The Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 8Blackie, 1890 |
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... lady with Queen Elizabeth's maid of honour , Mrs. Mary Fitton , places the first acquaintance of the poet with Herbert , then a youth of eighteen , in the spring of the year 1598. While several other theories of Shakespeare's Sonnets ...
... lady with Queen Elizabeth's maid of honour , Mrs. Mary Fitton , places the first acquaintance of the poet with Herbert , then a youth of eighteen , in the spring of the year 1598. While several other theories of Shakespeare's Sonnets ...
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... lady , " says Hamlet to the growing youth who acted the Player Queen , " your ladyship is nearer to heaven than when I saw you last , by the altitude of a chopine . Pray God , your voice , like a piece of uncurrent gold , be not cracked ...
... lady , " says Hamlet to the growing youth who acted the Player Queen , " your ladyship is nearer to heaven than when I saw you last , by the altitude of a chopine . Pray God , your voice , like a piece of uncurrent gold , be not cracked ...
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William Shakespeare. patra , Lady Macbeth , Juliet , Rosalind , Viola , Imogen , to an actress of genius , capable of entering into all his meanings , instead of to a performer of the other sex , " not old enough for a man , nor young ...
William Shakespeare. patra , Lady Macbeth , Juliet , Rosalind , Viola , Imogen , to an actress of genius , capable of entering into all his meanings , instead of to a performer of the other sex , " not old enough for a man , nor young ...
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... lady of Belmont , so richly endowed with gifts of mind , so firm of will , so buoyant of temper , so noble in her serious moods , so charming in her play , so great a giver , yet so delicate in her art of giving . From comedy ...
... lady of Belmont , so richly endowed with gifts of mind , so firm of will , so buoyant of temper , so noble in her serious moods , so charming in her play , so great a giver , yet so delicate in her art of giving . From comedy ...
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... lady : whom our isle May better boast of , than e'er Roman might Of her , whose ransack'd treasury hath task'd The vain endeavours of so many pens . It seems to me far from probable that the author of the Rape of Lucrece is here ...
... lady : whom our isle May better boast of , than e'er Roman might Of her , whose ransack'd treasury hath task'd The vain endeavours of so many pens . It seems to me far from probable that the author of the Rape of Lucrece is here ...
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