The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 18Harper& brothers, 1908 |
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Page xv
... poor man , he never failed to relieve distress , and he could not realise that there were men who would refuse assistance to friends in time of need . The Sena- tor , in the first scene of the second act , utters the precept of common ...
... poor man , he never failed to relieve distress , and he could not realise that there were men who would refuse assistance to friends in time of need . The Sena- tor , in the first scene of the second act , utters the precept of common ...
Page xxiii
... poor , infirm , weak , and despised old man . " " Timon . Let me look back upon thee , O thou wall , That girdlest in those wolves , dive in the earth , more ༣ ྂ ་ ཞབ of Timor And fence not Athens . Matrons turn incontinent ; Obedience ...
... poor , infirm , weak , and despised old man . " " Timon . Let me look back upon thee , O thou wall , That girdlest in those wolves , dive in the earth , more ༣ ྂ ་ ཞབ of Timor And fence not Athens . Matrons turn incontinent ; Obedience ...
Page xxvii
... poor man , he would have been a happy one , and he knows it . " Here is no use for gold , " says Apeman- " The best and truest , " replies Timon . tus . " For here it sleeps , and does no hired harm . " Aurum irrepertum sic melius situm ...
... poor man , he would have been a happy one , and he knows it . " Here is no use for gold , " says Apeman- " The best and truest , " replies Timon . tus . " For here it sleeps , and does no hired harm . " Aurum irrepertum sic melius situm ...
Page xxviii
... poor until they had ruined him , and then it is not his poverty that drives him frantic , but the exposure of his vulgar ideal . Vul- garity was the source of his delusions and the cause of his fall ; not the superficial vulgarity of ...
... poor until they had ruined him , and then it is not his poverty that drives him frantic , but the exposure of his vulgar ideal . Vul- garity was the source of his delusions and the cause of his fall ; not the superficial vulgarity of ...
Page xxix
... poor that , though he taught as no man had ever taught before him , he could hardly have given one of his disciples a dinner . But when he was in danger of an unjust doom he did not fear ; most of his friends would will- ingly have died ...
... poor that , though he taught as no man had ever taught before him , he could hardly have given one of his disciples a dinner . But when he was in danger of an unjust doom he did not fear ; most of his friends would will- ingly have died ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agrippa ALCIB Alcibiades Alexas Antony and Cleopatra Antony's APEM Apemantus Athenian bear breath CHAR Charmian CLEO dead death Dolabella dost dramatic drink Egypt Enobarbus Enter ANTONY Enter CLEOPATRA Eros Euphronius Exeunt Exit eyes farewell fear feast FLAV Flavius Folio reading follow fool fortune friends Fulvia give gods gold GUARD hand hath hear heart honest honour infra IRAS jewel Julius Cæsar kiss knave Lepidus live look Lord Timon Lucullus madam Marcus Crassus Mark Antony master means Menas MESS Messenger mistress nature ne'er never noble Octavia PAIN Parthia play Plutarch POET Pompey pray prithee Proculeius queen Rome Rowe's SCENE Senators SERV servant Sextus Pompeius Shakespeare SOLD soldier speak spirit supra sword tell thee Theobald's There's thine thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tragedy Ventidius word wouldst