The Plays of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Tập 14 |
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Trang 5
I wonder , how the king escap'd our hands . YORK . While we purfu'd the horsemen of the north , He flily ftole away , and left his men : Whereat the great lord of Northumberland , Whose warlike ears could never brook retreat , ' Cheer'd ...
I wonder , how the king escap'd our hands . YORK . While we purfu'd the horsemen of the north , He flily ftole away , and left his men : Whereat the great lord of Northumberland , Whose warlike ears could never brook retreat , ' Cheer'd ...
Trang 6
... and fecond part of The Contention & c . were not written by the fame hand . However , this is not decifive ; for the author , who- ever he was , might have been inadvertent , as we find Shakspeare undoubtedly was . MALONE . 3 Rich .
... and fecond part of The Contention & c . were not written by the fame hand . However , this is not decifive ; for the author , who- ever he was , might have been inadvertent , as we find Shakspeare undoubtedly was . MALONE . 3 Rich .
Trang 20
This may be too flight a circumftance to prove Marlowe the author of The Whole Contention ; it is , however , in other re- fpects , fufficiently probable that he had some hand in it . The perfon here meant was Thomas Nevil , bastard fon ...
This may be too flight a circumftance to prove Marlowe the author of The Whole Contention ; it is , however , in other re- fpects , fufficiently probable that he had some hand in it . The perfon here meant was Thomas Nevil , bastard fon ...
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Therefore [ Lifting his Hand . RUT . O , let me pray before I take my death : - To thee I pray ; Sweet Clifford , pity me ! CLIF . Such pity as my rapier's point affords . RUT . I never did thee harm ; Why wilt thou flay me ? CLIF .
Therefore [ Lifting his Hand . RUT . O , let me pray before I take my death : - To thee I pray ; Sweet Clifford , pity me ! CLIF . Such pity as my rapier's point affords . RUT . I never did thee harm ; Why wilt thou flay me ? CLIF .
Trang 38
What valour were it , when a cur doth grin , For one to thrust his hand between his teeth , When he might spurn him with his foot away ? It is war's prize 4 to take all vantages ; ' And ten to one is no impeach of valour .
What valour were it , when a cur doth grin , For one to thrust his hand between his teeth , When he might spurn him with his foot away ? It is war's prize 4 to take all vantages ; ' And ten to one is no impeach of valour .
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ANNE appears arms battle bear blood brother BUCK Buckingham called CLAR Clarence Clifford Contention copy crown daughter dead death doth Duke Earl edition Edward ELIZ Enter Exeunt eyes fair fame father fays fear fecond fhall fhould fight firſt folio fome foul France friends fuch George give Glofter grace GREY Haftings hand HAST hath head hear heart heaven himſelf hope John JOHNSON kill King Edward King Henry King Richard lady leave live look lord MALONE March means mind mother muſt never old play once original paffage perhaps piece poor prefent prince printed quarto queen RICH Richard Richmond ſcene Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſpeak ſpeech STEEVENS tell thee thefe theſe thing Third thou thought Tower true unto uſed Warwick wife York young