Twenty of the Plays of Shakespeare: The taming of the shrew. 1631. The history of King Lear. 1608. The troublesome raigne of King Iohn, in two parts. 1611. The tragedie of Richard the Second. 1615. The historie of Henry the Fourth. 1613. The second part of Henry the Fourth. 1600 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 5
Page
Not possible : for who shall beare your part , And be in Padua heere Vincentio's
fonne , Keepe house , and ply his booke , welcome his friends , Visit his
countriemen , and banquet them ? Luc . Bafta , content thee : for I haue it full . We
haue ...
Not possible : for who shall beare your part , And be in Padua heere Vincentio's
fonne , Keepe house , and ply his booke , welcome his friends , Visit his
countriemen , and banquet them ? Luc . Bafta , content thee : for I haue it full . We
haue ...
Page
and keepe in a doore , and thou shalt haue more , then two tens to a score . Lear
. This is nothing foole . Foole . Then like the breath of an vnfeed lawyer , you
gaue me nothing for it ; can you make no vse of nothing vocle ? Lear . Why no
boy ...
and keepe in a doore , and thou shalt haue more , then two tens to a score . Lear
. This is nothing foole . Foole . Then like the breath of an vnfeed lawyer , you
gaue me nothing for it ; can you make no vse of nothing vocle ? Lear . Why no
boy ...
Page
Let the great gods that keepe this dreadfull Thundring ore our heads , finde out
their enemies now , Tremble thou wretch that hast within thee Vndivulged crimes
, vnwhipt of iustice , Hide thee thou bloudy hand , thou periur'd , and Thou simular
...
Let the great gods that keepe this dreadfull Thundring ore our heads , finde out
their enemies now , Tremble thou wretch that hast within thee Vndivulged crimes
, vnwhipt of iustice , Hide thee thou bloudy hand , thou periur'd , and Thou simular
...
Page
Edg . Take heed of the foule fiend , obey thy parents , keepe thy words iustly ,
sweare not , commit not with mans sworne spouse , fet not thy sweet heart on
proud array ; Toms a cold . Lear . What hast thou beene ? Edg . A seruingman ,
proud ...
Edg . Take heed of the foule fiend , obey thy parents , keepe thy words iustly ,
sweare not , commit not with mans sworne spouse , fet not thy sweet heart on
proud array ; Toms a cold . Lear . What hast thou beene ? Edg . A seruingman ,
proud ...
Page
Ile keepe them all . By God he shall not haue a Scot of them , No , if a Scot would
saue his foule , he shall not . Ile keepe them , by this hand . Wor . You start away ,
And lend no eare vnto my purposes : Those prisoners you shall keepe . Hot .
Ile keepe them all . By God he shall not haue a Scot of them , No , if a Scot would
saue his foule , he shall not . Ile keepe them , by this hand . Wor . You start away ,
And lend no eare vnto my purposes : Those prisoners you shall keepe . Hot .
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
againe againſt armes Arthur Baft beare better brother comes crowne daughter dead death doth downe duke England Enter euen euery Exeunt Exit eyes face faire fall father feare felfe firſt follow foole fortune foule France friends giue grace hand Harry haſt hath haue head heare heart heauen heere hold honour horſe houſe Iohn Kate keepe Kent king lady land Lear leaue liue lohn looke lord loue maſter meanes meete moſt mother muſt neuer night noble once peace Philip pleaſe poore pray Prince Richard ſay ſee ſelfe ſet Shal ſhall ſhe ſhould ſir ſome ſonne ſpeake ſtand ſuch ſweete tell thee theſe thine thing thinke thou art thought tongue true vnto vpon whoſe wife wilt Yorke