Ainda não temos significados para "cornish knight".
1Will ye soon again speak shame of Cornish knights?
2Why, said Sir Tristram, may not a Cornish knight do as well as another knight?
3Alas, said Sir Ector, now am I ashamed that ever any Cornish knight should overcome me.
4And as they sat at supper these four knights, three of them spake all shame by Cornish knights.
5"A Cornish knight," cried Mrs. Montgomery, clapping her hands with genuine glee.
6I will do neither, said Bleoberis, for I dread no Cornish knight so sore that me list to deliver her.
7Have ye ever heard of the wooing of Sir Keith, the stout young Cornish knight, in good King Arthur's time?
8"I will not," said Bleoberis, "for I dread no Cornish knight."
9But when Sir Lamorak heard King Mark speak, then wist he well by his speech that he was a Cornish knight.
10"Why," said Sir Tristram, "may not a Cornish knight do well as any other?
11The knights as Mark approached laid their plan that Daguenet should personate Sir Launcelot of the Lake, and challenge the Cornish knight.
12They had seen his armor, and recognized him as a Cornish knight, and at once resolved to have some sport with him.
13"I had not thought," cried out Sir Bors, "that any Cornish knight could do so valiantly."
14So when Sir Palamydes had overthrown the Cornish knight, and when he would have returned to the tower, he could not, for lo!
15Tristram answering, "From Cornwall," Sir Kay did not let slip the opportunity of a joke at the expense of the Cornish knight.
16The drama opens on board a ship in which the Cornish knight, Tristan, is bearing Isolde, the unwilling Irish bride, to King Mark of Cornwall.
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