| Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher - 1926 - 140 str.
...The \>oy enters. Sir, your pleasure? CITIZEN Let Ralph come out on Mayday in the morning, and speak upon a conduit, with all his scarfs about him, and...think of our plot; what will become of that, then! BOY Why, sir, I care not what become on't. I'll have him come out, or I'll fetch him out myself; I'll... | |
| Robert Weimann - 2000 - 324 str.
...text of a regular city comedy "to totters, to very rags" (3.2.9-10). Rafe performs against the text, "with all his scarfs about him, and his feathers and his rings and his knacks"; as self-embodied Summer Lord, he comes not to represent but to "present the merry month of May" (4.... | |
| Simon Barker, Hilary Hinds - 2003 - 492 str.
...speak upon a conduit with all his scarfs about him, and his feathers and his rings and his knacks. и BOY Why, sir, you do not think of our plot. What will become ofthat, then? CITIZEN Why sir, I care not what become on't. I'll have him come out, or I'll fetch him... | |
| Simon Barker, Hilary Hinds - 2003 - 492 str.
...speak upon a conduit with all his scarfs ahout him, and his feathers and his rings and his knacks. n BOY Why, sir, you do not think of our plot. What will hecome ofthat, then? CITIZEN Why sir, I care not what hecome on't. I'll have him come out, or I'll... | |
| Francis Beaumont - 2004 - 212 str.
...Puritan account of the festival, and CL speak upon a conduit, with all his scarfs about him, and 10 his feathers and his rings and his knacks. Boy. Why,...think of our plot; what will become of that, then? Citizen. Why, sir, I care not what become on't. I'll have him come out, or I'll fetch him our myself.... | |
| 452 str.
...none of you hear? Boy. Sir, your pleasure. Cit. Let Rafe come out on May day in the morning, and speak upon a Conduit with all his Scarfs about him, and...then ? Cit. Why sir, I care not what become on't, I'll have him come out, or I'll fetch him out my self, I'll have something done in honor of the City... | |
| 576 str.
...? Enter Boy. Boy. Sir, your pleasure f Cit. Let Ralph come out on May-day in the morning, and speak upon a conduit, with all his scarfs about him, and his feathers, and his rings, and his knacks h. f come} The modern editors give, " come, sing this catch :" but in the first 4to. and one of the... | |
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