The Works of Shakespeare ..., Volume 38Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1901 |
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Page xxi
... sense and feeling of the words . The perfection of Spenser's verse gives to his poems the beauty of fairyland and of dreams , and the perfection of Shakespeare's adds to the sense of reality , because without imitative tricks and ...
... sense and feeling of the words . The perfection of Spenser's verse gives to his poems the beauty of fairyland and of dreams , and the perfection of Shakespeare's adds to the sense of reality , because without imitative tricks and ...
Page 15
... sense when there is an idio- matic one in existence , a common fault with annotators , -Schmidt's , mere guess - work . Unkind is to me the natural sequel to " hard " in the pre- ceding line , and the sense of the whole this : Had your ...
... sense when there is an idio- matic one in existence , a common fault with annotators , -Schmidt's , mere guess - work . Unkind is to me the natural sequel to " hard " in the pre- ceding line , and the sense of the whole this : Had your ...
Page 147
... sense and rhythm , besides bringing the stanza into line with the rest as regards its form , for the others are , in the original , quatrains ending in a full stop , and followed by couplets : 23. and Doth cite each moving sense from ...
... sense and rhythm , besides bringing the stanza into line with the rest as regards its form , for the others are , in the original , quatrains ending in a full stop , and followed by couplets : 23. and Doth cite each moving sense from ...
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affected appears arms bear beauty better birds blood breast breath called cheeks cites colour compares conj dead death desire Dict doth edition explains eyes face fair fall fear fire Gildon give Greene grief Grosart ground hand hast hath head heart Henry honour hyphened kill King kiss leave light lips live looks Lost Love's Lucrece Malone meaning mind nature never night Ovid Passionate Pilgrim perhaps poem poor quotes quoth reference rest Richard says seems sense Shake Shakespeare shame sight sometimes Sonnets sorrow stand stanza Steevens story suggested sweet Tarquin tears thee thing thou thought tongue true unto Venus and Adonis wind wound young youth