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Página xv
Then if all these be so , I am new wed , so ends old marriage woe ; And in your eyes so lovingly being wed , We hope your hands will bring us to our bed . Even the prose , he thinks , betrays a family likeness , e.g. in Thaliard's ...
Then if all these be so , I am new wed , so ends old marriage woe ; And in your eyes so lovingly being wed , We hope your hands will bring us to our bed . Even the prose , he thinks , betrays a family likeness , e.g. in Thaliard's ...
Página xxi
The Bawd describes him as " a fauorer of our calling , one that will as soone haue his hand in his pocket , as such a pretty dilling as thou shalt come in his eye , and not as most of our Gentle- men doe , draw it out empty ...
The Bawd describes him as " a fauorer of our calling , one that will as soone haue his hand in his pocket , as such a pretty dilling as thou shalt come in his eye , and not as most of our Gentle- men doe , draw it out empty ...
Página xxiii
There with maudlin emotion , wiping the tears from Marina's eyes , and longing to reward her virtue with a chaste kiss , Lysimachus whimpers out , " I hither came with thoughtes intemperate , foule and deformed , the which your paines ...
There with maudlin emotion , wiping the tears from Marina's eyes , and longing to reward her virtue with a chaste kiss , Lysimachus whimpers out , " I hither came with thoughtes intemperate , foule and deformed , the which your paines ...
Página 3
To sing a song that old was sung , From ashes ancient Gower is come , Assuming man's infirmities , To glad your ear , and please your eyes . It hath been sung at festivals , On ember - eves and holy - ales ; 5 6. holy - ales ] Steevens ...
To sing a song that old was sung , From ashes ancient Gower is come , Assuming man's infirmities , To glad your ear , and please your eyes . It hath been sung at festivals , On ember - eves and holy - ales ; 5 6. holy - ales ] Steevens ...
Página 6
What now ensues , to the judgement of your eye I give , my cause who best can justify . SCENE I. - Antioch . A Room in the Palace . 35 40 [ Exit . Enter ANTIOCHUS , PERICLES , and Attendants . Ant . Young Prince of Tyre , you have at ...
What now ensues , to the judgement of your eye I give , my cause who best can justify . SCENE I. - Antioch . A Room in the Palace . 35 40 [ Exit . Enter ANTIOCHUS , PERICLES , and Attendants . Ant . Young Prince of Tyre , you have at ...
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action Acts Antiochus appears arms Arranged Bawd better Boult bring brought Cleon comes Compare conjecture course daughter dead death Divided doth doubt Dyce edition Editors ending Enter Exeunt eyes faith father fear Fish fortune frequent give gods gold Gower hand hast hath hear heaven honour keep kind king Knight lady leave line in Qq live look lord Lysimachus Malone Marina master mean mind nature never novel original pare passage perhaps Pericles piece play poor present prince prose in Qq Quarto queen quotes rest Rowe SCENE Second seems sense Shakespeare shore speak Steevens story Tale tell Thai Thaisa thee thing Third thou thought Tyre unto Wilkins's wind Winter's wish worth