The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Hearst's International Library Company, 1914 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 20
... scene to be remembered , how- ever rude may have been the property which represented the infant ; while the extravagance of rage , which formed one of the then main dramatic characteristics of that sovereign , must have made a deep ...
... scene to be remembered , how- ever rude may have been the property which represented the infant ; while the extravagance of rage , which formed one of the then main dramatic characteristics of that sovereign , must have made a deep ...
Page 25
... scene was a resuscitation of the poet at school . Recollections of the same book are to be traced in other of his plays . The Sententia Pueriles was , in all probability , the little manual by the aid of which he first learned to ...
... scene was a resuscitation of the poet at school . Recollections of the same book are to be traced in other of his plays . The Sententia Pueriles was , in all probability , the little manual by the aid of which he first learned to ...
Page 64
... scene in a countrie . " It was natural that these impertinent remarks . should have annoyed the object of them , and that they were so far effective may be gathered from an interest- ing statement made by the editor , Henry Chettle , in ...
... scene in a countrie . " It was natural that these impertinent remarks . should have annoyed the object of them , and that they were so far effective may be gathered from an interest- ing statement made by the editor , Henry Chettle , in ...
Page 65
... scene of our fragmentary history from the metropolis to the country , we find , at the time of Greene's lampoonry , the poet's father busily engaged with his counters in appraising the goods of one Henry Field , a tanner of Stratford ...
... scene of our fragmentary history from the metropolis to the country , we find , at the time of Greene's lampoonry , the poet's father busily engaged with his counters in appraising the goods of one Henry Field , a tanner of Stratford ...
Page 70
... scene in the tragedy of Lear . No discussion on either of the last - named plays , or on many of the others , can be satisfactorily conducted so long as the influences of the older drama , and the theatric usages of the time , are not ...
... scene in the tragedy of Lear . No discussion on either of the last - named plays , or on many of the others , can be satisfactorily conducted so long as the influences of the older drama , and the theatric usages of the time , are not ...
Contents
5 | |
39 | |
67 | |
108 | |
123 | |
165 | |
176 | |
vii | |
3 | |
5 | |
41 | |
49 | |
66 | |
90 | |
119 | |
146 | |
153 | |
2 | |
3 | |
xxii | |
2 | |
3 | |
5 | |
37 | |
71 | |
101 | |
132 | |
155 | |
158 | |
164 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alarum battle blood brother Burgundy Cade Capell Char character Chronicles Clar Clarence Clif Clifford Collier conj crown death doth doubt drama dramatist Duke of Gloucester Duke of York Earl Edward emendation England English Enter Exeunt Exit father fear fight folio France French friends Glou Gloucester grace hand Hanmer hast hath head heart heaven Henry's Holinshed honor house of Lancaster house of York Jack Cade Joan John John Shakespeare King Henry lady latter live London lord Malone Margaret Mortimer never noble passage Plantagenet play poet poet's Pope prince Pucelle quarto Queen Reignier Richard Richard II Richard Plantagenet Salisbury scene Shakespeare shalt soldiers Somerset soul speak Stratford-on-Avon Suffolk sword Talbot tell theater thee thine thought tion Titus Andronicus Tower town traitor unto Vaughan Warwick William Shakespeare Winchester words