The Plays of William Shakespeare, Volume 10J. Johnson, 1803 |
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Page 8
... Hecate , and three Witches . Lords , Gentlemen , Officers , Soldiers , Murderers , Attendants , and Mefssengers . The Ghost of Banquo , and feveral other Apparitions . SCENE , in the End of the fourth Act , lies in England ; through the ...
... Hecate , and three Witches . Lords , Gentlemen , Officers , Soldiers , Murderers , Attendants , and Mefssengers . The Ghost of Banquo , and feveral other Apparitions . SCENE , in the End of the fourth Act , lies in England ; through the ...
Page 36
... Hecate at the head of their enchantments . And to make it still more familiar to the common audience ( which was always his point ) he adds , for another ingredient , a sufficient quantity of our own country fuperftitions concerning ...
... Hecate at the head of their enchantments . And to make it still more familiar to the common audience ( which was always his point ) he adds , for another ingredient , a sufficient quantity of our own country fuperftitions concerning ...
Page 101
... Steevens's emendation of " the curtain'd sleeper , " is well NATIONAL AND . LIBRARY 유 Pale Hecate's offerings ; and wither'd murder , Alarum'd by H3 ÌÀÑÂÅÒΗ . 101 The curtain'd fleep; now witchcraft celebrates & ...
... Steevens's emendation of " the curtain'd sleeper , " is well NATIONAL AND . LIBRARY 유 Pale Hecate's offerings ; and wither'd murder , Alarum'd by H3 ÌÀÑÂÅÒΗ . 101 The curtain'd fleep; now witchcraft celebrates & ...
Page 102
... Hecate , and the ravisher , and the murderer , who , like me , are stealing upon their prey . When the reading is thus adjusted , he wishes , with great propriety , in the following lines , that the earth may not hear his steps ...
... Hecate , and the ravisher , and the murderer , who , like me , are stealing upon their prey . When the reading is thus adjusted , he wishes , with great propriety , in the following lines , that the earth may not hear his steps ...
Page 164
... Hecate's fum- mons , The shard - borne beetle , with his drowsy hums , Again , by our author's 13th Sonnet : " So should that beauty which you hold in lease , " Find no determination . " MALONE . I once thought that by " Nature's copy ...
... Hecate's fum- mons , The shard - borne beetle , with his drowsy hums , Again , by our author's 13th Sonnet : " So should that beauty which you hold in lease , " Find no determination . " MALONE . I once thought that by " Nature's copy ...
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Common terms and phrases
almoſt alſo ancient anſwer Banquo BAST becauſe beſt blood cauſe curſe death deſcribed doth Duncan elſe emendation Engliſh Exeunt expreffion eyes faid falſe fame Faulconbridge fays fear feem fignifies fimilar firſt fleep following paſſage fome foul fuch hath heaven Hecate Henry VI himſelf Holinſhed honour houſe Hubert inſtance itſelf JOHNSON King Henry King Henry IV King John Lady laſt leſs lord MACB Macbeth MACD Macduff Malcolm MALONE means moſt murder muſt myſelf night obſerved occafion old copy paffage paſſage perſon play Pope preſent prince purpoſe Queen Rape of Lucrece reaſon Richard III ſaid ſame ſays ſcene Scotland ſecond ſee ſeems ſenſe Shakſpeare Shakſpeare's ſhall ſhe ſhould ſhow ſome ſpeak ſpeech ſpirits ſtand ſtate STEEVENS ſtill ſtrange ſuch ſupported ſuppoſe ſuſpect ſweet thane thee Theobald theſe thoſe thou thought tranflation uſed verſe WARBURTON whoſe WITCH word