Othello ; King Lear ; All's well that ends well ; MacbethCurrent Literature Publishing Company, 1909 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 80
Page xxi
... passages , some of them highly important , amounting in all to upwards of 160 lines , which are not in the preceding quarto . On the other hand , the folio omits a few lines that are found in the earlier issue . The play was again set ...
... passages , some of them highly important , amounting in all to upwards of 160 lines , which are not in the preceding quarto . On the other hand , the folio omits a few lines that are found in the earlier issue . The play was again set ...
Page xlvi
... passage into her mind : from his envenomed wit she ex- tracts the element of harmless mirth , without receiving or suspecting the venom with which it is charged . Thus the world's contagions pass before her , yet dare not touch nor come ...
... passage into her mind : from his envenomed wit she ex- tracts the element of harmless mirth , without receiving or suspecting the venom with which it is charged . Thus the world's contagions pass before her , yet dare not touch nor come ...
Page lvi
... passage he hints vaguely that he loves Des- demona , and it is significant that this is the only trace left of the ensign's motive for revenge in Cinthio's novel . That Shakspere departed so widely from his original proves that he meant ...
... passage he hints vaguely that he loves Des- demona , and it is significant that this is the only trace left of the ensign's motive for revenge in Cinthio's novel . That Shakspere departed so widely from his original proves that he meant ...
Page 7
... passage has caused a great deal of controversy . Tyrwhitt would read " fair life , " and Coleridge thinks this reading " the true one , as fitting to Iago's contempt for whatever did not display power , and that , intellectual power ...
... passage has caused a great deal of controversy . Tyrwhitt would read " fair life , " and Coleridge thinks this reading " the true one , as fitting to Iago's contempt for whatever did not display power , and that , intellectual power ...
Page 19
... Theobald ) " weaken notion " ; Hammer , " waken motion " ; Keightley , " wakens motion " ; Anon . conj . in Fur- ness , " wake emotion , " & c . - I . G. For if such actions may have passage free , Bond 19 THE MOOR Act I. Sc . ii .
... Theobald ) " weaken notion " ; Hammer , " waken motion " ; Keightley , " wakens motion " ; Anon . conj . in Fur- ness , " wake emotion , " & c . - I . G. For if such actions may have passage free , Bond 19 THE MOOR Act I. Sc . ii .
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