10 POLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HARCOP»
Discover the use of
harcop in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
harcop and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in Polish literature.
1
Seizures of the Will in Early Modern English Drama - Strona 158
Harcop's plan offers a next-best consolation for the absence of the possibility that by Clare's marriage his "name / Can be increased" (832). As a sonless gentry father Harcop must reconcile himself to a dowering loss and (presumably) to the ...
2
A Select Collection of Old Plays: Miseries of inforced ... - Strona 64
Enter Sir John Harcop with two or three otbers with him. Harcop. Up to this wood they took ; search near my friends, I am this morn robb'd of three hundred pound. , Butler. I am sorry there was not four to have made even money ; now by the ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, 1780
3
A select collection of old plays [ed. by R. Dodsley]. - Strona 57
Harcop. What fellow's that? Butler. Sir John Harcop, my noble knight, I am glad of your good health ; you bear your age fair, you keep a good house, I have fed at your board, and been drunk in your buttery. Harcop. But sirrah, sirrah : what ...
Select collection, John Payne Collier, Robert Dodsley, 1825
4
A Select Collection of Old Plays: The miseries of inforced ... - Strona 57
Harcop. What fellow's that ? ' Butler. Sir John Harcop, my noble knight, I am glad of your good health ; you bear your age fair, you keep a good house, I have fed at your board, and been drunk in your buttery. Harcop. But sirrah, sirrah : what ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, Octavius Gilchrist, 1825
5
A Select Collection of Old Plays: Miseries of inforced ... - Strona 57
Harcop. What fellow's that? Butler. Sir John Harcop, my noble knight, I am glad of your good health; you hear your age fair, you keep a good house, I have fed at your board, and been drunk in your buttery. Harcop. 33m sirrah, sirrah: what ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, Octavius Gilchrist, 1825
6
Discourse Markers in Early Modern English - Strona 131
The text excerpt quoted in (27) shows Sir John Harcop in conversation with the Butler of the Scarborrow family. Preceding this interaction, the deprived Scarborrow brothers Thomas and John robbed Sir John Harcop and his followers of three ...
7
A select collection of old plays: In twelve volumes - Tom 5 - Strona 36
Thou and thy friends, and I will loath thee for't. Enter Sir JOHN HARCOP. Harcop. They do bely her that do say she's dead; She is but stray'd to some by-gallery, And I must have her again. Clare, where art thou, Clare ? Scarborow. I-Iere, laid to ...
8
A Select Collection of Old Plays: In Twelve Volumes - Tom 5 - Strona 64
T.HE M.I S ER I-Esi-Ssi O Fsi x Entcr Sir john Harcop will: two or tþree other: wit/a him. Harcop. v - Up to this wood they took; search near my friends, I.am this mom robb'd of three hundred pound. _ Butler.I am sorry there was not four to have ...
John Payne- Collier, Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, 1780
This is the first volume of the final reports of the Mission of the K.U.Leuven in Dayr al-Barsha (Middle Egypt).
Harco Willems, Lies op de Beeck, 2007
10
Historical and Archaeological Aspects of Egyptian Funerary ...
This study of the history of regional elites and of the archaeology of their cemeteries shows that the Coffin Texts of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom do not reflect a form of popular religion, but rather the cult of local rulers.