The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volume 20J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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... hand . Captain Breval in his Travels tells us , that he saw at Verona the tomb of these unhappy lovers . STEEVENS . This story was well known to the English poets before the time of Shakspeare . In an old collection of poems , called A ...
... hand . Captain Breval in his Travels tells us , that he saw at Verona the tomb of these unhappy lovers . STEEVENS . This story was well known to the English poets before the time of Shakspeare . In an old collection of poems , called A ...
Page 1
... hands unclean . From forth the fatal loins of these two foes A pair of star - cross'd lovers take their life ; Whose misadventur'd piteous overthrows Do , with their death , bury their parents ' strife . The fearful passage of their ...
... hands unclean . From forth the fatal loins of these two foes A pair of star - cross'd lovers take their life ; Whose misadventur'd piteous overthrows Do , with their death , bury their parents ' strife . The fearful passage of their ...
Page 45
... hand ; " A gift he had , that nature gave him in his swathing band " That frozen mountain ice was never half so cold , " As were his hands , though ne'er so near the fire he did them hold . " Perhaps it was this last circumstance which ...
... hand ; " A gift he had , that nature gave him in his swathing band " That frozen mountain ice was never half so cold , " As were his hands , though ne'er so near the fire he did them hold . " Perhaps it was this last circumstance which ...
Page 47
... hands . This custom is mentioned by Froissart , and other writers who had the merit of describing every thing they saw . See a wooden cut in Vol . IX . p . 359 . To hold a torch , however , was anciently no degrading office . Queen ...
... hands . This custom is mentioned by Froissart , and other writers who had the merit of describing every thing they saw . See a wooden cut in Vol . IX . p . 359 . To hold a torch , however , was anciently no degrading office . Queen ...
Page 62
... hands , and they unwashed too , ' tis a foul thing . 1 SERV . Away with the joint - stools , remove the court - cupboard , look to the plate : -good thou , They were common even in the time of Charles I. See Vol . IV . p . 92 , n . 2 ...
... hands , and they unwashed too , ' tis a foul thing . 1 SERV . Away with the joint - stools , remove the court - cupboard , look to the plate : -good thou , They were common even in the time of Charles I. See Vol . IV . p . 92 , n . 2 ...
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Common terms and phrases
agayne Antipholus beauty Ben Jonson Benvolio brest called Capulet comedy dead death dedly dost doth Dromio DUKE edition editors emendation Enter Ephesus Euen euery Exeunt eyes fair frendes Friar fryer geue gleek greefe hand hart hath haue hear heart heaven hence howre husband JOHNSON kiss lady lord loue love's Love's Labour's Lost lyfe MALONE Mantua married master means Mercutio mistress Montague morris-pike musick mynde night nurce NURSE old copy Paris passage payne play poem Polydore Virgil Pope prince quarto quoth Rape of Lucrece rest Romeo Romeus and Juliet scene second folio Shakspeare siege of Capua sorrow speak speech STEEVENS sweet tears tell thee Theobald theyr thine thing thou art thou hast thought thyself Tybalt Verona vnto WARBURTON wherefore whilst wife woordes word wyfe