The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919 |
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Seite xvi
... hast rudely lost , Which by thy younger brother is supplied . Shakespeare is here following Holinshed , who relates that the Prince " once to hie offence of the king his father , . . . had with his fist striken the cheefe iustice for ...
... hast rudely lost , Which by thy younger brother is supplied . Shakespeare is here following Holinshed , who relates that the Prince " once to hie offence of the king his father , . . . had with his fist striken the cheefe iustice for ...
Seite xl
... hast and giue battell to his enimies , before their power by delaieng of time should still too much increase , he passed forward with such speed , that he was in sight of his enimies , lieng in campe neere to Shrewesburie , before they ...
... hast and giue battell to his enimies , before their power by delaieng of time should still too much increase , he passed forward with such speed , that he was in sight of his enimies , lieng in campe neere to Shrewesburie , before they ...
Seite xliii
... hast , falling from the crag of an hie mounteine , brake one of his cullions , and was taken , and for his valiantnesse , of the king frankelie and freelie deliuered . " There was also taken the earle of Worcester , the procuror and ...
... hast , falling from the crag of an hie mounteine , brake one of his cullions , and was taken , and for his valiantnesse , of the king frankelie and freelie deliuered . " There was also taken the earle of Worcester , the procuror and ...
Seite xlviii
... hast thou got ? Tom . Faith my Lord , some foure hundred pound . Hen . V. Foure hundred pounds , brauely spoken Lads . But tell me sirs , thinke you not that it was a vil- lainous part of me to rob my fathers Receiuers ? Ned . Why no my ...
... hast thou got ? Tom . Faith my Lord , some foure hundred pound . Hen . V. Foure hundred pounds , brauely spoken Lads . But tell me sirs , thinke you not that it was a vil- lainous part of me to rob my fathers Receiuers ? Ned . Why no my ...
Seite 11
... hast forgotten to de- mand that truly which thou wouldst truly know . What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the day ? Unless hours were cups of sack , and minutes capons , and clocks the tongues of bawds , and dials the signs of ...
... hast forgotten to de- mand that truly which thou wouldst truly know . What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the day ? Unless hours were cups of sack , and minutes capons , and clocks the tongues of bawds , and dials the signs of ...
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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 Introd 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 pray Prince rest Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet sack SCENE Scot Shakespeare Shrewsbury Sir John Oldcastle sonne speak sword tell thee Theobald thou art Twelfth Night vpon Wales Welsh Worcester word Wright Zounds