Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose |
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Página xv
THE COURT • ( Love's Labour's Lost , Much Ado About Nothing , Hamlet , Historical Plays ) PAGE 190 • 191 194 • The ideal , the other side of the picture § 1 . QUEEN ELIZABETH AT GREENWICH § 2 . THE COURTIER § 3 .
THE COURT • ( Love's Labour's Lost , Much Ado About Nothing , Hamlet , Historical Plays ) PAGE 190 • 191 194 • The ideal , the other side of the picture § 1 . QUEEN ELIZABETH AT GREENWICH § 2 . THE COURTIER § 3 .
Página 4
They excel in dancing and music , for they are active and lively , though of a thicker make than the French ; they cut their hair close on the middle of the head , letting it grow on either side ; they are good sailors , and better ...
They excel in dancing and music , for they are active and lively , though of a thicker make than the French ; they cut their hair close on the middle of the head , letting it grow on either side ; they are good sailors , and better ...
Página 19
9 JOHN EARLE , Micro - cosmographie 1628 A Cock - fight At Stanwick , my son had going with his hens a young cock of a stout and large breed , with very large jollops hanging down on either side of his beak , and a friend of his giving ...
9 JOHN EARLE , Micro - cosmographie 1628 A Cock - fight At Stanwick , my son had going with his hens a young cock of a stout and large breed , with very large jollops hanging down on either side of his beak , and a friend of his giving ...
Página 20
But the young cock turning again , and they falling to a new fight , very sharp and eager on both sides , at last the old cock finding his old hold of the young cock's jollops taken from him , was fain to cry creak , and to run away as ...
But the young cock turning again , and they falling to a new fight , very sharp and eager on both sides , at last the old cock finding his old hold of the young cock's jollops taken from him , was fain to cry creak , and to run away as ...
Página 37
So as , if there be any children unbaptised , or not guarded with the sign of the cross , or orisons ; then the witches may and do catch them from their mothers ' sides in the night , or out of their cradles , or otherwise kill them ...
So as , if there be any children unbaptised , or not guarded with the sign of the cross , or orisons ; then the witches may and do catch them from their mothers ' sides in the night , or out of their cradles , or otherwise kill them ...
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Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose John Dover Wilson Vista previa limitada - 1913 |
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