Second Part of King Henry IVUniversity Press, 1915 - 192 |
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Strona xii
... chief of all , its account of the highway and tavern escapades of Oldcastle and the prince is the germ of the merrymaking at the Boar's Head Tavern . The play of Henry IV is the middle portion of a great dramatic epic , which opens with ...
... chief of all , its account of the highway and tavern escapades of Oldcastle and the prince is the germ of the merrymaking at the Boar's Head Tavern . The play of Henry IV is the middle portion of a great dramatic epic , which opens with ...
Strona xv
... Chief Justice . There is a dreadful suggestion of impending Justice and Reformation . Even Falstaff's resourcefulness was never set a harder task than to try to avert our eyes from approaching trouble . From the beginning of the play to ...
... Chief Justice . There is a dreadful suggestion of impending Justice and Reformation . Even Falstaff's resourcefulness was never set a harder task than to try to avert our eyes from approaching trouble . From the beginning of the play to ...
Strona xvii
... Chief Justice speak in similar strain , and so testify that in his enjoyment of the passing hour Prince Hal had been most incredibly crafty in the conceal- ment of his craft . It is not Shakespeare's insight that is at fault . He is ...
... Chief Justice speak in similar strain , and so testify that in his enjoyment of the passing hour Prince Hal had been most incredibly crafty in the conceal- ment of his craft . It is not Shakespeare's insight that is at fault . He is ...
Strona xix
... Chief Justice's scathing description of his senile infirmities . " You that are old con- sider not the capacities of us that are young ... For my voice , I have lost it with halloing , and singing of anthems ... There is not a dangerous ...
... Chief Justice's scathing description of his senile infirmities . " You that are old con- sider not the capacities of us that are young ... For my voice , I have lost it with halloing , and singing of anthems ... There is not a dangerous ...
Strona xxi
... England are at my commandment . Happy are they which have been my friends ; and woe to my lord chief justice ! " All this begets a meretricious pathos when the blow does fall , and sympathy and reason Introduction xxi.
... England are at my commandment . Happy are they which have been my friends ; and woe to my lord chief justice ! " All this begets a meretricious pathos when the blow does fall , and sympathy and reason Introduction xxi.
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Amurath Arch Archbishop backsword Bard bear beseech blood brother Bullcalf captain Clar Colevile comes cousin crown Dagonet Davy dead death Doll dost doth Earl Exeunt Exit faith Fang father fear fellow friends give Glou grace grief hand Harry Hast hath hear heart heaven hither honest honour Host hostess Hotspur humours John of Lancaster King Henry king's knave look Lord Bardolph Lord Chief Justice Lord Hastings lordship majesty marry Master Shallow Master Silence merry Mistress Mouldy Mowb Mowbray naked weapons never night noble Northumberland peace Pist Pistol Poins pray pricked Prince Hal Prince John rascal Re-enter Richard II rogue SCENE Shakespeare Shal Shrewsbury sick Sir John Falstaff speak spirit Steevens swaggerers sweet sword Tearsheet tell thee there's thing thou art tongue troth unto Warkworth Castle Wart Warwick West Westmoreland wilt word youth