Barn, where, according to the same veracious tradition, the venison was concealed. A word or two disposes of this part of the tradition: Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family till the grandson of Sir Thomas purchased it in the... The Homes of Shakspere - Page 181847 - 32 pagesFull view - About this book
| Charles Knight - 1843 - 566 pages
...tradition, the venison was concealed. A word or two disposes of this part of the tradition : Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...of Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I. We have seen, then, that for ten years previous to the passing of the Act of Elizabeth for the preservation... | |
| James Thorne - Avon River - 1845 - 514 pages
...firm-looking fiction may break down. " A word or two," says Mr. Knight, " disposes of this part of the tradition : Fulbrooke Park did not come into the possession...Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I." Plainly Shakspere could not steal Sir Thomas Lucy's deer from this park, wherever else he might have... | |
| Frederick William Fairholt - Electronic books - 1847 - 72 pages
...Sir Thomas ! A boyish out- ¡ break, if rebuked harshly in a moment of irritability, was, we ; I i 20 THE HOME OF SHAKSPERE. are sure, forgiven and forgotten...the evening to his " lady-love." It is a pleasant walk — a short mile from Stratford. Quiet and luxuriant is the landscape which meets ihe eye all... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1851 - 624 pages
...tradition, the venison was concealed. A word or two disposes of this part of the tradition : Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...of Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I. We have seen, then, that for ten years previous to the passing of the Act of Elizabeth for the preservation... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1856 - 424 pages
...tradition, the vehison was concealed. A word or two disposes of this part of the tradition : Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...of Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I. We have seen, then, that for ten years previous to the passing of the Act of Elizabeth for the preservation... | |
| Thomas Nelson Publishers - Stratford-upon-Avon (England) - 1859 - 166 pages
...refutes Ireland's statement, that the affair took place at Fulbrooke Park, by showing that Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...till the grandson of Sir Thomas purchased it in the time of James I. It is conclusively proved by Mr. Collier, however, that Sir Thomas Lucy had deer ;... | |
| Stephen Watson Fullom - Dramatists, English - 1864 - 394 pages
...Fulbrooke, and this awakens greater scepticism in Mr. Knight, who seems to have ascertained that Fulbrooke " did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I." 1 But he cites no authority for the statement, and it has not been accepted as fact. Lately, however,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1867 - 584 pages
...tradition, the venison was concealed. A word or two disposes of this part of the tradition : Fulbrooke did not come into the possession of the Lucy family...of Sir Thomas purchased it in the reign of James I. We have seen, then, that for ten years previous to the passing of the Act of Elizabeth for the preservation... | |
| William Shakespeare - English drama - 1883 - 596 pages
...keeper's lodge in which Shakespeare was confined after his detection. According to Mr. Knight, Fulbroke Park did not come into the possession of the Lucy family till the seventeenth century. This is, of course, a final refutation of Ireland's account ; but it must be recollected,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1883 - 972 pages
...keeper's lodge in which Shakespeare was confined after his detection. According to Mr. Knight, Fulbroke Park did not come into the possession of the Lucy family till the seventeenth century. This is, of course, a final refutation of Ireland's account ; but it must be recollected,... | |
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