HesseDarmstadt, do you believe she would not pawn her islands rather than possess it? . . . While royal sons and daughters are dowered, and jewels remain in the Tower, Shakespeare's face lies in a foreign land unredeemed. Oh, the pity of it... A Study of Shakespeare's Portraits - Page 70by William Page - 1876 - 75 pagesFull view - About this book
| Henry Snowden Ward - Stratford-upon-Avon (England) - 1905 - 220 pages
...nook of HesseDarmstadt, do you believe she would not pawn her islands rather than possess it ? . . . While royal sons and daughters are dowered, and jewels...lies in a foreign land unredeemed. Oh, the pity of it ! " The Garrick Jubilee in 1769, which marked the opening of the new Town Hall, and the presentation... | |
| Literature - 1875 - 820 pages
...of entail ? she Shakespeare, " dear to both Englands," is ours. We are his colony, and he the u ered link that binds us to the mother country. Who are...a foreign land, unredeemed ! "Oh, the pity of it!" : There is no doubt that the maker of the bust had a death-mask, and used it to the best of his ability.... | |
| Drama - 1890 - 698 pages
...nook of Hesse-Darmstadt, do you believe she would not pawn her islands rather than not possess it? ... While royal sons and daughters are dowered, and Jewels...lies in a foreign land unredeemed. Oh, the pity of it 1" — W. Page, Sculptor, ex- President of the Academy of Design, New York. the First Folio edition... | |
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