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Page xvii
... to whom ye owe double obedience , wherfore , eftsones in his name , I charge you desiste of your wilfulnes and unlaufull entreprise , and from hensforth gyue good example to those whiche hereafter shall be your propre subiectes .
... to whom ye owe double obedience , wherfore , eftsones in his name , I charge you desiste of your wilfulnes and unlaufull entreprise , and from hensforth gyue good example to those whiche hereafter shall be your propre subiectes .
Page xxv
Holinshed in fact records that Fastolfe was eventually cleared of the charges that had been made against him . But Shakespeare was indifferent to historical niceties of this kind . He was content to borrow from stage tradition his ...
Holinshed in fact records that Fastolfe was eventually cleared of the charges that had been made against him . But Shakespeare was indifferent to historical niceties of this kind . He was content to borrow from stage tradition his ...
Page xxvii
... he is degenerate ” .3 The King , indeed , may not mean all he says , for , when the Prince protests his loyalty , he tells him that he shall “ have charge and sovereign trust ” ; 4 but his grief and disappointment are unmistakable .
... he is degenerate ” .3 The King , indeed , may not mean all he says , for , when the Prince protests his loyalty , he tells him that he shall “ have charge and sovereign trust ” ; 4 but his grief and disappointment are unmistakable .
Page xxviii
The time for action is at hand : Bardolph is despatched with a letter to Lord John of Lancaster ; Peto is ordered to horse , “ for thou and I have thirty miles to ride yet ere dinner time " ; and Falstaff , for whom a charge of foot has ...
The time for action is at hand : Bardolph is despatched with a letter to Lord John of Lancaster ; Peto is ordered to horse , “ for thou and I have thirty miles to ride yet ere dinner time " ; and Falstaff , for whom a charge of foot has ...
Page xxxii
Falstaff has been warmly defended against the charge of cowardice by his eighteenth century champion , Maurice Morgann . Morgann collects with the utmost care every scrap of available evidence in the two parts of Henry IV . , weighing ...
Falstaff has been warmly defended against the charge of cowardice by his eighteenth century champion , Maurice Morgann . Morgann collects with the utmost care every scrap of available evidence in the two parts of Henry IV . , weighing ...
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