The Plays of William Shakspeare, Volume 17 |
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Page 6
... ancient English writers . Thus , by Chapman , in his verfion of the fourth book of the Odyssey : Her handmaids join'd in a continuate yell . " STEEVENS . 5 He paffes , ] i . e . exceeds , goes beyond common bounds . So , in The Merry ...
... ancient English writers . Thus , by Chapman , in his verfion of the fourth book of the Odyssey : Her handmaids join'd in a continuate yell . " STEEVENS . 5 He paffes , ] i . e . exceeds , goes beyond common bounds . So , in The Merry ...
Page 24
... ancient copy of this play has reached us , leaves a doubt whether feveral fhort fpeeches in the present scene were defigned for verse or profe . I have therefore made no attempt at regulation . STEEVENS . * Pain . You are a dog . ] This ...
... ancient copy of this play has reached us , leaves a doubt whether feveral fhort fpeeches in the present scene were defigned for verse or profe . I have therefore made no attempt at regulation . STEEVENS . * Pain . You are a dog . ] This ...
Page 30
... ancient flage - direction adds — like 9 Moft honour'd Timon , ' t hath pleas'd the gods remember — ] The old copy reads to remember . But I have omitted , for the fake of metre , and in conformity to our author's practice on other occa ...
... ancient flage - direction adds — like 9 Moft honour'd Timon , ' t hath pleas'd the gods remember — ] The old copy reads to remember . But I have omitted , for the fake of metre , and in conformity to our author's practice on other occa ...
Page 55
... ancient times , but the mid - day's repalt . I do not suppose the paffage corrupt : fuch inadvertencies neither author nor editor can escape . There is another remark to be made . Varro and Ifidore fink a few lines afterwards into the ...
... ancient times , but the mid - day's repalt . I do not suppose the paffage corrupt : fuch inadvertencies neither author nor editor can escape . There is another remark to be made . Varro and Ifidore fink a few lines afterwards into the ...
Page 60
... ancient Greek city ; of which Alexander ab Alexandro has thefe words : CORINTHI Supra mille proftitutas in templo Veneris affidue degere & in- flammata libidine quĉftui meretricio operam dare , & velut facrorum mini- ftras De famulari ...
... ancient Greek city ; of which Alexander ab Alexandro has thefe words : CORINTHI Supra mille proftitutas in templo Veneris affidue degere & in- flammata libidine quĉftui meretricio operam dare , & velut facrorum mini- ftras De famulari ...
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Common terms and phrases
againſt ALCIB Alcibiades anſwer Antony and Cleopatra APEM Apemantus Athens Aufidius becauſe beft Cominius Coriolanus Cymbeline editors emendation Enter Exeunt expreffion faid fame fecond folio feems fenate fenfe fent fervant ferve fhall fhould fhow fignifies fimilar firft FLAV foldier fome fool fpeak fpeech friends ftand ftill fuch fuppofe fure fword gods Hanmer hath heart himſelf honeft honour houfe houſe inftances inftead itſelf JOHNSON King Henry King Henry VI King Lear laft lefs lord Lucullus Macbeth mafter MALONE Marcius means meaſure Menenius moft muft muſt myſelf noble obferved occafion old copy Othello paffage perfon pleaſe Plutarch poet prefent propofed reafon Rome ſay Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſhall Sir Thomas Hanmer ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou art Timon Timon of Athens tranflation ufed uſed Volces WARBURTON whofe word ΤΙΜ