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Seite vii
Reference is made to the various Quartos as Q 1 , Q 2 , etc. , to the first Folio as F , and to the subsequent Folios as F 2 , F 3 , F 4 . Qq means all Quartos , and Ff all Folios . Thirdly , the foot - notes supply a commentary to the ...
Reference is made to the various Quartos as Q 1 , Q 2 , etc. , to the first Folio as F , and to the subsequent Folios as F 2 , F 3 , F 4 . Qq means all Quartos , and Ff all Folios . Thirdly , the foot - notes supply a commentary to the ...
Seite viii
The " Dering MS . , " to which reference is made in the critical apparatus , was supposed by Mr. Halliwell to date from the early part of the seventeenth century . It contains a large portion of the First Part of Henry IV . and some ...
The " Dering MS . , " to which reference is made in the critical apparatus , was supposed by Mr. Halliwell to date from the early part of the seventeenth century . It contains a large portion of the First Part of Henry IV . and some ...
Seite ix
( ii ) The earliest contemporary reference to the play by name is in the famous list of Shakespeare's plays given in Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia , 1598. In the same work , Meres refers to " these declining and corrupt times ...
( ii ) The earliest contemporary reference to the play by name is in the famous list of Shakespeare's plays given in Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia , 1598. In the same work , Meres refers to " these declining and corrupt times ...
Seite x
The final words of Jonson's Every Man out of His Humour ( first performed 1599 ) contain an obvious reference : " you may in time make lean Macilente as fat as sir John Falstaff " . And in the Pilgrimage to Parnassus acted in St. John's ...
The final words of Jonson's Every Man out of His Humour ( first performed 1599 ) contain an obvious reference : " you may in time make lean Macilente as fat as sir John Falstaff " . And in the Pilgrimage to Parnassus acted in St. John's ...
Seite xi
A reference to Falstaff as Oldcastle has been pointed out in The Meeting of Gallants at an Ordinarie , or the Walks in Powles ( 1604 ) , where Shuttlecock says , " Now Signiors how like you mine Host ? did I not tell you he was a madde ...
A reference to Falstaff as Oldcastle has been pointed out in The Meeting of Gallants at an Ordinarie , or the Walks in Powles ( 1604 ) , where Shuttlecock says , " Now Signiors how like you mine Host ? did I not tell you he was a madde ...
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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