The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Jefferson Press, 1906 |
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Page xviii
... Elizabethan Eng- lish may be held responsible . But other irregularities owe their presence to complexities inherent in Shake- speare's perfected genius . Few writers at their maturity offer [ xviii ] GENERAL INTRODUCTION.
... Elizabethan Eng- lish may be held responsible . But other irregularities owe their presence to complexities inherent in Shake- speare's perfected genius . Few writers at their maturity offer [ xviii ] GENERAL INTRODUCTION.
Page xx
... Elizabethan publishers , who were governed little by respect for the rights or feelings of others , often obtained from the playhouses , by fair means or foul , tran- scripts of plays and then issued them in print , without a careful ...
... Elizabethan publishers , who were governed little by respect for the rights or feelings of others , often obtained from the playhouses , by fair means or foul , tran- scripts of plays and then issued them in print , without a careful ...
Page xxii
... Elizabethan typography and Elizabethan English . Probably no more than one in each thousand lines presents really formidable obsta- cles to the expert reader's progress . And Shakespeare's writings were inherently of too fertile and too ...
... Elizabethan typography and Elizabethan English . Probably no more than one in each thousand lines presents really formidable obsta- cles to the expert reader's progress . And Shakespeare's writings were inherently of too fertile and too ...
Page xxviii
... Elizabethan and Jacobean theatres , men of fashion and critics were permitted to occupy seats on the stage . ' The Blackfriars ' Theatre , on part of the present site of The Times office in London , was formed out of a private house in ...
... Elizabethan and Jacobean theatres , men of fashion and critics were permitted to occupy seats on the stage . ' The Blackfriars ' Theatre , on part of the present site of The Times office in London , was formed out of a private house in ...
Page 19
... Elizabethan writer who uses the word in this sense , and that only here , in V , i , 299 , infra , and in Venus and Adonis , 736 . fair ] beauty . This substantival use of the adjective is common in Shakespeare's Sonnets . Cf. Sonnets ...
... Elizabethan writer who uses the word in this sense , and that only here , in V , i , 299 , infra , and in Venus and Adonis , 736 . fair ] beauty . This substantival use of the adjective is common in Shakespeare's Sonnets . Cf. Sonnets ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbess Adriana ÆGE Ægeon ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse bear chain Comedy of Errors dine dinner dost thou doth dramatic dramatist Dromio DROMIO of Syracuse DUKE Eglamour Enter ANTIPHOLUS Enter PROTEUS Epidamnum Exeunt Exit eyes fair false father fault Folio gentle Gentlemen of Verona give gone grace hair hath hear hence Henry Condell HOST husband JOHN HEMINGE John Lowin Julia lady ladyship LAUNCE letter live look lord Love's Love's Labour's Lost Lucetta Luciana Madam Silvia Marry Menæchmi Milan mistress never Plautus play poet pray quibble quoth reading SCENE servant Shake Shakespeare Sir Proteus Sir Thurio Sir Valentine sister speak speare's SPEED sweet tell thee thou art thou hast thy master thyself unto Venus and Adonis villain wife WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE Winter's Tale word writ youth