Second Part of King Henry IVWilliam Heinemann, 1904 - 126 |
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Strona 44
... Hang yourself , you muddy conger , hang yourself ! HOST . By my troth , this is the old fashion ; you two never meet but you fall to some discord : you are both , i ' good truth , as rheumatic as two dry toasts ; you cannot one bear ...
... Hang yourself , you muddy conger , hang yourself ! HOST . By my troth , this is the old fashion ; you two never meet but you fall to some discord : you are both , i ' good truth , as rheumatic as two dry toasts ; you cannot one bear ...
Strona 47
... hang him , rogue ! he lives upon mouldy stewed prunes and dried cakes . A captain ! God's light , these villains will make the word as odious as the word occupy ; which was an excellent good word before it was ill sorted : therefore ...
... hang him , rogue ! he lives upon mouldy stewed prunes and dried cakes . A captain ! God's light , these villains will make the word as odious as the word occupy ; which was an excellent good word before it was ill sorted : therefore ...
Strona 50
... a good pantler , a ' would ha ' chipped bread well . DOL . They say Poins has a good wit . FAL , He a good wit ? hang him , baboon ! his wit's as thick as Tewksbury mustard ; there's no more 50 [ ACT II . SECOND PART OF.
... a good pantler , a ' would ha ' chipped bread well . DOL . They say Poins has a good wit . FAL , He a good wit ? hang him , baboon ! his wit's as thick as Tewksbury mustard ; there's no more 50 [ ACT II . SECOND PART OF.
Strona 57
... hanging them With deafening clamour in the slippery clouds , That , with the hurly , death itself awakes ? Canst thou , O partial sleep , give thy repose To the wet sea - boy in an hour so rude , And in the calmest and most stillest ...
... hanging them With deafening clamour in the slippery clouds , That , with the hurly , death itself awakes ? Canst thou , O partial sleep , give thy repose To the wet sea - boy in an hour so rude , And in the calmest and most stillest ...
Strona 80
... hangs resolved correction in the arm That was uprear'd to execution . HAST . Besides , the king hath wasted all his rods On late offenders , that he now doth lack The very instruments of chastisement : So that his power , like to a ...
... hangs resolved correction in the arm That was uprear'd to execution . HAST . Besides , the king hath wasted all his rods On late offenders , that he now doth lack The very instruments of chastisement : So that his power , like to a ...
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an't ARCH archbishop Archbishop of York BARD bear beseech blood brother Bullcalf captain CLAR Colevile comes cousin Davy dead death dost doth earl Eastcheap Enter FALSTAFF Exeunt Exit faith FANG father fear fellow friends GEORGE BRANDES give GLOU Gloucestershire grace grief Harry hath head hear heart heaven hither honest honour HOST hostess HUMPHREY OF GLOUCESTER John of Lancaster justice knave look Lord Bardolph Lord Chief-Justice Lord Hastings Lord Mowbray Lord of Westmoreland lordship majesty marry Master Bardolph Master Robert Shallow Master Shallow Master Silence merry Mistress Mouldy MoWB Mowbray night Northumberland peace PIST Pistol POINS pray thee prick PRINCE HENRY PRINCE JOHN rascal Re-enter rogue Rumour sack SCENE SHAL Shrewsbury sick Sir John Falstaff sleep speak swaggerers sweet sword Tamburlaine tell there's thine thing thou art tongue troth unto Wart WARWICK WEST whoreson word