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Page lv
... and live my Lord and soueraigne for euer : and with your dagger arme show like vengeance vpon the bodie of that your sonne , I was about say and dare not , ah woe is me therefore , that your wilde slaue , tis not the Crowne that I ...
... and live my Lord and soueraigne for euer : and with your dagger arme show like vengeance vpon the bodie of that your sonne , I was about say and dare not , ah woe is me therefore , that your wilde slaue , tis not the Crowne that I ...
Page 35
And for whose death we in the world's wide mouth Live scandalized and foully spoken of . Hot . But , soft , I pray you ; did King Richard then 155 Proclaim my brother Edmund Mortimer Heir to the crown ? North .
And for whose death we in the world's wide mouth Live scandalized and foully spoken of . Hot . But , soft , I pray you ; did King Richard then 155 Proclaim my brother Edmund Mortimer Heir to the crown ? North .
Page 37
Where never fathom - line touch'd Cf. , e.g. , Peele , Edward 1 , ji : “ Then any ground , live or die , brave Ned , or sink or And pluck up drowned honour from swim . " the lake of hell . " 198. To rouse hare !
Where never fathom - line touch'd Cf. , e.g. , Peele , Edward 1 , ji : “ Then any ground , live or die , brave Ned , or sink or And pluck up drowned honour from swim . " the lake of hell . " 198. To rouse hare !
Page 40
485 ) as “ a man rather a paragraph devcted to “ Your miscoueting to live in pleasure , than to placing and preposterous placing of deale with much businesse , and weightie words , " instances “ A corall lippe of affaires of the realme ...
485 ) as “ a man rather a paragraph devcted to “ Your miscoueting to live in pleasure , than to placing and preposterous placing of deale with much businesse , and weightie words , " instances “ A corall lippe of affaires of the realme ...
Page 59
What , ye knaves ! young men must live . You are grandjurors , are ye ? we'll jure ye , ' faith . [ Here they rob them and bind them . Exeunt . Re - enter PRINCE HENRY and Poins disguised . Prince . The thieves have bound the true men .
What , ye knaves ! young men must live . You are grandjurors , are ye ? we'll jure ye , ' faith . [ Here they rob them and bind them . Exeunt . Re - enter PRINCE HENRY and Poins disguised . Prince . The thieves have bound the true men .
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arms Beaumont and Fletcher better blood brother Capell cause character charge common death Dekker devil Dict doth Douglas drink earle earth ending England English Enter Exit explains eyes face fair faith Falstaff father fear four give Grosart hand hang Harry hast hath haue Hazlitt's head hear heart Henry Heywood hold Holinshed honour horse Hotspur Humour John Jonson kind King Lady land live London look Lord lost Malone March matter means MICHIGAN Mortimer never night noble North omitted omitted Ff Pearson Percy perhaps play Poins Pope Prince quotes reference rest Richard scene seems sense Shakespeare Sir John speak stand Steevens sword tell term thee Theobald thing thou thou art true Wright