The Works of Shakespeare: Macbeth, 1947At the University Press, 1955 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 30
Page 48
... honour , Our madams mock at us , and plainly say Our mettle is bred out , and they will give 30 Their bodies to the lust of English youth , To new - store France with bastard warriors . Britaine . They bid us to the English dancing ...
... honour , Our madams mock at us , and plainly say Our mettle is bred out , and they will give 30 Their bodies to the lust of English youth , To new - store France with bastard warriors . Britaine . They bid us to the English dancing ...
Page 75
... honour , am the most offending soul alive . No , faith , my coz , wish not a man from England : God's peace , I would not lose so great an honour , As one man more , methinks , would share from me , For the best hope I have . O , do not ...
... honour , am the most offending soul alive . No , faith , my coz , wish not a man from England : God's peace , I would not lose so great an honour , As one man more , methinks , would share from me , For the best hope I have . O , do not ...
Page 174
... honour : ' . Clearly F. has dropped a word and a stop after ' in , ' and we are left to mere guesswork . Knight filled the gap with ' honour ' taken from ' Lets dye with honour ' in Q. But Greg ( p . 170 ) notes that " " in honour " is ...
... honour : ' . Clearly F. has dropped a word and a stop after ' in , ' and we are left to mere guesswork . Knight filled the gap with ' honour ' taken from ' Lets dye with honour ' in Q. But Greg ( p . 170 ) notes that " " in honour " is ...
Contents
KING HENRY V FRONTISPIECE | vii |
THE STAGEHISTORY OF HENRY V | xlviii |
TO THE READER | lvii |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Agincourt Alarum Alice Archbishop audience Bardolph battle battle of Agincourt behold blood Bourbon brother Burgundy Camb Canterbury Captain Chorus Constable Constable of France Covent Garden crown Dauphin death doth Duke Duke of Burgundy Duthie England English Enter Erpingham Exeter eyes fair Falstaff Fluellen follows France French King French Soldier Gesta give Gloucester glove Gower grace Greg hand Harfleur Harry hath heart Henry IV Henry of Monmouth Henry's herald Holinshed honour horse Hostess humour Introd Kate Katharine King Henry king's knight leek liege look lord Macmorris majesty Montjoy never noble numbers Orleans Pistol play Pope princes prob Prol Prologue prose ransom Rowe ruined band Salic Salic Law scene Scroop Shakespeare speak speech Steev sword tell Theatre thee Theo thou unto Warwick Westmoreland Williams words Wylie