The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919 |
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Seite xxvi
... perhaps , win our sympathy . Henry IV . is a sad figure . He has plucked the turn to dust in his mouth . fruit of his ambition to find it Our pity is deeply stirred by his pathetic disappointment in his heir.1 Prince Henry , on xxvi ...
... perhaps , win our sympathy . Henry IV . is a sad figure . He has plucked the turn to dust in his mouth . fruit of his ambition to find it Our pity is deeply stirred by his pathetic disappointment in his heir.1 Prince Henry , on xxvi ...
Seite xxxiii
... perhaps , whether we are to believe his own account of his leading his hundred and fifty ragamuffins to their death ; but he was sufficiently unscrup- ulous to have done so had it suited his pocket or his whim . 1 The e key to ...
... perhaps , whether we are to believe his own account of his leading his hundred and fifty ragamuffins to their death ; but he was sufficiently unscrup- ulous to have done so had it suited his pocket or his whim . 1 The e key to ...
Seite 5
... perhaps of Sir John Mandeville , Travels , Pro- logue : " it lykede him to envy- rone that holy Lond with his blessede Feet . " • .. 28. now old ] " month " repre- sents an old genitive plural , as in Chaucer , Canterbury Tales , B ...
... perhaps of Sir John Mandeville , Travels , Pro- logue : " it lykede him to envy- rone that holy Lond with his blessede Feet . " • .. 28. now old ] " month " repre- sents an old genitive plural , as in Chaucer , Canterbury Tales , B ...
Seite 13
... perhaps a euphemism for a highwayman . " Let us , " says Falstaff , " who go by the moon and not by the sun , be called , if you will , ' squires of the night's body ' ( i.e. highwaymen ) , but not thieves of the day's beauty ' ( i.e. ...
... perhaps a euphemism for a highwayman . " Let us , " says Falstaff , " who go by the moon and not by the sun , be called , if you will , ' squires of the night's body ' ( i.e. highwaymen ) , but not thieves of the day's beauty ' ( i.e. ...
Seite 14
... perhaps a command to the travellers to put aside or throw down their arms . See Brome , Covent - Garden Weeded , v . iii : " You shall receive no harm , sir . Lay by your Armes , my Masters . I bring none but friends . " Possibly it was ...
... perhaps a command to the travellers to put aside or throw down their arms . See Brome , Covent - Garden Weeded , v . iii : " You shall receive no harm , sir . Lay by your Armes , my Masters . I bring none but friends . " Possibly it was ...
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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