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Examples
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Stephen "Marvin" Moore was also good as the exiled family retainer Belarius.
April Books 18) Cymbeline, by William Shakespeare nwhyte 2009
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Belarius can eat a moldy bagel and live to tell about it
EXTRALIFE – By Scott Johnson - The 27 Things I Learned at Nerdtacular ‘08: 2008
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The ensemble is mostly impressive, and there were several individual performances I liked, particularly the assured verse-speaking of Robert Stattel's Cymbeline and Randy Danson's Queen, the wit of Earl Hindman's banished Belarius (the cowboy lord) and the take-no-prisoners low comedy of Andrew Weems 'clotted Cloten, clomping about the place as both a deranged samurai and a crapping horse.
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The ensemble is mostly impressive, and there were several individual performances I liked, particularly the assured verse-speaking of Robert Stattel's Cymbeline and Randy Danson's Queen, the wit of Earl Hindman's banished Belarius (the cowboy lord) and the take-no-prisoners low comedy of Andrew Weems 'clotted Cloten, clomping about the place as both a deranged samurai and a crapping horse.
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The King, disabused finally of his faith in his wife when he learns that, in dying, she has confessed to a plan to poison her husband, embraces his long-lost daughter and two sons, forgives Belarius for having abducted the two princes, makes peace with Rome, and even pardons the villainous Iachimo.
Shakespeare Bevington, David 2002
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The ensemble is mostly impressive, and there were several individual performances I liked, particularly the assured verse-speaking of Robert Stattel's Cymbeline and Randy Danson's Queen, the wit of Earl Hindman's banished Belarius (the cowboy lord) and the take-no-prisoners low comedy of Andrew Weems 'clotted Cloten, clomping about the place as both a deranged samurai and a crapping horse.
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The valour of Belarius and the two boys obtains a British victory.
William Shakespeare John Masefield 1922
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He falls into rhyme; he shows the cheap modesty of the conventional hero; he tells of what others did, and nothing of his own feats; Belarius and the two striplings, he says:
The Man Shakespeare Harris, Frank, 1855-1931 1909
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He falls into rhyme; he shows the cheap modesty of the conventional hero; he tells of what others did, and nothing of his own feats; Belarius and the two striplings, he says:
The Man Shakespeare Frank Harris 1893
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The mountainous retreat in which Belarius and his fascinating boy-companions play their part has points of resemblance to the Forest of Arden in 'As
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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