The Plays of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volume 17J. Johnson, 1803 |
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Page 26
... myself in dotage . - What are you ? 2 MESS . Fulvia thy wife is dead . ANT . Where died fhe ? our lively , apprehenfive minds . So , in King Henry IV . P. II : " It afcends me into the brain ; -makes it apprehenfive , quick , forgetive ...
... myself in dotage . - What are you ? 2 MESS . Fulvia thy wife is dead . ANT . Where died fhe ? our lively , apprehenfive minds . So , in King Henry IV . P. II : " It afcends me into the brain ; -makes it apprehenfive , quick , forgetive ...
Page 40
... myself . " M. MASON . I have not the smallest doubt that Mr. Steevens's explanation of this paffage is juft . Dr. Johnson fays , that " it was her memory , not her oblivion , that like Antony , was forgetting and deferting her . " It ...
... myself . " M. MASON . I have not the smallest doubt that Mr. Steevens's explanation of this paffage is juft . Dr. Johnson fays , that " it was her memory , not her oblivion , that like Antony , was forgetting and deferting her . " It ...
Page 53
... myself With most delicious poifon : 3 - Think on me , That am with Phoebus ' amorous pinches black , And wrinkled deep in time ? Broad - fronted Cæfar , 4 When thou waft here above the ground , I was A morfel for a monarch : and great ...
... myself With most delicious poifon : 3 - Think on me , That am with Phoebus ' amorous pinches black , And wrinkled deep in time ? Broad - fronted Cæfar , 4 When thou waft here above the ground , I was A morfel for a monarch : and great ...
Page 66
... myself offended ; and with you Chiefly i ' the world : more laugh'd at , that I should 3 Cæf . Sit . Ant . Sit , fir ! Antony appears to be jealous of a cir- cumftance which feemed to indicate a consciousness of fuperiority in his too ...
... myself offended ; and with you Chiefly i ' the world : more laugh'd at , that I should 3 Cæf . Sit . Ant . Sit , fir ! Antony appears to be jealous of a cir- cumftance which feemed to indicate a consciousness of fuperiority in his too ...
Page 72
... myself ; ] i . e . told him the condition I was in , when he had his laft audience . WARBURTON . The honour's facred- ] Sacred , for unbroken , unviolated . WARBURTON . Dr. Warburton seems to understand this paffage thus ; The honour ...
... myself ; ] i . e . told him the condition I was in , when he had his laft audience . WARBURTON . The honour's facred- ] Sacred , for unbroken , unviolated . WARBURTON . Dr. Warburton seems to understand this paffage thus ; The honour ...
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againſt alfo anſwer Antony becauſe beft better Cæfar cauſe Charmian CLEO Cleopatra Cordelia Coriolanus Cymbeline daughters Edgar Edmund Enobarbus EROS Exeunt expreffion eyes faid fame father fays fecond feems feen fenfe fhall fhould fhow fifter fignifies firft firſt folio fome fool fpeak fpeech ftand ftill fuch fuppofe fure fword Glofter Goneril guife Hanmer hath heart himſelf honour houſe inftead JOHNSON juft KENT King Henry King Lear laft LEAR lefs lord Macbeth madam MALONE Mark Antony MASON means meaſure Meffenger moft moſt muft muſt myſelf obferved occafion old copy Othello paffage perfon play Plutarch Pompey prefent purpoſe quartos quartos read queen reafon ſay ſcene ſeems ſenſe Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſhall ſhe Sir Thomas Hanmer ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou Timon of Athens tranflation ufed uſed WARBURTON whofe word