Judith Shakespeare: Her love affairs and other adventuresGood Press, 25. 4. 2021 - Počet stran: 387 This romantic novel is the work of Scottish author William Black, on the life of Judith Shakepeare. Judith Quiney, née Shakespeare, was the younger daughter of William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway and the fraternal twin of their only son Hamnet Shakespeare. She married Thomas Quiney, a wine merchant of Stratford-upon-Avon. The circumstances of the marriage, including Quiney's misconduct is thought to have prompted the rewriting of Shakespeare's will. Thomas was blocked from the prospect of receiving anything from the estate, while Judith's inheritance was attached with stringent provisions to safeguard it from her husband. |
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Strana
... regarded him from head to foot with nothing beyond a mild curiosity. Indeed, it was rather he who was embarrassed. He looked at her with a kind of wonder—and admiration also; and if she had been sufficiently heedful and watchful she ...
... regarded him from head to foot with nothing beyond a mild curiosity. Indeed, it was rather he who was embarrassed. He looked at her with a kind of wonder—and admiration also; and if she had been sufficiently heedful and watchful she ...
Strana
... regarded her with such an intensity of interest that sometimes he stumbled forgetfully in his speech, as if he were repeating a lesson but ill prepared, "It is for the revelation of the future to them that are born under fortunate ...
... regarded her with such an intensity of interest that sometimes he stumbled forgetfully in his speech, as if he were repeating a lesson but ill prepared, "It is for the revelation of the future to them that are born under fortunate ...
Strana
... regarded her for a second with some slight surprise; but he took the paper, and read aloud, slowly, the lines written thereon: "Dare you haunt our hallowed green? None but fairies here are seen. Down and sleep, Wake and weep, Pinch him ...
... regarded her for a second with some slight surprise; but he took the paper, and read aloud, slowly, the lines written thereon: "Dare you haunt our hallowed green? None but fairies here are seen. Down and sleep, Wake and weep, Pinch him ...
Strana
... regarded by many, and even openly spoken of, as a suitor for her own hand. "God mend me," said she, in her anger (and greatly to the distress of the mild-spoken Prudence), "but 'tis a strange way of paying court to a young woman to ...
... regarded by many, and even openly spoken of, as a suitor for her own hand. "God mend me," said she, in her anger (and greatly to the distress of the mild-spoken Prudence), "but 'tis a strange way of paying court to a young woman to ...
Strana
... regarded as a matter of conscience—that they should carry thither and read aloud, among other things, the fierce denunciations of stage-plays and stage-players which were common in the CHAPTER III THE PLANTING OF THE CHARM.
... regarded as a matter of conscience—that they should carry thither and read aloud, among other things, the fierce denunciations of stage-plays and stage-players which were common in the CHAPTER III THE PLANTING OF THE CHARM.
Obsah
CHAPTER VI | |
CHAPTER VII | |
CHAPTER VIII | |
CHAPTER IX | |
CHAPTER X | |
CHAPTER XI | |
DIVIDED WAYS | |
CHAPTER XIII | |
CHAPTER XIV | |
CHAPTER XV | |
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Judith Shakespeare; Her Love Affairs and Other Adventures William Black, IV Náhled není k dispozici. - 2015 |
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