The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 19Caxton publishing Company, 1910 |
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Page 185
... lords . Say no more : 60 Enter the Lords of the city I have not deserved it . ALL THE LORDS . You are most welcome home . AUF . But , worthy lords , have you with heed perused What I have written to you ? LORDS . FIRST LORD . We have ...
... lords . Say no more : 60 Enter the Lords of the city I have not deserved it . ALL THE LORDS . You are most welcome home . AUF . But , worthy lords , have you with heed perused What I have written to you ? LORDS . FIRST LORD . We have ...
Page 187
... lords , Must give this cur the lie : and his own notion Who wears my stripes impress'd upon him ; that Must bear my beating to his grave — To thrust the lie unto him . shall join FIRST LORD . Peace , both , and hear me speak . COR . Cut ...
... lords , Must give this cur the lie : and his own notion Who wears my stripes impress'd upon him ; that Must bear my beating to his grave — To thrust the lie unto him . shall join FIRST LORD . Peace , both , and hear me speak . COR . Cut ...
Page
... lord . Hitherto Shake- spearean has meant simply Hamletian . The good - na- tured world - for the actual world is at the best and in the gross exceedingly thoughtless and agreeable - I say , my lord , the good - natured world , highly ...
... lord . Hitherto Shake- spearean has meant simply Hamletian . The good - na- tured world - for the actual world is at the best and in the gross exceedingly thoughtless and agreeable - I say , my lord , the good - natured world , highly ...
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Common terms and phrases
Antium Antony and Cleopatra Astrophel and Stella Aufidius bear beauty beauty's blood Brutus Caius Marcius Citizens Cominius common consul Coriolanus Corioli dear death dost doth Enter Exeunt Faerie Queene fair fear fire Folio reading gates give gods grace Hamlet hate hath hear heart heaven honour infra Julius Cæsar LART live look lord love's Lucrece Menenius Metam mistress mother night noble Othello Ovid patricians peace Plutarch poet poet's praise pray proud Quarto Roman Rome SCENE senate sense Shakespeare shalt shame SICINIUS Sidney's Sonnet soul speak supra sweet sword tell thee thine eyes things THIRD SERV thou art thou hast thought thyself Time's TITUS LARTIUS tongue tribunes true truth Venus and Adonis Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia word worth wounds ΜΕΝ Сом