The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumen7 |
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Página 12
How well this yielding rescues thee from shame ! BIRON . [ Reads . ] Item , That no woman shall come within a mile of my court.And hath this been proclaim'd ? LONG . Four days ago Biron . Let's see the penalty . [ Reads . ] ...
How well this yielding rescues thee from shame ! BIRON . [ Reads . ] Item , That no woman shall come within a mile of my court.And hath this been proclaim'd ? LONG . Four days ago Biron . Let's see the penalty . [ Reads . ] ...
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See Beaumont and Fletcher's Love's Cure , or The Martial Maid , Act II . sc . ii : " Or did the cold Muscovite beget thee , “ That lay here leiger , in the last great frost ? " Again , in Sir Henry Wotton's Definition : “ An ambassador ...
See Beaumont and Fletcher's Love's Cure , or The Martial Maid , Act II . sc . ii : " Or did the cold Muscovite beget thee , “ That lay here leiger , in the last great frost ? " Again , in Sir Henry Wotton's Definition : “ An ambassador ...
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Him I ( as my ever - esteemed duty pricks me on ) have sent to thee , to receive the meed of punishment , by thy sweet grace's officer , Antony Dull ; a man of good repute , carriage , bearing , and estimation . Dull .
Him I ( as my ever - esteemed duty pricks me on ) have sent to thee , to receive the meed of punishment , by thy sweet grace's officer , Antony Dull ; a man of good repute , carriage , bearing , and estimation . Dull .
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Affliction may one day smile again , and till then , Sit thee down , sorrow ! [ Exeúnt . { SCENE II . Another part of the same . Armado's House . Enter ARMADO and Moth . ARM .
Affliction may one day smile again , and till then , Sit thee down , sorrow ! [ Exeúnt . { SCENE II . Another part of the same . Armado's House . Enter ARMADO and Moth . ARM .
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So , in The Noble Stranger , 1640 : “ Oh , I could hug thee for this , my jovial juvinell . ” STEEVENS . -tough senior , as an appertinent title to your old time , ] Here and in two speeches above the old copies have signior , which ...
So , in The Noble Stranger , 1640 : “ Oh , I could hug thee for this , my jovial juvinell . ” STEEVENS . -tough senior , as an appertinent title to your old time , ] Here and in two speeches above the old copies have signior , which ...
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affection ancient answer Antonio appears Bass Bassanio beauty believe Biron blood bond BOYET called Christian comes common Cost doth editions editor Enter expression eyes face fair FARMER father flesh folio fool Giannetto give hand hath head hear heart heaven Henry hold Italy Johnson kind King lady Launcelot learned leave letter light live look lord lost MALONE manner master means Moth musick nature never night observed old copies passage Perhaps play pound praise pray present Princess printed quarto reason ring romances says SCENE seems sense Shakspeare speak speech stand STEEVENS suppose sweet tell term thee THEOBALD thing thou thought thousand true turn Venice WARBURTON word young