King LearB. Tauchnitz, 1868 - 102 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 40
... storm . But I will tarry ; the fool will stay , And let the wise man fly : The knave turns fool that runs away : The fool no knave , perdy . Kent . Where learned you this , fool ? Fool . Not i ' the stocks , fool . Re - enter LEAR with ...
... storm . But I will tarry ; the fool will stay , And let the wise man fly : The knave turns fool that runs away : The fool no knave , perdy . Kent . Where learned you this , fool ? Fool . Not i ' the stocks , fool . Re - enter LEAR with ...
Page 46
... Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws , Or e'er I'll weep . O fool , I shall go mad ! - [ Exeunt Lear , Gloster , Kent , and Fool . Storm heard at a distance . Corn . Let us withdraw ; ' twill be a 46 [ ACT II . KING LEAR .
... Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws , Or e'er I'll weep . O fool , I shall go mad ! - [ Exeunt Lear , Gloster , Kent , and Fool . Storm heard at a distance . Corn . Let us withdraw ; ' twill be a 46 [ ACT II . KING LEAR .
Page 47
... storm . [ Exeunt . ACT III . SCENE I. A heath . A storm , with thunder and lightning . Enter KENT and a Gentleman , meeting . Kent . Who's there , besides foul weather ? Gent . One minded like the weather , most unquietly . Kent . I ...
... storm . [ Exeunt . ACT III . SCENE I. A heath . A storm , with thunder and lightning . Enter KENT and a Gentleman , meeting . Kent . Who's there , besides foul weather ? Gent . One minded like the weather , most unquietly . Kent . I ...
Page 49
... storm ! I will go seek the king . Gent . Give me your hand : have you no more to say ? Kent . Few words , but , to effect , more than all yet , That , when we've found the king , in which your pain That way , I'll this , he that first ...
... storm ! I will go seek the king . Gent . Give me your hand : have you no more to say ? Kent . Few words , but , to effect , more than all yet , That , when we've found the king , in which your pain That way , I'll this , he that first ...
Page 53
... Storm continues . Enter LEAR , KENT , and Fool . Kent . Here is the place , my lord ; good my lord , enter : The tyranny of the open night's too rough For nature to endure . Lear . Let me alone . Kent . Good my lord , enter here . Lear ...
... Storm continues . Enter LEAR , KENT , and Fool . Kent . Here is the place , my lord ; good my lord , enter : The tyranny of the open night's too rough For nature to endure . Lear . Let me alone . Kent . Good my lord , enter here . Lear ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack Albany arms art thou Attendants bastard blood brother Burgundy canst Cordelia Corn dear death Doct Dost thou doth Dover Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloster Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter GLOSTER Enter KENT Enter LEAR Enter OSWALD eyes farewell father fear fellow Fool fortune foul fiend France gainst Gent Gentleman Give GLOSTER's castle gods Goneril grace hand hath hear heart heavens hither honour horse inform'd king KING LEAR knave lady letter look lord lov'd madam man's master Methinks nature never night noble nuncle o'er pity poison'd poor poor Tom pray Prithee Re-enter Regan SCENE seek Servants shame sirrah sister slave speak stand storm sweet lord sword tell thee there's thine thing thou art thou dost thou hast thou shalt thy daughters traitor trumpet villain