The Works of Shakespeare: Macbeth, 1947At the University Press, 1955 |
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Page xxi
... speech given him by Shakespeare to mark the gravity of the occasion and the scrupulosity of the King's conscience1 . Lastly , the sole connection between the subject of the Archbishop's speech and the question of Church lands is that ...
... speech given him by Shakespeare to mark the gravity of the occasion and the scrupulosity of the King's conscience1 . Lastly , the sole connection between the subject of the Archbishop's speech and the question of Church lands is that ...
Page xxxi
... speech after speech , and once even in a stage- direction , though the editors have obliterated it . For the zenith of the play is not the victory - that is lightly passed over , and ( in itself miraculous 3 ) is ascribed to God alone ...
... speech after speech , and once even in a stage- direction , though the editors have obliterated it . For the zenith of the play is not the victory - that is lightly passed over , and ( in itself miraculous 3 ) is ascribed to God alone ...
Page 150
... speech in Hall , Hol . or Stow . Clearly based on Gesta , p . 21 ( trans . Nicholas , p . 106 ) : Our King who sought peace , not war , in order that he might further arm the cause in which he was engaged with the shield of justice ...
... speech in Hall , Hol . or Stow . Clearly based on Gesta , p . 21 ( trans . Nicholas , p . 106 ) : Our King who sought peace , not war , in order that he might further arm the cause in which he was engaged with the shield of justice ...
Contents
KING HENRY V FRONTISPIECE | vii |
THE STAGEHISTORY OF HENRY V | xlviii |
TO THE READER | lvii |
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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