The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 3 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 330
bring him jump when he may Cassio find . " f With martial stalk he passed through
our watch . ) The reading of the earliest quarto , and presenting a finer image
than that of the subsequent editions , which have , " hath he gone by our watch .
bring him jump when he may Cassio find . " f With martial stalk he passed through
our watch . ) The reading of the earliest quarto , and presenting a finer image
than that of the subsequent editions , which have , " hath he gone by our watch .
Page 336
in “ Othello , " Act I . Sc . 2 , Cassio inquires of Tago ," - ancient , what makes he
here ? ” and in “ Love ' s Labour ' s Lost , " Act IV . Sc . 3 , the king questions
Costard , " what makes treason here ? " f We ' ll teach you to drink deep ere you
depart ...
in “ Othello , " Act I . Sc . 2 , Cassio inquires of Tago ," - ancient , what makes he
here ? ” and in “ Love ' s Labour ' s Lost , " Act IV . Sc . 3 , the king questions
Costard , " what makes treason here ? " f We ' ll teach you to drink deep ere you
depart ...
Page 646
Cassio , his Lieutenant . Iago , his Ancient . DESDEMONA , Daughter to
Brabantio , and Wife to Othello . EMILIA , Wife to Iago . Bianca , Mistress to
Cassio . Sailor , Messengers , Herald , Oficers , Gentlemen , Musicians , and
Attendants .
Cassio , his Lieutenant . Iago , his Ancient . DESDEMONA , Daughter to
Brabantio , and Wife to Othello . EMILIA , Wife to Iago . Bianca , Mistress to
Cassio . Sailor , Messengers , Herald , Oficers , Gentlemen , Musicians , and
Attendants .
Page 659
she must have change , she must ; ] These words are not in C - defeat thy favour
with an usurped beard : ) Change , or dis | the folio . figure thy countenance by
putting on a spurious beard . 659 UU 2 Rod . What say you ? | Cassio ' s ACT 1 .
she must have change , she must ; ] These words are not in C - defeat thy favour
with an usurped beard : ) Change , or dis | the folio . figure thy countenance by
putting on a spurious beard . 659 UU 2 Rod . What say you ? | Cassio ' s ACT 1 .
Page 660
William Shakespeare Howard Staunton. Rod . What say you ? | Cassio ' s a
proper man : let me see now ;Iago . No more of drowning , do you hear ? To get
his place , and to plume up my will , ROD . I am changed : I ' ll go sell all my land .
William Shakespeare Howard Staunton. Rod . What say you ? | Cassio ' s a
proper man : let me see now ;Iago . No more of drowning , do you hear ? To get
his place , and to plume up my will , ROD . I am changed : I ' ll go sell all my land .
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
answer Antony appear arms Attendants bear better blood body bring brother Brutus Cæsar Cassio cause CLEO comes daughter dead dear death dost doth Enter Exeunt Exit eyes face fair fall father fear fire folio follow fool fortune friends give gods gone grace Hamlet hand hast hath head hear heart heaven hold honour I'll Iago keep king lady LEAR leave live look lord mark matter means mind mother nature never night noble Old text omits once play poor pray present quarto queen reason Rome SCENE seen sense SERV soul speak speech spirit stand sweet sword tears tell thee thine thing thou thought tongue true turn unto wife