhappy nuptials o'erwhelmed with foul disgrace - Euripedes "Helen" transl. by Michael Wodhull
Who have disgraced and plunged my house in ruin - Euripedes "Hercules Distracted" transl. by Michael Wodhull
If he could not his foes disgrace - John Gay "Fable LVI: Squire and Cur" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
Disgraced by acts of lawless violence - "The Gold-Finder" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIX, v.LXXI, May 1852]
Disgrace and reproaches here - Arthur Rimbaud "Hellish Night" transl. by Bertrand Mathieu
When in disgrace with fortune - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XXIX"
And cures not the disgrace - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XXXIV"
Merits not the blame of that disgrace - Gregory Thornton "Sonnets of Shakespeare's Ghost: IV"
And artistry brought to much sad disgrace - Rudolph Valentino "Reflections at Random (To A.T.)"
For honour he will pay him disgrace - "The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach or Ecclesiasticus 29" [Project Gutenberg. The Wisdom of the Apocrypha. 1910. Ed. by L. Cranmer-Byng and S.A. Kapadia]
Grace.
Navigation Links:
Go to D word index.
Go to Potential Titles: Law: Crime and Violence [category].
Go to Potential Titles: Law: Repercussions [category].
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.