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" Great griefs, I see, medicine the less; for Cloten Is quite forgot. He was a queen's son, boys: And though he came our enemy, remember He was paid for that: though mean and mighty, rotting Together, have one dust, yet reverence, That angel of the world,... "
Gaisford prize: Greek Theocritean verse [Cymbeline, act 4, scene 2, tr.] by ... - Page 8
by William Shakespeare - 1869
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Works ...

William Shakespeare - 1909 - 320 pages
...Scene 1I] Cymbeline 115 Than priests and fanes that lie. Arviragus. We 'll speak it, then. Belarius. Great griefs, I see, medicine the less, for Cloten...make distinction Of place 'tween high and low. Our fee1 was princely; And though you took his life' '« be'^g our foe, 251 Yet bury him as a prince. ••...
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The Romantic Movement in English Poetry

Arthur Symons - Literary Criticism - 1909 - 372 pages
...last two lines ; and they are striking lines. But let us open Shakespeare, and read, say, this : — ' He was a queen's son, boys : And though he came our...angel of the world, doth make distinction Of place 'twixt high and low.' Here the superb epithet, 'that angel of the world,' which seems to interrupt...
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The Romantic Movement in English Poetry

Arthur Symons - English literature - 1909 - 362 pages
...last two lines ; and they are striking lines. But let us open Shakespeare, and read, say, this: — ' He was a queen's son, boys : And though he came our...angel of the world, doth make distinction Of place 'twizt high and low.' Here the superb epithet, 'that angel of the world,' which seems to interrupt...
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The Wisdom of Shakespeare: Being Extracts from His Prose and Verse

William Shakespeare - 1909 - 228 pages
...be; But clay and clay differs in dignity, Whose dust is both alike. Cymbeline. Act IV, Sc. 2. T HOUGH mean and mighty, rotting Together, have one dust,...doth make distinction Of place 'tween high and low. Cymbeline. Act IV, Sc. 2. The Democracy of Death Reverence Stones in a Necklace Rarity THE WORLD'S...
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The Aldus Shakespeare: With Copious Notes and Comments, Volume 7

William Shakespeare - 1909 - 242 pages
...mighty, rotting was dramatized as early as 1600 in Yarrington's "Two Lamentable Tragedies.','—IG Together, have one dust, yet reverence, That angel...Of place 'tween high and low. Our foe was princely; 249 And though you took his life as being our foe, Yet bury him as a prince. Gui. Pray you, fetch him...
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The Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 8

William Shakespeare - 1909 - 870 pages
...mighty, rotting was dramatized as early as 1600 in Yarrington's Two Lnmcnta'A, Tragedies."—!. G. Together, have one dust, yet reverence, That angel...Of place 'tween high and low. Our foe was princely; 249 And though you took his life as being our foe, Yet bury him as a prince. Gul " Pray you, fetch...
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The Complete Dramatic and Poetic Works of William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare - 1906 - 1290 pages
...forgot. He was a queen's son, boys; And though he came our enemy, remember и* He was paid forthat. right ; m And though you took his life, as being our foe, Yet bury him as a prince. Gut. Pray you, fetch...
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The Bridling of Pegasus: Prose Papers on Poetry

Alfred Austin - Poetry - 1910 - 276 pages
...to remember the lines of the really "great master," — not M. Victor Hugo, but Shakespeare : . . . Reverence, That angel of the world, doth make distinction Of place 'tween high and low. ON THE RELATION OF LITERATURE TO POLITICS IT occasionally happens to men of letters, at political gatherings,...
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The Tragedies of William Shakespeare: With Introd. Studies ...

William Shakespeare, Edward Dowden - 1912 - 1474 pages
...a queen's son, boys, 244 And though he came our enemy, remember He was paid for that ; though moan and mighty, rotting Together, have one dust, yet reverence...— That angel of the world— doth make distinction 243 Of place 'tween high and low. Our foe was princely, And though you took his life, as being our...
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The English Drama in the Age of Shakespeare

Wilhelm Michael Anton Creizenach - Literary Criticism - 1916 - 488 pages
...Belarius nevertheless maintains that he ought to be buried with the honour due to a king's son, for reverence, That angel of the world, doth make distinction Of place 'tween high and low. This view receives most forcible expression in the works of the Cavalier poets of the Stuart period....
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