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- With a friend desperate for money, a merchant takes out a loan from a ruthless money-lender. Confident that his ships will soon be bringing him great wealth, the merchant willingly agrees to conditions of the loan that put him at great personal risk.
- About the daughter of the Borgia, a noble medieval house. From her numerous and unhappy weddings, to the forced monacation, to the will of her family.
- King Lear decides to divide his kingdom amongst his three daughters. The oldest two daughters fawn insincerely over their father, and get most of his possessions. The youngest daughter, Cordelia, is much less lavish in her displays of affection, and disappoints her father. But events soon lead the old king to find out how each of his daughters really feels about him.
- Bianca works in a porcelain factory. Enrico Cernelli, the head foreman, falls in love with Bianca and marries her. Bianca, tired of living poorly, leaves the home for a life of luxury with another man. One night, Enrico sneaks into her new house and begs her to come back. Upon her refusal, he strikes her. Not knowing if he killed her, he escapes. Back home, grief-stricken, he calls upon death where he hears a knock on the door. Bianca is coming back.
- A tragedy based upon a happening in Italian history in which a young and beautiful widow marries the faithless Duke of Milan. To save a friendly chevalier, the duchess makes a false confession, but her sacrifice fails in its purpose, and after the young fellow has paid the death penalty, the returning executioners find that the shock has caused her death also.
- Romeo, of the House of Capulets, and Juliet, of the House of Montagues, scorn the family feud of years, and love each other with all the fervor of Veronian youths. The ardent wooer sings his love beneath his lady's window while the stars wink their approval of the lovers' happiness. Juliet's father urges her marriage to Tybalt, a man of his choosing, but Romeo determines she shall not, so together they visit the venerable Friar Lawrence and are secretly united in marriage. Romeo is challenged by his rival, Tybalt, and in the encounter wounds his antagonist, for which he is exiled. Romeo's departure leaves Juliet open to the demands of her father, who insists upon her immediate marriage to Tybalt. In terror she flees to the old Friar, who gives her a powerful sleeping potion, and on the day she is to marry Tybalt, her friends are horrified to see her fall into a deathlike swoon. She is interred in the vault of her ancestors, and Romeo, hearing of her death, returns home, enters the vault and after gazing upon the face of his beloved plunges a dagger into his heart. Juliet awakens to see him expiring, and in her agony seizes the same dagger, inflicts a death-wound, and expires beside her lover.
- In love, although a Cardinal, with the same girl, the beautiful Sancia, as his brother John. Duke of Gandia, Caesar did not hesitate, after an entertainment at the Vatican, to hire bravi, and to have this brother foully done to death, and to be afterwards thrown into the Tiber. For a time the disappearance of John Borgia remained clothed in mystery, but the waters of the river gave up their dead in the very heart of Rome, almost within a stone's throw of the Papal Palace. John's mutilated remains are brought into his father's presence, and Sancia denounces the all-powerful Ceasar as the author of the crime. But if Alexander VI. was at times a powerful ruler, his weakness with his children was complete, and he feared Cesar and also Lucretia, his notorious daughter. Sancia. determined to avenge her lover's death, plans the murderer's undoing. She sends him the following anonymous note:-" A lady who admires and secretly loves Cesar will await him to-night in the Avenue of the Graces." Cesar has his suspicions aroused, yet his fondness for mysterious adventures induces him to cast prudence aside, and, going to the appointment, he falls into the trap laid for him. Thrown into a cell and chained to the wall, he manages to attack his jailer, to overpower the man, and to escape.
- An Italian, silent film about the heroic life of Switzerland's freedom fighter, William Tell.
- Charles is bidding his wife an affectionate good-bye preparatory to setting out for a short bicycle run. The moment his back is turned Percy calls, but the unexpected return of the husband obliges the lady to hide her visitor in the cupboard. Charles soon goes out again and the prisoner is released. Catching up a white stocking to wipe the perspiration from his brow, he stuffs it in his pocket and takes his departure for the nearest café to get a bracer. There he meets Charles and another friend. To this latter he recounts his adventure and both laugh heartily at the joke. However, Percy is not to get off scot free, for on his return home his wife finds the stocking and naturally gives him a piece of her mind. Percy thereupon sits down and writes a note to his friend, asking him to get him out of the scrape, and the friend shows the letter to Charles, who volunteers to do the trick for him. Charles accordingly calls upon Mrs. Percy with one bare leg and narrates a story about her husband having removed the stocking in the spirit of mischief. Mrs. Percy calls attention to the fact that his other stocking is black and Charles, picking up the white hosiery to examine it, is horrified to find that it belongs to his wife.
- This is the beautiful story of Francesca di Rimini, which is known the world over for the charm of its heroine. Paul falls deeply in love with Francesca, to whom he has been sent by his brother, Lancietto, to propose for him. After her acceptance of the proposal she is accompanied by Paul to her future husband. Paul cannot keep away from the object of his affections, and during the voyage their friendship deepens and ripens into an all-absorbing passion. On the trip there is also a court fool, who, while disporting himself for the amusement of others, is really plotting dark deeds. When the twain arrive at Rimini Francesca cannot repress a shudder of horror at the sight of her betrothed, nevertheless, they are married, and Paul, in order to stifle his love, begs of his brother to be sent on a mission, to which his brother consents. Lancietto's fool, however, has a grudge against his master, and in order to be revenged upon him, and knowing the love that Paul bears to Francesca follows Paul and persuades him to return. This Paul does, and unable to withstand the beauty of Francesca, makes love to her. The perfidious fool now tells Lancietto of his wife's inconstancy, and the latter enters the apartment where they are together and pierces them both with one stroke of his sword.
- Driven by his own ambition and by that of Tullia, his stepsister, Tarquin decides to usurp the throne of his stepfather, Servius Tullius, the good old King of Rome. To this end, he solicits and obtains the support of the patrician senators and has the monarch assassinated. Happy to hear the news, Tullia rushes into the regicide's arms, determined to marry him...