The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1907 |
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Page xi
... scenes out the play . But it follows not that he is answer- its worst part , though the best it contains may be , nonourably , imputed to him . . . . To conclude , the Pericles was in all probability the composition of iend whose ...
... scenes out the play . But it follows not that he is answer- its worst part , though the best it contains may be , nonourably , imputed to him . . . . To conclude , the Pericles was in all probability the composition of iend whose ...
Page xii
... scenes of very absorbing interest . The introduction of Gower , however inartificial it may seem , was the result of very profound skill . The presence of Gower supplied the unity of idea which the desultory nature of the story wanted ...
... scenes of very absorbing interest . The introduction of Gower , however inartificial it may seem , was the result of very profound skill . The presence of Gower supplied the unity of idea which the desultory nature of the story wanted ...
Page xiv
... scenes and shorter passages in which we trace him manifestly belong to his latest style of composition . Whether it had ever been acted before it received those vivifying touches from our poet , we cannot determine - perhaps it was the ...
... scenes and shorter passages in which we trace him manifestly belong to his latest style of composition . Whether it had ever been acted before it received those vivifying touches from our poet , we cannot determine - perhaps it was the ...
Page xviii
... Sidney Walker , who suggested Dekker as the third hand . 2 As no such list is given in any of the Quartos , this argument falls to the ground . mere literature is concerned , of the brothel scenes to xviii INTRODUCTION.
... Sidney Walker , who suggested Dekker as the third hand . 2 As no such list is given in any of the Quartos , this argument falls to the ground . mere literature is concerned , of the brothel scenes to xviii INTRODUCTION.
Page xix
... scenes to ng in the first two Acts ; the impossibility of Shake- s marrying Marina to a man like Lysimachus ; the ions of , and additions to , the Shakespeare work by Wilkins in his novel fancied he could improve the ve . The difference ...
... scenes to ng in the first two Acts ; the impossibility of Shake- s marrying Marina to a man like Lysimachus ; the ions of , and additions to , the Shakespeare work by Wilkins in his novel fancied he could improve the ve . The difference ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acts Antiochus Antony and Cleopatra arms Arranged Bawd Boult brothel call'd Cambridge Editors Cerimon Cleon Collier Compare The Winter's Cymbeline daughter dead death Delius Dionyza Divided doth doubt Dyce edition Enter GOWER Enter PERICLES Exeunt Exit eyes father Fleay Folios Gent Gentlemen give gods hast hath hear heaven Helicanus Henry honour Julius Cæsar king Knight lady Leonine line ends line in Qq lord Lychorida Lysimachus Malone compares Marina mean mistress Mitylene ne'er never old copies pare passage Pericles play pray Prince of Tyre prose in Qq Quarto queen quotes rest Romeo and Juliet Rowe Sail Sailors SCENE sense Shakespeare Shakespearian Grammar shore Simonides sorrow speak Tarsus tell Thai Thaisa Thaliard thee there's thou art thought Troilus and Cressida Tyre unto verb virgin Wilkins Wilkins's novel wilt wind Winter's Tale word ΙΟ