Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan ProseJohn Dover Wilson The University Press, 1913 - 291 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 6-10 de 72
Página 20
... manner is ( as I think it is in other like corporations ) that when players of interludes come to town , they first attend the mayor , to inform him what nobleman's servants they are , and so to get licence for their public playing ...
... manner is ( as I think it is in other like corporations ) that when players of interludes come to town , they first attend the mayor , to inform him what nobleman's servants they are , and so to get licence for their public playing ...
Página 25
... manner of them , I will show you as I have seen them practised myself . First , all the wild- heads of the parish , conventing together , choose them a Grand- Captain ( of all mischief ) whom they ennoble with the title of my Lord of ...
... manner of them , I will show you as I have seen them practised myself . First , all the wild- heads of the parish , conventing together , choose them a Grand- Captain ( of all mischief ) whom they ennoble with the title of my Lord of ...
Página 35
... to the rest that is before declared . Touching this Agnes Sampson , she is the only woman who , by the devil's persuasion , should have intended and put She in execution the King's Majesty's death in this manner C 2 35 WITCHCRAFT.
... to the rest that is before declared . Touching this Agnes Sampson , she is the only woman who , by the devil's persuasion , should have intended and put She in execution the King's Majesty's death in this manner C 2 35 WITCHCRAFT.
Página 36
... manner . confessed that she took a black toad , and did hang the same up by the heels three days , and collected and gathered the venom as it dropped and fell from it in an oyster shell , and kept the same venom close covered , until ...
... manner . confessed that she took a black toad , and did hang the same up by the heels three days , and collected and gathered the venom as it dropped and fell from it in an oyster shell , and kept the same venom close covered , until ...
Página 41
... manner : Whene'er thou hear my piper blow , From thy bed see that thou go ; For nightly you must with us dance , When we in circles round do prance . I love thee , son , and by the hand I carry thee to Fairy Land , Where thou shalt see ...
... manner : Whene'er thou hear my piper blow , From thy bed see that thou go ; For nightly you must with us dance , When we in circles round do prance . I love thee , son , and by the hand I carry thee to Fairy Land , Where thou shalt see ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose John Dover Wilson Vista previa limitada - 1913 |
Términos y frases comunes
abroad acquaintance amongst apparel attire beasts better body called Candle-light carbonadoed chamber Civis comedy common commonly court devil dice dinner dish divers doth drink Duke of Würtemberg England English eyes Falstaff fashion fear fellow friends FYNES MORYSON gentlemen GERVASE MARKHAM give hand hast hath head Henry IV honest honour horse idle Italy keep King labour land learning live London look Lord manner master means meat Merchant of Venice merry Midsummer Night's Dream never NICHOLAS BRETON night persons PHILIP STUBBES play players poor pounds quoth rogues saith scholars servants shew shillings sort speak STEPHEN GOSSON strange streets sundry tavern theatre thee thereof things THOMAS DEKKER THOMAS NASHE thou thought unto wherein wine withal words worthy young