| William Shakespeare - 1788 - 346 pagina’s
...mistaking : if you know not the author, you may raile against him ; and, peradventure, so behave yourselfe, that you may enforce the author to know you. " By...stage, if you be a knight, you may happily get you a mistresse : if a meere Fleet-Street R iij gentleman, gentleman, a wife : but assure yourselfe by continuall... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1809 - 394 pagina’s
...coxcombe. you know not the author, you may raile against him; and peradventure so behave yourselfe, that you may enforce the author to know you. " By...stage, if you be a knight, you may happily get you amistresse: if a mere Fleet-street gentleman, a wife: but assure yourselfe by continuall residence,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1809 - 390 pagina’s
...We three. you know not the author, you may raile against him; and peradventure so behave yourselfe, that you may enforce the author to know you. " By sitting on the stage, you may (with small cost) purchase the deere acquaintance of the boyes: h:ive a good stoole for sixpence:... | |
| Thomas Dekker - 1812 - 228 pagina’s
...you to avoid much mistaking; if you know not the author, you may rail against him ; and peradventure so behave yourself, that you may enforce the author to know you. Page 27, seems to make love-locks of French origin ; for, inquiring into the motives that could induce... | |
| 1814 - 752 pagina’s
...gentleman, as his fine cloaths and perruke are perfectly revealed. — Second, By lilting in the pit, if you be a knight, you may happily get you a mistress ; which, if you would, 1 advise you never to be absent when Epsome Wells u plaid: for, GENT. MAG. July,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1821 - 668 pagina’s
...mistaking : if you know not the author, you may raile against him ; and peradventure so behave yourselfe, that you may enforce the author to know you. " By...stage, if you be a knight, you may happily get you a mistresse : if a mere Fleet-street gentleman, a wife : but assure yourselfe by continuall residence,... | |
| Thomas Dekker - 1887 - 642 pagina’s
...you to avoid much mistaking ; if you know not the author, you may rail against him, and peradventure so behave yourself, that you may enforce the author to know you.". The refinements of torture to which the Elizabethan playwright was subject under this arrange* ment,... | |
| Henry Benjamin Wheatley - 1891 - 646 pagina’s
...citizens they are in debt; if first to us they are in law."—Spedding, Baconiana, vol. vii. p. 175. By sitting on the stage, if you be a knight you may happily get you a mistress; if a mere Fleet Street gentleman, a wife.—Gull's Hornbook (1609), p. 33. Sir Dauphine. He has got on his whole... | |
| George Saintsbury - 1892 - 316 pagina’s
...mistaking : if you know not ye author, you may raile against him : and peraduenture so behaue your selfe, that you may enforce the Author to know you. By sitting...stage, if you be a Knight, you may happily get you a Mistresse : if a mere Fleetstreet Gentleman, a wife : but assure yourselfe, by continuall residence,... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1903 - 74 pagina’s
...mistaking: if you know not \ author, you may raile against him : and peraduenture so behaue your selfe, that you may enforce the Author to know you.. ... ' By sitting on the stage, you may (with small cost) purchase the deere acquaintance of the boyes : haue a good stoole for sixpence:... | |
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