The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919 |
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Seite xxvii
... Harry , and he mine . He thinks or affects to think his son guilty of disloyalty ; he is his " near'st and dearest enemy " . Failing to recognise the essential truth and loyalty of the Prince , he considers him capable of cowardice and ...
... Harry , and he mine . He thinks or affects to think his son guilty of disloyalty ; he is his " near'st and dearest enemy " . Failing to recognise the essential truth and loyalty of the Prince , he considers him capable of cowardice and ...
Seite xxviii
... Harry for his honest humour and light- hearted fooling . His conduct may be very undignified , very un- seemly in a prince and an heir to the crown of England , but is to be young and merry a sin ? It may be said that the Prince was ...
... Harry for his honest humour and light- hearted fooling . His conduct may be very undignified , very un- seemly in a prince and an heir to the crown of England , but is to be young and merry a sin ? It may be said that the Prince was ...
Seite xxx
... Harry Plantagenet lets the world pass , and devotes his life to barren and unworthy pleasures , apparently without ambition , Harry Hotspur is intent on ' winning honour and renown . Not his is the deep and subtle craft of the King or ...
... Harry Plantagenet lets the world pass , and devotes his life to barren and unworthy pleasures , apparently without ambition , Harry Hotspur is intent on ' winning honour and renown . Not his is the deep and subtle craft of the King or ...
Seite xxxi
... Harry has been wasting his youth in folly , John has been studying statecraft under his father's tuition . He will become a practical man of affairs who will avoid excesses of all sorts , and will rest content in a mediocre , negative ...
... Harry has been wasting his youth in folly , John has been studying statecraft under his father's tuition . He will become a practical man of affairs who will avoid excesses of all sorts , and will rest content in a mediocre , negative ...
Seite l
... Harry . ( II ) Prince Henry Strikes the Chief Justice . Enter Lord chiefe Iustice , Clarke of the Office , Iayler , Iohn Cobler , Dericke , and the Theefe . Iudge . Well , what sayest thou , art thou guiltie , or not guiltie ? Theefe ...
... Harry . ( II ) Prince Henry Strikes the Chief Justice . Enter Lord chiefe Iustice , Clarke of the Office , Iayler , Iohn Cobler , Dericke , and the Theefe . Iudge . Well , what sayest thou , art thou guiltie , or not guiltie ? Theefe ...
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Anon Arber Bardolph battle Battle of Shrewsbury Beaumont and Fletcher blood Blunt Brome Capell Cotgrave cousin coward death Dekker devil Dict doth Douglas Drayton drink Dyce earle of March England English Enter Exeunt Exit faith Falstaff father fear Gadshill Glend Glendower Grosart hang Hanmer Harry hath haue Hazlitt's Dodsley Heauen Ff heaven Henry IV Heywood Holinshed Honest Whore honour horse Hotspur Humour ibid Iohn Jonson Julius Cæsar Lady lines ending Lord Love's Labour's Lost Lyly Malone Massinger Middleton Minshew Mortimer Nashe night noble North's Plutarch omitted Ff omitted Qq Pearson Percy Persie Peto play Plutarch Poins Pope Prince quotes rest Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet sack SCENE Scot Shakespeare Shrewsbury Sir John Oldcastle sonne speak Steevens sword tell thee Theobald thou art Twelfth Night vpon Wales Welsh Worcester word Wright Zounds