The Plays of William Shakespeare, Volym 7A. Leathley, 1766 |
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Sida 13
... night o'erfhade thy day , and death thy life ! Glo . Curfe not thyfelf , fair creature : thou art both , Anne . I would I were , to be reveng'd on thee . Glo . It is a quarrel moft unnatural , To be reveng'd on him that loveth thee ...
... night o'erfhade thy day , and death thy life ! Glo . Curfe not thyfelf , fair creature : thou art both , Anne . I would I were , to be reveng'd on thee . Glo . It is a quarrel moft unnatural , To be reveng'd on him that loveth thee ...
Sida 29
... night , So full of ugly fights , of ghaftly dreams , That , as I am a Chriftian faithful man , ( 2 ) I would not spend another fuch a night , ( 2 ) Faithful man . ] Not an infidel . B 3 Though Though ' twere to buy a world of happy days.
... night , So full of ugly fights , of ghaftly dreams , That , as I am a Chriftian faithful man , ( 2 ) I would not spend another fuch a night , ( 2 ) Faithful man . ] Not an infidel . B 3 Though Though ' twere to buy a world of happy days.
Sida 30
... methought , the melancholy flood , With that grim ferry - man , which Poets write of , ( 2 ) That woo'd the fimy bottom.- ] By feeming to gaze upon it . Unto Unto the Kingdom of perpetual Night . The first that 30 KING RICHARD III .
... methought , the melancholy flood , With that grim ferry - man , which Poets write of , ( 2 ) That woo'd the fimy bottom.- ] By feeming to gaze upon it . Unto Unto the Kingdom of perpetual Night . The first that 30 KING RICHARD III .
Sida 31
... night morning , and the noon - tide night , Princes have but their titles for their glories , ( 6 ) An ( 3 ) Fleeting is the fame as changing fides . ( 4 ) O God ! if my deep prayers , & c . ] The four following lines have been added ...
... night morning , and the noon - tide night , Princes have but their titles for their glories , ( 6 ) An ( 3 ) Fleeting is the fame as changing fides . ( 4 ) O God ! if my deep prayers , & c . ] The four following lines have been added ...
Sida 40
... night ; I thank my God for my humility . Queen . A holy - day fhall this be kept hereafter ; I would to God , all ftrifes were well compounded ! -My Sovereign Lord , I do befeech your Highness To take our Brother Clarence to your grace ...
... night ; I thank my God for my humility . Queen . A holy - day fhall this be kept hereafter ; I would to God , all ftrifes were well compounded ! -My Sovereign Lord , I do befeech your Highness To take our Brother Clarence to your grace ...
Vanliga ord och fraser
againſt anfwer Anne becauſe beft better blood Buck Buckingham Cardinal Catef Catesby caufe Cham Clarence confcience Cordelia curfe daughter death doth Duke Duke of Norfolk Edmund Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fafe faid father fear feems fenfe fent fhall fhould fifter fince firft flain fleep folio fome Fool forrow foul fpeak fpeech friends ftand ftill fuch fuppofe give Glofter Gonerill Grace Haftings hath heart heav'n himſelf honour horfe Kent King lady laft Lear lefs Lord Lord Chamberlain Lord Stanley Madam mafter moft moſt muft muſt myſelf noble paffage perfon pleaſe pleaſure poor pray prefent Prince purpoſe quarto Queen reafon Rich Richard SCENE Shakespeare ſhall Sir Thomas Lovell ſpeak tell thee thefe THEOBALD theſe thofe thoſe thou underſtand uſed WARBURTON whofe wife word worfe