The life of King Henry VIIICassell, 1908 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 26
Page 15
... once was mistress of the field and flour | ish'd , I'll hang my head and perish . ' " Was it possible to believe that these lines were written by Shakspere ? I had often amused myself with attempting to trace the gradual change of his ...
... once was mistress of the field and flour | ish'd , I'll hang my head and perish . ' " Was it possible to believe that these lines were written by Shakspere ? I had often amused myself with attempting to trace the gradual change of his ...
Page 16
... once disclosed an idea cannot wait to work it orderly out ; the same daring confidence in the resources of language , which plunges headlong into a sentence without knowing how it is to come forth ; the same careless metre which ...
... once disclosed an idea cannot wait to work it orderly out ; the same daring confidence in the resources of language , which plunges headlong into a sentence without knowing how it is to come forth ; the same careless metre which ...
Page 18
William Shakespeare. the first Act , I had seemed to be passing all at once out of the language of nature into that of convention , so in passing from the second to the third scene of the second Act ( in which Anne Bullen appears , I may ...
William Shakespeare. the first Act , I had seemed to be passing all at once out of the language of nature into that of convention , so in passing from the second to the third scene of the second Act ( in which Anne Bullen appears , I may ...
Page 25
... attendants . SCENE - Chiefly in LONDON and WESTMINSTER ; once , at KIMBOLTON PROLOGUE I COME no more to make you laugh : things now That bear a weighty and a serious brow Sad , high , and working , full of state 25 TEXT OF PLAY.
... attendants . SCENE - Chiefly in LONDON and WESTMINSTER ; once , at KIMBOLTON PROLOGUE I COME no more to make you laugh : things now That bear a weighty and a serious brow Sad , high , and working , full of state 25 TEXT OF PLAY.
Page 43
... once weak ones , is Not ours , or not allowed ; what worst , as oft , Hitting a grosser quality , is cried up For our best act . If we shall stand still , In fear our motion will be mocked or carped at 43 ACT ONE SCENE TWO King Henry VIII.
... once weak ones , is Not ours , or not allowed ; what worst , as oft , Hitting a grosser quality , is cried up For our best act . If we shall stand still , In fear our motion will be mocked or carped at 43 ACT ONE SCENE TWO King Henry VIII.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Anne Bullen Archbishop bear Bishop bless Buck CAMPEIUS Canterbury Cardinal WOLSEY Cardinal's cause Cham conscience coronation council-chamber Court Cran Cranmer Crom Cromwell dare Duchess Duchess of NORFOLK Duke of Buckingham Duke of NORFOLK Duke of Suffolk Earl of SURREY England Exeunt Exit fair fall Farewell favour fear Fletcher follows Gent Gentlemen give grace Grif Griffith hand hath hear heart Heaven Henry VIII highness Holinshed holy honest honour Kath KING HENRY King's lady late leave live Lord Cardinal Lord Chamberlain Lord Sands lordship madam malice master never noble patience peace pity play pleasure poor porringer Pr'ythee pray prayers princes Queen Katharine reverend royal scene sent Shaks Shakspere Shakspere's SIR HENRY GUILDFORD Sir Thomas Lovell soul speak stand Surv tell thank thee There's thou tongue trumpets truth virtue Winchester Wolsey woman