Othello ; King Lear ; All's well that ends well ; MacbethCurrent Literature Publishing Company, 1909 |
From inside the book
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Page xv
... tell me , be assured that I will make you wish you had been born dumb . " - " That would have been casy enough , " said the ensign , " when the lieutenant came to your house ; but now that you have driven him away , it will be hard to ...
... tell me , be assured that I will make you wish you had been born dumb . " - " That would have been casy enough , " said the ensign , " when the lieutenant came to your house ; but now that you have driven him away , it will be hard to ...
Page xxix
... tell his thoughts , the more he sharpens the desire to know them : when ques- tioned , he so states his reasons for not speaking , that in effect they compel the Moor to extort the secret from him . For his purpose is , not merely to ...
... tell his thoughts , the more he sharpens the desire to know them : when ques- tioned , he so states his reasons for not speaking , that in effect they compel the Moor to extort the secret from him . For his purpose is , not merely to ...
Page xxxi
... 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 great mistake to suppose that a man's love of truth will needs be in proportion ...
... 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 great mistake to suppose that a man's love of truth will needs be in proportion ...
Page xxxii
... tell ; and absolutely persecutes the Moor with a redundancy of proof . When , for instance , Othello drops the words , " and yet how nature , erring from itself " ; meaning simply that no woman is altogether exempt from frailty ; Iago ...
... tell ; and absolutely persecutes the Moor with a redundancy of proof . When , for instance , Othello drops the words , " and yet how nature , erring from itself " ; meaning simply that no woman is altogether exempt from frailty ; Iago ...
Page xl
... telling various lies about the Moor ; yet his lying is so managed as , while affecting its immediate purpose on the gull , to be at the same time more or less suggestive of the truth : he caricatures Othello , but is too artful a cari ...
... telling various lies about the Moor ; yet his lying is so managed as , while affecting its immediate purpose on the gull , to be at the same time more or less suggestive of the truth : he caricatures Othello , but is too artful a cari ...
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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