King LearLippincott, 1908 - 503 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... poet , too , cf. 3 Hen . VI : III , iii , 86 : ' all her perfections challenge sovereignty ; ' IV , vi , 6 : ' Subjects may challenge nothing of their sovereigns ; ' IV , viii , 48 : ' These graces challenge grace ; ' and Oth . I , iii ...
... poet , too , cf. 3 Hen . VI : III , iii , 86 : ' all her perfections challenge sovereignty ; ' IV , vi , 6 : ' Subjects may challenge nothing of their sovereigns ; ' IV , viii , 48 : ' These graces challenge grace ; ' and Oth . I , iii ...
Page 13
... poet himself was free . [ Whatever meaning or no - meaning we may attach to ' square of sense , ' it seems clear to me that Regan refers to the joys which that ' square ' ' professes ' to bestow ; I therefore follow the Ff.-ED. ] • 74 ...
... poet himself was free . [ Whatever meaning or no - meaning we may attach to ' square of sense , ' it seems clear to me that Regan refers to the joys which that ' square ' ' professes ' to bestow ; I therefore follow the Ff.-ED. ] • 74 ...
Page 14
... poet's every touch upon the figure of Cordelia paints her as , with all her firmness of character , a creature to nestle in a man's bosom , -her father's or her husband's , — and to be cherished almost like a little child ; and this ...
... poet's every touch upon the figure of Cordelia paints her as , with all her firmness of character , a creature to nestle in a man's bosom , -her father's or her husband's , — and to be cherished almost like a little child ; and this ...
Page 17
... poet has laid very close to us , now rests the whole piece . 92. bond ] ECCLES : What I am bound to by duty . 94 , et seq . MOBERLY : Sh . , with wonderful naturalness , makes the shy and re- served Cordelia speak , when her false ...
... poet has laid very close to us , now rests the whole piece . 92. bond ] ECCLES : What I am bound to by duty . 94 , et seq . MOBERLY : Sh . , with wonderful naturalness , makes the shy and re- served Cordelia speak , when her false ...
Page 53
... poet to expose . But it was a tender point , and required managing . For this impious juggle had in his time a kind of religious reverence paid to it . It was therefore to be done obliquely ; and the circumstances of the scene furnished ...
... poet to expose . But it was a tender point , and required managing . For this impious juggle had in his time a kind of religious reverence paid to it . It was therefore to be done obliquely ; and the circumstances of the scene furnished ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABBOTT Albany better Bodl called CAPELL character Child Rowland Coll COLLIER conj Cordelia Cornwall Cotgrave daughters death DELIUS Dover Duke Dyce ECCLES Edgar edition Edmund emendation Enter Exeunt Exit eyes father Folio Fool France Gent gives Gloster Glou Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril hath heart Huds insanity instances JENNENS Johns JOHNSON Kent King Lear Ktly Lear's Leir Lines end lord Macb madness MALONE means MOBERLY nature night Oswald passage passion phrase play poet poor Pope Pope+ Prose Q₂ Qq et cet QqFf Quartos reading Regan Rowe Rowe+ says scene SCHMIDT Lex seems sense Shakespeare Sing sisters speak speech Steev STEEVENS suppose thee Theob thing thou thought tragedy verb WALKER Crit Warb WARBURTON word WRIGHT