The Tragedy of MacbethBlackie, 1893 - 188 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 15
... Fleance , and their legendary con- nection with the Stuarts , have no sure place in history . The Macbeth story before Shakespeare . It is possible that Shakespeare was not the first to make a literary use of the story of Macbeth ...
... Fleance , and their legendary con- nection with the Stuarts , have no sure place in history . The Macbeth story before Shakespeare . It is possible that Shakespeare was not the first to make a literary use of the story of Macbeth ...
Page 25
... Fleance . Hitherto , Macbeth's path has been gilded with success ; now the epoch of failure begins . And the parallelisms and correspondences throughout are remarkable . Each act has a definite subject : the Temptation ; the First ...
... Fleance . Hitherto , Macbeth's path has been gilded with success ; now the epoch of failure begins . And the parallelisms and correspondences throughout are remarkable . Each act has a definite subject : the Temptation ; the First ...
Page 26
... Fleance , the false prophecy of the witches , the escape of Macduff . Malcolm and Macduff at the end answer to Duncan and Banquo at the beginning . A meeting with the witches heralds both rise and fall . Finally , each of the Crimes is ...
... Fleance , the false prophecy of the witches , the escape of Macduff . Malcolm and Macduff at the end answer to Duncan and Banquo at the beginning . A meeting with the witches heralds both rise and fall . Finally , each of the Crimes is ...
Page 28
... FLEANCE , Son to Banquo . SIWARD , Earl of Northumberland , general of the English forces . Young SIWARD , his son . SEYTON , an officer attending on Macbeth . Boy , son to Macduff . An English Doctor . A Scotch Doctor . A Soldier . A ...
... FLEANCE , Son to Banquo . SIWARD , Earl of Northumberland , general of the English forces . Young SIWARD , his son . SEYTON , an officer attending on Macbeth . Boy , son to Macduff . An English Doctor . A Scotch Doctor . A Soldier . A ...
Page 42
... FLEANCE bearing a torch before him . Ban . How goes the night , boy ? Fle . The moon is down ; I have not heard the clock . Ban . And she goes down at twelve . I take ' t , ' t is later , sir . Fle . Ban . Hold , take my sword . There's ...
... FLEANCE bearing a torch before him . Ban . How goes the night , boy ? Fle . The moon is down ; I have not heard the clock . Ban . And she goes down at twelve . I take ' t , ' t is later , sir . Fle . Ban . Hold , take my sword . There's ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbott Angus Appendix Balliol College Banquo Birnam BLACKIE AND SON'S blood BOOK castle Chronicle of King Clarendon Press editors cloth elegant College common Crown 8vo Cymbeline dagger death deed Doct Donalbain Duncan Dunsinane edition Edward the Confessor Elizabethan England English Enter MACBETH Exeunt Exit F'cap 8vo fear Fleance Fleay Folio Glossary Hamlet hand hath haue heart Hecate Holinshed Julius Cæsar king of Scotland knocking Lady Macbeth Lear lord Macb Macd Macduff Mach Malcolm means Merchant of Venice metaphor metre murder nature night noble passages phrase play quotes Richard Richard II Ross sayde scene Scot Scotland sense Shakespeare Siward slain sleep SON'S EDUCATIONAL CATALOGUE speak speech spirits Steevens stress syllable thane thane of Cawdor thee There's theyr things Third Witch thou thought tyrant unity vnto vpon weird sisters wife word ΙΟ