The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volume 15 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 5
Page 332
HELEN . Dear lord , you are full of fair words . · Pan . You speak your fair
pleasure , sweet queen .Fair prince , here is good broken musick . PAR . You
have broke it , cousin : and , by my life , you shall make it whole again ; you shall
piece it out ...
HELEN . Dear lord , you are full of fair words . · Pan . You speak your fair
pleasure , sweet queen .Fair prince , here is good broken musick . PAR . You
have broke it , cousin : and , by my life , you shall make it whole again ; you shall
piece it out ...
Page 333
HELEN . You shall not bob us out of our melody ; If you do , our melancholy upon
your head ! Pan . Sweet queen , sweet queen ; that ' s a sweet queen , i ' faith .
HELEN . And to make a sweet lady sad , is a sour offence . . PAN . Nay , that shall
...
HELEN . You shall not bob us out of our melody ; If you do , our melancholy upon
your head ! Pan . Sweet queen , sweet queen ; that ' s a sweet queen , i ' faith .
HELEN . And to make a sweet lady sad , is a sour offence . . PAN . Nay , that shall
...
Page 334
Mr . Steevens proposes to assign the next speech , “ I ' ll lay my life , " & c . to
Helen instead of Paris . This arrangement appeared to me so plausible , that I
once regulated the text accordingly . But it is observable that through the whole of
the ...
Mr . Steevens proposes to assign the next speech , “ I ' ll lay my life , " & c . to
Helen instead of Paris . This arrangement appeared to me so plausible , that I
once regulated the text accordingly . But it is observable that through the whole of
the ...
Page 335
HELEN . Why , this is kindly done . Pan . My niece is horribly in love with a thing
you have , sweet queen . HELEN . She shall have it , my lord , if it be not my lord
Paris . may be obtained . She addresses herself , I suppose , to Pandarus , and ...
HELEN . Why , this is kindly done . Pan . My niece is horribly in love with a thing
you have , sweet queen . HELEN . She shall have it , my lord , if it be not my lord
Paris . may be obtained . She addresses herself , I suppose , to Pandarus , and ...
Page 336
In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various
Commentators, to which are Added Notes William Shakespeare Isaac Reed. on
Pan . He ! no , she ' ll none of him ; they two are twain . HELEN . Falling in , after
falling ...
In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various
Commentators, to which are Added Notes William Shakespeare Isaac Reed. on
Pan . He ! no , she ' ll none of him ; they two are twain . HELEN . Falling in , after
falling ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achilles AGAM Ajax ancient appears bear believe better blood bring called cardinal cause CRES Cressida doth Duke editions editors Enter Exeunt expression eyes fair fall fear folio GENT give given grace Greeks hand hath head hear heart heaven Hector Helen Holinshed honour Johnson keep King King Henry king's lady leave look lord MALONE Mason matter means nature never noble observe old copy once opinion Pandarus Paris passage perhaps person play poor Pope praise pray present prince quarto Queen scene seems sense serve Shakspeare soul speak speech stand STEEVENS suppose sweet tell thee THER thing Thomas thou thought Troilus Trojan Troy true truth Ulyss Wolsey