The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 8Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite xi
... eyes as we turn over the pages , " but , in the words of the same critic , " never before did genius ever transmute so base a caput mortuum into ore so precious . " FALSTAFF Sir John Oldcastle , one of the Prince's wild companions in ...
... eyes as we turn over the pages , " but , in the words of the same critic , " never before did genius ever transmute so base a caput mortuum into ore so precious . " FALSTAFF Sir John Oldcastle , one of the Prince's wild companions in ...
Seite xix
... eye ; Sir John Oldcastle being a dull low - minded profligate , uninformed with the slightest felicity of thought or humor , the prince an irredeemable compound of the ruffian , the blackguard , and the hypocrite , and their companions ...
... eye ; Sir John Oldcastle being a dull low - minded profligate , uninformed with the slightest felicity of thought or humor , the prince an irredeemable compound of the ruffian , the blackguard , and the hypocrite , and their companions ...
Seite xxvi
... of Jonson , Beaumont and Fletcher , and Massinger , he adds the following : - " What had a grammatical and logical consistency for the ear , -what I could be put together and represented to the eye xxvi Introduction THE FIRST PART OF.
... of Jonson , Beaumont and Fletcher , and Massinger , he adds the following : - " What had a grammatical and logical consistency for the ear , -what I could be put together and represented to the eye xxvi Introduction THE FIRST PART OF.
Seite xxvii
... eye , these poets took from the ear and eye , unchecked by any intui- tion of an inward impossibility ; just as a man might put together a quarter of an orange , a quarter of an apple , and the like of a lemon and a pomegranate , and ...
... eye , these poets took from the ear and eye , unchecked by any intui- tion of an inward impossibility ; just as a man might put together a quarter of an orange , a quarter of an apple , and the like of a lemon and a pomegranate , and ...
Seite xxx
... eye to the inter- ests of his country as well as of his family , and in his wars he was humane much above the custom of his time . So that the more we study what he was and what he did , the more we shall probably be inclined to say ...
... eye to the inter- ests of his country as well as of his family , and in his wars he was humane much above the custom of his time . So that the more we study what he was and what he did , the more we shall probably be inclined to say ...
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Anon Archbishop Archbishop of York arms Bard Bardolph battle battle of Shrewsbury bear blood Blunt brother called character cousin crown Davy dead death dost doth Douglas earl of Fife earl of March Eastcheap Enter Exeunt Exit faith father fear folio Gadshill give Glend Glendower grace Harry Harry Percy hath head hear heart Holinshed honor horse Host hostess Hotspur humor Jack John of Lancaster justice King Henry king's knave Lady lord Master Shallow merry Mortimer never night noble Northumberland peace Percy Peto Pist Pistol play Poins pray Prince Henry Prince of Wales prisoners quarto rascal rebels rogue sack scene Shakespeare Shal Shrewsbury Sir John Falstaff Sir John Oldcastle speak spirit sweet sword tell thee thing thou art thou hast tongue Westmoreland William Gascoigne Worcester word Zounds