The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 14Harper, 1908 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 56
Page xviii
... in the Toomb ? Awake an houre before the appointed time : Ah then I feare I shall be lunaticke , And playing with my dead forefathers bones . " Whoever will compare this with the text as it now [ xviii ] ROMEO AND JULIET.
... in the Toomb ? Awake an houre before the appointed time : Ah then I feare I shall be lunaticke , And playing with my dead forefathers bones . " Whoever will compare this with the text as it now [ xviii ] ROMEO AND JULIET.
Page xix
... dead man interd , How oft have many at the houre of death Beene blith and pleasant ? which their keepers call A lightning before death But how may I Call this a lightning . Ah deare Juliet , How well thy beauty doth become this grave ...
... dead man interd , How oft have many at the houre of death Beene blith and pleasant ? which their keepers call A lightning before death But how may I Call this a lightning . Ah deare Juliet , How well thy beauty doth become this grave ...
Page xxiv
... grave with tears ? An if thou couldst , " etc. , echoes Brooke's " Tybalt your friend is dead , what meene you by your tears To call him back againe ? " But nothing is more interesting than to note how in [ xxiv ] ROMEO AND JULIET.
... grave with tears ? An if thou couldst , " etc. , echoes Brooke's " Tybalt your friend is dead , what meene you by your tears To call him back againe ? " But nothing is more interesting than to note how in [ xxiv ] ROMEO AND JULIET.
Page xxx
... dead in the bottom of a tomb ” ( III , v ) . exclaims Juliet , as she parts from her lover . So Romeo , just when he is about to hear the news which will bring death to him , observes : " My bosom's lord sits lightly on his throne . And ...
... dead in the bottom of a tomb ” ( III , v ) . exclaims Juliet , as she parts from her lover . So Romeo , just when he is about to hear the news which will bring death to him , observes : " My bosom's lord sits lightly on his throne . And ...
Page xxxi
... dead bodies of the lovers . And lastly we have Balthasar's dream , " As I did sleep under this yew - tree here , I dreamt my inaster and another fought , And that my master slew him " ( V , iii ) . Irony , which was to play so important ...
... dead bodies of the lovers . And lastly we have Balthasar's dream , " As I did sleep under this yew - tree here , I dreamt my inaster and another fought , And that my master slew him " ( V , iii ) . Irony , which was to play so important ...
Other editions - View all
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