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" I might, but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable! Here receive my crown; Receive it? No, these innocent hands of mine Shall not be guilty of so foul a crime. "
The Ancient British Drama ... - Page 185
edited by - 1810
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The Growth of English Drama

Arnold Wynne - 1914 - 292 pages
...Edward. O, would I might ! but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable. Here, receive my crown. Receive it ? no, these innocent hands of mine Shall...pity you me ? Then send for unrelenting Mortimer, And Isabel, whose eyes, being turned to steel, Will sooner sparkle fire than shed a tear. Yet stay...
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Representative English Plays: From the Middle Ages to the End of the ...

John Strong Perry Tatlock, Robert Grant Martin - 1916 - 860 pages
...K. Edw. O would 1 might,%but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable! Here receive my crown; Receive it? No, these innocent hands of mine Shall...of you all that most desires my blood, And will be call'd the murderer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd? Pity you me? Then send for unrelenting...
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Representative English Plays: From the Middle Ages to the End of the ...

John Strong Perry Tatlock, Robert Grant Martin - 1916 - 860 pages
...would I might, but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable! Here receive my crown; Receive if? about it Of silver, call'd the murderer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'df Pity you me? Then send for unrelenting...
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Edward the Second

Christopher Marlowe - 1920 - 214 pages
...Edw. O would I might ! but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable. Here, receive my crown. Receive it ? no, these innocent hands of mine Shall...crime : He of you all that most desires my blood, too And will be call'd the murderer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd? pity you me? Then send...
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A Study of the Types of Literature

Mabel Irene Rich - 1921 - 576 pages
...crime. He of you all that most desires my blood, And will be called the murderer of a king, * I0° Take it. What, are you moved? Pity you me? Then send for unrelenting Mortimer, And Isabel, whose eyes, being turned to steel, Will sooner sparkle fire than shed a tear. Yet stay,...
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A Study of the Types of Literature

Mabel Irene Rich - 1921 - 582 pages
...miserable! Here, receive my crown; Receive itt No, these innocent hands of mine Shall not he guilty oi' so foul a crime. He of you all that most desires my hlooel, And will be called the murderer of a king, I0° Take it. What, are you moved? Pity you me?...
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An English Anthology of Prose and Poetry, Shewing the Main Stream of English ...

Sir Henry John Newbolt - 1922 - 1032 pages
...I might! but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable ! Here receive my crown ; Receive it t no, these innocent hands of mine Shall not be guilty...of you all that most desires my blood, And will be call'd the murtherer of a king, Take it. What, are you moved t pity you me t Then send for unrelenting...
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Great English Plays: Twenty-three Masterpieces from the Mysteries to ...

Harold F. Rubinstein - 1928 - 1138 pages
...EDw. : O, would I might ! but heavens and earth conspire To make me miserable. Here, receive my crown. tein call'd the murderer of a king, Take it. What, are you mov'd ? pity you me ? Then send for unrelenting...
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Themes and Conventions of Elizabethan Tragedy

M. C. Bradbrook - 1980 - 284 pages
...direction: 'The king rageth'. He has another lengthy speech, full of hesitations. Here, receive my crown, Receive it? no, these innocent hands of mine Shall not be guilty of so foul a crime: Take it Yet stay, for rather than I'll look on them Here, here ! [Gives the crown. In the deposition...
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Threshold of a Nation: A Study in English and Irish Drama

Philip Edwards - 1979 - 288 pages
...life, are coextensive with kingship. To end kingship is to end personality. Here, receive my crown. Receive it? No, these innocent hands of mine Shall...And will be called the murderer of a king, Take it. (Vi97-1o2) But, like Richard again, he eventually surrenders the crown, seeing this as the end of his...
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