The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1907 |
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Page xxii
... thou goest , And the gods strengthen thee ! . For me , be you thoughten That I came with no ill intent , for to me The very doors and windows savour vilely . Farewell . Thou art a piece of virtue , and I doubt not that thy training hath ...
... thou goest , And the gods strengthen thee ! . For me , be you thoughten That I came with no ill intent , for to me The very doors and windows savour vilely . Farewell . Thou art a piece of virtue , and I doubt not that thy training hath ...
Page 10
... thou thyself shalt bleed . 48 , 49. Who know . . . did ] " The meaning , " says Malone , " may be ' I will act as sick men do , who having had experience of the pleasures of the world , and only visionary and distant prospect of heaven ...
... thou thyself shalt bleed . 48 , 49. Who know . . . did ] " The meaning , " says Malone , " may be ' I will act as sick men do , who having had experience of the pleasures of the world , and only visionary and distant prospect of heaven ...
Page 11
... thou prove prosperous ! Of all , ' say'd yet , I wish thee happiness . Like a bold champion , I assume the lists , Nor ask advice of any other thought But faithfulness and courage . [ He reads the riddle . ] I am no viper , yet I feed ...
... thou prove prosperous ! Of all , ' say'd yet , I wish thee happiness . Like a bold champion , I assume the lists , Nor ask advice of any other thought But faithfulness and courage . [ He reads the riddle . ] I am no viper , yet I feed ...
Page 12
... Thou never comest to a happy birth , But kill'st the mother that en- gender'd thee ” . For a parallel in Wilkins's Miseries of Enforced Marriage , see Introduction . 71. As live ] by the hope you have of living . 72. the last ] these ...
... Thou never comest to a happy birth , But kill'st the mother that en- gender'd thee ” . For a parallel in Wilkins's Miseries of Enforced Marriage , see Introduction . 71. As live ] by the hope you have of living . 72. the last ] these ...
Page 13
... thou abraid me in my land ” . 96 , 97. For vice itself ] for the noising abroad of vicious deeds re- sembles the action of that chartered libertine , the wind , which , in giving itself free way , blows dust in men's eyes . 97. to ...
... thou abraid me in my land ” . 96 , 97. For vice itself ] for the noising abroad of vicious deeds re- sembles the action of that chartered libertine , the wind , which , in giving itself free way , blows dust in men's eyes . 97. to ...
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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