The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 18Harper& brothers, 1908 |
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Page xiii
... scene of the play we are introduced to Alcibiades , the most brilliant personage among the public men of that time , the Cæsar of the moral principle , but equally distinguished in culture and in action , and immortalised by Plato in ...
... scene of the play we are introduced to Alcibiades , the most brilliant personage among the public men of that time , the Cæsar of the moral principle , but equally distinguished in culture and in action , and immortalised by Plato in ...
Page xvii
... scene there is what some have taken for a refer- ence to an older play of " Timon " by an unknown author , written about 1600. In the older play , an abominably bad one , the feast is composed of stones painted like artichokes . In our ...
... scene there is what some have taken for a refer- ence to an older play of " Timon " by an unknown author , written about 1600. In the older play , an abominably bad one , the feast is composed of stones painted like artichokes . In our ...
Page xix
... scene is like the coarseness of Swift , not prurient and not ribald , but delighting in whatever degrades mankind . Such misanthropy as Swift's , at its worst , and Timon's , in this scene , is unfit for literature or for the stage . It ...
... scene is like the coarseness of Swift , not prurient and not ribald , but delighting in whatever degrades mankind . Such misanthropy as Swift's , at its worst , and Timon's , in this scene , is unfit for literature or for the stage . It ...
Page xxvii
... scene is undoubtedly Shakespeare's , and the speech of Apemantus from . to " This is in thee a nature but infected " " Do not assume my likeness " } is thoroughly Shakespearean . The verse is smooth , as it seldom is in this play , and ...
... scene is undoubtedly Shakespeare's , and the speech of Apemantus from . to " This is in thee a nature but infected " " Do not assume my likeness " } is thoroughly Shakespearean . The verse is smooth , as it seldom is in this play , and ...
Page 2
... SCENE : Athens , and the neighbouring woods 1 This piece was first printed in the First Folio . The opening Scene is headed " Actus Primus , Scana Prima . " No other scenic division is indi- cated . The First Folio prints at the end of ...
... SCENE : Athens , and the neighbouring woods 1 This piece was first printed in the First Folio . The opening Scene is headed " Actus Primus , Scana Prima . " No other scenic division is indi- cated . The First Folio prints at the end of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agrippa ALCIB Alcibiades Alexas Antony and Cleopatra Antony's APEM Apemantus Athenian bear breath Cæs CHAR Charmian CLEO dead death Dolabella dost dramatic drink Egypt Enobarbus Enter ANTONY Enter CLEOPATRA Eros Euphronius Exeunt Exit eyes farewell fear feast FLAV Flavius Folio reading follow fool fortune friends Fulvia give gods gold GUARD hand hath hear heart honest honour infra IRAS jewel Julius Cæsar kiss knave Lepidus live look Lord Timon Lucullus madam Marcus Crassus Mark Antony master means MESS Messenger mistress nature ne'er never noble Octavia PAIN Parthia play Plutarch POET Pompey pray prithee Proculeius queen Rome Rowe's SCENE Senators SERV servant Sextus Pompeius Shakespeare SOLD soldier speak spirit supra sword tell thee Theobald's There's thine thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tragedy Ventidius word wouldst