The Text of Shakespeare Vindicated from the Interpolations and Corruptions Advocated by J. P. Collier in His Notes and Emendations |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 16
... amended " by the corrector to " The place of death and solemn execution . " The first correction is Rowe's ; of which Mr. Collier has said , in a note to his Edition of Shakspeare , " We doubt much whether in this instance , where sense ...
... amended " by the corrector to " The place of death and solemn execution . " The first correction is Rowe's ; of which Mr. Collier has said , in a note to his Edition of Shakspeare , " We doubt much whether in this instance , where sense ...
Page 24
... amendment , if it be one . I however doubt it , and think encounters more likely to be right . " Six lines lower , the Princess , in all ordinary editions , is made to ask : — " What are they That charge their breath against us ? " To ...
... amendment , if it be one . I however doubt it , and think encounters more likely to be right . " Six lines lower , the Princess , in all ordinary editions , is made to ask : — " What are they That charge their breath against us ? " To ...
Page 37
... amend the language of the poet . SCENE II . P. 126. There is another capricious amendment of the poet's language ... amended in manuscript : Celia asks , - But is all this for your father ? and Rosalind replies , as her answer has ...
... amend the language of the poet . SCENE II . P. 126. There is another capricious amendment of the poet's language ... amended in manuscript : Celia asks , - But is all this for your father ? and Rosalind replies , as her answer has ...
Page 43
... amend the pas- sage . The following explanation of the old text is by a friend : " As those who are alarmed at their own tendency to be san- guine ( fear that they are harbouring secret hopes which will lead to disappointment ) and are ...
... amend the pas- sage . The following explanation of the old text is by a friend : " As those who are alarmed at their own tendency to be san- guine ( fear that they are harbouring secret hopes which will lead to disappointment ) and are ...
Page 48
... amended in various ways ; but the manuscript correction in the folio , 1632 , differs from all others , and is doubtless what the poet intended , viz . ' Master , master ! news , and such old news as you never heard of . ' " " I must ...
... amended in various ways ; but the manuscript correction in the folio , 1632 , differs from all others , and is doubtless what the poet intended , viz . ' Master , master ! news , and such old news as you never heard of . ' " " I must ...
Common terms and phrases
absurd adopted alteration amended Apemantus better authority blood blunder Cæsar coincidence Collier says Collier thinks compositor conjecture Coriolanus corrected folio corrector would substitute corruption death of sleep doubt edition of Shakespeare emendation epithet error evident expression Falstaff fancy favour fear following lines give Hanmer hath Henry impertinent improve insertion interference interpolation Johnson Julius Cæsar King last line lord Macbeth Malone manuscript manuscript-corrector margin meaning mistaken modern editors necessary never night old authentic text old copies old corrector old reading old text omitted Othello passage Patroclus peize perfectly intelligible piece of meddling plausible play poet poet's language poet's word printed printer probable misprint proposed quartos Queen reason rector reference remarkable rhyme Richard III SCENE I.
P. SCENE II second folio seems sense set right speech stands Steevens suggested Theobald third folio thou thought tion true reading uncalled undoubted unnecessary unsane Warburton