The Plays of William Shakespeare, Svazek 2Cassell, 1886 |
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Strana 207
... ( present now ) , Have put us in these ill - beseeming arms ; Not to break peace , or any branch of it , But to establish here a peace indeed , Concurring both in name and quality . West . When ever yet was your appeal denied ? Wherein ...
... ( present now ) , Have put us in these ill - beseeming arms ; Not to break peace , or any branch of it , But to establish here a peace indeed , Concurring both in name and quality . West . When ever yet was your appeal denied ? Wherein ...
Strana 281
... present speech of recital affords a striking instance of the mode in which Shakespeare makes a speaker , recounting a past occurrence , deviate occasionally into the present tense . See Note 91 , Act ii . , " First Part Henry IV ...
... present speech of recital affords a striking instance of the mode in which Shakespeare makes a speaker , recounting a past occurrence , deviate occasionally into the present tense . See Note 91 , Act ii . , " First Part Henry IV ...
Strana 288
... present passage has an air of obscurity that gives reason to believe something may have been omitted from the original text . Various attempts have been made to alter the words , so as to lend them clearer consecution and meaning , but ...
... present passage has an air of obscurity that gives reason to believe something may have been omitted from the original text . Various attempts have been made to alter the words , so as to lend them clearer consecution and meaning , but ...
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All's arms Bardolph bear blood Boling Bolingbroke brother Buck Buckingham Cade cardinal Clarence cousin crown death dost doth Duch Duke Duke of York Earl Edward Eliz elliptically England Exeunt Exit express eyes Falstaff father fear Folio prints France French friends Gentlemen of Verona give Gloster grace hand hath hear heart Heaven Henry IV Henry VI Holinshed honour Kath King Henry King John king's Lady live lord Love's Labour's Lost madam majesty means Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night's Dream never noble Note peace play Poins pray Prince Quarto queen Rich Richard Richard II royal SCENE Second Part Henry sense sentence Shakespeare Sir John soldiers soul speak speech Suffolk sweet sword Talbot tell thee thine thou art thou hast tongue Twelfth Night unto Warwick Winter's Tale word York