King LearLongmans, 1907 - 152 pages |
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Page v
... appears probable that he also traded in cattle and agri- cultural produce . He prospered in trade , and in 1557 married Mary Arden , the daughter and heiress of a wealthy yeoman of Wilmecote , a village a few miles away to the north ...
... appears probable that he also traded in cattle and agri- cultural produce . He prospered in trade , and in 1557 married Mary Arden , the daughter and heiress of a wealthy yeoman of Wilmecote , a village a few miles away to the north ...
Page vii
... appears to have become speedily attached in some humble capacity , but before long he rose to be an actor of repute , and at Christmas , 1594 , he joined Burbage and Kemp , the Garrick and Grimaldi of the time , in playing before the ...
... appears to have become speedily attached in some humble capacity , but before long he rose to be an actor of repute , and at Christmas , 1594 , he joined Burbage and Kemp , the Garrick and Grimaldi of the time , in playing before the ...
Page viii
... appears to have been employed by theatrical managers in recasting old plays , and , working either alone or perhaps in conjunction with Mar- lowe , he produced what we now have as the three parts of King Henry VI . The plays of Richard ...
... appears to have been employed by theatrical managers in recasting old plays , and , working either alone or perhaps in conjunction with Mar- lowe , he produced what we now have as the three parts of King Henry VI . The plays of Richard ...
Page x
... which Perdita with her flowers appears . The Winter's Tale and The Tempest were written about 1610 or 1611 , and by that date , if not earlier , Shakespeare had retired from the stage and had settled in his X KING LEAR .
... which Perdita with her flowers appears . The Winter's Tale and The Tempest were written about 1610 or 1611 , and by that date , if not earlier , Shakespeare had retired from the stage and had settled in his X KING LEAR .
Page xxvii
... appears at first sight to be an obvious false concord is in reality a survival of old English usage . When , for example , we find a singular verb with a plural subject , that is not to be denounced at once as a flagrant error on the ...
... appears at first sight to be an obvious false concord is in reality a survival of old English usage . When , for example , we find a singular verb with a plural subject , that is not to be denounced at once as a flagrant error on the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack Albany arms Bedlam better brother Burgundy character Child Rowland Cordelia CORN dear death Dost thou doth Dover Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloucester Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter KENT Enter LEAR Exeunt Exit eyes father FOOL fortune foul fiend France gainst GENT gentleman give GLOUCESTER'S castle gods Goneril Goneril and Regan GORDON BROWNE grace hath hear heart heaven hither honour John Shakespeare Julius Cæsar King Lear knave lady Lear's look lord madam master Nahum Tate nature night noble nuncle OSWALD pity play plot poet poor pray Prithee Re-enter SCENE seek Servants Shakespeare shame sirrah sister slave speak speech stand storm sword tears tell thee there's thine thing thou art thou dost thou hast thou shalt traitor trumpet villain weep WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE words