The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1909 |
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Seite xvii
... Edward the Second , so constantly referred to as affording opposite parallels in this dispute - and erroneously made use of " in which , especially in the scene of Edward's murder , he attained a drama- tic power and a freedom of ...
... Edward the Second , so constantly referred to as affording opposite parallels in this dispute - and erroneously made use of " in which , especially in the scene of Edward's murder , he attained a drama- tic power and a freedom of ...
Seite xx
... Edward and the widow in Part III . , as being impossible by Marlowe . He allots Henry VI . to Marlowe with the exception of IV . iv . ; V. i .; V. v . which belong to some one else , not Greene or Peele or Marlowe . And one scene in ...
... Edward and the widow in Part III . , as being impossible by Marlowe . He allots Henry VI . to Marlowe with the exception of IV . iv . ; V. i .; V. v . which belong to some one else , not Greene or Peele or Marlowe . And one scene in ...
Seite xxiv
... Edward I. , or parts of his Arraignment of Paris . David and Bethsabe is an unnatural piece in many ways , full of stilted and unnatural quasi - Biblical writing that becomes wearisome with its load of thous and thees and thys . Peele's ...
... Edward I. , or parts of his Arraignment of Paris . David and Bethsabe is an unnatural piece in many ways , full of stilted and unnatural quasi - Biblical writing that becomes wearisome with its load of thous and thees and thys . Peele's ...
Seite xxv
... Edward I. and Arraignment of Paris , dependent for harmony on the rhyme , but usually the lines are long , often fourteeners . Then it breaks into a page or two of lines with four feet or accents , still rhyming and quite musical , just ...
... Edward I. and Arraignment of Paris , dependent for harmony on the rhyme , but usually the lines are long , often fourteeners . Then it breaks into a page or two of lines with four feet or accents , still rhyming and quite musical , just ...
Seite xxvi
... Edward I. ( 389 , b ) : " we will admit no pause , For goes this wretch , this traitor , to the pot . " Jack Straw ( p . 387 ) : “ Gog's blood , Jack have we . ( p . 502 ) : “ Nay , Gog's blood , I'll bee gone . " • · " " ? Sir Clyomon ...
... Edward I. ( 389 , b ) : " we will admit no pause , For goes this wretch , this traitor , to the pot . " Jack Straw ( p . 387 ) : “ Gog's blood , Jack have we . ( p . 502 ) : “ Nay , Gog's blood , I'll bee gone . " • · " " ? Sir Clyomon ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Arden edition Battle of Alcazar Buck Buckingham Cade's Cardinal Clif Clifford common Compare Peele Contention crown David and Bethsabe death Dick Dict doth Duch Duke Humphrey Duke of Suffolke Duke of Yorke Dyce earlier Edward England Enter Exeunt Faerie Queene France Glou Gloucester Golding's Ovid grace Grafton Greene Greene's Grosart hand hath haue head heart Henry IV Henry VI honour Iohn Jack Cade Jack Straw Jack Straw Hazlitt's King Henry King John Kyd's Locrine London Lord Love's Labour's Lost Madam Marlowe Marlowe's master Nashe night occurs Old Wives Tale omitted Q passage Peele's play protector quotes rebels Richard Richard III Salisbury scene Selimus Shake Shakespeare Simp Sir Clyomon Soliman and Perseda Somerset sonne Spanish Tragedy speak speare speech Spenser Steevens sword Tamburlaine thee thine thou hast Titus Andronicus traitor True Tragedy unto vnto Warwick words Yere
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 28 - ... me bread and water, being a king ; So that, for want of sleep and sustenance, My mind's distempered, and my body's numb'd, And whether I have limbs or no, I know not.
Seite vii - The Whole Contention betweene the two Famous Houses, Lancaster and Yorke. With the Tragicall ends of the good Duke Humfrey, Richard Duke of Yorke, and King Henrie the sixt. Diuided into two Parts : And newly corrected and enlarged. Written by William Shakespeare, Gent. Printed at London, for TP" A small quarto, containing 64 leaves, A to Q in fours.