The Yale Shakespeare: The first part of King Henry the sixth, ed. by Tucker BrookeYale University Press, 1918 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 17
Página 106
... Folios , which many mod- ern editors retain . I. i . 60 , 61. These lines illustrate the freedom with which the play everywhere alters historic fact . Two of the places named , Orleans and Poitiers , were not in English possession . The ...
... Folios , which many mod- ern editors retain . I. i . 60 , 61. These lines illustrate the freedom with which the play everywhere alters historic fact . Two of the places named , Orleans and Poitiers , were not in English possession . The ...
Página 107
... Folios have the easy mis- print ' slew ' ( with long s ) , which a very few editors are quixotic enough to champion . I. i . 131. Sir John Fastolfe . This episode of Fastolfe's cowardice is four times employed in the play . Cf. I. iv ...
... Folios have the easy mis- print ' slew ' ( with long s ) , which a very few editors are quixotic enough to champion . I. i . 131. Sir John Fastolfe . This episode of Fastolfe's cowardice is four times employed in the play . Cf. I. iv ...
Página 108
... Folio , at least , the two were identified . J. B. Henneman ( Publ . Mod . Lang . Assoc . , xv , 1900 ) gives a number of reasons for assuming that when Shakespeare chose the name Falstaff for the fat knight of Henry IV and The Merry ...
... Folio , at least , the two were identified . J. B. Henneman ( Publ . Mod . Lang . Assoc . , xv , 1900 ) gives a number of reasons for assuming that when Shakespeare chose the name Falstaff for the fat knight of Henry IV and The Merry ...
Página 109
... Folios . Though not inevitable , the change is supported by the rime , fre- quent at the close of scenes , and it has been adopted in most recent texts . On the other hand , support for the Folio reading may perhaps be found in the ...
... Folios . Though not inevitable , the change is supported by the rime , fre- quent at the close of scenes , and it has been adopted in most recent texts . On the other hand , support for the Folio reading may perhaps be found in the ...
Página 110
... Folio ; cf. II . ii . 20 and V. iv . 49 ) . Mr. Fleay attempted to find in these differences of name a clue to the play's authorship . I. ii . 131 . Saint Martin's summer . Summer in the midst of autumn . The reference is to the unsea ...
... Folio ; cf. II . ii . 20 and V. iv . 49 ) . Mr. Fleay attempted to find in these differences of name a clue to the play's authorship . I. ii . 131 . Saint Martin's summer . Summer in the midst of autumn . The reference is to the unsea ...
Términos y frases comunes
Alarum Alen Alençon arms Bast battle Battle of Patay Bedford blood Bordeaux brave Cæsar Char chroniclers crown Dauphin dead death doth Duke of Alençon Duke of Burgundy Duke of York Edmund Mortimer Edward Edward II England English Enter Charles Enter Talbot Exeter Exeunt Exit farewell father fight foes Folio French Frenchmen give Gloucester Grace hand hast hath heart heavens Henry the Sixth Henry VI Henry's Holinshed honour Joan la Pucelle Joan of Arc Joan's King Henry knight Lord Talbot Lucy madam Margaret Marlowe Mess Modern editors ne'er noble Patay peace play pluck prince prisoner Protector queen regent Reig Reignier Richard Plantagenet Roan rose Rouen Saint Salisbury Shakespeare siege Sir John Fastolfe soldiers Somerset Suffolk sword Tamburlaine Temple Garden thee thou art thou canst thou shalt Tower town uncle unto valiant vnto warlike Warwick words
Pasajes populares
Página 39 - Will I upon thy party wear this rose : And here I prophesy ; — This brawl to-day Grown to this faction, in the Temple garden, Shall send, between the red rose and the white, A thousand souls to death and deadly night.
Página 13 - Glory is like a circle in the water, Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself, Till by broad spreading it disperse to nought.
Página 1 - HUNG be the heavens with black, yield day to night ! Comets, importing change of times and states, Brandish your crystal tresses in the sky, And with them scourge the bad revolting stars, That have consented unto Henry's death ! King Henry the Fifth, too famous to live long ! England ne'er lost a king of so much worth.