In William Shakespeare's play "The Merchant of Venice," as Mercy dies, he expresses a profound sense of forgiveness and compassion. He emphasizes the importance of mercy over strict justice, suggesting that true nobility lies in showing kindness and understanding to others. His words highlight the theme that mercy is a divine quality that benefits both the giver and the receiver, ultimately underscoring the play's moral lessons about empathy and humanity.
Because Bart Millerd's grandma would always say, "mercy me"
Misericordia=pity/mercy
the Kyrie
Dying to Say This to You was created on 2006-03-15.
have no mercy to win this battle young knight
Mercy is a noun, not a verb, so there is no past tense. You could say 'had mercy' which would be in the past tense.
'No mercy' in French is 'pas de pitié'. An example sentence is 'sans pitié'. This means 'have no mercy'.
ninguna misericordia
aloha no
Edward G. Robinson
I too have a fear of dying but I recommend you seeing a psychiatrist. Phobias can be helped.
all i can say is its not meant to be you're gonna have to give up and move on before it's too late