The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Ginn, Heath, 1881 |
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Page vi
... all , make that love come free and natural to them . - To be plying such minds with arguments of duty , or with thoughts of the good to be gained by standing through un- pleasant task - work , seems to me a rather vi PREFACE .
... all , make that love come free and natural to them . - To be plying such minds with arguments of duty , or with thoughts of the good to be gained by standing through un- pleasant task - work , seems to me a rather vi PREFACE .
Page viii
... realities after having strayed among shadows till the shadows have come to seem realities . Not seldom the very naturalness of Shakespeare's world frightens unaccustomed readers : they find , or feel , viii PREFACE .
... realities after having strayed among shadows till the shadows have come to seem realities . Not seldom the very naturalness of Shakespeare's world frightens unaccustomed readers : they find , or feel , viii PREFACE .
Page x
... come only by many years of careful study and thought ; and he must keep the details and processes of his learning out of sight , putting forth only the last and highest results , the blossom and fragrance , of his learnedness : and the ...
... come only by many years of careful study and thought ; and he must keep the details and processes of his learning out of sight , putting forth only the last and highest results , the blossom and fragrance , of his learnedness : and the ...
Page xi
... come , and indeed really does come , from the hearer's own mind . It is much the same in editing a standard author for common use . And for an editor to be all the while , or often , putting average readers in mind how ignorant and ...
... come , and indeed really does come , from the hearer's own mind . It is much the same in editing a standard author for common use . And for an editor to be all the while , or often , putting average readers in mind how ignorant and ...
Page xii
... of readers , with Shakespeare's page before them , were to " pore , and dwindle as they pore " ? Here the ruling thought seems to be , that the chief profit • of studying Shakespeare is to come by analyzing and xii PREFACE .
... of readers , with Shakespeare's page before them , were to " pore , and dwindle as they pore " ? Here the ruling thought seems to be , that the chief profit • of studying Shakespeare is to come by analyzing and xii PREFACE .
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Common terms and phrases
Ægeon Antipholus Ben Jonson chain Collier's second folio correction daughter death didst doth Duke Dyce edition Eglamour Enter Ephesus Exeunt Exit fair father fool gentle gentlemen Gentlemen of Verona give grace hair hand hath Henry Condell honour husband instance Item John Heminge John Shakespeare Julia Julius Cæsar King labour lady Launce letter live look lord Lucetta LUCIANA Madam Marry master means merry mind mistress old copies old text original reads phrase plays Poet Poet's pray printed probably quibble SCENE seems sense servant Shake Silvia Sir Proteus Sir Thurio sister Snitterfield speak Speed Stratford Stratford-upon-Avon sure Susanna Hall sweet Syracuse tell thee thing thou art thou hast thought thyself Twelfth Night unto Valentine Venus and Adonis verse villain wife William Shakespeare word