The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 35Methuen, 1918 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page xxi
... nature , as of a duke to be in love with a countess , and that countess to be in love with the duke's son , and the son to love the lady's waiting - maid ; some such cross - wooing , with a clown to their serving - man , better to be ...
... nature , as of a duke to be in love with a countess , and that countess to be in love with the duke's son , and the son to love the lady's waiting - maid ; some such cross - wooing , with a clown to their serving - man , better to be ...
Page xxv
... nature and ( mostly unnatural ) " Natural History " as reflected in the mass of literature to which he had access- Pliny's Natural History , for instance . See also notes on I. i . 5 . Especially classical , mostly of the Latin ( see p ...
... nature and ( mostly unnatural ) " Natural History " as reflected in the mass of literature to which he had access- Pliny's Natural History , for instance . See also notes on I. i . 5 . Especially classical , mostly of the Latin ( see p ...
Page xxvi
... nature ; this , however , is always subservient to the poet's dramatic purpose . 2 But these , in the case of A Midsummer - Night's Dream , might be later interpolations . history , where he found them already outlined ; or xxvi ...
... nature ; this , however , is always subservient to the poet's dramatic purpose . 2 But these , in the case of A Midsummer - Night's Dream , might be later interpolations . history , where he found them already outlined ; or xxvi ...
Page xxvii
... nature of A Midsummer - Night's Dream , we may yet infer justly and at once , that characterisation in the later ... natural - and all the rest of their dramatic equipment . But for these we have no space , and the subject must now be ...
... nature of A Midsummer - Night's Dream , we may yet infer justly and at once , that characterisation in the later ... natural - and all the rest of their dramatic equipment . But for these we have no space , and the subject must now be ...
Page xxix
... " Jonson's learned sock , " and half their pur- port may be gathered from the Epitaph on Shakespeare- " To the shame of slow - endeavouring Art Thy easy numbers flow . " more real beauty in the flowers which " Nature boon INTRODUCTION xxix.
... " Jonson's learned sock , " and half their pur- port may be gathered from the Epitaph on Shakespeare- " To the shame of slow - endeavouring Art Thy easy numbers flow . " more real beauty in the flowers which " Nature boon INTRODUCTION xxix.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abbott ANGELES Appendix Bandello Belleforest better Cæsar CALIFORN Camb Capell Cesario Clown Collier colour comedy Cotgrave Craig compares Craig quotes Cymbeline devil Dict Duke Dyce Exeunt Exit F reading Fabian favour Feste fool former note Furness galliard Gentlemen of Verona give Gl'Ingannati Halliwell Hamlet Handbook to Shakespeare Hanmer hath heart Henry Henry IV humour Illyria Italian Julius Cæsar Keightley King King Lear lady Latin lord Love's Labour's Lost madam Malone Malvolio Maria meaning merry metaphor note on line occurs Olivia Orsino Othello passage pavin phrase play poet Pope possibly probably reference Richard II Rowe scene Sebastian sense Shake Shakespeare Sir Andrew SIR TOBY BELCH Sir Toby's Sir Topas song speak speare's speech Steevens suggested sweet Tempest textual notes thee Theobald thou thought tion Twelfth Night UNIVERS UNIVERSI Viola word Wright