Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan ProseThe University Press, 1920 - 291 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página xii
... women Part I. Shakespeare's Youth , Stratford 1564—1586 Born 1564 : son of a farmer and shopkeeper of Stratford- on - Avon : probably attends the free grammar school of the town CHAPTER II . THE COUNTRYSIDE ( Midsummer Night's Dream ...
... women Part I. Shakespeare's Youth , Stratford 1564—1586 Born 1564 : son of a farmer and shopkeeper of Stratford- on - Avon : probably attends the free grammar school of the town CHAPTER II . THE COUNTRYSIDE ( Midsummer Night's Dream ...
Página 7
... woman , the Queen absolute , as I have heretofore said : in whose name and by whose authority all things are administered . The gentlemen , which be divided into two parts , the barony or estate of lords containing barons and all that ...
... woman , the Queen absolute , as I have heretofore said : in whose name and by whose authority all things are administered . The gentlemen , which be divided into two parts , the barony or estate of lords containing barons and all that ...
Página 8
... women ( a foreign view ) Wives in England are entirely in the power of their husbands , their lives only excepted . Therefore , when they marry , they give up the surname of their father and of the family from which they are descended ...
... women ( a foreign view ) Wives in England are entirely in the power of their husbands , their lives only excepted . Therefore , when they marry , they give up the surname of their father and of the family from which they are descended ...
Página 9
... women , who do what the men ought to do both in the house and in the shops , for which services in England men are employed , nevertheless the women usually persist in retaining their customs . This is why England is called the Paradise ...
... women , who do what the men ought to do both in the house and in the shops , for which services in England men are employed , nevertheless the women usually persist in retaining their customs . This is why England is called the Paradise ...
Página 24
... women and children , old and young , even all in- differently ; and either going all together or dividing themselves into companies ,, they go some to the woods and groves , some to the hills and mountains , some to one place and some ...
... women and children , old and young , even all in- differently ; and either going all together or dividing themselves into companies ,, they go some to the woods and groves , some to the hills and mountains , some to one place and some ...
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
Agnes Sampson amongst apparel beasts better body called carbonadoed chamber cock comedy common commonly court dance devil dice divers doth drink Duke of Würtemberg ears England English fashion fear fellow FYNES MORYSON gentlemen GERVASE MARKHAM give Hamlet hand hast hath head honest honour horse idle keep King labour land learning live London look Lord Majesty manner master means meat Merchant of Venice merchants merry Midsummer Night's Dream never NICHOLAS BRETON night PHILIP STUBBES play players playhouse poor quoth REGINALD SCOT Robin rogues saith scholars servants shew shillings ship SIR THOMAS OVERBURY sometimes sort souls speak stage STEPHEN GOSSON sweet tavern theatre thee thereof things THOMAS DEKKER THOMAS NASHE thou unto walk wherein wine witches withal women word young