The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1909 |
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Page 2
... Fastolfe . Dead Bed alon SIR WILLIAM LUCY . SIR WILLIAM GLANSDALE . SIR THOMAS GARGRAVE . Mayor of London . WOODVILE , Lieutenant of the Tower . VERNON , of the White - Rose or York Faction . BASSET , of the Red - Rose or Lancaster ...
... Fastolfe . Dead Bed alon SIR WILLIAM LUCY . SIR WILLIAM GLANSDALE . SIR THOMAS GARGRAVE . Mayor of London . WOODVILE , Lieutenant of the Tower . VERNON , of the White - Rose or York Faction . BASSET , of the Red - Rose or Lancaster ...
Page 10
... Fastolfe and his Companions set all their cōpanie in good order of Battaile , and pitched stakes before every Archer to breake the force of the horsemen . At their backes they set all their wagons and cariages . and in this maner they ...
... Fastolfe and his Companions set all their cōpanie in good order of Battaile , and pitched stakes before every Archer to breake the force of the horsemen . At their backes they set all their wagons and cariages . and in this maner they ...
Page 11
... Fastolfe had not play'd the coward . I 20 125 here is needful to explain a line in Greene's Frier Bacon and Frier Bungay ( Grosart , xiii . 162 ) : - : - " But then the stormy threats of war shall cease : The horse shall stampe as ...
... Fastolfe had not play'd the coward . I 20 125 here is needful to explain a line in Greene's Frier Bacon and Frier Bungay ( Grosart , xiii . 162 ) : - : - " But then the stormy threats of war shall cease : The horse shall stampe as ...
Page 12
... Fastolfe play'd the coward ] See note at line 116 , and see below , III . ii . 103-9 . Sir John Fastolfe appears to have satisfactorily disproved their charge of cowardice , upon his return home . His honours were restored to him and he ...
... Fastolfe play'd the coward ] See note at line 116 , and see below , III . ii . 103-9 . Sir John Fastolfe appears to have satisfactorily disproved their charge of cowardice , upon his return home . His honours were restored to him and he ...
Page 34
... Fastolfe , and diuerse other valiant knightes and squiers " ( p . 578 , The VI . Yere ) . Historical inaccuracy in this drama is very prominent . The events are often transposed , backward or forward , out of their proper years ...
... Fastolfe , and diuerse other valiant knightes and squiers " ( p . 578 , The VI . Yere ) . Historical inaccuracy in this drama is very prominent . The events are often transposed , backward or forward , out of their proper years ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alarum ALENÇON Alphonsus Arden edition arms Bastard blood Burgundy Cæsar Cambridge Capell Chronicle Compare Faerie Queene Compare Greene conj Dauphin death Dict doth Dyce earlier earliest Edward elsewhere in Shakespeare England English Enter Erle Euphues example Exeunt Exit expression Faerie Queene Fastolfe favourite France French give Glou Gloucester Golding's Ovid Grafton Greene's Grosart hath Henry VI Holinshed honour Jack Straw Jack Straw Hazlitt's Julius Cæsar King Henry Locrine Lord Talbot Love's Labour's Lost Malone Mamillia Marlowe Marlowe's Nashe noble occurs omitted Ff Orlando Furioso Orleans Orpharion pare passage Peele's play prince Pucelle quotes reference Reig Reignier Richard Richard III Richard Plantagenet sayde SCENE Selimus sense Shake Shakespeare Shepheards Calender Somerset sonne Spanish Tragedy speare Spenser Steevens sword Tale Tamburlaine thee Theobald thou Titus Andronicus town unto verb viii Winchester word Yere York ΙΟ
Popular passages
Page 65 - Will I upon thy party wear this rose : And here I prophesy ; — This brawl to-day Grown to this faction, in the Temple garden, Shall send, between the red rose and the white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night.
Page xxv - Few of the university pen plays well; they smell too much of that writer Ovid and that writer Metamorphosis, and talk too much of Proserpina and Jupiter. Why, here's our fellow Shakespeare puts them all down, aye, and Ben Jonson too.
Page 4 - HUNG be the heavens with black, yield day to night ! Comets, importing change of times and states, Brandish your crystal tresses in the sky, And with them scourge the bad revolting stars, That have consented unto Henry's death ! King Henry the Fifth, too famous to live long ! England ne'er lost a king of so much worth.
Page 24 - Glory is like a circle in the water, Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself, Till, by broad spreading, it disperse to nought.