The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 20Harper, 1908 |
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Page xi
... nature's moulds , all germens spill at once That make ingrateful man ! ” " 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 ...
... nature's moulds , all germens spill at once That make ingrateful man ! ” " 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 ...
Page xiii
... natural of writers , and fortunately for himself , as for us , he could afford to be so . In him , " the art itself is nature . " It would be just as easy to establish the other proposi- tion that , in the rhymed and more confessedly ...
... natural of writers , and fortunately for himself , as for us , he could afford to be so . In him , " the art itself is nature . " It would be just as easy to establish the other proposi- tion that , in the rhymed and more confessedly ...
Page xiv
... nature of his genius is apprehended . Similarly , in " Venus and Adonis " and " The Rape of Lucrece , " he manifests that ample command of language and that power of preserv- ing an almost hard and fast line between one character and ...
... nature of his genius is apprehended . Similarly , in " Venus and Adonis " and " The Rape of Lucrece , " he manifests that ample command of language and that power of preserv- ing an almost hard and fast line between one character and ...
Page xv
... Nature , Art , the relation of Man and Woman , and finally as to the World not seen , and necessarily , therefore , only surmised . To answer these questions in the above order , Shake- speare was born in A.D. 1564 , in the reign of ...
... Nature , Art , the relation of Man and Woman , and finally as to the World not seen , and necessarily , therefore , only surmised . To answer these questions in the above order , Shake- speare was born in A.D. 1564 , in the reign of ...
Page xviii
... nature , to take all that happens to them , and all they see and hear , as a matter of course , and to lack the spur and stimulus of a desire for personal improvement and advancement . No English poet who can be accurately described as ...
... nature , to take all that happens to them , and all they see and hear , as a matter of course , and to lack the spur and stimulus of a desire for personal improvement and advancement . No English poet who can be accurately described as ...
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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