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Page xxi
( vi ) The Prince's quibbling retort to Falstaff's admonition , “ Do not thou , when thou art king , hang a thief ” ( 1. ii . 58 ff . ) , is evidently a reminiscence of the Prince's promise in The Famous Victories to make Ned ?
( vi ) The Prince's quibbling retort to Falstaff's admonition , “ Do not thou , when thou art king , hang a thief ” ( 1. ii . 58 ff . ) , is evidently a reminiscence of the Prince's promise in The Famous Victories to make Ned ?
Page l
Well , what sayest thou , art thou guiltie , or not guiltie ? Theefe . Not guiltie , my Lord . Iudġe . By whom wilt thou be tride ? Theefe . By my Lord the young Prince , or by my selfewhether you will . I must goe Enter the young ...
Well , what sayest thou , art thou guiltie , or not guiltie ? Theefe . Not guiltie , my Lord . Iudġe . By whom wilt thou be tride ? Theefe . By my Lord the young Prince , or by my selfewhether you will . I must goe Enter the young ...
Page liii
Who art thou , Sownds , doost not know thy selfe ? Lohn . No. Der . Now away simple fellow , Why man , thou art Iohn the Cobler . lohn . No , I am my Lord chiefe Iustice of England . Der . Oh Iohn , Masse thou saist true , thou art ...
Who art thou , Sownds , doost not know thy selfe ? Lohn . No. Der . Now away simple fellow , Why man , thou art Iohn the Cobler . lohn . No , I am my Lord chiefe Iustice of England . Der . Oh Iohn , Masse thou saist true , thou art ...
Page 9
Yea , there thou makest me sad and makest me sin In envy that my Lord Northumberland Should be the father to so blest a ... 243 ) : “ My two persons of Fife and Menteith son ! thou art a changeling , not my Shakespeare follows Holinshed ...
Yea , there thou makest me sad and makest me sin In envy that my Lord Northumberland Should be the father to so blest a ... 243 ) : “ My two persons of Fife and Menteith son ! thou art a changeling , not my Shakespeare follows Holinshed ...
Page 11
Thou art so fat - witted , with drinking of old sack and unbuttoning thee after supper and sleeping upon benches after noon , that thou hast forgotten to demand that truly which thou wouldst truly know . What a devil hast thou to do ...
Thou art so fat - witted , with drinking of old sack and unbuttoning thee after supper and sleeping upon benches after noon , that thou hast forgotten to demand that truly which thou wouldst truly know . What a devil hast thou to do ...
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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