Shakespeare Jest-Books. VariousЧитать онлайн книгу.
¶ Of an other frier that taxed Erasmus for writyng Germana theologia. cxxv.
¶ Of an other that inueighed agaynst the same Erasmus. cxxvi.
¶ Of kyng Richarde the iii, and the Northern man. [315] cxxvii.
¶ Of the Canon and his man. cxxviii
¶ Of the same Canon and his sayd man. cxxix.
¶ Of the gentilman that checked hys seruant for talke of ryngyng. cxxx.
¶ Of the blynde man and his boye. cxxxi.
¶ Of him that sold two lodes of hey. cxxxii.
¶ How a mery man deuised to cal people to a playe. cxxxiii.
¶ How the image of the dyuell was lost and sought. cxxxiiii.
¶ Of Tachas, kyng of Aegypt, and Agesilaus. cxxxv.
¶ Of Corar the Rhetorician, and Tisias hys scoler. cxxxvi.
¶ Of Augustus and Athenodorus the Phylosopher. cxxxvii.
¶ Of the frenche kyng and the brome seller. [339] cxxxviii.
¶ An other tale of the same frenche kyng. [340] cxxxix.
¶ What an Italyan fryer dyd in his preachyng. cxl.
ADDITIONAL NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
MERY TALES AND QUICK ANSWERES.
VOL. I.
Shakespeare Jest-Books;
REPRINTS OF THE EARLY
AND VERY RARE JEST-BOOKS SUPPOSED TO
HAVE BEEN USED BY SHAKESPEARE.
A Hundred Mery Talys,
FROM THE ONLY KNOWN COPY.
II.
Mery Tales and Quicke Answeres,
FROM THE RARE EDITION OF 1567.
Edited, with Introduction and Notes.
BY
W. CAREW HAZLITT,
OF THE INNER TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW.
——That I was disdainful—and that I had my good wit out of the Hundred Merry Tales. Beatrice, in Much Ado about Nothing.
LONDON: WILLIS & SOTHERAN, 136, STRAND.
MDCCCLXIV.
¶ A C. mery
Talys.
The Table.
PAGE | |
¶ Of him that said there were but two commandementes. i. | 11 |
¶ Of the wyfe who lay with her prentys and caused him to beate her husbande disguised in her rayment. ii | 12 |
¶ Of John Adroyns in the dyuyls apparell. iii. | 14 |
¶ Of the Ryche man and his two sonnes. iv. | 18 |
¶ Of the Cockolde who gained a Ring by his iudgment. v. | 19 |
¶ Of the scoler that gave his shoes to cloute. vi. | 20 |
¶ Of him that said that a womans tongue was lightest of digestion. vii. | ib. |
¶ Of the Woman that followed her fourth husbands bere and wept. viii. |
21
|