The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 4,Edizione 15 |
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Pagina 10
... When I was got , I'll send his soul to Hell . Come , Lady , I will shew thee to my kin ; And they shall say , when Richard me begot , If thou hadst said him nay , it had been sin : Who says it was , he lies ; I say ' twas not .
... When I was got , I'll send his soul to Hell . Come , Lady , I will shew thee to my kin ; And they shall say , when Richard me begot , If thou hadst said him nay , it had been sin : Who says it was , he lies ; I say ' twas not .
Pagina 14
By my soul , I think His father never was so true begot : It cannot be , an if thou wert his mother . ELI . There's a good mother , Boy , that blots thy father . Const . There's a good grandam , Boy , that would blot thee . Aust .
By my soul , I think His father never was so true begot : It cannot be , an if thou wert his mother . ELI . There's a good mother , Boy , that blots thy father . Const . There's a good grandam , Boy , that would blot thee . Aust .
Pagina 18
-Stand in his face , to contradict his claim . FIRST Cit . Till you compound whose right is worthiest , We for the worthiest hold the right from both . K. JOHN . Then God forgive the sin of all those souls , That to their everlasting ...
-Stand in his face , to contradict his claim . FIRST Cit . Till you compound whose right is worthiest , We for the worthiest hold the right from both . K. JOHN . Then God forgive the sin of all those souls , That to their everlasting ...
Pagina 21
... charged to the mouths , Till their soul - fearing * clamours have brawl'd down The flinty ribs of this contemptuous City : I'ld play incessantly upon these jades , Even till unfenced Desolation Leave them as naked as the ...
... charged to the mouths , Till their soul - fearing * clamours have brawl'd down The flinty ribs of this contemptuous City : I'ld play incessantly upon these jades , Even till unfenced Desolation Leave them as naked as the ...
Pagina 23
I see a yielding in the looks of France ; Mark , how they whisper : urge them , while their souls Are capable of this ambition , Lest zeal , now melted by the windy breath 460 a 470 ACT II Sc . I 480 490 Of soft petitions.
I see a yielding in the looks of France ; Mark , how they whisper : urge them , while their souls Are capable of this ambition , Lest zeal , now melted by the windy breath 460 a 470 ACT II Sc . I 480 490 Of soft petitions.
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Parole e frasi comuni
ACT II Sc ACT III Angiers answer arms ARTH Arthur Attendants Aust Bast Bastard bear better BLANCH blood break breath brother callid Cardinal child Const curse dead death Dolphin dost doth England English Enter exeunt eyes face fair faith father Faulconbridge fear field fire foot Fortune France French friends gentle give grief hand hath head hear heart Heaven Highness hold holy honour Hubert iron JAMES GURNEY keep King John Lady land leave Lewis lies lion live look Lord Majesty means mother mouth never night noble PAND peace Philip Prince Richard SALISBURY SCENE shame side Sir Robert soul speak spirit stand strong sweet tell thee thine thou thou shalt tongue Town true truth wrong young