The Plays of William Shakespeare ...: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, Volume 9C. and A. Conrad & Company, 1809 |
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Page 15
... once , took fire and heat away From the best temper'd courage in his troops : For from his metal was his party steel'd ; Which once in him abated , ' all the rest Turn'd on themselves , like dull and heavy lead . And as the thing that ...
... once , took fire and heat away From the best temper'd courage in his troops : For from his metal was his party steel'd ; Which once in him abated , ' all the rest Turn'd on themselves , like dull and heavy lead . And as the thing that ...
Page 16
... once some confidence ; but it is much diminished by the subsequent note , and by my having lately ob- served that Shakspeare elsewhere uses grief for bodily pain . Fal- staff , in King Henry IV , Part I , p . 317 , speaks of " the grief ...
... once some confidence ; but it is much diminished by the subsequent note , and by my having lately ob- served that Shakspeare elsewhere uses grief for bodily pain . Fal- staff , in King Henry IV , Part I , p . 317 , speaks of " the grief ...
Page 17
... once by our author . In As you Like it , Amiens says , his voice is ragged ; and rag is em- ployed as a term of reproach in The Merry Wives of Windsor , and in Timon of Athens . See also the Epistle prefixed to Spenser's Shepherd's ...
... once by our author . In As you Like it , Amiens says , his voice is ragged ; and rag is em- ployed as a term of reproach in The Merry Wives of Windsor , and in Timon of Athens . See also the Epistle prefixed to Spenser's Shepherd's ...
Page 20
... once so much the fashion , that Linacre , the founder of the College of Physicians , formed a statute to restrain apothecaries from carry- ing the water of their patients to a doctor , and afterwards giving medicines , in consequence of ...
... once so much the fashion , that Linacre , the founder of the College of Physicians , formed a statute to restrain apothecaries from carry- ing the water of their patients to a doctor , and afterwards giving medicines , in consequence of ...
Page 35
... once on foot afford no hopes that may securely be relied on ; which is certainly not true . Malone . 2 When we mean to build , Whoever compares the rest of this speech with St. Luke , xiv , 28 , & c . will find the former to have been ...
... once on foot afford no hopes that may securely be relied on ; which is certainly not true . Malone . 2 When we mean to build , Whoever compares the rest of this speech with St. Luke , xiv , 28 , & c . will find the former to have been ...
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Common terms and phrases
alludes ancient appears Bard Bardolph battle of Agincourt believe Ben Jonson blood brother called captain Constable of France crown dead death doth duke Earl edition England English Enter Exeunt fair Falstaff father fear Fluellen folio France French give grace Hanmer Harfleur Harry hast hath heart heaven Henry VI Holinshed honour Host humour Johnson Justice Kath King Henry King Henry IV knight look lord Love's Labour's Lost majesty Malone Mason master means merry never noble numbers old copy Oldcastle passage peace perhaps Pist Pistol poet Poins Pope pray prince quarto Ritson says scene sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shal Shallow signifies Sir Dagonet sir John sir John Falstaff Sir John Oldcastle soldiers speak speech Steevens suppose sword tell thee Theobald thing thou thought unto Warburton Westmoreland word