King LearMethuen, 1952 - 256 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 57
... tell what I can tell . Lear . What canst tell , boy ? Fool . She will taste as like this as a crab does to a crab . Thou canst tell why one's nose stands i̇ ' th ' middle on's face ? Lear . No. Fool . Why , to keep one's eyes of either ...
... tell what I can tell . Lear . What canst tell , boy ? Fool . She will taste as like this as a crab does to a crab . Thou canst tell why one's nose stands i̇ ' th ' middle on's face ? Lear . No. Fool . Why , to keep one's eyes of either ...
Page 85
... tell in a year . Lear . O ! how this mother swells up toward my heart ; Hysterica passio ! down , thou climbing sorrow ! Thy element's below . Where is this daughter ? Kent . With the Earl , Sir ; here within . Lear . Follow me not ...
... tell in a year . Lear . O ! how this mother swells up toward my heart ; Hysterica passio ! down , thou climbing sorrow ! Thy element's below . Where is this daughter ? Kent . With the Earl , Sir ; here within . Lear . Follow me not ...
Page 223
... tell so false a tale . Leir . Speak now , Cordella , make my ioyes at full , And drop downe Nectar from thy hony lips . Cor . I cannot paynt my duty forth in words , I hope my deede shall make report for me : But looke what loue the ...
... tell so false a tale . Leir . Speak now , Cordella , make my ioyes at full , And drop downe Nectar from thy hony lips . Cor . I cannot paynt my duty forth in words , I hope my deede shall make report for me : But looke what loue the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Albany Appendix Capell cites conj Cordelia Corn Cornwall Cotgrave Craig daughters death dost doth Dover Duke Duthie Edgar Edmund emendation Enter Exeunt Exit eyes F reading father Florio Fool fortune Gent give Glou Gloucester Gloucester's Gods Goneril Goneril and Regan Greg Harsnett hast hath haue heart Holinshed honour hyphened Jennens Johnson Kent King Lear Kittredge knave Lear's Leir letter lines London Prodigal Lord loue Madam Malone means Mirror for Magistrates Montaigne nature neuer night noble Nuncle Oswald passage Perillus Perrett phrase play poor Pope pray Q corr Q uncorr quibble R. W. Chambers Rowe Scene Schmidt sense Shakespeare sister sonne speak speech Steevens suggests thee Theobald thine thou thought Timon of Athens vnto vpon W. W. Greg word ΙΟ