The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, Volume 16 |
From inside the book
Page 19
Hath love in thy old blood no living fire ? Edward ' s seven sons , whereof thyself
art one , Were as seven phials of his sacred blood , Or seven fair branches
springing from one root : Some of those seven are dried by nature ' s course ,
Some of ...
Hath love in thy old blood no living fire ? Edward ' s seven sons , whereof thyself
art one , Were as seven phials of his sacred blood , Or seven fair branches
springing from one root : Some of those seven are dried by nature ' s course ,
Some of ...
Page 30
For that our kingdom ' s earth should not be soild With that dear blood which it
hath fostered ' ; And for our eyes do hate the dire aspect Of civil wounds * plough '
d up with neighbours ' swords ; 2 - - hath thrown his WARDER down . ] A warder ...
For that our kingdom ' s earth should not be soild With that dear blood which it
hath fostered ' ; And for our eyes do hate the dire aspect Of civil wounds * plough '
d up with neighbours ' swords ; 2 - - hath thrown his WARDER down . ] A warder ...
Page 180
Steevens . If there be no corruption in the text , I believe Shakspeare meant ,
however licentiously , to say , “ No more shall this soil have the lips of her thirsty
entrance , or mouth , daubed with the blood of her own children . ” “ Her lips , " in
my ...
Steevens . If there be no corruption in the text , I believe Shakspeare meant ,
however licentiously , to say , “ No more shall this soil have the lips of her thirsty
entrance , or mouth , daubed with the blood of her own children . ” “ Her lips , " in
my ...
Page 186
The earl of Douglas is discomfited ; Ten thousand bold Scots , two - and - twenty
knights , Balk ' d in their own blood ” , did sir Walter see 4 Stain ' d with the
variation of each soil - ] No circumstance could have been better chosen to mark
the ...
The earl of Douglas is discomfited ; Ten thousand bold Scots , two - and - twenty
knights , Balk ' d in their own blood ” , did sir Walter see 4 Stain ' d with the
variation of each soil - ] No circumstance could have been better chosen to mark
the ...
Page 187
On Holmedon ' s plains : Of prisoners , Hotspur took Mordake earl of Fife , and
eldest son To beaten Douglas • ; and the earls of Athol , “ Balk ' d , in their own
blood , ” & c . “ Piled up in a ridge , and in their own blood , ” & c . But without this
...
On Holmedon ' s plains : Of prisoners , Hotspur took Mordake earl of Fife , and
eldest son To beaten Douglas • ; and the earls of Athol , “ Balk ' d , in their own
blood , ” & c . “ Piled up in a ridge , and in their own blood , ” & c . But without this
...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient answer appears arms bear believe better blood brother called comes common cousin crown death doth duke Earl edition England English Enter expression eyes face fair Falstaff father fear folio France French friends give given grace hand hast hath head hear heart heaven Holinshed honour horse John Johnson kind King Henry Lady land live look lord MALONE master means meet mentioned nature never night noble observed old copies once passage peace Percy perhaps person play Poins present prince printed probably quarto Queen Rich Richard says scene seems sense Shakspeare Sir John speak speech stand STEEVENS suppose sweet sword taken tell term thee thing Thomas thou thought true WARBURTON word York