The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 10Macmillan and Company, limited, 1904 |
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Page 3
... less of lyric manner . These changes were in part prompted by conscious art . But they were also symptoms of a decaying sense of form . Declining freshness of dramatic invention is betrayed too by the preponder- ance of typical traits ...
... less of lyric manner . These changes were in part prompted by conscious art . But they were also symptoms of a decaying sense of form . Declining freshness of dramatic invention is betrayed too by the preponder- ance of typical traits ...
Page 5
... less regard of honesty before their eyes ' over ' the noble honest citizens whose persons and purse did dutifully serve the commonwealth in their wars.'1 But even in the blurred tradition he followed , some traits of a different and ...
... less regard of honesty before their eyes ' over ' the noble honest citizens whose persons and purse did dutifully serve the commonwealth in their wars.'1 But even in the blurred tradition he followed , some traits of a different and ...
Page 6
... less serve to illustrate his large humanity . The violent but honest party leader is still discernible in Plutarch behind the unscrupulous demagogue : Shakespeare effaces the finer traits and brings out the baser with incisive emphasis ...
... less serve to illustrate his large humanity . The violent but honest party leader is still discernible in Plutarch behind the unscrupulous demagogue : Shakespeare effaces the finer traits and brings out the baser with incisive emphasis ...
Page 7
... Less ' churlish and solitary ' than in Plutarch , for Shakespeare gives him the adoring friendship of Menenius and Cominius , he is at bottom more ' un- civil , ' less fit for citizenship , more impracticable in his passionate self ...
... Less ' churlish and solitary ' than in Plutarch , for Shakespeare gives him the adoring friendship of Menenius and Cominius , he is at bottom more ' un- civil , ' less fit for citizenship , more impracticable in his passionate self ...
Page 9
... less to be so . It marks the comparative sobering of Shakespeare's imagination in this last of the great tragedies , that such dicta of the cool , critical judgment are finally seen to exhaust the situation . We accept for the moment ...
... less to be so . It marks the comparative sobering of Shakespeare's imagination in this last of the great tragedies , that such dicta of the cool , critical judgment are finally seen to exhaust the situation . We accept for the moment ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adonis Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Athens Aufidius bear beauty blood breast breath cheeks Collatine Cominius Coriolanus Corioli dead dear death dost thou doth ears Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair false fear flatter Flav fool foul friends give gods grief hate hath hear heart heaven honour kiss Lart LARTIUS lips live look Lord Timon love's LOVER'S COMPLAINT Lucrece Lucullus Marcius Menenius misanthropy ne'er never night noble pity Plutarch Poet poor praise pray proud quoth Richard Barnfield Roman Rome SCENE Senators Shakespeare shalt shame SICINIUS Sonnets sorrow speak sweet Tarquin tears tell thee thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thou wilt thought thyself TIMON OF ATHENS tongue tribunes true unto Venus and Adonis VIRGILIA voices Volsces Volscian VOLUMNIA weep words worthy wounds youth ΙΟ ΤΟ