10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «SPENDALL»
Découvrez l'usage de
spendall dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
spendall et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
1
A Select Collection of Old Plays: Greenes Tu quoque; ...
Proteus, propitious be to my disguise, And I shall prosper in my enterprise. [Exit.
Enter Spendall, Pursenet and a Boy with rackets. Spendall. A rubber, sirrah. Boy.
You shall, sir. Spendall. And bid those two men, you said would speak with me, ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, Octavius Gilchrist, 1825
2
A Select Collection of Old Plays: In Twelve Volumes
Proteus, propitious be to my disguise, And I shall prosper in my enterprise. [Exit.
Enter Spendall, Pursenet and a Boy with rackets. Spendall. A rubber, sirrah. Boy.
You shall, sir. Spendall. And bid those two men, you said would speak with me, ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, Octavius Gilchrist, 1825
3
A Select Collection of Old Plays: Greenes tu quoque
Spendall. You say right; found it you have, indeed, But never won it. Do you know
this dye? Staines. Not I, sir. Spendall. _You seem a gentleman, and you may
perceive I have some respect unto your credit, To take you thus aside. Will you ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, Octavius Gilchrist, 1825
4
Theatre, Finance and Society in Early Modern England
(2,138±45) The combination of shame and rage that Spendall feels in the Hole
prompts no more altruism or fellow-feeling in him than we see in the starving
prisoner. Instead, deprivation becomes the motive for thrusting. After word
reaches ...
Theodore B. Leinwand, 1999
5
A Select Collection of Old Plays: Green's tu quoque, or The ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed. But for the law. Go, y're a prating jack ; Nor is't your
hopes of crying out for clubs, Can save you from my chastisement, if once You
shall but dare to utter this again. Spendall. You lye, you dare not. Staines- Lye ...
Robert Dodsley, Isaac Reed, 1780
6
The Making of Jacobean Culture: James I and the ...
Spendall of course proves profligate, mixing a decidedly civic ambition to "bee
Lord Maior of London before I die, and have three Pageants carried before me,
besides a Shippe and an Unicorne" (372-73) with the behavior of a young gallant
.
7
Essays in Memory of Richard Helgerson: Laureations
John (or Joseph) Cooke's Greene's Tu Quoque, or The Cittie Gallant, staged in
1611 and printed in 1614, features a double set of prodigals.12 Spendall,
recently an apprentice, is given the mercer's shop by his master, Sir Lionel, who
has ...
Roze Hentschell, Kathy Lavezzo, 2011
8
Theater of a City: The Places of London Comedy, 1598-1642
Later, Gatherscrap, the parish basketman, arrives to feed the poorest prisoners,
and Spendall refuses to eat, though he knows that To such a one as these are
must I come, Hunger will draw mee into their fellowship, To fight and scramble for
...
9
Widows and Suitors in Early Modern English Comedy
are no bawdy double-entendres in her speech, and she accepts Spendall's
thanks with some sage advice to live within his means and without any hint of
sexual attraction. The audience is thus quite unprepared for Spendall's response.
10
London Past and Present: Its History, Associations, and ...
... to cite.2 Later it was a frequent scene of more private combats. Staines. I
accept it : the meeting place ? Spendall. Beyond the Maze in Tuttle. Staines.
What weapon ? Spendall. Single rapier. Staines. The time ? Spendall. To morrow
. Staines.
Henry Benjamin Wheatley, Peter Cunningham, 2011