King LearCassell & Company, 1908 - 195 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... comes a furious tempest of crime and madness , through which we see dimly the monstrous and unnatural forms of Goneril and Regan , Cornwall and Edmund , and hear ever and anon the wild laugh of the Fool , the mad howls of Lear , and the ...
... comes a furious tempest of crime and madness , through which we see dimly the monstrous and unnatural forms of Goneril and Regan , Cornwall and Edmund , and hear ever and anon the wild laugh of the Fool , the mad howls of Lear , and the ...
Page 12
... come to the knowledge of himself , has found , smelt out , those flatterers who ' d destroy him , then is he more truly " every inch a king , " though cut to the brains , than ever he was before . The pathos of his recognition of ...
... come to the knowledge of himself , has found , smelt out , those flatterers who ' d destroy him , then is he more truly " every inch a king , " though cut to the brains , than ever he was before . The pathos of his recognition of ...
Page 13
... he had done her and of his own sufferings , come to him as he gazes on the fair face of his dead Cordelia , and find expression in those terrible Nevers 1 which pierce the heart of all who hear them repeated 13 Introduction.
... he had done her and of his own sufferings , come to him as he gazes on the fair face of his dead Cordelia , and find expression in those terrible Nevers 1 which pierce the heart of all who hear them repeated 13 Introduction.
Page 14
... come next ; Lear may follow . The date of Lear 1 Coleridge says of Act III . sc . iv . , " O , what a world's convention of agonies is here ! All external nature in a storm , all moral nature convulsed - the real madness of Lear , the ...
... come next ; Lear may follow . The date of Lear 1 Coleridge says of Act III . sc . iv . , " O , what a world's convention of agonies is here ! All external nature in a storm , all moral nature convulsed - the real madness of Lear , the ...
Page 21
... comes too short ; that I profess Myself an enemy to all other joys Which the most precious square of sense possesses ... come of nothing : speak again 21 ACT ONE SCENE ONE King Lear.
... comes too short ; that I profess Myself an enemy to all other joys Which the most precious square of sense possesses ... come of nothing : speak again 21 ACT ONE SCENE ONE King Lear.
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Common terms and phrases
Alack ALBANY arms art thou Attasked Bedlam blessing brother Burgundy canst Child Rowland comes Cordelia Corn dead dear death dost thou doth Dover duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloster Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter GLOSTER Enter KENT Enter LEAR Exeunt LEAR eyes father follow Fool fortune foul fiend France Gent gentleman give GLOSTER'S Castle Enter gods GONERIL grace hath hear heart heavens hither honour KING LEAR knave lady Layamon letter look lord Macbeth madam man's master nature never night noble nuncle o'er offend OSWALD pity poor Poor Tom pr'ythee pray Re-enter Regan SCENE seek Servants Shakspere Sir George Trevelyan sirrah sister slave sorrow speak stand storm sword tell thee there's thine thou art thou dost thou hast traitor trumpet villain wind wretch