The Works of Shakespeare ..., Volume 39Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1922 |
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Results 1-5 of 39
Page xii
... thoughts long after its first performance . It was known already to Rowe and Gildon at the beginning of the eighteenth century that Shakespeare had founded the plot of his Winter's Tale upon Robert Greene's prose romance , Pandosto ...
... thoughts long after its first performance . It was known already to Rowe and Gildon at the beginning of the eighteenth century that Shakespeare had founded the plot of his Winter's Tale upon Robert Greene's prose romance , Pandosto ...
Page xv
... thoughts to yet another version of the story which appeared in Elizabethan England between the publication of Pandosto and the dramatisation of the story by Shakespeare . In the year 1595 the Lichfield schoolmaster , Francis Sabie ...
... thoughts to yet another version of the story which appeared in Elizabethan England between the publication of Pandosto and the dramatisation of the story by Shakespeare . In the year 1595 the Lichfield schoolmaster , Francis Sabie ...
Page xxiv
... thoughts to yet another highly romantic story the action of which takes place upon Greek soil . Our reference is , of course , to The Two Noble Kinsmen , which most critics are agreed in regarding as the joint work of Shakespeare and ...
... thoughts to yet another highly romantic story the action of which takes place upon Greek soil . Our reference is , of course , to The Two Noble Kinsmen , which most critics are agreed in regarding as the joint work of Shakespeare and ...
Page xxviii
... thought of it . " 1 But the humour of Autolycus and the realism of Mopsa and the Clown are not Shakespeare's only substitutes for the Euphuism and Arcadianism of Greene's romance . They furnish only the background to the picture ; the ...
... thought of it . " 1 But the humour of Autolycus and the realism of Mopsa and the Clown are not Shakespeare's only substitutes for the Euphuism and Arcadianism of Greene's romance . They furnish only the background to the picture ; the ...
Page 5
... thought that the reference was to the putting forth of buds on the trees . 13. sneaping ] nipping . Compare Love's Labour's Lost , I. i . 100 : “ sneap- ing frost . " 16. Than you can put us to ' t ] Than any extremities to which you ...
... thought that the reference was to the putting forth of buds on the trees . 13. sneaping ] nipping . Compare Love's Labour's Lost , I. i . 100 : “ sneap- ing frost . " 16. Than you can put us to ' t ] Than any extremities to which you ...
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Common terms and phrases
Anon Antigonus Apollo Autolycus ballad bear Bellaria beseech Bohemia Camb Camillo Capell Cassander child Cleomenes Clown Collier conj court Cymbeline dance daughter death Delphos Dict Dion discase Dorastus Dyce Egistus Elizabethan emendations Exeunt Exit eyes F. W. MOORMAN father Fawnia fear Florizel Folios follows Furness Gent gentleman give Grace Greek Greene's Pandosto hand Hanmer hast hath heart heavens Hermione honest honour jealousy Johnson Keightley king King Lear king of Bohemia lady Leon Leontes look lord Malone Mamillius meaning Measure for Measure mistress Mopsa o'er oracle Pandosto pare passage Paul Paulina Perdita phrase play Polixenes Pope pray prince prithee queen romance Rowe SCENE seems sense Shakespeare Shep shepherd Sicilia sorrow speak story swear thee Theobald thing Thirsis thou art thought true Warburton wife Winter's Tale word ΙΟ