The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 10Hearst's International Library Company, 1914 |
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Page viii
... seems to corroborate the tradition , and Shake- speare's additions are now generally assigned to about 1589-90 . The following passages suggest Shakespearean authorship : -I , i , 9 ; II , i , 82 , 83 ; I , i , 70-76 , 117-119 , 141 ...
... seems to corroborate the tradition , and Shake- speare's additions are now generally assigned to about 1589-90 . The following passages suggest Shakespearean authorship : -I , i , 9 ; II , i , 82 , 83 ; I , i , 70-76 , 117-119 , 141 ...
Page xii
... seems to have been started by Ravenscroft , who , having altered and of course improved the play , revived it on the stage about the time of the Popish Plot , in 1678. In the Pro- logue then supplied , Ravenscroft speaks as follows ...
... seems to have been started by Ravenscroft , who , having altered and of course improved the play , revived it on the stage about the time of the Popish Plot , in 1678. In the Pro- logue then supplied , Ravenscroft speaks as follows ...
Page xiii
... Palladis Tamia , 1598 , names Titus Andronicus as one of Shakespeare's tragedies . Meres seems to have been fully competent for the work which he undertook to do . It is highly probable xiii TITUS ANDRONICUS Introduction.
... Palladis Tamia , 1598 , names Titus Andronicus as one of Shakespeare's tragedies . Meres seems to have been fully competent for the work which he undertook to do . It is highly probable xiii TITUS ANDRONICUS Introduction.
Page xvi
... seems tolerably sustained : at least , we do not discover that it any- where either falls greatly below or rises greatly above itself . There is indeed a certain overwrought lustihood and incon- tinence of wickedness in Tamora and the ...
... seems tolerably sustained : at least , we do not discover that it any- where either falls greatly below or rises greatly above itself . There is indeed a certain overwrought lustihood and incon- tinence of wickedness in Tamora and the ...
Page xvii
... seems to be without any foundation in authen- tic history . How or whence the story originated , has not been revealed to us , unless in the play itself . The scene of the incidents seems to be nowhere , the time , nowhen . The ...
... seems to be without any foundation in authen- tic history . How or whence the story originated , has not been revealed to us , unless in the play itself . The scene of the incidents seems to be nowhere , the time , nowhen . The ...
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Aaron Antiochus Bassianus Bawd beauty blood Boult cheeks Cleon Comp daughter dead dear death deed Dionyza dost doth edition emperor empress England's Helicon Enter Exeunt eyes fair fear foul Francis Meres gentle give Goths grace grief hand hath hear heart heaven honor ISRAEL GOLLANCZ king kiss Lavinia live look lord Love's Love's Labor's Lost Lucius Lucrece lust Lysimachus Malone Marc Marcus Marina mistress Mytilene never night noble passion Passionate Pilgrim Pericles pity play poem poet poet's poor praise prince Prince of Tyre Prol queen quoth revenge rhyming Rome Saturninus SCENE Shakespeare shalt shame Sonnets sons sorrow soul speak Steevens conj sweet Tamora Tarquin tears tell Tereus Thaisa thee thine thou art thou hast thought thyself Titus Andronicus tongue Tyre unto Venus and Adonis verse weep wilt words youth