King LearLongmans, 1907 - 152 pages |
From inside the book
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Page v
... there with open eyes to see . At seven years of age he was sent to the Free Grammar School of the Holy Cross , a few streets away from his father's house , and it is thought probable that in Love's Labour's Lost , his earliest JUN 22 ...
... there with open eyes to see . At seven years of age he was sent to the Free Grammar School of the Holy Cross , a few streets away from his father's house , and it is thought probable that in Love's Labour's Lost , his earliest JUN 22 ...
Page vi
... there being four or five younger children . A few years later , in 1582 , William married Anne Hath- away , the daughter of a " husbandman " of Shottery , a hamlet just outside Stratford , to the west . The marriage was a hasty one ...
... there being four or five younger children . A few years later , in 1582 , William married Anne Hath- away , the daughter of a " husbandman " of Shottery , a hamlet just outside Stratford , to the west . The marriage was a hasty one ...
Page vii
... there is little doubt that in the character of Justice Shallow in King Henry IV . and in the Merry Wives of Windsor , Shakespeare pokes fun at the pompous and not overwise Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote . When Shakespeare came to London ...
... there is little doubt that in the character of Justice Shallow in King Henry IV . and in the Merry Wives of Windsor , Shakespeare pokes fun at the pompous and not overwise Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote . When Shakespeare came to London ...
Page viii
... there are amusing pictures of rustic life and manners , such as Shakespeare remembered them at Stratford . The Comedy of Errors and the Two Gentlemen of Verona were not much later ; and the two beautiful plays , A Midsummer - Night's ...
... there are amusing pictures of rustic life and manners , such as Shakespeare remembered them at Stratford . The Comedy of Errors and the Two Gentlemen of Verona were not much later ; and the two beautiful plays , A Midsummer - Night's ...
Page xiii
... which Shakespeare used as a framework upon which to hang the creations of his genius there was perhaps none more popular than the story of King “ Leir ” and his three daughters Gonerilla , Regan and Cordilla . INTRODUCTION . xiii.
... which Shakespeare used as a framework upon which to hang the creations of his genius there was perhaps none more popular than the story of King “ Leir ” and his three daughters Gonerilla , Regan and Cordilla . INTRODUCTION . xiii.
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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