Tuesday, December 10, 2019
The Two Foscari monologue Persuasive Essay Example For Students
 The Two Foscari monologue Persuasive Essay  A monologue from the play by Lord Byron  NOTE: This monologue is reprinted from Lord Byron: Six Plays. Lord Byron. Los Angeles: Black Box Press, 2007.  JACOPO FOSCARI:   No light, save yon faint gleam which shows me walls  Which never echo\d but to sorrow\s sounds,  The sigh of long imprisonment, the step  Of feet on which the iron clank\d the groan  Of death, the imprecation of despair!  And yet for this I have return\d to Venice,  With some faint hope, \tis true, that time, which wears  The marble down, had worn away the hate  Of men\s hearts; but I knew them not, and here  Must I consume my own, which never beat  For Venice but with such a yearning as  The dove has for her distant nest, when wheeling  High in the air on her return to greet  Her callow brood. What letters are these which   Are scrawl\d along the inexorable wall?  Will the gleam let me trace them? Ah! the names  Of my sad predecessors in this place,  The dates of their despair, the brief words of  A grief too great for many. This stone page  Holds like an epitaph their history;  And the poor captive\s tale is graven on  His dungeon barrier, like the lover\s record  Upon the bark of some tall tree, which bears  His own and his beloved\s name. Alas!  I recognize some names familiar to me,  And blighted like to mine, which I will add,  Fittest for such a chronicle as this,  Which only can be read, as writ, by wretches.           
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