The Shakespeare Apocrypha: Being a Collection of Fourteen Plays which Have Been Ascribed to Shakespeare, Volume 10Clarendon Press, 1908 - 455 pages |
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Page 69
... shepheard of our comon- wealth ? Edward the third , King of England . Edward , Prince of Wales , his Son . Earl of Warwick . Earl of Derby . Earl of Salisbury . Lord Audley . Lord Percy . Lodowick , Edward's Confident . Sir William ...
... shepheard of our comon- wealth ? Edward the third , King of England . Edward , Prince of Wales , his Son . Earl of Warwick . Earl of Derby . Earl of Salisbury . Lord Audley . Lord Percy . Lodowick , Edward's Confident . Sir William ...
Page 70
... shepheard of our comon- wealth ? King . This counsayle , Artoyes , like to fruict- full shewers , Hath added growth vnto my dignitye ; And , by the fiery vigor of thy words , Hot courage is engendred in my brest , Which heretofore was ...
... shepheard of our comon- wealth ? King . This counsayle , Artoyes , like to fruict- full shewers , Hath added growth vnto my dignitye ; And , by the fiery vigor of thy words , Hot courage is engendred in my brest , Which heretofore was ...
Page 87
... shepheard of thy realme , But one , that teares her entrailes with thy handes , I 20 And , like a thirstie tyger , suckst her bloud . Aud . You peeres of France , why do you follow him That is so prodigall to spend your liues ? Ch ...
... shepheard of thy realme , But one , that teares her entrailes with thy handes , I 20 And , like a thirstie tyger , suckst her bloud . Aud . You peeres of France , why do you follow him That is so prodigall to spend your liues ? Ch ...
Page 107
... shepherd's once Wag . 57 , 58 One line Q3 , Which ] That Q8 Clo . I , plaine mouse with out either welt. And be my ... shepheard with a sworde drawne and a beares head in his hande . Mu . Stay , Lady , stay , and be no more dis- maide ...
... shepherd's once Wag . 57 , 58 One line Q3 , Which ] That Q8 Clo . I , plaine mouse with out either welt. And be my ... shepheard with a sworde drawne and a beares head in his hande . Mu . Stay , Lady , stay , and be no more dis- maide ...
Page 108
... shepheard , thanks a thousand times . This gift , assure thy selfe , contents me more Then greatest bountie of a mighty prince , Although he were the monarch of the world . Mu . Most gracious goddesse , more then mortal wight , 21 Your ...
... shepheard , thanks a thousand times . This gift , assure thy selfe , contents me more Then greatest bountie of a mighty prince , Although he were the monarch of the world . Mu . Most gracious goddesse , more then mortal wight , 21 Your ...
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Common terms and phrases
Ales Amadine Arcite Arden Birth of Merlin brother Clown Cobham conj Corineus corr Cromwell Daugh daughter death doth doubtful plays Dyce Edol Enter euen euery Exeunt Exit Fair Em faire faith farewell Fath father fauour feare Flowerdale giue hand hart hath haue heare heauen heere honor Humber husband King knaue Lady Lance leaue lines Qq liue Locrine London London Prodigal Lord loue Lubeck maiestie Maior Maister Manuile Merlin Moore Mosbie Mucedorus nere neuer night noble Noble Kinsmen ouer Palamon play pray Prince S. D. add saue Scene serue Shakespeare shee shepheard Sir Godf sir Iohn sirra sister sonne souldiers soule speake stand sweete tell thee thine thinke Thomas Lord Cromwell thou art thou hast thou shalt thy selfe Valingford vnto vpon weele wench wife words Yorkshire Tragedy
Popular passages
Page 3 - The First part of the Contention betwixt the two famous Houses of Yorke and Lancaster...
Page 297 - t in a woman's key, like such a woman As any of us three ; weep ere you fail; Lend us a knee ; But touch the ground for us no longer time Than a dove's motion, when the head 's pluck'd off; Tell him, if he i' the blood-siz'd field lay swoln, Showing the sun his teeth, grinning at the moon, What you would do ! Hip.
Page 1 - And shew this but the same face you have done Your dear delight, The Devil of Edmonton.
Page 327 - Add'st flames, hotter than his; the heavenly fires Did scorch his mortal son, thine him. The huntress All moist and cold, some say, began to throw Her bow away, and sigh. Take to thy grace Me thy...
Page 334 - O you heavenly charmers, What things you make of us ! For what we lack We laugh, for what we have are sorry ; still Are children in some kind.
Page 5 - henceforward know me not"? Remember, when I lock'd thee in my closet, What were thy words and mine; did we not both Decree to murder Arden in the night? The heavens can witness, and the world can tell, Before I saw that falsehood look of thine, 'Fore I was tangled with thy 'ticing speech...
Page 328 - pointed, but do not know him ; out of two I should choose one; and pray for his success, but I am guiltless of election...
Page 295 - m sure It has a noble breeder and a pure, A learned ; and a poet never went More famous yet 'twixt Po and silver Trent: Chaucer, of all admir'd, the story gives ; There constant to eternity it lives. If we let fall the nobleness of this, And the first sound this child hear be a hiss, How will it shake the bones of that good man, And make him cry from under ground, O, fan From me the witless chaff of such a writer, That blasts my bays, and my famd works makes lighter Than Robin Hood...
Page 323 - I'll choose, And end their strife : two such young handsome men Shall never fall for me ; their weeping mothers, Following the dead-cold ashes of their sons, Shall never curse my cruelty. Good heaven, What a sweet face has Arcite ! If wise Nature, With all her best endowments, all those beauties She sows into the births of noble bodies, Were here a mortal woman, and had in her The coy denials of young maids, yet doubtless She would run mad for this man : what an eye, Of what a fiery sparkle and...
Page 296 - That does good turns to th' world ; give us the bones Of our dead kings, that we may chapel them ! And of thy boundless goodness, take some note That for our crowned heads we have no roof Save this, which is the lion's and the bear's, And vault to every thing ! Thes.