“The” Plays of William Shakspeare ...J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Page 8
... Lords , Gentlemen , Officers , Soldiers , Murderers , Attendants , and Messengers . The Ghost of Banquo , and several other Apparitions . SCENE , in the End of the fourth Act , lies in Eng . land ; through the rest of the Play , in ...
... Lords , Gentlemen , Officers , Soldiers , Murderers , Attendants , and Messengers . The Ghost of Banquo , and several other Apparitions . SCENE , in the End of the fourth Act , lies in Eng . land ; through the rest of the Play , in ...
Page 9
... Lord Hailes's Annals of Scotland , II . 332. RITSON . Androw of Wyntown , in his Cronykil , informs us that this per- sonage was the widow of Duncan ; a circumstance with which Shakspeare must have been wholly unacquainted : " Dame ...
... Lord Hailes's Annals of Scotland , II . 332. RITSON . Androw of Wyntown , in his Cronykil , informs us that this per- sonage was the widow of Duncan ; a circumstance with which Shakspeare must have been wholly unacquainted : " Dame ...
Page 18
... Lord Bacon , in his Essays , uses the word in the same sense : " Wives are young men's mistresses , companions for middle age , and old men's nurses ; so as a man may have a quarrel to marry , when he will . " MALONE . • Show'd like a ...
... Lord Bacon , in his Essays , uses the word in the same sense : " Wives are young men's mistresses , companions for middle age , and old men's nurses ; so as a man may have a quarrel to marry , when he will . " MALONE . • Show'd like a ...
Page 21
... lord , surveying vantage , With furbish'd arms , and new supplies of men , Began a fresh assault . Dismay'd not this Our captains , Macbeth and Banquo ? DUN . SOLD . Yes ; 3 reading of this passage , in an alteration of this play ...
... lord , surveying vantage , With furbish'd arms , and new supplies of men , Began a fresh assault . Dismay'd not this Our captains , Macbeth and Banquo ? DUN . SOLD . Yes ; 3 reading of this passage , in an alteration of this play ...
Page 23
... Lord Buck- hurst , prefixed to his Pastorals , 1579 : " In vaine I thinke , right honourable lord , " By this rude rime to memorize thy name . " T. WARTON . The word is likewise used by Drayton ; and by Chapman , in his translation of ...
... Lord Buck- hurst , prefixed to his Pastorals , 1579 : " In vaine I thinke , right honourable lord , " By this rude rime to memorize thy name . " T. WARTON . The word is likewise used by Drayton ; and by Chapman , in his translation of ...
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Common terms and phrases
All's ancient Arthur Banquo BAST Bastard Ben Jonson blood breath called castle Cawdor Coriolanus crown Cymbeline death deed doth Duncan edit emendation England Enter Exeunt expression eyes father Faulconbridge fear folio following passage France give hand hast hath heart heaven Hecate Henry VI Holinshed honour Hubert Iliad JOHNSON Julius Cęsar King Henry King Henry IV King John King Richard Kyng Lady Macbeth lord MACB MACD Macduff Malcolm MALONE MASON means murder nature night noble observed old copy old play old reading peace perhaps Philip poet Pope present prince Queen Rape of Lucrece ROSSE sayd says scene Scotland seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies sleep speak speech spirit STEEVENS suppose Tale thane thee Theobald There's thine things thou art thought tragedy unto WARBURTON weird sisters Winter's Tale WITCH word žat