The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 18Jefferson Press, 1908 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 39
Page xii
... fool in " Lear , " upon the nurse in " Romeo and Juliet , " upon Launce in " The Two Gen- tlemen of Verona , " upon Master Shallow , upon Mrs. Quickly , or upon Falstaff's ragged retainers , with Ape- mantus's celebrated and not ...
... fool in " Lear , " upon the nurse in " Romeo and Juliet , " upon Launce in " The Two Gen- tlemen of Verona , " upon Master Shallow , upon Mrs. Quickly , or upon Falstaff's ragged retainers , with Ape- mantus's celebrated and not ...
Page xv
... was not altogether a wise man nor Timon altogether a fool . As much foolery as one had , so much wisdom the other lacked . Timon was en- titled to say : - 71044 " No villainous bounty yet hath passed my heart ; [ xv ] INTRODUCTION.
... was not altogether a wise man nor Timon altogether a fool . As much foolery as one had , so much wisdom the other lacked . Timon was en- titled to say : - 71044 " No villainous bounty yet hath passed my heart ; [ xv ] INTRODUCTION.
Page xviii
... fools of fortune , trencher - friends , time's flies , Cap - and - knee slaves , vapours , and minute - jacks . " Still it is a fish - fag's eloquence , and simple swearing would be quite as impressive . In the fourth act , which Mr ...
... fools of fortune , trencher - friends , time's flies , Cap - and - knee slaves , vapours , and minute - jacks . " Still it is a fish - fag's eloquence , and simple swearing would be quite as impressive . In the fourth act , which Mr ...
Page xix
... fool . " To him at his task comes Alcibiades marching on Athens , and accompanied by two courte- sans , exceptionally degraded specimens of their class , who never open their mouths except to curse or to beg . But in cursing they cannot ...
... fool . " To him at his task comes Alcibiades marching on Athens , and accompanied by two courte- sans , exceptionally degraded specimens of their class , who never open their mouths except to curse or to beg . But in cursing they cannot ...
Page xx
... fool's . " In the fine speech where he describes himself as " left open , bare for every storm that blows , " the misanthrope made by circumstance asserts his superiority over the misanthrope by nature . 66 Why shouldst thou hate men ...
... fool's . " In the fine speech where he describes himself as " left open , bare for every storm that blows , " the misanthrope made by circumstance asserts his superiority over the misanthrope by nature . 66 Why shouldst thou hate men ...
Other editions - View all
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