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Add. MS 41063 K, folio 87 recto
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From the collections of: THE BRITISH LIBRARY

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Document-specific information
Title: Four slips of paper used as bookmarks, said to be taken from a German book of about 1620. The first three consist of fragments from a letter, the last contains a dozen Shakespearian quotations, of one to two lines each, from Pericles and Richard I[II]
Date: ca. 1620
Repository: The British Library, London, UK
Call number and opening: Add. MS 41063 K, fol. 87r
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Semi-diplomatic transcription

[first two lines obliterated]

Richard 3.

True hope is swift, and flyes with swallowes winges

Kinges it makes godes, and meaner creatures kinges./.

You runn before your horse to markett.

foole, foole, thou whetest a knife to kill thie selfe./.

Curses never passe the lippes mouth of them that breath

them in the aire./.

Small herbes haue grace great weedes grow apace.

Soe wise soe young, they say never liue long./.

Short summers likely haue a forward spring./.

Play the maydes part, say noe, and take it./.

Pericles /.

We neither in our hertes nor outward eyes

Envy the greate nor doe the lowe dispise

To me she seemes diamond to glasse./.

he may my proffer take for an offence,

since men take womens guiftes for Impudence./.

 

Item Title
Four slips of paper used as bookmarks, said to be taken from a German book of about 1620. The first three consist of fragments from a letter, the last contains a dozen Shakespearian quotations, of one to two lines each, from Pericles and Richard I[II]
Item Date
ca. 1620
Repository
The British Library, London, UK
Call Number
Add. MS 41063 K, fol. 87r