The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919 |
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Page xxii
... scenes . Shakespeare owes the older dramatist little more , so far as Falstaff is concerned . The Sir John Old- castle of The Famous Victories is but slightly drawn , and the Sir John of Henry IV . is virtually a new creation , But even ...
... scenes . Shakespeare owes the older dramatist little more , so far as Falstaff is concerned . The Sir John Old- castle of The Famous Victories is but slightly drawn , and the Sir John of Henry IV . is virtually a new creation , But even ...
Page xxiv
... scene , in which Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff is referred to , and by name , in contemptuous terms . In III . iv . Henry V. says : " Where the diuel are all my old theeues , that were wont to keepe this walke ? Falstaffe , the ...
... scene , in which Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff is referred to , and by name , in contemptuous terms . In III . iv . Henry V. says : " Where the diuel are all my old theeues , that were wont to keepe this walke ? Falstaffe , the ...
Page xxviii
... scene . It may be urged that this apologia is scarcely necessary , that it is even obtrusive ; hypocritical it certainly is not . Even in the rollicking scene 1 on Gadshill and in the scene of Olympian laughter in the tavern ( II . iv ...
... scene . It may be urged that this apologia is scarcely necessary , that it is even obtrusive ; hypocritical it certainly is not . Even in the rollicking scene 1 on Gadshill and in the scene of Olympian laughter in the tavern ( II . iv ...
Page xxix
... scene , it is with a jest and a cheery farewell . Meanwhile the Prince has shown his mettle ; he has won the esteem of all , even of the enemy . With praise of Hotspur and with " a blushing cital of himself , " he challenges Percy to ...
... scene , it is with a jest and a cheery farewell . Meanwhile the Prince has shown his mettle ; he has won the esteem of all , even of the enemy . With praise of Hotspur and with " a blushing cital of himself , " he challenges Percy to ...
Page xxxii
... scene at Gadshill and its sequel in the tavern , we are so bewitched that it is impossible to feel dislike or resentment . Yet towards the end of the play 1 M. Morgann , Essay on the Dramatic Character of Sir John Falstaff , 1777 . See ...
... scene at Gadshill and its sequel in the tavern , we are so bewitched that it is impossible to feel dislike or resentment . Yet towards the end of the play 1 M. Morgann , Essay on the Dramatic Character of Sir John Falstaff , 1777 . See ...
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