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" Thou, Sir Thomas, Thinking to shame me in thy lady's sight, Sham'st but thyself in mine. Thou may'st not touch My spirit that can suffer and be strong. LADY LUCY. SIR THOMAS LUCY. Relieve our presence of the knave's pollution. THE CONSTABLE. Sir Thomas,... "
William Shakespeare, Pedagogue & Poacher: A Drama - Page 97
by Richard Garnett - 1904 - 111 pages
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William Shakespeare, Pedagogue & Poacher: A Drama

Richard Garnett - English drama - 1904 - 120 pages
...Hath shocked my purpose, and myself I liken To Dardan Paris when the heavenly three Sought the Idaean mountain all unrobed, Contending for the apple. Could...[from the lower end of the Court], Place ! give place ! Enter LEICESTER, muffled in a horseman's cloak, much splashed. LADY LUCY. Bespattered is he all from...
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William Shakespeare, Pedagogue & Poacher: A Drama

Richard Garnett - 1904 - 122 pages
...ravages Of devastation he had spared the world 1 Trojaque nunc stares, Priamique arx alta matures. What Paris might not do, Sir Thomas may: And being,...your honour? THE PUBLIC \from the lower end of the Courf\. Place ! give place ! Enter LEICESTER, muffled in a horseman's cloak, much splashed. LADY LUCY....
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William Shakespeare, Pedagogue & Poacher: A Drama

Richard Garnett - English drama - 1904 - 130 pages
...to-night. My tongue is shorter than thy Anna's, William, By a good yard, but yet methinks 't will serve. SIR THOMAS LUCY. Relieve our presence of the knave's...CONSTABLE. What did I tell your honour ? THE PUBLIC \_from the lower end of the Court]. Place ! give place ! A messenger from her dread Majesty ! ? 7 Enter...
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The Dial, Volumes 38-39

Francis Fisher Browne - American literature - 1905 - 910 pages
...Impish sootlkln. but haply Tall-switching Lucifer, Hell's emperor.' To this Shakespeare replies: ' Aye, man, I hold In fee ten thousand spirits, And...vasty deep. Who at my word shall seize thy knight and theĢ And set bemocKed upon the public stage. Stuff for the humourous world's derision.' It will have...
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The Dial, Volumes 38-39

Francis Fisher Browne - American literature - 1905 - 920 pages
...Impish sootlkin. but haply Tall-switching Lucifer, Hell's emperor.' To this Shakespeare replies: 4 Aye, man, I hold In fee ten thousand spirits, And...set bemocked upon the public stage, Stuff for the humourous world's derision.' It will have been noticed from the above extracts that Dr. Garnett has...
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Shakespeare's Other Lives: An Anthology of Fictional Depictions of the Bard

Maurice O'Sullivan - Literary Criticism - 1997 - 240 pages
...serve. SlR THOMAS LUCY. Relieve our presence of the knave's pollution. THE CONSTABLE. Sir Thomas, I'm afeard to touch the man. Thou heardest? he hath a...Place! give place! A messenger from her dread Majesty! {Enter Leicester, muffed in a horseman's cloak, much splashed.] LADY LUCY. Bespattered is he all from...
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