The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . dy, which he liadreceived in seventeen years service at the wars, andin many sundry battles, being ever tiie foremostman that did set out feet to tight; so that tiiere wasnot a man among the people but was ashamed ofhimself to refuse so valiant a man ; and one ofthem said to another. We must needs choose himconsul, there is no remedy. ??^ Scene III.— IVhat stock he sprittgs of. The Life of Coriolanus, in Plutarch, opens withthe following sentence:— The house of the Martians at Rome was of thenumber of tlie patricians, out of the which havesprun


The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . dy, which he liadreceived in seventeen years service at the wars, andin many sundry battles, being ever tiie foremostman that did set out feet to tight; so that tiiere wasnot a man among the people but was ashamed ofhimself to refuse so valiant a man ; and one ofthem said to another. We must needs choose himconsul, there is no remedy. ??^ Scene III.— IVhat stock he sprittgs of. The Life of Coriolanus, in Plutarch, opens withthe following sentence:— The house of the Martians at Rome was of thenumber of tlie patricians, out of the which havesprung many noble personages, whereof AncusMartius was one, King Numas daughters son,who was King of Rome after TuUus the same house was Publius and Quintus, whobrought to Rome their best water they had by con-duits. Censorinus also came of that family, thatwas so surnamed because the people had chosenhim censor twice, through whose persuasion theymade a law that no man from thenceforth mightrequire or enjoy the censorship [Augurs Staff.] 179


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Keywords: ., bookauthorshakespearewilliam15641616, bookcentury1800, bookdecad