Publications, Volumen20Shakespeare Society, and to be had of W. Skeffington, 1844 |
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Página xx
... foole , And soe you may him call , Squeaking , & c . You may see his goodly counterfeit Hung up on everie wall . You never can misse the likennesse , For everie bodie knowes , Squeaking , & c . His fathers lovelie visnomie , His two ...
... foole , And soe you may him call , Squeaking , & c . You may see his goodly counterfeit Hung up on everie wall . You never can misse the likennesse , For everie bodie knowes , Squeaking , & c . His fathers lovelie visnomie , His two ...
Página xxi
... foole he is a Puritane , Goose son1 we call him right , Squeaking , & c . A most notorious piedbalde foole , For sure a hippocrite ; Of a verie numerous familie . Of the familie of Love , like a player , he is not , Squeaking , & c ...
... foole he is a Puritane , Goose son1 we call him right , Squeaking , & c . A most notorious piedbalde foole , For sure a hippocrite ; Of a verie numerous familie . Of the familie of Love , like a player , he is not , Squeaking , & c ...
Página xxii
... foole Then ever I bee , And not of so merie a familie . This one you perchance might know By his dresse and his shape , Squeaking , & c . Is a poett , or if he is not soe , He is a poett ape : They are of the same familie . He has got ...
... foole Then ever I bee , And not of so merie a familie . This one you perchance might know By his dresse and his shape , Squeaking , & c . Is a poett , or if he is not soe , He is a poett ape : They are of the same familie . He has got ...
Página xxiii
... foole , Squeaking , & c . Who thinkes you nothing can be done But by olde Galen his rule : Of a verie poysoning familie . He killeth us all I weene With such skill and arte , Squeaking , & c . He makes dying quite a pleasure : When ...
... foole , Squeaking , & c . Who thinkes you nothing can be done But by olde Galen his rule : Of a verie poysoning familie . He killeth us all I weene With such skill and arte , Squeaking , & c . He makes dying quite a pleasure : When ...
Página xxiv
... foole : Noe , it is not this ; I lye . Yes it is , I sweare by Cupido : Hist , you may heare him sighe : Of a verie windie familie . All the livelong wearie daie With his armes acrosse , Squeaking , & c . Singing this dittie to his lute ...
... foole : Noe , it is not this ; I lye . Yes it is , I sweare by Cupido : Hist , you may heare him sighe : Of a verie windie familie . All the livelong wearie daie With his armes acrosse , Squeaking , & c . Singing this dittie to his lute ...
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Términos y frases comunes
alewife amongst the rest angell Gabriell answered askt ballad Bartolo Bedford town began called Canterburie chamber clowne Cobler Collier commended comming crane cuckold daye doore downe euery faine faire favour fell fellow ferrex foole Friar Onyon friends gentleman gentlewoman Gracechurch Street hart hath haue head heare heere himselfe honest hornes horse husband Jests knave knew lady laugh Lidgate Lionello Lisetta Lond London longd looked Lord maid Marry master merry Mizaldo mother neere neighbours never night passe Pisa play players pleasant poore pope Porrex PURGATORY Queen quoth Tarlton Richard Richard Tarlton Robert Greene Robin Goodfellow saies Tarlton sate sayes Shakespeare shee shewe Shoreditch Signior Lamberto smilde Smith sonne Squeaking stept sundry tale Tarl Tereus thee thinke thou thought told tooke unto vickar wench whereupon whome wife woman woords yong
Pasajes populares
Página xviii - And let those that play your clowns, speak no more than is set down for them : for there be of them, that will themselves laugh, to set on some quantity of barren spectators to laugh too ; though, in the mean time, some necessary question of the play be then to be considered: that's villainous; and . shows a most pitiful ambition in the fool that uses it.
Página xxvii - Our Tarlton was master of his faculty. When queen Elizabeth was serious (I dare not say sullen) and out of good humour, he could un-dumpish her at his pleasure. Her highest favourites would, in some cases, go to Tarlton before they would go to the queen, and he was their usher to prepare their advantageous access unto her. In a word, he told the queen more of her faults than most of her chaplains, and cured her melancholy better than all of her physicians.
Página x - ... and exquisite actors for all matters, they were entertained into the service of divers great lords, out of which companies there were twelve of the best chosen, and, at the request of Sir Francis Walsingham, they were sworn the Queen's servants and were allowed wages and liveries as grooms of the chamber. And until this year 1583, the Queen had no players.
Página 54 - The next, by his sute of russet, his buttond cap, his taber, his standing on the toe, and other tricks, I knew to be either the body or resemblance of Tarlton, who, liuing, for his pleasant conceits was of all men liked, and dying, for mirth left not his like.
Página 25 - Henry the fift, hit Tarlton a sound boxe indeed, which made the people laugh the more because it was he, but anon the judge goes in, and immediately Tarlton in his...
Página 95 - Divers yong gentlemen proffered large feoffments, but in vaine, a maide shee must bee still: till at last an olde doctor in the towne, that professed phisicke, became a sutor to her, who was a welcome man to her father, in that he was one of the welthiest men in all Pisa; a tall stripling...
Página 100 - ... doore, who went home with a flea in his eare to his lodging. Well, the next day he went againe to meete his doctor, whome hee found in his woonted walke. What newes...
Página 134 - Beside, they open our crosse-biting,1 our conny-catching, our traines, our traps, our gins, our snares, our subtilties : for no sooner have we a tricke of deceipt, but they make it common, singing jigs and making jeasts of us, that everie boy can point out our houses as they passe by.
Página xliii - Greene's Vision : Written at the instant of his death, conteyning a penitent passion for the folly of his pen, 4to., bl.
Página xxvii - Bourbidge, and Edward Allen, two such Actors, as no age must ever look to see the like...