The Complete Works of William Hazlitt, Volume 6 |
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Page 34
Come on , come on , come on ; give me your hand , Sir ; give me your hand , Sir ; an early stirrer , by the rood . And how doth my good cousin Silence ? Silence . Good morrow , good cousin Shallow . Shallow .
Come on , come on , come on ; give me your hand , Sir ; give me your hand , Sir ; an early stirrer , by the rood . And how doth my good cousin Silence ? Silence . Good morrow , good cousin Shallow . Shallow .
Page 192
Our understanding ( such as it is , and must remain to be good for any thing ) is not a thoroughfare for common places , smooth as the palm of one's hand , but full of knotty points and jutting excrescences , rough , uneven , overgrown ...
Our understanding ( such as it is , and must remain to be good for any thing ) is not a thoroughfare for common places , smooth as the palm of one's hand , but full of knotty points and jutting excrescences , rough , uneven , overgrown ...
Page 210
He sent a shaggy , tattered , staring slave , That when he speaks , draws out his grisly beard , And winds it twice or thrice about his ear ; Whose face has been a grind - stone for men's swords : His hands are hack'd , some fingers cut ...
He sent a shaggy , tattered , staring slave , That when he speaks , draws out his grisly beard , And winds it twice or thrice about his ear ; Whose face has been a grind - stone for men's swords : His hands are hack'd , some fingers cut ...
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