The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 8Ginn, Heath, 1881 |
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Page 4
... hand to have been among the first , if not the very first , of his essays in dra- matic composition . And it stands clear in evidence that the public taste or preference was at that time running strongly in favour of plays founded on ...
... hand to have been among the first , if not the very first , of his essays in dra- matic composition . And it stands clear in evidence that the public taste or preference was at that time running strongly in favour of plays founded on ...
Page 5
... hand to account for any part of it . • In such a diversity of opinions resting on internal evidence , probably our best way is to fall back upon such clear points of external evidence as the case may afford . Now the mere fact of the ...
... hand to account for any part of it . • In such a diversity of opinions resting on internal evidence , probably our best way is to fall back upon such clear points of external evidence as the case may afford . Now the mere fact of the ...
Page 6
... hand he drew more or less from the work of Hall . It is to be noted , however , that in this case he took much greater freedom than usual with the actual order of events , marshalling them here and there upon no settled principle , or ...
... hand he drew more or less from the work of Hall . It is to be noted , however , that in this case he took much greater freedom than usual with the actual order of events , marshalling them here and there upon no settled principle , or ...
Page 8
... hand , but conqueréd . Exe . We mourn in black : why mourn we not in blood ? 1 The upper part of the stage was in Shakespeare's time technically called the heavens , and was used to be hung with black when tragedies were performed . 2 ...
... hand , but conqueréd . Exe . We mourn in black : why mourn we not in blood ? 1 The upper part of the stage was in Shakespeare's time technically called the heavens , and was used to be hung with black when tragedies were performed . 2 ...
Page 16
... hands by those secret gimmers which now every puppet play can imitate . " 6 Bastard was not in former times a title of reproach . Hurd , in his Let- ters on Chivalry and Romance , makes it one of the circumstances of agree- ment between ...
... hands by those secret gimmers which now every puppet play can imitate . " 6 Bastard was not in former times a title of reproach . Hurd , in his Let- ters on Chivalry and Romance , makes it one of the circumstances of agree- ment between ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alarums Alen ALENÇON arms Beaufort blood Buck Buckingham Burgundy Cade canst Capell Cardinal Char Charles Clif Clifford Collier's second folio Corrected crown Dauphin death Dick doth Duch Duke Humphrey Duke of Burgundy Duke of York Earl Earl of March Edmund enemies England English Enter King HENRY Exeunt Exit father fear fight France French give Gloster Grace hand hath heart Heaven Henry the Fifth Henry's Holinshed honour Humphrey's Iden Jack Cade Joan John Julius Cæsar Lord Protector madam Majesty Margaret means Mortimer ne'er never noble old text reads Orleans peace Plantagenet play princely prisoner PUCELLE quarto Queen realm regent Reig Reignier Richard RICHARD PLANTAGENET Rouen Salisbury SCENE Shakespeare shame Simp soldiers Somerset soul sovereign speak Suffolk sword thee thine thou art thou hast thou shalt thou wilt traitor uncle unto Walker Warwick Winchester words