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" We'll lead them on courageously ; I read A triumph over tyranny upon Their several foreheads. Faint not in the moment Of victory! our ends, and Warwick's head, Innocent Warwick's head, (for we are prologue But to his tragedy) conclude the wonder Of Henry's... "
Dramatic Works of John Ford ... - Page 126
by John Ford - 1827
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Specimens of English Dramatic Poets: Who Lived about the Time of Shakespeare ...

Charles Lamb - English drama - 1808 - 512 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head, (for we are prologue But to his tragedy) conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears : and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets,...debts. Death ! pish, 'tis but a sound ; a name of air j A minute's storm ; or not so much : to tumble From bed to bed, be massacred alive By some physicians...
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Dramatic Works, Volume 2

John Ford - English drama - 1811 - 528 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head, (for we are prologue But to his tragedy) conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears ; and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets, determines In this last issue male ; Heaven be obeyed ! Impoverish time of its amazement, friends, And we will prove as trusty in our payments, As...
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Specimens of English Dramatic Poets: Who Lived about the Time of ..., Volume 1

Charles Lamb - English drama - 1813 - 502 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head, (for we are prologue But to his tragedy) conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears : and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets,...amazement, friends ; And we will prove as trusty in onr payments, As prodigal to nature in our debts. Death ! pish, 'tis but a sound ; a name of air ;...
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The Eton miscellany, by Bartholomew Bouverie, Volume 1, Issues 1-10

Eton miscellany - 1827 - 532 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head (for we are prologues But to his tragedy), conclude the wonder Of Henry's tears ; and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings, Plantagenets, determines In this last issue male ; Heav'n be obey'd ! Impoverish time of its amazement, friends, And we will prove as trusty in our...
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Specimens of English Dramatic Poets who Lived about the Time of Shakespeare ...

Charles Lamb - Drama - 1845 - 540 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head (for we are prologue But to his tragedy), conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears : and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets,...obey'd. Impoverish time of its amazement, friends : Ami we will prove as trusty in our payments, As prodigal to nature in our debts. Death ! pish, 'tis...
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The American Whig Review, Volume 14

Periodicals - 1851 - 608 pages
...glorious race Of fourteen kings Plautagcnets determines In this last issue male. Heaven be obeyed. Impoverish time of its amazement, friends ; And we will prove as trusty in our payment?, As prodigal to nature in our debts. Death ! pish ! 'tis but a sound ; a name of air ; A minute's...
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Specimens of English Dramatic Poets: Who Lived about the Time of Shakespeare ...

Charles Lamb - English drama - 1854 - 572 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head, (for we are prologue But to his tragedy,) conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears : and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets,...air ; A minute's storm ; or not so much : to tumble Prom bed to bed, be massacred alive By some physicians for a month or two, In hope of freedom from...
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Specimens of English dramatic poets. New ed. (2 pt. in 1 v.)

Charles Lamb - 1857 - 468 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head (for we are prologue But to his tragedy), conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears : and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings Plantagenets,...debts. Death ! pish, 'tis but a sound • a name of air - y A minute's storm ; or not so much; to tumble From bed to bed, be massacred alive By some physicians...
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A Critical Examination of the Text of Shakespeare: With Remarks on ..., Volume 1

William Sidney Walker - 1860 - 410 pages
...some crotchets in thy head." So in Ford, Perkin Warbeck, v. 3, Moxon's edition, p. 121, col. 2,— " Death ? pish ! 'tis but a sound ; a name of air ; A minute's storm, or not so much ; to tumble From bod to bed, be massacred alive By some physicians, for a month or two, In hope of freedom from a fever's...
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Shakspere's Predecessors in the English Drama, Volume 4

John Addington Symonds - English drama - 1884 - 696 pages
...Innocent Warwick's head (for we are prologue But to his tragedy) conclude the wonder Of Henry's fears ; and then the glorious race Of fourteen kings, Plantagenets, determines In this last issue male ; Heaven be obeyed ! I have dealt only with extant plays on minor characters in English history. But it appears...
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