The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators: Comprehending a Life of the Poet, and an Enlarged History of the Stage, Volume 13 |
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Page 11
So slackly guarded ! And the search so slow , That could not trace them ! 1 GENT . 3 Howsoe'er ' tis strange , Or that the negligence may well be laugh'd at , Yet is it true , sir . 2 GENT . I do well believe ...
So slackly guarded ! And the search so slow , That could not trace them ! 1 GENT . 3 Howsoe'er ' tis strange , Or that the negligence may well be laugh'd at , Yet is it true , sir . 2 GENT . I do well believe ...
Page 14
May not sear up , here mean solder up , and the reference be to a lead coffin ? Perhaps cerements , in Hamlet's address to the Ghost , was used for searments in the same sense . HENLEY . I believe nothing more than close up was intended ...
May not sear up , here mean solder up , and the reference be to a lead coffin ? Perhaps cerements , in Hamlet's address to the Ghost , was used for searments in the same sense . HENLEY . I believe nothing more than close up was intended ...
Page 21
CLO . Nay , come , let's go together . 2 LORD . Well , my lord . [ Exeunt . 9 her beauty and her brain go not together : ] I believe the lord means to speak a sentence , " Sir , as I told you always , beauty and brain go not together .
CLO . Nay , come , let's go together . 2 LORD . Well , my lord . [ Exeunt . 9 her beauty and her brain go not together : ] I believe the lord means to speak a sentence , " Sir , as I told you always , beauty and brain go not together .
Page 22
I believe the poet's meaning is , that the loss of that paper would prove as fatal to her , as the loss of a pardon to a condemned criminal . A thought resembling this , occurs in All's Well That Ends Well : " Like a remorseful pardon ...
I believe the poet's meaning is , that the loss of that paper would prove as fatal to her , as the loss of a pardon to a condemned criminal . A thought resembling this , occurs in All's Well That Ends Well : " Like a remorseful pardon ...
Page 26
Believe it , sir : I have seen him in Britain : he was then of a crescent note ; expected to prove so worthy , as since he hath been allowed the name of : but I could then have looked on him without the help of admiration ; though the ...
Believe it , sir : I have seen him in Britain : he was then of a crescent note ; expected to prove so worthy , as since he hath been allowed the name of : but I could then have looked on him without the help of admiration ; though the ...
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