The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 20Harper, 1908 |
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Page xiv
... plays ; though it should be added that , even in these last , he sacrifices the dis- tinction without hesitation or ... play . It is often said that we know nothing about Shake- speare , the man . It seems to me there is no one about ...
... plays ; though it should be added that , even in these last , he sacrifices the dis- tinction without hesitation or ... play . It is often said that we know nothing about Shake- speare , the man . It seems to me there is no one about ...
Page xix
... play of human nature . Finally , he grew up to adolescence in a town which we should now designate a mere village , by reason of its diminutive dimensions , and which , while possessed of Municipal Institutions , so ancient and so ...
... play of human nature . Finally , he grew up to adolescence in a town which we should now designate a mere village , by reason of its diminutive dimensions , and which , while possessed of Municipal Institutions , so ancient and so ...
Page 2
... plays , viz .: Love's Labour's Lost , The Two Gentlemen of Verona , A Comedy of Errors , and Romeo and Juliet , and had revised as many more by other hands , viz . , Titus Andronicus , and the three parts of Henry VI . eare ] plough ...
... plays , viz .: Love's Labour's Lost , The Two Gentlemen of Verona , A Comedy of Errors , and Romeo and Juliet , and had revised as many more by other hands , viz . , Titus Andronicus , and the three parts of Henry VI . eare ] plough ...
Page 9
... play , our sport is not in sight : These blue - vein'd violets whereon we lean Never can blab , nor know not what we mean . " The tender spring upon thy tempting lip Shews thee unripe ; yet mayst thou well be tasted : Make use of time ...
... play , our sport is not in sight : These blue - vein'd violets whereon we lean Never can blab , nor know not what we mean . " The tender spring upon thy tempting lip Shews thee unripe ; yet mayst thou well be tasted : Make use of time ...
Page 18
... player bade or challenged another to run without being caught from one fixed bound or base to another in a farther corner of the field . Cf. Two Gent . , I , ii , 97 : " Indeed , I bid the base for Proteus , " and note . 310 outward ...
... player bade or challenged another to run without being caught from one fixed bound or base to another in a farther corner of the field . Cf. Two Gent . , I , ii , 97 : " Indeed , I bid the base for Proteus , " and note . 310 outward ...
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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