The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, Volume 10R. C. and J. Rivington, 1821 - Theater |
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Page 13
... edition , without which the sense was not complete . РОРЕ . 9 But goes this with thy heart ? ] Thus the quartos , and thus I have no doubt Shakspeare wrote , this kind of inversion occurring often in his plays , and in the contemporary ...
... edition , without which the sense was not complete . РОРЕ . 9 But goes this with thy heart ? ] Thus the quartos , and thus I have no doubt Shakspeare wrote , this kind of inversion occurring often in his plays , and in the contemporary ...
Page 16
... editions have silently departed , for the sake of better numbers , with a degree of insincerity , which , if not sometimes detected and censured , must impair the credit of ancient books . One of the editors , and perhaps only one ...
... editions have silently departed , for the sake of better numbers , with a degree of insincerity , which , if not sometimes detected and censured , must impair the credit of ancient books . One of the editors , and perhaps only one ...
Page 19
... editions , but one of the quartos , [ Quarto B. ] ( which reads make good , ) is right . Lear had just delegated his power to Albany and Cornwall , contenting himself with only the name and all the additions of a king . He could ...
... editions , but one of the quartos , [ Quarto B. ] ( which reads make good , ) is right . Lear had just delegated his power to Albany and Cornwall , contenting himself with only the name and all the additions of a king . He could ...
Page 24
... editions . The early quarto reads : The folio : 66 or you , for vouch'd affections " Fall'n into taint . " " or your fore - vouch'd affection " Fall into taint . " Taint is used for corruption and for disgrace . If therefore we take the ...
... editions . The early quarto reads : The folio : 66 or you , for vouch'd affections " Fall'n into taint . " " or your fore - vouch'd affection " Fall into taint . " Taint is used for corruption and for disgrace . If therefore we take the ...
Page 27
... editions read- professed . Mr. Pope - professing ; but , perhaps , unnecessarily , as Shakspeare often uses one participle for the other ; -longing for longed in The Two Gentlemen of Verona , and all - obeying for all- obeyed in Antony ...
... editions read- professed . Mr. Pope - professing ; but , perhaps , unnecessarily , as Shakspeare often uses one participle for the other ; -longing for longed in The Two Gentlemen of Verona , and all - obeying for all- obeyed in Antony ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient Antony and Cleopatra Bertram better BOSWELL called Cordelia CORN COUNT Cymbeline daughter death dost doth duke Edgar edition editors Edmund emendation Enter Exeunt Exit eyes father folio reads fool fortune France GENT gentleman give Gloster Goneril grace Hanmer hast hath heart heaven Helena HENLEY honour JOHNSON KENT King Henry King Lear knave lady Lafeu LEAR lord Macbeth madam MALONE MASON meaning nature never night noble old copy omitted Othello Parolles passage perhaps play poet poor pray Prince of Tyre quartos read Rape of Lucrece Regan Rousillon scene seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies speak speech STEEVENS STEW suppose tears thee Theobald thine thing thou art thought Timon of Athens Troilus and Cressida TYRWHITT villain WARBURTON Winter's Tale word