The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Hearst's International Library Company, 1914 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 11
... London as a haber- dasher , returning , however , in the early part of the follow- ing century , to his native town , where he is found , in 1602 , completing an important legal transaction with which he was entrusted by the great ...
... London as a haber- dasher , returning , however , in the early part of the follow- ing century , to his native town , where he is found , in 1602 , completing an important legal transaction with which he was entrusted by the great ...
Page 38
... London . " If we accept this nar- rative , which is the most reliable account of the incident that has been preserved , the date of the poet's departure from his native town may be reasonably assigned to the year 1585. He certainly ...
... London . " If we accept this nar- rative , which is the most reliable account of the incident that has been preserved , the date of the poet's departure from his native town may be reasonably assigned to the year 1585. He certainly ...
Page 40
... London , and there received into the play - house as a servitor ? " What but a strong and compulsory motive could have driven him so far away from a locality to which , as we gather from subsequent events , he was sensitively attached ...
... London , and there received into the play - house as a servitor ? " What but a strong and compulsory motive could have driven him so far away from a locality to which , as we gather from subsequent events , he was sensitively attached ...
Page 47
... London , where he had never been before , and sold his horse in Smithfield ; and , having no acquaintance in Lon- don , to recommend him or assist him , he went from street to street , and house to house , asking if they wanted an ...
... London , where he had never been before , and sold his horse in Smithfield ; and , having no acquaintance in Lon- don , to recommend him or assist him , he went from street to street , and house to house , asking if they wanted an ...
Page 48
... London a needy ad- venturer , and lived for a time by very mean employments . ' To the same effect is the earlier testimony given by the author of Ratseis Ghost , 1605 , where the strolling player , in a passage reasonably believed to ...
... London a needy ad- venturer , and lived for a time by very mean employments . ' To the same effect is the earlier testimony given by the author of Ratseis Ghost , 1605 , where the strolling player , in a passage reasonably believed to ...
Contents
5 | |
39 | |
67 | |
108 | |
123 | |
165 | |
176 | |
vii | |
3 | |
5 | |
41 | |
49 | |
66 | |
90 | |
119 | |
146 | |
153 | |
2 | |
3 | |
xxii | |
2 | |
3 | |
5 | |
37 | |
71 | |
101 | |
132 | |
155 | |
158 | |
164 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alarum battle blood brother Burgundy Cade Capell Char character Chronicles Clar Clarence Clif Clifford Collier conj crown death doth doubt drama dramatist Duke of Gloucester Duke of York Earl Edward emendation England English Enter Exeunt Exit father fear fight folio France French friends Glou Gloucester grace hand Hanmer hast hath head heart heaven Henry's Holinshed honor house of Lancaster house of York Jack Cade Joan John John Shakespeare King Henry lady latter live London lord Malone Margaret Mortimer never noble passage Plantagenet play poet poet's Pope prince Pucelle quarto Queen Reignier Richard Richard II Richard Plantagenet Salisbury scene Shakespeare shalt soldiers Somerset soul speak Stratford-on-Avon Suffolk sword Talbot tell theater thee thine thought tion Titus Andronicus Tower town traitor unto Vaughan Warwick William Shakespeare Winchester words