The Plays of William Shakespeare, Volume 1 |
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Page 86
I thank you for my venison , Master Shallow . Shal . Master Page , I am glad to
see you : much good do it your good heart ! I wished your venison better ; it was
ill killed . - How doth good Mistress Page ? —and I thank you always with my
heart ...
I thank you for my venison , Master Shallow . Shal . Master Page , I am glad to
see you : much good do it your good heart ! I wished your venison better ; it was
ill killed . - How doth good Mistress Page ? —and I thank you always with my
heart ...
Page 88
No , I thank you , forsooth , heartily ; I am very well . what I do is to pleasure you ,
coz . Can you love the maid ? Slen . I will marry her , sir , at your request : but if
there be no great love in the beginning , yet heaven may decrease it upon better
...
No , I thank you , forsooth , heartily ; I am very well . what I do is to pleasure you ,
coz . Can you love the maid ? Slen . I will marry her , sir , at your request : but if
there be no great love in the beginning , yet heaven may decrease it upon better
...
Page 235
Fair Beatrice , I thank you for your pains . Beat . I took no more pains for those
thanks , than you take pains to thank me : if it had been painful , I would not have
come . Bene . You take pleasure , then , in the message ? Beat . Yea , just so
much ...
Fair Beatrice , I thank you for your pains . Beat . I took no more pains for those
thanks , than you take pains to thank me : if it had been painful , I would not have
come . Bene . You take pleasure , then , in the message ? Beat . Yea , just so
much ...
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Contents
CONTENTS | 23 |
THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA | 45 |
THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR | 85 |
11 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
Act ii answer appear bear Beat believe better Biron bring brother comes Count daughter death desire doth Duke effect Enter Exeunt Exit expression eyes face fair father fear Folio follow fool Ford French gentle give given grace hand hast hath head hear heart Heaven hold honour hour husband I'll Italy keep kind King lady leave Leon live look lord lost madam marry master means Measure merry mind mistress nature never night Note passage person phrase play poor pray present printed reason reference SCENE seems sense serve Shakespeare sometimes speak speech Speed spirit stand stay sweet tell term thank thee things thou thou art thought Touch true turn wife woman word young