The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 14Harper, 1908 |
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Page xvii
... Friar Laurence's speech , II , iii : " The earth that's natures mother is her tombe , What is her burying grave , that is her wombe : And from her wombe children of divers kinde , We sucking on her naturall bosome finde : Many for many ...
... Friar Laurence's speech , II , iii : " The earth that's natures mother is her tombe , What is her burying grave , that is her wombe : And from her wombe children of divers kinde , We sucking on her naturall bosome finde : Many for many ...
Page xx
... Friar Laurence in the sixth scene of the second act . 1597 Quarto we have : In the " Rom . And come she will . Fr. I gesse she will indeed , Youths love is quicke , swifter than swiftest speed . Enter Juliet somewhat fast , and ...
... Friar Laurence in the sixth scene of the second act . 1597 Quarto we have : In the " Rom . And come she will . Fr. I gesse she will indeed , Youths love is quicke , swifter than swiftest speed . Enter Juliet somewhat fast , and ...
Page xxiii
... Friar Laurence ; the secret marrriage ; the encounter in the streets and the death of Tybalt ; the exile of Romeo ; his violence in Friar Laurence's cell and the Friar's rebuke ; the parting of the lovers ; the plan of Capulet and his ...
... Friar Laurence ; the secret marrriage ; the encounter in the streets and the death of Tybalt ; the exile of Romeo ; his violence in Friar Laurence's cell and the Friar's rebuke ; the parting of the lovers ; the plan of Capulet and his ...
Page xxv
... Friar Laurence . Brooke describes him as one who " knew the secrets in Nature's woorkes that loorke , " represents him as calm , composed , philosophical , and kindly , con- senting to marry the lovers because he thought that such a ...
... Friar Laurence . Brooke describes him as one who " knew the secrets in Nature's woorkes that loorke , " represents him as calm , composed , philosophical , and kindly , con- senting to marry the lovers because he thought that such a ...
Page xxvi
... Friar Laurence , and in the scene in which Capulet so brutally lectures Juliet - her coquetry and womanly vanity - " Peter , my fan , " " Where's my man ? " her naïveté , " O Lord , I could have stay'd here all the night To hear good ...
... Friar Laurence , and in the scene in which Capulet so brutally lectures Juliet - her coquetry and womanly vanity - " Peter , my fan , " " Where's my man ? " her naïveté , " O Lord , I could have stay'd here all the night To hear good ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aaron art thou banished Bassianus Benvolio blood brother Chiron dead dear death Demetrius doth early editions read earth Elizabethan emperor empress Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair Farewell father fear Friar Laurence gentle give gone Goths grave grief hand hath heart heaven hither honour infra Juliet kinsman kiss LADY CAPULET Lavinia live look lord Lucius madam Mantua MARC Marcus married Mercutio mistress Montague murder night noble NURSE Ovid Paris play poems prince quarrel revenge Roman Rome Romeo Romeo and Juliet Rosaline Saturninus SCENE Scythia Second Quarto Shakespeare slain Sonnet sons sorrow speak supra sweet sword Tamora tears tell Tereus thee thine thou art thou hast thou wilt Titus Andronicus tomb tongue tragedy-of-blood tribunes Tybalt Venus and Adonis villain weep word