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- Hadst thou done so when I announced to thee the Flood it would not have come to pass.
- If thou hadst spent all that is in the earth thou couldst not have attuned their hearts, but Allah hath attuned them.
- "" Thou hadst expressed thy great wish to be of service to the Divine Threshold and to heal the infirm with the Divine Panacea-- the infirm who is afflicted with passion and self.
- When thou hast brought forward a demonstration of this subject, then thou wilt know the pure essence of the faith; otherwise what have faith and thou in common ? thou hadst best be silent, and speak not folly.
- "Thou shouldst not have been old till thou hadst been wise, " the aged Fool says, and Lear responds with the line that is the soul of this interpretation : " O, let me not be mad ."
- Later, in Act 2, Scene 6, when Edward is blaming Margaret for the civil war, he says to Henry that if she hadn't provoked the House of York " thou this day hadst kept thy chair in peace " ( l . 19 ).
- He is said to have said : " Hadst thou now been alive, thy head would not have been in great safety . " Then Fleming's widow Ebba Stenbock is said to have approached the Duke and responded : " If my late husband had been alive, Your Grace would never have entered herein ."
- According to Bott, in the " eight words " couplet originally cited by Valiente, " an " is used correctly, in the Middle English sense of "'in the event that', or simply'if'" ( as in the Shakespearean " an hadst thou not come to my bed " ) and thus has no apostrophe.
- And if thou hast received, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it ? " Or again when a man prefers to God the temporal good in which he glories : for this is forbidden ( Jeremiah 9 : 23-24 ) : " Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, and let not the strong man glory in his strength, and let not the rich man glory in his riches.
- Another midrash implicates Jacob in Dinah's misfortune : when he went to meet Esau, he locked Dinah in a box, for fear that Esau would wish to marry her, but God rebuked him in these words : " If thou hadst married off thy daughter in time she would not have been tempted to sin, and might, moreover, have exerted a beneficial influence upon her husband " ( Gen . R . lxxx . ).
- The Nurse also admits to being something of a fool, proclaiming, " were not I thine [ Juliet's ] only nurse, I would say thou hadst suck'd wisdom from thy teat . " She is implied to be ugly by Mercutio, who urges the Nurse's servant Peter to fetch her fan quickly, " to hide her face; for her fan's the fairer face . " Mercutio also mentions her age, calling her an " ancient lady " as he exits from the same scene.
- These are the song and the " Lawes " mentioned in the following line of Ezra Pound's poem " " Envoi " " which ends the first part of Pound's " Hugh Selwyn Mauberley " : " Go, dumb-born book, tell her that sang me once that song of Lawes : Hadst thou but song as thou hast subjects known, then were there cause in thee that should condone even my faults that heavy upon me lie, and build her glories their longevity ".
- He approached Majolus and said'Brother Majolus, I did not set thee over me that thou shouldst persecute me, or order me about as a master orders a slave, but that as a son thou mightest have compassion on thy father .'and after many other words he then said,'Art thou indeed my monk ?'Majolus replied that he was and so Aymardus said,'If that be so, give up thy seat and take the one thou hadst before .'Immediately Majolus obeyed and Aymardus sat on the abbot's chair.
- Then God, may He be blessed and exalted ! put it into the heart of the Angel to call " Alexander'Two-horned, "'. . . And Alexander said unto him, "'Thou didst call me by the name Two-horned, " but my name is Alexander . . . and I thought that thou hadst cursed me by calling me by this name .'The angel spake unto him, saying,'O man, I did not curse thee by " the name by which thou and the works that thou doest are known ."
- They will learn a very simplified working language with phrases such as, " Me done say you work yesterday, me say you work today, me gone say you work tomorrow, sabby ? " This is not the way native English speakers talk and they have not learned it from their mothers, but as a second very simplified " compromise " language with maybe only a 500 word vocabulary, a simplified set of sounds ( no " th " ) and a limited grammar-- no " I would have fled hence hadst thou told me . " Now, let's say a slave from one tribe takes a wife from a different tribe.