The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 9 |
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William Shakespeare. CONTENTS ' KING LEAR- Introduction Text MACBETH- Introduction Text · ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA- Introduction Text · PAGE • 3 · 17 151 165 · • • 259 271 VOL . IX KING LEAR DRAMATIS PERSONE LEAR , king.
William Shakespeare. CONTENTS ' KING LEAR- Introduction Text MACBETH- Introduction Text · ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA- Introduction Text · PAGE • 3 · 17 151 165 · • • 259 271 VOL . IX KING LEAR DRAMATIS PERSONE LEAR , king.
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William Shakespeare. In the same year a second Quarto ( Q2 ) appeared , with a different device , and omitting the name of the place of sale . The text of Q2 follows now the corrected , now the uncorrected copies of Q1 , fre- quently ...
William Shakespeare. In the same year a second Quarto ( Q2 ) appeared , with a different device , and omitting the name of the place of sale . The text of Q2 follows now the corrected , now the uncorrected copies of Q1 , fre- quently ...
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The theory of a subsequent Shakespearean revision cannot be ab- solutely dismissed . If Shakespeare in his ripest maturity patched King Lear , his art was probably quite a match for our tests , as it hardly is in the patching of Love's ...
The theory of a subsequent Shakespearean revision cannot be ab- solutely dismissed . If Shakespeare in his ripest maturity patched King Lear , his art was probably quite a match for our tests , as it hardly is in the patching of Love's ...
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William Shakespeare. year of the world 3105 , at what time Joas reigned in Juda , ' was a familiar name to the Elizabethans . As undisputed history his legend had been transcribed by successive chroniclers , in prose and verse ...
William Shakespeare. year of the world 3105 , at what time Joas reigned in Juda , ' was a familiar name to the Elizabethans . As undisputed history his legend had been transcribed by successive chroniclers , in prose and verse ...
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William Shakespeare. trates ) , Lear questions his daughters to ascertain which deserves the largest of the three prospective shares , thinking ' to guerdon most where favour most be found.'1 According to the second ( Spenser's ) ...
William Shakespeare. trates ) , Lear questions his daughters to ascertain which deserves the largest of the three prospective shares , thinking ' to guerdon most where favour most be found.'1 According to the second ( Spenser's ) ...
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Antony and Cleopatra Banquo better blood Cæs Cæsar Cawdor Char Charmian Cleo Cleopatra Cordelia Corn daughter dead dear death Doct dost doth duke Edgar Edmund Egypt Enobarbus Enter ANTONY Eros Exeunt Exit eyes farewell father fear fellow Fleance Fool fortune friends Fulvia Gent give Glou Gloucester gods Goneril grace hand hath hear heart heaven hither Holinshed honour horse INDIANENSIS Iras Julius Cæsar Kent king King Lear knave Lady Lear Lepidus look lord Macb Macd Macduff Mach madam Mark Antony master Mess Messenger murder never night noble nuncle Octavia Parthia Pompey poor pray Prithee queen Re-enter Regan Ross SCENE Shakespeare SIGILLUM sister sleep Sold Soldiers speak sword tell thane thee There's thine things thou art thou hast VERITAS villain What's Witch