The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 20Harper, 1908 |
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Page xi
... King Lear , " Act III , sc . 2 . 1 Shakespeare perforce must have been well aware that the nightingale does sing by day just as much as by night , but doubtless wished to convey that it pauses , or might just as well pause , in its ...
... King Lear , " Act III , sc . 2 . 1 Shakespeare perforce must have been well aware that the nightingale does sing by day just as much as by night , but doubtless wished to convey that it pauses , or might just as well pause , in its ...
Page xix
... Kings , Queens , Popes , and Statesmen ; while these either lack the peculiar foibles of the former , or take infinite pains to dissemble them . Thus Shakespeare , who developed the highest , deepest , and widest Imagination , and ...
... Kings , Queens , Popes , and Statesmen ; while these either lack the peculiar foibles of the former , or take infinite pains to dissemble them . Thus Shakespeare , who developed the highest , deepest , and widest Imagination , and ...
Page xxii
... King Lear , " we are told 66 66 Men must endure Their going hence , even as their coming hither : Ripeness is all , " it is obvious that it is Shakespeare , even more than Edgar , who is speaking . When , at the end of " The Taming of ...
... King Lear , " we are told 66 66 Men must endure Their going hence , even as their coming hither : Ripeness is all , " it is obvious that it is Shakespeare , even more than Edgar , who is speaking . When , at the end of " The Taming of ...
Page 2
... King James I. He died on November 10 , 1624 . This vow was fulfilled by the production a year later in 1594 of Shakespeare's second narrative poem , The Rape of Lucrece , which was also dedicated to the Earl of Southampton . These words ...
... King James I. He died on November 10 , 1624 . This vow was fulfilled by the production a year later in 1594 of Shakespeare's second narrative poem , The Rape of Lucrece , which was also dedicated to the Earl of Southampton . These words ...
Page 52
... king of graves , and grave for kings , Imperious supreme of all mortal things . " No , no , " quoth she , " sweet Death , I did but jest ; Yet pardon me , I felt a kind of fear When as I met the boar , that bloody beast , Which knows no ...
... king of graves , and grave for kings , Imperious supreme of all mortal things . " No , no , " quoth she , " sweet Death , I did but jest ; Yet pardon me , I felt a kind of fear When as I met the boar , that bloody beast , Which knows no ...
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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