The Works of Shakespeare: Troilus and CressidaAt the University Press, 1960 |
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Page xxix
... seems to be unaware of his pride , and is hurt when his mother mentions it . It does not prevent him from being genuinely modest , for he never dreams that he has attained the ideal he worships ; yet the sense of his own greatness is ...
... seems to be unaware of his pride , and is hurt when his mother mentions it . It does not prevent him from being genuinely modest , for he never dreams that he has attained the ideal he worships ; yet the sense of his own greatness is ...
Page xlii
... seems , a second revival , and Shakespeare's was put on in its stead at Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1718 ( 13-16 December ) . But the next year Coriolanus again fell into the hands of an ' improver ' . This was John Dennis , poetaster ...
... seems , a second revival , and Shakespeare's was put on in its stead at Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1718 ( 13-16 December ) . But the next year Coriolanus again fell into the hands of an ' improver ' . This was John Dennis , poetaster ...
Page 225
... seems clear , once the general drift is grasped which is that if virtue or honour is subject to detraction ; success , which is the public recognition of virtue or honour , is still more so . To paraphrase : Power , which seems a worthy ...
... seems clear , once the general drift is grasped which is that if virtue or honour is subject to detraction ; success , which is the public recognition of virtue or honour , is still more so . To paraphrase : Power , which seems a worthy ...
Contents
PREFATORY NOTE PAGE | vii |
THE STAGE HISTORY OF CORIOLANUS | xli |
TO THE READER | lv |
Copyright | |
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Alarum Antiates Antium Aufidius banished battle Belly blood Brutus Caius Marcius Camb Capitol carbonado Censorinus cites Citizen Clar Cominius common conj consul Corio Corioli Edile enemy Enter CORIOLANUS Entry F Exeunt eyes fear fight follow friends Furn gates give gods hate hath hear heart honour Introd Jean Fernel ladies Livy lords Menenius Menenius Agrippa Messenger mother noble North patricians peace perh play plebeians Plut Plutarch Pope praise pray pride prob Roman Rome Rowe S.D. Loc Schmidt Senate Servingman Sh.'s Hand Shake Shakespeare Sicinius soldier speak speech stand Steev sword tell thee Theob thou hast Titus Lartius tongue traitor tribunes Troil Tullus Aufidius Valeria Veturia Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia W. W. Greg wife words worthy wounds ΙΟ