The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 11Harper, 1907 |
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Page x
... character , diction , or versifica- tion , speak a period at which the poet has already learned a great deal , but has not learned everything . He has already we shall dwell more on this later acquired the full disposition of the ...
... character , diction , or versifica- tion , speak a period at which the poet has already learned a great deal , but has not learned everything . He has already we shall dwell more on this later acquired the full disposition of the ...
Page xi
... character going " ; but as that character itself is not fully worked out , so their powers are not fully called into action . They help to show us further develop- ments of Richard's incurable " redelessness , " as one great ...
... character going " ; but as that character itself is not fully worked out , so their powers are not fully called into action . They help to show us further develop- ments of Richard's incurable " redelessness , " as one great ...
Page xii
... character - that rhetorical rather than poetical ordon- nance - which disappears so marvellously in the trage- dies of the greatest time even where rhetoric was almost excusable . The diction of the play , from the present point of view ...
... character - that rhetorical rather than poetical ordon- nance - which disappears so marvellously in the trage- dies of the greatest time even where rhetoric was almost excusable . The diction of the play , from the present point of view ...
Page xiv
... character . In the former respect the earlier drama- tist has hardly even come near the secret of the chroni- cle - play , which in our text Shakespeare has nearly , if not quite , mastered . In character the failure to " join the flats ...
... character . In the former respect the earlier drama- tist has hardly even come near the secret of the chroni- cle - play , which in our text Shakespeare has nearly , if not quite , mastered . In character the failure to " join the flats ...
Page xv
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. mer , is more characterless than even the least character- ful person of any consequence in our play ; and the same may be said of Gaveston , while the rest pretend to noth- ing and achieve what they ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. mer , is more characterless than even the least character- ful person of any consequence in our play ; and the same may be said of Gaveston , while the rest pretend to noth- ing and achieve what they ...
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Common terms and phrases
Angiers arms ARTH Arthur Aumerle BAGOT banish'd BAST Bastard BISHOP OF CARLISLE Blanch blood BOLING Bolingbroke breath brother BUSHY castle CONST Constance cousin crown Dauphin death dost doth DUCH DUCHESS OF GLOUCESTER Duke Duke of Hereford Duke of Norfolk earth England Enter KING Exeunt eyes fair farewell father Faulconbridge fear Folios read France friends GAUNT give grace grief hand hath head hear heart heaven Hereford hither honour Hubert infra James Gurney JOHN OF GAUNT King John King Richard king's Lady land liege live look lord majesty mother Mowbray never noble Northumberland PAND Pandulph pardon peace PERCY Philip play prince Quartos QUEEN RICH royal sacred king SALISBURY SCENE Shakespeare shame Sir Robert sorrow soul speak supra sweet tears thee thine thou art thou hast tongue traitor uncle word YORK