The Works of Shakespeare: Twelfth night or What you will, 1930At the University Press, 1962 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page xvi
... authorship is as fully established as such a case ever can be on purely internal evidence . It may be that minute analysis will yield new arguments - and equally , that it may reveal things about the play which tell against joint authorship ...
... authorship is as fully established as such a case ever can be on purely internal evidence . It may be that minute analysis will yield new arguments - and equally , that it may reveal things about the play which tell against joint authorship ...
Page xxxi
... authorship from being bad . I hope that my belief in Fletcher's part - authorship is based on a fair evaluation of the evidence , but I must also confess to finding Henry VIII one of the least interesting plays in the canon ; and this ...
... authorship from being bad . I hope that my belief in Fletcher's part - authorship is based on a fair evaluation of the evidence , but I must also confess to finding Henry VIII one of the least interesting plays in the canon ; and this ...
Page 113
... authorship discussed in the Introduction . The accepted view about it is cautiously summarized by Sir Walter Greg : " The copy for F was clearly a care- fully prepared manuscript , in whose hand or hands there is no evidence to show ...
... authorship discussed in the Introduction . The accepted view about it is cautiously summarized by Sir Walter Greg : " The copy for F was clearly a care- fully prepared manuscript , in whose hand or hands there is no evidence to show ...
Contents
PREFATORY NOTE PAGE | vii |
The Play | xxxi |
THE STAGEHISTORY OF HENRY VIII | xxxviii |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Abbott Anne Bullen archbishop Authorship bishop Camb Campeius Canterbury cardinall chamber Chancellor cites Clar conscience counsel court Cranmer Cromwell dare Deighton diuerse divided Duke of Buckingham E. K. Chambers earle Ellen Terry England Enter Entry F euerie favour fear Fletcher Fletcherian Foakes Foakes notes Gentleman give grace Griffith hand hath haue hear heart heaven Henry VIII highness Holinshed honour init iudges Katharine king's line in Pope lord cardinal LORD CHAMBERLAIN madam marriage matter noble Noble Kinsmen Norfolk NSH VIII Old Lady passage perceiued perh play Pooler pray princes princesse prob Prol queen quoth Rowe S.D. F Exeunt scene sense Shakespeare Shakspere Society Sir Thomas Lovell sp.-pref speak Spedding's stage Steev Surrey thee Theob thou Tilley Vaughan vnto vpon W. W. Greg William Shakespeare Wolsey Wolsey's woman words ΙΟ