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" He is familiar with the prince only as an agent of vice ; but of this familiarity he is so proud as not only to be supercilious and haughty with common men, but to think his interest of importance to the duke of Lancaster. Yet the man thus corrupt, thus... "
King John. King Richard II. King Henry IV, part I-II - Page 497
by William Shakespeare - 1773
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William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, Volume 5

Brian Vickers - 1995 - 600 pages
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Johnson on Johnson: A Selection of the Personal and Autobiographical ...

Samuel Johnson - 1976 - 314 pages
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Samuel Johnson on Literature

Samuel Johnson - 1979 - 138 pages
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Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson - 1984 - 882 pages
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The New Moulton's Library of Literary Criticism, Volume 2

Harold Bloom - 1985 - 544 pages
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English Poetry: A Poetic Record from Chaucer to Yeats

David Hopkins - 1990 - 269 pages
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Shakespeare Domesticated: The Eighteenth-century Editions

Colin Franklin - 1991 - 284 pages
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The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets: Poetic Responses to English ...

David Hopkins - 1994 - 275 pages
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The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages

Harold Bloom - 1995 - 560 pages
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William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, Volume 5

Brian Vickers - 1995 - 585 pages
...timorous and insult the defenceless. At once obsequious and malignant, he satirises in their absence those whom he lives by flattering. He is familiar with the...as an agent of vice, but of this familiarity he is so proud as not only to be supercilious and haughty with common men, but to think his interest of importance...
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