The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 6Ginn, Heath, 1881 |
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Page 3
... course of the same year , and was reprinted in 1619 . In this quarto edition , the play is but about half as long as in the authentic copy of 1623 , and some of the prose parts are printed so as to look like verse . It is in doubt ...
... course of the same year , and was reprinted in 1619 . In this quarto edition , the play is but about half as long as in the authentic copy of 1623 , and some of the prose parts are printed so as to look like verse . It is in doubt ...
Page 4
... course of blundering and exposure which Sir John here goes through is such , that I can hardly con- ceive how the Poet should have framed it , but that he was prompted to do so by some motive external to his own mind . That the free ...
... course of blundering and exposure which Sir John here goes through is such , that I can hardly con- ceive how the Poet should have framed it , but that he was prompted to do so by some motive external to his own mind . That the free ...
Page 11
... there . 12 Fault was sometimes used for misfortune . - Shallow here very politely tries to arrest the unpleasant course of speech Slender persists in taking . Shal . Tut , a pin ! this shall be SCENE I. II THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR .
... there . 12 Fault was sometimes used for misfortune . - Shallow here very politely tries to arrest the unpleasant course of speech Slender persists in taking . Shal . Tut , a pin ! this shall be SCENE I. II THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR .
Page 14
... course . The application here is probably too deep for anybody but Bardolph , unless it refer to the reeling of a drunken man , now this way , now that . Cashier'd seems to be Bardolph's word for robbed ; discash'd . 25 Slender mistook ...
... course . The application here is probably too deep for anybody but Bardolph , unless it refer to the reeling of a drunken man , now this way , now that . Cashier'd seems to be Bardolph's word for robbed ; discash'd . 25 Slender mistook ...
Page 17
... course Sir Hugh's pronunciation of fault . 30 The Poet uses to attend repeatedly in the sense of to stay or wait for . So in Othello , iii . 3 : " Your dinner , and the generous islanders by you invited , do attend your presence . " See ...
... course Sir Hugh's pronunciation of fault . 30 The Poet uses to attend repeatedly in the sense of to stay or wait for . So in Othello , iii . 3 : " Your dinner , and the generous islanders by you invited , do attend your presence . " See ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abhorson BARDOLPH Barnardine bawd better brother Caius Claud Claudio Collier's second folio Critical Notes cuckold death disguised doth Duke Dyce Enter Mistress Escal Exeunt Exit fairies falconry Falstaff fault Fent Fool foot-note Ford's friar Froth Gent gentleman give Hanmer hath hear heart Heaven Herne the hunter honour Host HUGH EVANS humour husband Isab Isabel ISABELLA Julius Cæsar justice knave knog Lord Angelo Lucio maid Mariana marry Master Brook master doctor Master Fenton Master Ford Master Slender means Mistress Anne Mistress Ford night old copies old text oman original pardon Pist play Poet Poet's Pompey pray prison Prov Provost quartos Quick Re-enter reading Rugby SCENE sense Shakespeare Shal Shallow Sir John Sir John Falstaff Slen speak speech tell thee there's thing thou art to-morrow Walker warrant What's wife Windsor woman word