Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan ProseUniversity Press, 1956 - 293 páginas |
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Página 1
... England .... Richard II , II . i . 40–50 The air of England is temperate , but thick , cloudy and misty , and Caesar witnesseth that the cold is not so piercing in England as in France . For the sun draweth up the vapours of the sea ...
... England .... Richard II , II . i . 40–50 The air of England is temperate , but thick , cloudy and misty , and Caesar witnesseth that the cold is not so piercing in England as in France . For the sun draweth up the vapours of the sea ...
Página 4
... England with the Norman conquest . Their houses are commonly of two stories , except in London , where they are of three and four , though but seldom of four ; they are built of wood ; those of the richer sort with bricks ; their roofs ...
... England with the Norman conquest . Their houses are commonly of two stories , except in London , where they are of three and four , though but seldom of four ; they are built of wood ; those of the richer sort with bricks ; their roofs ...
Página 78
... England is for the most part plain , or consisting of pleasant hills , yet the ways far from London are so dirty as hired coachmen do not ordinarily take any long journeys , but only for one or two days any way from London , the ways so ...
... England is for the most part plain , or consisting of pleasant hills , yet the ways far from London are so dirty as hired coachmen do not ordinarily take any long journeys , but only for one or two days any way from London , the ways so ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose John Dover Wilson Vista previa limitada - 1913 |
Life in Shakespeare's England; a Book of Elizabethan Prose John Dover Wilson Sin vista previa disponible - 2019 |
Términos y frases comunes
amongst apparel Arimaspi beasts beggars better body called Captain carbonadoed chamber comedy command common commonly court dance dice dinner dish divers doth drink Duke of Würtemberg England English Falstaff fashion fear fellow friends FYNES MORYSON gentlemen GERVASE MARKHAM give hand hast hath head Henry IV honest honour horse hour King labour land learning live London look Lord Majesty manner master means meat Merchant of Venice merchants merry Midsummer Night's Dream morning never NICHOLAS BRETON night persons PHILIP STUBBES play players poor quoth ready rest Robin rogues saith scholars servants shew shillings ships sort speak STEPHEN GOSSON strange sundry tavern theatre thee thereof things THOMAS DEKKER THOMAS NASHE thou trenchers unto wherein wine withal word worthy young