The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 18Harper& brothers, 1908 |
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Page xiv
... falls from Apemantus that terrible line " I wonder men dare trust themselves with men , " which might serve for the motto of the whole play , the English equivalent of the Latin proverb , homo homini hepus , amplified in the following ...
... falls from Apemantus that terrible line " I wonder men dare trust themselves with men , " which might serve for the motto of the whole play , the English equivalent of the Latin proverb , homo homini hepus , amplified in the following ...
Page 12
... fall into my keeping , Which is not owed to you ! 135 apt ] susceptible . 136 precedent ] former , earlier . [ Exeunt Lucilius and old Athenian . 143 an equal husband ] a husband of equal fortune . 147 a bond in men ] a bounden duty of ...
... fall into my keeping , Which is not owed to you ! 135 apt ] susceptible . 136 precedent ] former , earlier . [ Exeunt Lucilius and old Athenian . 143 an equal husband ] a husband of equal fortune . 147 a bond in men ] a bounden duty of ...
Page 22
... fall to't : Rich men sin , and I eat root . [ Eats and drinks . Much good dich thy good heart , Apemantus ! 50 windpipe's dangerous notes ] The gurgling sounds made by the big - wig's throat in drinking call the evil - minded man's ...
... fall to't : Rich men sin , and I eat root . [ Eats and drinks . Much good dich thy good heart , Apemantus ! 50 windpipe's dangerous notes ] The gurgling sounds made by the big - wig's throat in drinking call the evil - minded man's ...
Page 45
... fall , want treasure , cannot Do what they would ; are sorry - you are honourable , But yet they could have wish'd- they know not Something hath been amissa noble nature May catch a wrench- would all were well- ' t is pity : And so ...
... fall , want treasure , cannot Do what they would ; are sorry - you are honourable , But yet they could have wish'd- they know not Something hath been amissa noble nature May catch a wrench- would all were well- ' t is pity : And so ...
Page 76
... fall'n ! All gone ! and not One friend to take his fortune by the arm , And go along with him ! SEC . SERV . As we do turn our backs From our companion thrown into his grave , So his familiars to his buried fortunes 34 multiplying bans ...
... fall'n ! All gone ! and not One friend to take his fortune by the arm , And go along with him ! SEC . SERV . As we do turn our backs From our companion thrown into his grave , So his familiars to his buried fortunes 34 multiplying bans ...
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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