Othello ; King Lear ; All's well that ends well ; MacbethCurrent Literature Publishing Company, 1909 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page xxxi
... Heaven in the face with a sort of defiant smile ! That Iago prefers lying to telling the truth , is implied in what we have said . Perhaps , indeed , such a preference is inseparable from his inordinate intellectuality . For it is a ...
... Heaven in the face with a sort of defiant smile ! That Iago prefers lying to telling the truth , is implied in what we have said . Perhaps , indeed , such a preference is inseparable from his inordinate intellectuality . For it is a ...
Page lv
... heaven of her native innocence , wrought a civil war in his heart . She is his counterpart ; and , like him , is almost sanctified in our eyes by her absolute un- suspiciousness , and holy entireness of love . As the curtain drops ...
... heaven of her native innocence , wrought a civil war in his heart . She is his counterpart ; and , like him , is almost sanctified in our eyes by her absolute un- suspiciousness , and holy entireness of love . As the curtain drops ...
Page 7
... heaven , I rather would have been his hangman . Iago . Why , there's no remedy ; ' tis the curse of service , Preferment goes by letter and affection , And not by old gradation , where each second The passage has caused a great deal of ...
... heaven , I rather would have been his hangman . Iago . Why , there's no remedy ; ' tis the curse of service , Preferment goes by letter and affection , And not by old gradation , where each second The passage has caused a great deal of ...
Page 8
... Heaven is my judge , not I for love and duty , But seeming so , for my peculiar end : 50. " Visages " ; outward semblances . - C . H. H. 60 For when my outward action doth demonstrate The native act 8 ' Act I. Sc . i . OTHELLO.
... Heaven is my judge , not I for love and duty , But seeming so , for my peculiar end : 50. " Visages " ; outward semblances . - C . H. H. 60 For when my outward action doth demonstrate The native act 8 ' Act I. Sc . i . OTHELLO.
Page 14
... heaven ! How got she out ? O treason of the blood ! Fathers , from hence trust not your daughters ' minds By what you see them act . Is there not charms By which the property of youth and maidhood May be abused ? Have you not read ...
... heaven ! How got she out ? O treason of the blood ! Fathers , from hence trust not your daughters ' minds By what you see them act . Is there not charms By which the property of youth and maidhood May be abused ? Have you not read ...
Contents
vii | |
xi | |
xxiv | |
2 | |
3 | |
5 | |
89 | |
119 | |
138 | |
163 | |
177 | |
182 | |
184 | |
184 | |
184 | |
3 | |
5 | |
52 | |
160 | |
184 | |
204 | |
iv | |
140 | |
149 | |
iv | |
vii | |
xiii | |
xl | |
2 | |
3 | |
7 | |
38 | |
84 | |
130 | |
143 | |
Common terms and phrases
Banquo Bertram better blood Brabantio Cassio character Child Rowland conj Cordelia Count Cyprus daugh daughter death deed Desdemona devil dost Duke Edgar Edmund Emil Emilia Enter Exeunt Exit eyes father fear feeling Fleance folio fool fortune Gent give Glou Gloucester Goneril grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven Helena honor husband Iago Iago's ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Kent king King Lear knave Lady Lady Macbeth Lafeu Lear Lear's look lord Macb Macbeth Macd Macduff madam means Michael Cassio mind Moor murder nature never night noble Othello Parolles passion pity play poor pray quartos Regan Roderigo Rousillon scene sense Shakespeare soul speak speech tell thane thee thine thing thou art thought tion truth Venice villain Weird Sisters wife Witch words