A Shakespeare Commentary ...F. Ungar Publishing Company, 1957 - 973 pages |
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Page 53
... show more mirth than I am mistress of ; and would you yet I were merrier ? Unless you could teach me to forget a ... shows great interest in Orlando , who incurs the dis- pleasure of Duke Frederick when he learns that he is the son ...
... show more mirth than I am mistress of ; and would you yet I were merrier ? Unless you could teach me to forget a ... shows great interest in Orlando , who incurs the dis- pleasure of Duke Frederick when he learns that he is the son ...
Page 144
... show riches Ready to drop upon me ; that , when I waked , I cried to dream again . [ III . ii . 144-152 . ] is considered to be one of the most beauti- ful passages in the play . It shows Caliban -not as a slave , a low immoral creature ...
... show riches Ready to drop upon me ; that , when I waked , I cried to dream again . [ III . ii . 144-152 . ] is considered to be one of the most beauti- ful passages in the play . It shows Caliban -not as a slave , a low immoral creature ...
Page 198
... show here is peculiar ( as Ophelia's remark in line 150 shows ) and is not in accordance with the usage of the English stage , where dumb - shows merely represented action not dealt with in the dialogue , or else , and very rarely ...
... show here is peculiar ( as Ophelia's remark in line 150 shows ) and is not in accordance with the usage of the English stage , where dumb - shows merely represented action not dealt with in the dialogue , or else , and very rarely ...
Contents
THE LIFE AND DEATH OF JULIUS CESAR | 1 |
As You Like | 33 |
THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Alonso Angiers Antonio appears Ariel Arthur Aumerle Banquo Bassanio Bastard battle Bolingbroke brother Brutus Cæsar Caliban called Carthage Cassius castle cause character Claudius Cordelia Cornwall court crown daughter dead death Denmark Dido doth Duke Duncan Earl Edgar Edmund England English enters Extract father Faulconbridge Ferdinand fool France French ghost Giannetto give Gloucester Goneril Gratiano Hamlet hand hast hath haue heart Henry Henry IV Holinshed honour Horatio Hubert husband Julius Cæsar Kent King John King Lear king's kingdom Lady Laertes land Lear lord Macbeth Macduff madness Malcolm married Miranda murder Nerissa night noble Ophelia Pandulph Philip play Plutarch Polonius Portia Prince Prospero queen Regan remarks replies revenge Richard Rosalynde says Scene of Act Scotland servant Shakespeare ship Shylock sisters slain song speak spirit Swinstead tells Thane thee thou throne unto Venice vnto vpon wife witches words