TragediesFrowde, 1912 - 1315 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 3
... play both in quarto form and in the folio of 1623 are singular . On February 7 , 1602-3 an entry appears in the Stationers ' Register of Master Robertes ' copy of The booke of Troilus and Cresseda as it is acted by my lord Chamberlens ...
... play both in quarto form and in the folio of 1623 are singular . On February 7 , 1602-3 an entry appears in the Stationers ' Register of Master Robertes ' copy of The booke of Troilus and Cresseda as it is acted by my lord Chamberlens ...
Page 4
... play . It is not mentioned in the Catalogue of contents . At first the intention was to place it after Romeo and Juliet , and copies of the folio have been found in which the opening of the play was so printed ; the leaf was cancelled ...
... play . It is not mentioned in the Catalogue of contents . At first the intention was to place it after Romeo and Juliet , and copies of the folio have been found in which the opening of the play was so printed ; the leaf was cancelled ...
Page 5
... play upon the same theme by Chettle and Dekker , which is mentioned in Henslowe's Diary , April 1599 ; but this is improb- able , for the name of their play seems to have been altered from Troilus and Cressida to Agamemnon . In the old ...
... play upon the same theme by Chettle and Dekker , which is mentioned in Henslowe's Diary , April 1599 ; but this is improb- able , for the name of their play seems to have been altered from Troilus and Cressida to Agamemnon . In the old ...
Page 7
... play seems charged with the cruelty of disillusion . !! 14 The chief sources used by the dramatist are Caxton's Recuyell of the Historyes of Troy , translated from Raoul le Febvre , perhaps the Troy - booke ' of Lydgate , Chaucer's ...
... play seems charged with the cruelty of disillusion . !! 14 The chief sources used by the dramatist are Caxton's Recuyell of the Historyes of Troy , translated from Raoul le Febvre , perhaps the Troy - booke ' of Lydgate , Chaucer's ...
Page 8
... play . But Shakespeare's chief debt is certainly to Cax- ton , and through Caxton to Raoul le Febvre , though here again the dramatist freely modified at pleasure the matter which he used . In view of certain theories put forward to ...
... play . But Shakespeare's chief debt is certainly to Cax- ton , and through Caxton to Raoul le Febvre , though here again the dramatist freely modified at pleasure the matter which he used . In view of certain theories put forward to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
AARON ACHILLES AGAMEMNON AJAX ALCIBIADES Andronicus Antony APEMANTUS art thou AUFIDIUS BANQUO BENVOLIO blood BRABANTIO BRUTUS Cæsar CASCA CASSIUS CITIZEN CLOWN COMINIUS CORDELIA CORIOLANUS CRESSIDA daughter dead dear death DESDEMONA DIOMEDES doth EDGAR EDMUND Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair Farewell father fear FLAVIUS fool FRIAR LAURENCE friends gentleman give GLOUCESTER gods GONERIL GUILDENSTERN HAMLET hand hath hear heart heaven Hector hither honour HORATIO IAGO JULIET KENT king LADY CAPULET LADY MACBETH LAERTES Lavinia LEAR look lord LUCIUS MACDUFF madam Marcius Mark Antony MENENIUS MERCUTIO murder night noble NURSE OPHELIA OTHELLO PANDARUS PARIS PATROCLUS play POLONIUS poor pray prithee QUEEN Re-enter REGAN RODERIGO Roman Rome ROMEO ROSENCRANTZ SATURNINUS SCENE SENATOR SERVANT SERVINGMAN Shakespeare SICINIUS soul speak stand sweet sword TAMORA tell thee there's THERSITES thine thing thou art thou hast TIMON TITUS TROILUS Tybalt ULYSSES villain VOLUMNIA word