The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1907 |
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Page 4
... thee to lay aside the sword Which sways usurpingly these several titles , And put the same into young Arthur's hand , Thy nephew and right royal sovereign . K. John . What follows if we disallow of this ? Chat . The proud control of ...
... thee to lay aside the sword Which sways usurpingly these several titles , And put the same into young Arthur's hand , Thy nephew and right royal sovereign . K. John . What follows if we disallow of this ? Chat . The proud control of ...
Page 6
... only to the bravest fighters . See Gautier's La Chevalerie for in- stances ( pp . 253 , 254 ) . Compare also Cymbeline , v . v . 20 . 62. put you o'er to ] refer you to . Eli . Out on thee , rude man ! thou 6 [ ACT I. KING JOHN.
... only to the bravest fighters . See Gautier's La Chevalerie for in- stances ( pp . 253 , 254 ) . Compare also Cymbeline , v . v . 20 . 62. put you o'er to ] refer you to . Eli . Out on thee , rude man ! thou 6 [ ACT I. KING JOHN.
Page 7
... thee , rude man ! Dost shame thy mother ! " 65. diffidence ] obsolete sense of " mistrust . " Compare King Lear , 1. ii . 161 : " heedless diffidences , banishment of friends , dissipation of cohorts . " 69. pound ] The singular is ...
... thee , rude man ! Dost shame thy mother ! " 65. diffidence ] obsolete sense of " mistrust . " Compare King Lear , 1. ii . 161 : " heedless diffidences , banishment of friends , dissipation of cohorts . " 69. pound ] The singular is ...
Page 8
... thee ! K. John . Why , what a madcap hath heaven lent us here ! Eli . He hath a trick of Coeur - de - lion's face ; 85 The accent of his tongue affecteth him . Do you not read some tokens of my son In the large composition of this man ...
... thee ! K. John . Why , what a madcap hath heaven lent us here ! Eli . He hath a trick of Coeur - de - lion's face ; 85 The accent of his tongue affecteth him . Do you not read some tokens of my son In the large composition of this man ...
Page 11
... thee well : wilt thou forsake thy fortune , Bequeath thy land to him and follow me ? I am a soldier and now bound to France . 139. sir Robert's his ] This is treated by Schmidt and Mr. Moore - Smith as a double genitive . It may be so ...
... thee well : wilt thou forsake thy fortune , Bequeath thy land to him and follow me ? I am a soldier and now bound to France . 139. sir Robert's his ] This is treated by Schmidt and Mr. Moore - Smith as a double genitive . It may be so ...
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Common terms and phrases
Angiers arms Arth Arthur Aust Bast Bastard Blanch blood brabbler breath Capell Collier Compare Henry Compare Richard conj conjecture Const Constance Cotgrave curse Dauphin death dost doth Dyce Elinor Elizabethan English emendation England Exeunt fair faith father Faulconbridge fear Fleay Folios read France French Geffrey's give grief hand Hanmer hath hear heaven Henry IV Holinshed holy honour Hubert Hubert de Burgh infra JAMES GURNEY Julius Cæsar King John Kynge Johan Lady land Lewis lion lord majesty meaning Melun mother night noble Pand Pandulph pare passage peace Philip play Pope prince Ralph Roister Doister Richard II Rowe Salisbury SCENE seems Shake Shakespeare shame Sir Robert soul speak spirit Steevens supra Swinstead thee Theobald thine eye thou hast tongue Troublesome Raigne Twelfth Night unto Vaughan suggests word ΙΟ