The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 20Harper, 1908 |
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Page x
... things to man's delightful use : the roof the subject ; and , in all I shall say , it will be assumed that the reader is familiar with that volume . Those who are not , if there be such , should become so , at once . Of thickest covert ...
... things to man's delightful use : the roof the subject ; and , in all I shall say , it will be assumed that the reader is familiar with that volume . Those who are not , if there be such , should become so , at once . Of thickest covert ...
Page xi
... things by season season'd are To their right praise and true perfection ! Peace , ho ! the moon sleeps with Endymion And would not be awaked . " " The Merchant of Venice , " Act V , sc . 1 . " Lear . Blow , winds , and crack your cheeks ...
... things by season season'd are To their right praise and true perfection ! Peace , ho ! the moon sleeps with Endymion And would not be awaked . " " The Merchant of Venice , " Act V , sc . 1 . " Lear . Blow , winds , and crack your cheeks ...
Page xii
... Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse : Seeds spring from seeds and beauty breedeth beauty ; Thou wast begot ; to get it is thy duty . " If one had space in which to quote passages from the blank verse of Wordsworth , Tennyson ...
... Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse : Seeds spring from seeds and beauty breedeth beauty ; Thou wast begot ; to get it is thy duty . " If one had space in which to quote passages from the blank verse of Wordsworth , Tennyson ...
Page xv
... things respecting him are what he thought and felt , what he said when he truly meant what he was saying , what was the main occupation and what the general tenor of his life , what his reputed disposition , and what his conduct in the ...
... things respecting him are what he thought and felt , what he said when he truly meant what he was saying , what was the main occupation and what the general tenor of his life , what his reputed disposition , and what his conduct in the ...
Page xvi
... things that are to be in any way understood by mortals . In the second place , Shakespeare was born , according to the ideas and educational opportunities of the England of that day , in a relatively humble but certainly not a lowly ...
... things that are to be in any way understood by mortals . In the second place , Shakespeare was born , according to the ideas and educational opportunities of the England of that day , in a relatively humble but certainly not a lowly ...
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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