| John Gibson Lockhart - 1837 - 790 pàgines
...with the collection of paintings, which seems valuable. " He told me the park from which Shakspeare stole the buck was not that which surrounds Charlecote,...part of which was standing a few years ago, but now totallydecayed. This park no longer belongs to the Lucys. The house bears no marks of decay, but seems... | |
| John Gibson Lockhart - 1848 - 402 pàgines
...with the collection of paintings, which seems valuable. " He told me the park from which Shakspeare Stole the buck was not that which surrounds Charlecote,...longer belongs to the Lucys. The house bears no marks decay, but seems the abode of ease and opulence. There were some fine old books, and I was told of... | |
| Charles Holte Bracebridge - 1862 - 50 pàgines
...Mr. Lucy, a descendant of the worshipful Sir Thomas, came to welcome us in person. He told me that the park from which Shakespeare stole the buck was...which was standing a few years ago, but now totally destroyed." Let us first consider the period at which Shakespeare could have committed the act imputed... | |
| 1893 - 732 pàgines
...him that " the park from which Shakespeare stole the buck was not that whi«h surround-. Charlcote, but belonged to a mansion at some distance where Sir...standing a few years ago, but now totally decayed." The whole story, of course, is apocryphal, but one cannot avoid letting it take its place with the... | |
| 1893 - 796 pàgines
...not that which surrounds Charlcote, but belonged to a mansion at some distance where Sir Thomas Lacy resided at the time of the trespass. The tradition...standing a few years ago, but now totally decayed." The whole story, of course, is apocryphal, but one cannot avoid letting it take its place with the... | |
| Walter Scott - 1927 - 968 pàgines
...additions. He told me the park from which Shakspeare stole the buck was not that which surrounds Charlcote, but belonged to a mansion at some distance where Sir...standing a few years ago, but now totally decayed. This parkno longer belongs to the Lucys. The house bears no marks of decay, but seems the abode of ease... | |
| Samuel Schoenbaum - 1987 - 420 pàgines
...stolen his deer from Fulbrook. 'The tradition went', Sir Walter Scott noted in his journal for 8 April, 'that they hid the buck in a barn, part of which was standing a few years ago but now totally decayd.'17 Today a few nineteenth-century dwellings near the site of Daisy Hill commemorate the tradition... | |
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