The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1921 |
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Page liv
... explains Gloucester's words , " and the king gone to - night " ( line 24 ) , as meaning that he 1 See P. A. Daniel , " Time Analysis of the Plots of Shakespeare's Plays " in the Transactions of the New Shakspere Society , 1879 , Part ii ...
... explains Gloucester's words , " and the king gone to - night " ( line 24 ) , as meaning that he 1 See P. A. Daniel , " Time Analysis of the Plots of Shakespeare's Plays " in the Transactions of the New Shakspere Society , 1879 , Part ii ...
Page lvi
... explain to the best of my ability the exact meaning of all the obsolete words and phrases occurring in the play , and when I could , I have illustrated their meaning by examples taken from the writers of the Elizabethan age drawn from ...
... explain to the best of my ability the exact meaning of all the obsolete words and phrases occurring in the play , and when I could , I have illustrated their meaning by examples taken from the writers of the Elizabethan age drawn from ...
Page 7
... explains , " Where the claims of merit are superadded to that of nature , ¿ .c . birth . Challenge , to make title to , to claim as one's right . " So 3 Henry VI . III . ii . 86 : “ All her perfections challenge sovereignty . " 55. Sir ...
... explains , " Where the claims of merit are superadded to that of nature , ¿ .c . birth . Challenge , to make title to , to claim as one's right . " So 3 Henry VI . III . ii . 86 : “ All her perfections challenge sovereignty . " 55. Sir ...
Page 8
... . she names ... love ] she exactly , really , and truly describes my love . Delius explains deed of love as " the formal legal definition of love . " Only she comes too short : that I profess Myself 8 [ ACT 1 . KING LEAR.
... . she names ... love ] she exactly , really , and truly describes my love . Delius explains deed of love as " the formal legal definition of love . " Only she comes too short : that I profess Myself 8 [ ACT 1 . KING LEAR.
Page 9
... explains the whole phrase , " the most delicately sensitive part of my nature " ; Moberly , " the choicest estimate of sense , ” comparing Troilus and Cressida , v . ii . 133 : " To square the general sex By Cressid's rule . " 75 ...
... explains the whole phrase , " the most delicately sensitive part of my nature " ; Moberly , " the choicest estimate of sense , ” comparing Troilus and Cressida , v . ii . 133 : " To square the general sex By Cressid's rule . " 75 ...
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Albany All's Arber Ben Jonson Capell Chronicle Collier Compare conject Cordelia Coriolanus Corn Cornwall Cotgrave's French Dictionary Cymbeline daughter Dodsley's Old Plays dost doth Duke Dyce edition Edmund Exeunt explains eyes father Folio follow Fool fortune France Gent Gentleman Gentlemen of Verona give Glou Gloucester Goneril Hamlet Hanmer hast hath Hazlitt heart Henry Henry IV honour hyphened Jennyns Johnson Kent King Lear knave Lear's Leir Leir's letter lord Macbeth madam Malone mean Measure for Measure nuncle omitted Q Oswald Othello passage Pope QI some copies Quarto Regan Richard III Romeo and Juliet Rowe scene Schmidt sense Servants Shakespeare sister Six Old Plays speak Steevens quotes Tempest thee Theobald thine thing thou Timon of Athens Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night Winter's Tale word Wright