The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 11Macmillan Company, 1904 |
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Page 45
... never went out of their native shires ; travellers from a distance were few . Tales of Leicester's honours and emoluments were told and listened to like modern fairy stories ; his rapid advancement lent a kind of magic to the splendour ...
... never went out of their native shires ; travellers from a distance were few . Tales of Leicester's honours and emoluments were told and listened to like modern fairy stories ; his rapid advancement lent a kind of magic to the splendour ...
Page 54
... never been awakened by the clamour of trade , although it turns a wheel here and there in its winding course ; the note of a hidden waterfall penetrates the silence and deepens it . The Avon knows no gentler landscape than that through ...
... never been awakened by the clamour of trade , although it turns a wheel here and there in its winding course ; the note of a hidden waterfall penetrates the silence and deepens it . The Avon knows no gentler landscape than that through ...
Page 65
... never detected of any crime or vice ; in religion most sound ; in love to her husband most faithfull and true . In friendship most constant . To what in trust was committed to her most secret ; in wisdom excelling ; in governing her ...
... never detected of any crime or vice ; in religion most sound ; in love to her husband most faithfull and true . In friendship most constant . To what in trust was committed to her most secret ; in wisdom excelling ; in governing her ...
Page 69
... his native place when he was still in middle life ; there is evidence that his interest in Stratford and his communication with it were never interrupted ; that his care not only for his family but for 69 Marriage and London.
... his native place when he was still in middle life ; there is evidence that his interest in Stratford and his communication with it were never interrupted ; that his care not only for his family but for 69 Marriage and London.
Page 76
... never lacking in the independence which comes from civic courage and civic wealth . James I. said , with characteristic pedantry , that " the growth of the capital resembleth that of the head of a rickety child , in which an excessive ...
... never lacking in the independence which comes from civic courage and civic wealth . James I. said , with characteristic pedantry , that " the growth of the capital resembleth that of the head of a rickety child , in which an excessive ...
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