{"id":"01KG8AZHW9Z0VFW3TKMS3FKMNB","cid":"bafkreih3ifapdmqlhpz3xesuhyxfy7anoxx6r7j3aw4x22plopz4bt4sma","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreiafohnfgpofrqigxslhdm36uwoaqbscezxhoyt7m2i7dxo7nii52m","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"04_henry_iv_part_2_1921_page_0137.jpg","height":1817,"key":"pdf-page-1769806480393-hfzogxe30ua","label":"04_henry_iv_part_2_1921_page_0137.jpg","page_number":137,"pdf_type":"born_digital","size":462129,"text":"Second Part of King Henry the Fourth 125\nand added by the Folio. The other important Folio\nadditions are the following: I. i. 189-209; I. iii. 21-\n24; I. iii. 36-55; I. iii. 85-108; II. iii. 23-45; IV. i.\n55-79; Epilogue 37, 38 (and so kneel . . . queen).\nFurthermore, the whole of III. i., containing the\nKing's famous soliloquy on sleep, is omitted in cer\ntain Quarto copies, though added in others. On the\nother hand, certain passages, usually shorter and\nbelonging to the prose scenes, are omitted in the\nFolio version; viz., I. ii. 244-251 (But it was . . .\nmotion); II. ii. 26-31 (and God . . . strengthened);\nII. iv. 14, 15 (Dispatch . . . straight); II. iv. 144-\n146; II. iv. 428 f. (Come! . . . come, Doll?); III.\ni. 53-56 (O! . . . die); III. ii. 340, 341 (yet lech\nerous . . . mandrake) ; III. ii. 342-345 (and sung\n. . . good-nights); IV. i. 93; IV. i. 95.\nI. i. 204, 205. According to Shakespeare, King\nRichard II, predecessor and cousin of Henry IV,\nwas murdered in Pomfret castle at Henry's hint,\nafter the latter had forced Richard's abdication. Cf.\nShakespeare's Richard II. Richard Scroop, Arch\nbishop of York, belonged to a family which was\nfirmly attached to the cause of Richard.\nI. i. 208. Bolingbroke. King Henry, born in\nBolingbroke castle, Lincolnshire.\nI. ii. 18. manned with an agate. Attended by a\nservant as small as a figure cut in an agate.\nI. ii. 25. face-royal. A royal was a gold coin\nworth ten shillings. Falstaff is here playing on the\ndouble sense of a 'royal face' and the face stampedon the coin.\nI. ii. 38. glutton. The parable of Dives and\nLazarus (St. Luke 16. 19-31) is frequently referred\nto by Falstaff, possibly because Dives, 'the glutton/\nwho 'fared sumptuously every day,' but who went to\nhell and called out for the poor man Lazarus to 'dip\nthe tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue,'","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:54:40.393Z","text_extracted_by":"pdf-processor","text_has_content":true,"text_source":"born_digital","uploaded":true,"width":1118},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG89K4MQB10V83VB7VGQ9V7D","predicate":"derived_from"},{"peer":"01KG89JREDR8WY5QQGYR5FZRDY","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AZHWY6HBH6D20T0P8AH35","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG8AZHX0B1DPFRHRT7YCARZW","predicate":"next"}],"ver":3,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:54:41.289Z","ts":"2026-01-30T21:12:46.268Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFH6ETXGRVD10WPNP3007D6"}}