The Plays of William Shakspeare, Volume 20Printed and fold by J.J. Tourneisen, 1802 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 63
Page 17
... supposed to depend upon the asped of the stars at the time they were born , not at the time in which they were conceived . M. MASON . VOL . XX . C 1 The fenate - house of planets all did fit , PRINCE OF TYRE . 17 1 ...
... supposed to depend upon the asped of the stars at the time they were born , not at the time in which they were conceived . M. MASON . VOL . XX . C 1 The fenate - house of planets all did fit , PRINCE OF TYRE . 17 1 ...
Page 18
... house of planets all did fit . " && . and that the words , " till Lucina teign'd , Nature , & c . are paren- thetical . MALONE . 3 The Senate - house of planets all did fit , To Anit in her their best perfections . ) I suspect that a ...
... house of planets all did fit . " && . and that the words , " till Lucina teign'd , Nature , & c . are paren- thetical . MALONE . 3 The Senate - house of planets all did fit , To Anit in her their best perfections . ) I suspect that a ...
Page 29
... house , which has been since pulled down . The upper tire of masonry that covers a wall is ftill called the copping or coping . High - crowned hats were anciently called copatain hats . the earth is wrong'd STEEVENS . By man's ...
... house , which has been since pulled down . The upper tire of masonry that covers a wall is ftill called the copping or coping . High - crowned hats were anciently called copatain hats . the earth is wrong'd STEEVENS . By man's ...
Page 47
William Shakespeare. SCENE VI . Tharfus . A Room in the Governour's House Enter CLEON , DIONYZA , and Attendants . CLE . My Dionyza , shall we rest us here , And by relating tales of others ' griefs , See if ' twill teach us to forget ...
William Shakespeare. SCENE VI . Tharfus . A Room in the Governour's House Enter CLEON , DIONYZA , and Attendants . CLE . My Dionyza , shall we rest us here , And by relating tales of others ' griefs , See if ' twill teach us to forget ...
Page 50
... houses are defil'd for want of use , They are now stary'd for want of exercise : Those palates , who not yet two summers younger , Again , in Cymbeline : " A sample to the youngeft ; to the more mature " A glass that feated them ...
... houses are defil'd for want of use , They are now stary'd for want of exercise : Those palates , who not yet two summers younger , Again , in Cymbeline : " A sample to the youngeft ; to the more mature " A glass that feated them ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alſo ancient anſwer Antony and Cleopatra BAWD becauſe better BOULT cauſe copies read Cordelia courſe Cymbeline daughter defire doth Edgar edition Edmund Exeunt expreffion eyes faid fame father fays fignifies firſt folio fome fool forrow ftill fuch GENT Glofter Goneril Gower hath heaven honour houſe JOHNSON KENT King Henry King Lear lady LEAR leſs lord Macbeth MALONE Marina MASON maſter means moſt muſt night obſerved occafion old copies omitted Othello paffage paſſage Pericles play pleaſe poet preſent prince Prince of Tyre purpoſe quartos read queſtion reaſon Regan Romeo and Juliet ſame ſays ſcarce ſcene ſea ſecond ſee ſeems ſeen ſenſe ſet Shakſpeare Shakſpeare's ſhall ſhe ſhip ſhould ſhow ſome ſpeak ſpeech ſpirit ſtand STEEVENS ſtill ſuch ſuppoſe thee theſe theſe words thoſe thou thought tranflation Twine's Tyre uſed WARBURTON whoſe Winter's Tale