The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 9Macmillan and Company, limited, 1899 |
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Page 154
... Witch in the same scene ( iv . 1. 125-132 ) , whose good - natured desire to ' cheer up his sprites ' is so oddly out of keeping with their character as demoniac contrivers of harm , and with the ' horrible sight ' they have just ...
... Witch in the same scene ( iv . 1. 125-132 ) , whose good - natured desire to ' cheer up his sprites ' is so oddly out of keeping with their character as demoniac contrivers of harm , and with the ' horrible sight ' they have just ...
Page 155
William Shakespeare Charles Harold Herford. three students in the character of Witches.1 The Porter , again , in his quality of Clown , founds allusive jests on topics of 1606 : the phenomenally abundant harvest ( ii . 3. 5 ) , and the ...
William Shakespeare Charles Harold Herford. three students in the character of Witches.1 The Porter , again , in his quality of Clown , founds allusive jests on topics of 1606 : the phenomenally abundant harvest ( ii . 3. 5 ) , and the ...
Page 160
... witch , whom he had in great trust , ' assures him that he ' should never be slain by man born of woman , nor vanquished till the wood of Birnam came to the castle of Dunsinane . ' Obvious dramatic 1 The earliest known form of the witches ...
... witch , whom he had in great trust , ' assures him that he ' should never be slain by man born of woman , nor vanquished till the wood of Birnam came to the castle of Dunsinane . ' Obvious dramatic 1 The earliest known form of the witches ...
Page 161
... witches , who should be women ' but that their beards forbid me to interpret that they are so ' ; who tread the earth but seem not like its inhabitants ; vanish like bubbles of the air , and speak a language which admits the extremes of ...
... witches , who should be women ' but that their beards forbid me to interpret that they are so ' ; who tread the earth but seem not like its inhabitants ; vanish like bubbles of the air , and speak a language which admits the extremes of ...
Page 162
... in the porter's grim jest at the equivocators who knock at hell - gate since they ' could not equivocate to heaven . ' The witches ' cry as they sweep away into the stormlit gloom , ' Fair is foul , and foul is fair , ' is 162 Macbeth.
... in the porter's grim jest at the equivocators who knock at hell - gate since they ' could not equivocate to heaven . ' The witches ' cry as they sweep away into the stormlit gloom , ' Fair is foul , and foul is fair , ' is 162 Macbeth.
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Common terms and phrases
Alack Antony's Banquo better blood Cæs Cæsar Cawdor Char Charmian Cleo Cleopatra Cordelia Corn daughter dead dear death Doct dost doth duke Edgar Edmund Egypt Enobarbus Enter ANTONY Eros Exeunt Exit eyes F. W. H. MYERS farewell father fear fellow Fleance Fool fortune friends Fulvia Gent give Glou Gloucester gods Goneril grace hand hath hear heart heaven hither honour Iras Julius Cæsar Kent king King Lear knave Lady Lear Lepidus look lord Macb Macd Macduff Mach madam Mark Antony master Mess Messenger murder never night noble nuncle Octavia Parthia Pompey poor pray Prithee queen Re-enter Regan Ross SCENE Shakespeare sister sleep Sold Soldiers speak sword tell thane thee There's thine things thou art thou hast villain What's Witch