The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 20Harper, 1908 |
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Page v
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. BY SIDNEY LEE VOLUME XX WITH A POEMS . - I . SPECIAL INTRODUCTION BY ALFRED AUSTIN AND AN ORIGINAL FRONTISPIECE BY GERTRUDE DEMAIN HAMMOND RSI VIRGINIA ENERAL LIBRAR 7819 NEW YORK HARPER & BROTHERS ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. BY SIDNEY LEE VOLUME XX WITH A POEMS . - I . SPECIAL INTRODUCTION BY ALFRED AUSTIN AND AN ORIGINAL FRONTISPIECE BY GERTRUDE DEMAIN HAMMOND RSI VIRGINIA ENERAL LIBRAR 7819 NEW YORK HARPER & BROTHERS ...
Page ix
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. INTRODUCTION I HAVE always been disposed to think that collaboration on the part of several authors in the pro- duction of a work of importance should , where it is possible , be avoided ; since the ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. INTRODUCTION I HAVE always been disposed to think that collaboration on the part of several authors in the pro- duction of a work of importance should , where it is possible , be avoided ; since the ...
Page x
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. The germs of Shakespeare's mature and fully devel- oped genius are to be traced in his earliest acknowledged writings , " Venus and Adonis , " " The Rape of Lucrece , " and the " Sonnets " ; for ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. The germs of Shakespeare's mature and fully devel- oped genius are to be traced in his earliest acknowledged writings , " Venus and Adonis , " " The Rape of Lucrece , " and the " Sonnets " ; for ...
Page xiii
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. 99 craft and conscious intention discernible in the latter , Shakespeare's blank verse is a perfectly natural utterance , as natural to him as the most ordinary prose utterances are to other people . I ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. 99 craft and conscious intention discernible in the latter , Shakespeare's blank verse is a perfectly natural utterance , as natural to him as the most ordinary prose utterances are to other people . I ...
Page xviii
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. not by any means constitute the main and most valuable ingredients in Shakespeare's early education . I have spoken of the rank of life in which he was born ; and it is an inexpressible advantage to a ...
William Shakespeare Sir Sidney Lee. not by any means constitute the main and most valuable ingredients in Shakespeare's early education . I have spoken of the rank of life in which he was born ; and it is an inexpressible advantage to a ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. W. II arms bear beauty bird blood blunder breast breath cheeks Collatine colour Comp death doth England's Helicon eyes face fair false fancy fear fire fool foul gentle give grace grief Hamlet hand hath heart hence honour horse infra J. C. II John king kiss L. L. L. IV Lear light lips live look love's Lucr Lucrece lust Macb means N's D night oneself Ovid's pale Pass passion phoenix poem poet poor prol Quarto quoth reads Remy Belleau sense Shakespeare shame sighs song Sonn Sonnet sorrow stain stanza supra sweet Tarquin tears Tereu term thee thine thou thought tion tongue v. t. to take Venus and Adonis viii W. T. IV wanton weep wind word wound youth