"You may have noticed in my chest a library,"
and the house was convulsed with laughter.—
Russell,
Representative Actors
(appendix).
Edward II., a tragedy by C. Marlowe (1592), imitated by Shakespeare in his Richard II. (1597). Probably most readers would prefer Marlowe's noble tragedy to Shakespeare's.
Edward IV. of England, introduced by Sir W. Scott in his novel entitled Anne of Geierstein (1829).
Edward the Black Prince, a tragedy by W. Shirley (1640). The subject of this drama is the victory of Poitiers.
Yes, Philip lost the battle [
Cressy