The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 1Methuen, 1904 |
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Page x
... Slender . With the swaggering vaine of Auncient Pistoll and Corporall Nym . By William Shake- speare . As it hath been diuers times Acted by the right Honorable my Lord Chamberlaines seruants . Both before her Maiestie and elsewhere ...
... Slender . With the swaggering vaine of Auncient Pistoll and Corporall Nym . By William Shake- speare . As it hath been diuers times Acted by the right Honorable my Lord Chamberlaines seruants . Both before her Maiestie and elsewhere ...
Page xv
... Slender , by the colour device . Previously to this , in the fourth Scene , about eighty lines ( nearly the whole Scene ) have been devoted , in proper dramatic and poetic fashion , to setting forth this plot , as it was first ...
... Slender , by the colour device . Previously to this , in the fourth Scene , about eighty lines ( nearly the whole Scene ) have been devoted , in proper dramatic and poetic fashion , to setting forth this plot , as it was first ...
Page xvi
... Slender and Caius are to be deceived . These are brief passages , and the second is necessary as opening the final denouement . The Quarto dispenses entirely with these two Scenes , and cer- tainly one does not miss them . It is true we ...
... Slender and Caius are to be deceived . These are brief passages , and the second is necessary as opening the final denouement . The Quarto dispenses entirely with these two Scenes , and cer- tainly one does not miss them . It is true we ...
Page xix
... Slender is here again compelled to hide his diminished head , but all the " Lucy " passages are lost ; a very ... Slender short . His " Cotsall " remarks are omitted . The deer - stealing remarks are retained , as are also the incidents ...
... Slender is here again compelled to hide his diminished head , but all the " Lucy " passages are lost ; a very ... Slender short . His " Cotsall " remarks are omitted . The deer - stealing remarks are retained , as are also the incidents ...
Page xxi
... For a dish of stewed prunes , and I with my ward Defending my head , he hot my shin . " This is a more intelligible fencing metaphor , but the Folio makes Slender appear , as is intended , a greater fool INTRODUCTION xxi.
... For a dish of stewed prunes , and I with my ward Defending my head , he hot my shin . " This is a more intelligible fencing metaphor , but the Folio makes Slender appear , as is intended , a greater fool INTRODUCTION xxi.
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Bardolph Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson called circa Compare conj Cotgrave court Craig Cynthia's Revels Devil of Edmonton Dict Dods English Evans Exeunt Exit expression fairies Falstaff Fenton Fletcher Folio Gabriel Harvey Garter gentlemen gives Gros Grosart Halliwell hath Henry Henry IV Herne the hunter Heywood Holland's Plinie horns Host Humour husband Jonson knight letter Love's Labour's Lost Malone marry Master Brook master doctor meaning Merry Devil Merry Wives Mistress Anne Mistress Ford Nares Nashe Nashe's numbers occurs Othello passage Pist Pistol play pray proverb Quarto Quarto reads Queen Quick Quickly quoted reference Rugby sack Saffron Walden Satiromastix says scene sense Shakespeare Shal Shallow Sir Hugh Sir John Slen speak speech Steevens sword Tale tell term thee Theobald thou Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night Welsh Wheatley wife Windsor wine witch woman word ΙΟ دو وو