The Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare: Printed from the Text of J. Payne Collier, ... with the Life and Portrait of the Poet ; Complete in Seven Volumes, Band 6Bernh. Tauchnitz Jun., 1843 |
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Seite 4
... tongue our trumpeter , With other muniments and petty helps In this our fabric , if that they Men . ' Fore me , this fellow speaks ! What then ? - what then ? what then ? 2 Cit . Should by the cormorant belly be restrain'd , Who is the ...
... tongue our trumpeter , With other muniments and petty helps In this our fabric , if that they Men . ' Fore me , this fellow speaks ! What then ? - what then ? what then ? 2 Cit . Should by the cormorant belly be restrain'd , Who is the ...
Seite 19
... tongue From every meaner man . Mar. Come I too late ? Com . Ay , if you come not in the blood of others , But mantled in your own . Mar. O ! let me clip you In arms as sound , as when I woo'd ; in heart As merry , as when our nuptial ...
... tongue From every meaner man . Mar. Come I too late ? Com . Ay , if you come not in the blood of others , But mantled in your own . Mar. O ! let me clip you In arms as sound , as when I woo'd ; in heart As merry , as when our nuptial ...
Seite 32
... tongues speak of him , and the bleared sights Are spectacled to see him : your prattling nurse Into a rapture lets her baby cry While she chats him : the kitchen malkin pins Her richest lockram ' bout her reechy neck , Clambering the ...
... tongues speak of him , and the bleared sights Are spectacled to see him : your prattling nurse Into a rapture lets her baby cry While she chats him : the kitchen malkin pins Her richest lockram ' bout her reechy neck , Clambering the ...
Seite 35
... tongues to be silent , and not confess so much , were a kind of ingrateful injury ; to report otherwise were a malice , that , giving itself the lie , would pluck reproof and rebuke from every ear that heard it . 1 Off . No more of him ...
... tongues to be silent , and not confess so much , were a kind of ingrateful injury ; to report otherwise were a malice , that , giving itself the lie , would pluck reproof and rebuke from every ear that heard it . 1 Off . No more of him ...
Seite 40
... tongues into those wounds , and speak for them ; so , if he tell us his noble deeds , we must also tell him our noble acceptance of them . Ingratitude is mon- strous , and for the multitude to be ingrateful were to make a monster of the ...
... tongues into those wounds , and speak for them ; so , if he tell us his noble deeds , we must also tell him our noble acceptance of them . Ingratitude is mon- strous , and for the multitude to be ingrateful were to make a monster of the ...
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